Ocean acidification threatens over one million species with extinction--and…
One Ocean: Birth of an Ocean
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
More than four billion years ago, the most important event in Earth's history took place - the ocean was born. It completely transformed the planet, creating a watery oasis that gave rise to the air we breathe, our climate, and a stunning array of life, including the critical species that first crawled out of the sea to inhabit land. The ocean is what transformed Earth into the livable, blue planet it is today.
As BIRTH OF AN OCEAN reveals, we are just beginning to understand the complexity of the ocean and the immense influence it has on the planet and our own survival.
'The cinematography is breathtaking. The views, especially those of the oceans' depths, are nothing short of brilliant. [Birth of an Ocean] is both visually stimulating and content rich, allowing for a quite wide and varied audience access to this DVD. Both teachers and students, along with every other person simply interested in the nature of the oceans and our ecosystem, will find themselves very pleased with this DVD.' Marc Zucker, Assistant Professor, NSTA Recommends
'Very impressive! One Ocean is an exceptional series of videos focused on some of the most pressing problems threatening the health and future of the oceans...The geographic diversity of the areas covered, the superb quality and high definition videos, and the lucid explanations of the science provide a powerful and credible set of stories...These are moving and compelling stories of ocean researchers investigating the problems humans have created in the sea and explaining why our one ocean needs our help now.' Dr. Gary Griggs, Distinguished Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Director of the Institute of Marine Sciences, University of California Santa Cruz, Author, Living with the Changing California Coast and Introduction to California Beaches and Coast
'There are a lot of DVDs available on topics relating to the ocean, but these are some of the best I have seen. I enjoyed the way in which information was conveyed and was pleased to learn things I had not seen in previous videos... I highly recommend this series to public, high-school, and college libraries.' Barbara Butler, University of Oregon Institute of Marine Biology, Educational Media Reviews Online
'I have finally found a film series that thoroughly covers all of the current marine topics that I teach in the classroom which includes MPAs, marine ecosystems, sustainability, international coastal culture, climate change and the formation of ocean life. It is presented in a sense of urgency and at the same time provides essential background information peaking the viewer's interest with animations and interviews with seasoned marine scientists and beautiful cinematography! One Ocean should be an integral part of any environmental studies course.' Michelle Ashley, Environmental Science teacher, South Aiken High School
'Puts viewers in the passenger seat along-side scientists, fishermen and explorers on numerous ocean-going expeditions...Most impressive is the ample footage from deep-sea explorations--courtesy of research submersibles. These give us a window into alien worlds...Appropriate for audiences from grade school students to adults.' Timothy Oleson, EARTH Magazine
'Details the origins of the Earth's oceans, and therefore life on our planet...An interesting film for students studying the development of life on Earth.' Ryan Henry, Daviess County Public Library, School Library Journal
Citation
Main credits
								Suzuki, David T. (narrator)
Downie, Mike (film director)
Downie, Mike (screenwriter)
Verma, Tina (film producer)
							
Other credits
Editor, Jacques Milette; cinematography, Paul Warren, Michael Sweeney, Mark Gerasimenko, Serge Brunet; original music, Aaron Davis and John Lang.
Distributor subjects
Biology; Climate Change/Global Warming; Earth Science; Ecology; Environment; Fisheries; Geography; Geology; Global Issues; Habitat; Marine Biology; Oceans and Coasts; Pacific Studies; Pollution; SustainabilityKeywords
WEBVTT
 
 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.100
 
 
 00:00:04.100 --> 00:00:08.610
 More than four billion years
 ago, the most important event
 
 00:00:08.610 --> 00:00:11.620
 in the history of the
 earth took place.
 
 00:00:11.620 --> 00:00:14.920
 The ocean was born.
 
 00:00:14.920 --> 00:00:18.910
 It completely transformed the
 planet, creating a watery
 
 00:00:18.910 --> 00:00:23.530
 oasis that gave rise to the air
 we breathe, our climate,
 
 00:00:23.530 --> 00:00:28.090
 and a stunning array of life,
 including the critical species
 
 00:00:28.090 --> 00:00:33.170
 that first crawled out of the
 ocean to inhabit land.
 
