Yarvelling

Yarvelling, or Yarveling, was a famous Dalek scientist.

Space travel
Yarveling originally rose to prominence when he became the first of the humanoid Daleks to travel in space beyond Skaro. Exploring Skaro's deserted moon Flidor, he discovered that it was rich in a particular blue-veined gold, and brought some back to Skaro proper. (PROSE: The Dalek Dictionary)

Creating the War Machines
In 2003, (COMIC: The Dalek Tapes) or thousands of years prior to the 2060s, under the orders of Minister Zolfian, he developed a mobile war machine for the war against the Thals which he dubbed the Dalek War Machine. Zolfian ordered the mass production of such machines to be readied. However, as the war effort increased, a freak meteorite storm detonated the neutron bombs built and stashed away by the Daleks. Zolfian and Yarvelling survived in the war council chamber, turning into a fallout shelter, and were believed to be the only unmutated survivors of their kind, (COMIC: Genesis of Evil) with the front page of TV Century 21 on 30 January 2065 noting that Yarvelling and Zolfian had been the only reported survivors of the catastrophe, (PROSE: Stingray Attacked!) although in truth several other individuals had survived in stasis. (COMIC: Legacy of Yesteryear)

Hiding out & death
For two years following the neutron explosion between the Daleks and the Thals, nothing stirred on Skaro. Believing radiation levels to have dropped sufficiently, Zolfian and Yarvelling finally emerged from their shelter; where Zolfian's main ambition was to destroy any surviving Thals, Yarvelling was more worried about locating surviving Daleks.

However, they quickly found the surface of Skaro to be devastated, and contracted radiation sickness themselves. They were discovered by a mutation, the first member of the race the rest of the universe would soon know as the Daleks; Yarvelling realised with fascination that the creature it had become was "a thousand times superior" in intelligence to himself and Zolfian, and observed that, being "all brain", it had taken to inhabiting the very war machine Yarvelling had developed, using it as a travel machine and a protection against the radiations. Before they died, Yarvelling and Zolfian rebuilt the war factory, started a Dalek production line, and made a special casing for the first Dalek, who would soon declare itself the Dalek Emperor. The two humanoids died of radiation sickness just as the casing was completed. (COMIC: Genesis of Evil)

Legacy
Yarvelling's creation of the Dalek War Machines and subsequent death was chronicled in the Dalek Tapes, a collection of tapes found by the Doctor in an ancient library on a twilight world. (COMIC: The Dalek Tapes) The story was also told in the pages of TV Century 21 in 2065, (COMIC: Genesis of Evil) and in 2094 as an instalment of the Dalek Chronicles. (PROSE: The Dalek Chronicles Found!)

At a much later point in Dalek history, the Dalek Prime claimed that, despite Davros claiming otherwise, Davros had not actually invented the Dalek travel machine, having instead stolen the designs of "other scientists". (PROSE: War of the Daleks) Other accounts suggested Davros had indeed developed the casing, however. (AUDIO: Guilt, PROSE: The Whoniverse)

According to one account, the purported two origins were actually distinct events within a single history. After Davros's Daleks were buried for a thousand years by the Fourth Doctor's efforts, the Kaleds evolved into the humanoid Daleks, with the Thousand Year War having come to an end. However, after the neutronic exchange that wiped out the "humanoid Dalek", or Dal, civilisation, the Dalek Prime created by Davros reemerged from underground, and, passing itself off as a new mutation, directed the new, "natural" mutant Daleks to climb into Dalek casings, seeing it as an easy way to expand its fledgling race. It then set itself up as the new race's leader. The Dal-descended Daleks remained subservient to the Dalek Prime and the other few Daleks made directly by Davros, as programming within the casings directed them to act so. (PROSE: The History of the Daleks)

Something akin to the story of Yarvelling, Drenz and Zolfian was one of the creation myths formulated by species conquered by the Daleks about their oppressors. The myth, however, altered certain details, speaking of the "Sea of Ooze" and suggesting the Dalek War Machines were originally intended to be autonomous robots. Human historians who recorded the myth at length in their history of the Daleks did not give it much credence, though they granted that, for one moment at least, the Yarvelling story may have briefly "become" the true origin of the Daleks at one point during the Last Great Time War. (PROSE: Dalek: The Astounding Untold History of the Greatest Enemies of the Universe)

Indeed, the Time War-era Time Lords, in their scrutiny of Dalek history, became aware of a "very different origin story" for the Daleks and their Emperor which contradicted the known record of Davros. Opinions varied as to whether these accounts were apocryphal or evidence of Dalek activity in parallel dimensions. (PROSE: Dalek Combat Training Manual) The black, friable spires of Yarvelling's Church from Skaro were a fragment of the Time War. According to one account, the Eighth Doctor saw the Cathedral fused with fragments of Morbius' Red Capitol in the backwater where he triggered the Moment. (PROSE: Doctor Who and the Time War)

Behind the scenes

 * Yarvelling's status as the original creator of the Dalek travel machines was seemingly contradicted by the introduction of Davros in Genesis of the Daleks, although the novel War of the Daleks hinted at a possible reconciliation by having the Dalek Prime claim that Davros only created the Mark III Travel Machines based on designs stolen from "other scientists". Dalek: The Astounding Untold History of the Greatest Enemies of the Universe provided another possible answer by suggesting the story of Yarvelling was merely a myth, with the temporal affects of the Last Great Time War briefly making his account of Dalek history true before the timeline returned to Davros being the creator of the Dalek race.
 * Davros' half-sister Yarvell, who appeared in I, Davros, was named after Yarvelling.