 00:00:33.170 --> 00:00:36.240
 We\'re looking at an animal
 that\'s really at the base of
 
 00:00:36.240 --> 00:00:40.190
 the branch in the tree
 of life that leads
 
 00:00:40.190 --> 00:00:42.380
 to all limbed animals.
 
 00:00:42.380 --> 00:00:44.760
 And we\'re a limbed animal.
 
 00:00:44.760 --> 00:00:48.970
 The story of the ocean is the
 story of mass extinctions and
 
 00:00:48.970 --> 00:00:53.000
 of astonishing survival in one
 of the most beautiful and
 
 00:00:53.000 --> 00:00:55.980
 mysterious parts
 of the planet.
 
 00:00:55.980 --> 00:01:00.890
 Ultimately, the history of the
 ocean is our own history.
 
 00:01:00.890 --> 00:01:04.050
 And today, we are just beginning
 to understand its
 
 00:01:04.050 --> 00:01:07.710
 complexity, and the immense
 influence it has on the
 
 00:01:07.710 --> 00:01:10.085
 planet, and on our
 own survival.
 
 00:01:10.085 --> 00:01:33.760
 
 
 00:01:33.760 --> 00:01:37.560
 Our vast ocean stretches out
 over space and time.
 
 00:01:37.560 --> 00:01:40.390
 It\'s almost as old as
 the planet itself.
 
 00:01:40.390 --> 00:01:44.990
 Yet for most of us, the ocean
 is a shoreline, a watery
 
 00:01:44.990 --> 00:01:47.480
 surface, a mystery.
 
 00:01:47.480 --> 00:01:50.840
 There\'s an amazing world beneath
 these waves, but it\'s
 
 00:01:50.840 --> 00:01:53.070
 fragile and threatened.
 
 00:01:53.070 --> 00:01:56.390
 In this four part series, we\'ll
 join the scientists who
 
 00:01:56.390 --> 00:02:00.490
 are unlocking the secrets, and
 exploring the wonders of this
 
 00:02:00.490 --> 00:02:04.290
 most critical life force on
 the planet, the ocean.
 
 00:02:04.290 --> 00:02:09.620
 
 
 00:02:09.620 --> 00:02:13.500
 We live on a blue planet which
 is almost all ocean.
 
 00:02:13.500 --> 00:02:18.740
 A water planet that is unique
 among the cosmos.
 
 00:02:18.740 --> 00:02:21.770
 But where did all this
 water come from?
 
 00:02:21.770 --> 00:02:23.790
 And how did it transform
 our planet?
 
 00:02:23.790 --> 00:02:32.692
 
 
 00:02:32.692 --> 00:02:36.230
 Nick Eyles, a professor of
 geology at the University of
 
 00:02:36.230 --> 00:02:40.280
 Toronto, has a good idea of what
 this planet looked like
 
 00:02:40.280 --> 00:02:42.330
 four and a half billion
 years ago.
 
 00:02:42.330 --> 00:02:52.190
 
 
 00:02:52.190 --> 00:02:55.840
 He\'s traveling into the Afar
 Depression, through Ethiopia\'s
 
 00:02:55.840 --> 00:03:00.660
 Rift Valley in the searing hot,
 hot heat to descend into
 
 00:03:00.660 --> 00:03:03.560
 the Erta Ale, one of the
 planet\'s most active
 
 00:03:03.560 --> 00:03:07.950
 volcanoes, to see what early
 Earth must have looked like as
 
 00:03:07.950 --> 00:03:09.200
 it was being forged.
 
 00:03:09.200 --> 00:03:13.148
 
 
 00:03:13.148 --> 00:03:17.210
 It formed out of dust particles
 collecting together,
 
 00:03:17.210 --> 00:03:19.000
 brought together by gravity.
 
 00:03:19.000 --> 00:03:21.720
 Meteorites bringing
 in more material.
 
 00:03:21.720 --> 00:03:22.940
 And it was a cluster.
 
 00:03:22.940 --> 00:03:27.440
 Think of it as a giant, red-hot
 snowball, gathering
 
 00:03:27.440 --> 00:03:29.390
 material from space.
 
 00:03:29.390 --> 00:03:30.845
 It was a red planet.
 
 00:03:30.845 --> 00:03:32.220
 It wasn\'t a blue planet.
 
 00:03:32.220 --> 00:03:34.750
 There were no oceans, there
 were no atmospheres.
 
 00:03:34.750 --> 00:03:39.213
 A giant ball of red-hot magma
 flashing through space.
 
 00:03:39.213 --> 00:03:54.391
 
 
 00:03:54.391 --> 00:03:56.610
 Will you just look at that?
 
 00:03:56.610 --> 00:03:57.860
 That\'s incredible.
 
 00:03:57.860 --> 00:04:09.890
 
 
 00:04:09.890 --> 00:04:12.400
 This is what the
 earth once was.
 
 00:04:12.400 --> 00:04:16.672
 
 
 00:04:16.672 --> 00:04:19.516
 That\'s amazing.
 
 00:04:19.516 --> 00:04:24.180
 A planet of lava, where gases
 belch up from deep within, and
 
 00:04:24.180 --> 00:04:27.320
 molten rock sloshes back
 and forth like water.
 
 00:04:27.320 --> 00:04:33.200
 
 
 00:04:33.200 --> 00:04:37.240
 So if the earth started like
 this, how could an ocean ever
 
 00:04:37.240 --> 00:04:38.480
 have formed?
 
 00:04:38.480 --> 00:04:41.810
 And where did all the
 water come from?
 
 00:04:41.810 --> 00:04:43.830
 Well, there\'s been a lot of
 scientific debate about the
 
 00:04:43.830 --> 00:04:45.440
 origin of the oceans.
 
 00:04:45.440 --> 00:04:48.530
 And surprisingly, the answer
 appears to be that the ocean
 
 00:04:48.530 --> 00:04:51.210
 water came from within
 the planet.
 
 00:04:51.210 --> 00:04:55.420
 It was water that was squeezed
 out under huge, unimaginable
 
 00:04:55.420 --> 00:04:58.120
 pressures from rocks
 and minerals.
 
 00:04:58.120 --> 00:05:00.580
 Imagine the forces that
 are taking place
 
 00:05:00.580 --> 00:05:02.110
 deep within the planet.
 
 00:05:02.110 --> 00:05:05.520
 And the water outgassed from
 the deep interior of the
 
 00:05:05.520 --> 00:05:10.340
 planet, and pooled on
 the hot surface.
 
 00:05:10.340 --> 00:05:13.110
 The water vapor entered
 the atmosphere
 
 00:05:13.110 --> 00:05:15.330
 as superheated steam.
 
 00:05:15.330 --> 00:05:18.830
 As it cooled, it condensed,
 and rained down upon the
 
 00:05:18.830 --> 00:05:23.280
 planet, cooling the surface,
 ponding in the depressions,
 
 00:05:23.280 --> 00:05:27.080
 and slowly creating the
 first bodies of water.
 
 00:05:27.080 --> 00:05:30.970
 And eventually, an ocean.
 
 00:05:30.970 --> 00:05:34.550
 The ocean reshaped the Earth\'s
 surface, and ultimately
 
 00:05:34.550 --> 00:05:38.530
 transformed it into a livable,
 temperate planet that could
 
 00:05:38.530 --> 00:05:39.780
 support life.
 
 00:05:39.780 --> 00:05:49.310
 
 
 00:05:49.310 --> 00:05:52.390
 Half of the oxygen we breathe
 comes from plants
 
 00:05:52.390 --> 00:05:53.910
 living in the ocean.
 
 00:05:53.910 --> 00:05:57.206
 And they absorb half of the
 carbon dioxide we produce.
 
 00:05:57.206 --> 00:06:00.710
 
 
 00:06:00.710 --> 00:06:03.410
 The ocean acts as the
 planet\'s thermostat.
 
 00:06:03.410 --> 00:06:06.550
 It regulates the temperature,
 and prevents the Earth\'s
 
 00:06:06.550 --> 00:06:09.470
 surface from getting too
 hot or too cold.
 
 00:06:09.470 --> 00:06:16.200
 
 
 00:06:16.200 --> 00:06:19.960
 The ocean not only shaped the
 earth\'s surface and created
 
 00:06:19.960 --> 00:06:21.500
 our temperate climate.
 
 00:06:21.500 --> 00:06:25.780
 It nurtured life itself on this
 planet, when one single
 
 00:06:25.780 --> 00:06:30.310
 cell first formed some 3.5
 billion years ago.
 
 00:06:30.310 --> 00:06:40.070
 
 
 00:06:40.070 --> 00:06:43.410
 Peter Ward, a paleontologist
 with the University of
 
 00:06:43.410 --> 00:06:47.140
 Washington, has traveled here
 to Shark Bay in Western
 
 00:06:47.140 --> 00:06:51.070
 Australia to see what that early
 life in the ocean might
 
 00:06:51.070 --> 00:06:52.320
 have looked like.
 
 00:06:52.320 --> 00:07:07.400
 
 
 00:07:07.400 --> 00:07:10.000
 Yeah, I really think this is a
 view of what the world looked
 
 00:07:10.000 --> 00:07:12.860
 like, all the world\'s oceans,
 from three and a half billion
 
 00:07:12.860 --> 00:07:15.560
 years ago to a half
 billion years ago.
 
 00:07:15.560 --> 00:07:20.370
 They may look like rocks, but
 these stromatolites are very
 
 00:07:20.370 --> 00:07:21.970
 much alive.
 
 00:07:21.970 --> 00:07:24.710
 They are made up of layer
 upon layer of
 
 00:07:24.710 --> 00:07:26.950
 tiny, sticky bacteria.
 
 00:07:26.950 --> 00:07:31.220
 Sand and dirt particles adhere
 to the bacteria, building it
 
 00:07:31.220 --> 00:07:33.990
 up, and giving it this
 rock-like appearance.
 
 00:07:33.990 --> 00:07:36.990
 
 
 00:07:36.990 --> 00:07:41.490
 Stromatolites like these, here
 in Shark Bay, once covered the
 
 00:07:41.490 --> 00:07:42.740
 ancient ocean floor.
 
 00:07:42.740 --> 00:07:46.040
 
 
 00:07:46.040 --> 00:07:49.190
 Every time we find fossils
 of marine rocks, there\'s
 
 00:07:49.190 --> 00:07:50.420
 stromatolites in them.
 
 00:07:50.420 --> 00:07:52.150
 But they\'re gone now.
 
 00:07:52.150 --> 00:07:54.630
 And the disappearance of them
 really can be thought of as
 
 00:07:54.630 --> 00:07:58.090
 perhaps one of the first and
 most disastrous of all mass
 
 00:07:58.090 --> 00:07:59.340
 extinctions for life.
 
 00:07:59.340 --> 00:08:03.440
 
 
 00:08:03.440 --> 00:08:06.970
 So what happened to the
 ubiquitous stromatolites?
 
 00:08:06.970 --> 00:08:11.160
 What forces wiped them out?
 
 00:08:11.160 --> 00:08:15.510
 For billions of years, this
 planet was oxygen-free.
 
 00:08:15.510 --> 00:08:19.170
 The ocean was filled with
 anaerobic bacteria that
 
 00:08:19.170 --> 00:08:22.890
 thrived without oxygen,
 obtaining all their energy
 
 00:08:22.890 --> 00:08:25.610
 from rocks and minerals.
 
 00:08:25.610 --> 00:08:28.390
 We can think of early life
 itself in ways somewhat
 
 00:08:28.390 --> 00:08:31.260
 analogous to energy
 in our society.
 
 00:08:31.260 --> 00:08:34.230
 Right now we are fueled mostly
 by coal and oil.
 
 00:08:34.230 --> 00:08:35.780
 But we\'re switching to
 solar, aren\'t we?
 
 00:08:35.780 --> 00:08:37.289
 Well, early life
 was like that.
 
 00:08:37.289 --> 00:08:40.059
 Early life took its energy right
 out of rocks as we take
 
 00:08:40.059 --> 00:08:41.950
 it right out of oil wells.
 
 00:08:41.950 --> 00:08:45.950
 But very quickly, all that solar
 power, that untouched
 
 00:08:45.950 --> 00:08:49.360
 resource, became available,
 simply through the evolution
 
 00:08:49.360 --> 00:08:51.050
 of one specialized
 type of cell.
 
 00:08:51.050 --> 00:08:54.090
 A pigment that could take
 sunlight, combine it with
 
 00:08:54.090 --> 00:08:57.210
 carbon dioxide in the
 atmosphere, and build cell
 
 00:08:57.210 --> 00:08:58.880
 living material.
 
 00:08:58.880 --> 00:09:03.120
 Stromatolites used these
 pigmented cells to harness the
 
 00:09:03.120 --> 00:09:04.630
 sun\'s energy.
 
 00:09:04.630 --> 00:09:08.160
 This reaction, called
 photosynthesis, released one
 
 00:09:08.160 --> 00:09:10.490
 revolutionary byproduct.
 
 00:09:10.490 --> 00:09:12.710
 Oxygen.
 
 00:09:12.710 --> 00:09:17.220
 The presence of oxygen was, in
 reality, just a mistake.
 
 00:09:17.220 --> 00:09:18.200
 It is a byproduct.
 
 00:09:18.200 --> 00:09:19.730
 Simply a metabolic byproduct.
 
 00:09:19.730 --> 00:09:21.950
 It\'s not as if any plant
 really cares much
 
 00:09:21.950 --> 00:09:23.065
 about oxygen at all.
 
 00:09:23.065 --> 00:09:26.780
 It just tossed it away during
 photosynthesis.
 
 00:09:26.780 --> 00:09:30.600
 The oxygen emitted by
 stromatolites accumulated in
 
 00:09:30.600 --> 00:09:33.610
 the ocean and the atmosphere
 over hundreds
 
 00:09:33.610 --> 00:09:36.850
 of millions of years.
 
 00:09:36.850 --> 00:09:41.310
 Oxygen allowed more and more
 complex life to evolve into
 
 00:09:41.310 --> 00:09:44.050
 the ocean\'s earliest
 creatures.
 
 00:09:44.050 --> 00:09:46.830
 The stromatolites around me
 were really the agents of
 
 00:09:46.830 --> 00:09:48.670
 their own destruction,
 in a way.
 
 00:09:48.670 --> 00:09:51.840
 Animals themselves duly evolved
 about 550 million
 
 00:09:51.840 --> 00:09:54.820
 years ago, could not
 photosynthesize, obviously.
 
 00:09:54.820 --> 00:09:55.690
 They\'re not plants.
 
 00:09:55.690 --> 00:09:56.700
 But they needed energy.
 
 00:09:56.700 --> 00:09:57.870
 They need food.
 
 00:09:57.870 --> 00:09:59.460
 Well, food is all around us.
 
 00:09:59.460 --> 00:10:02.425
 The most reliable food at that
 time were stromatolites.
 
 00:10:02.425 --> 00:10:05.000
 And so, the early animals
 which were capable
 
 00:10:05.000 --> 00:10:06.920
 of motion, had jaws.
 
 00:10:06.920 --> 00:10:10.010
 They had little rasping tongues
 if they were mollusks.
 
 00:10:10.010 --> 00:10:11.500
 And they just grazed.
 
 00:10:11.500 --> 00:10:13.540
 They grazed these stromatolites
 
 00:10:13.540 --> 00:10:15.225
 right out of existence.
 
 00:10:15.225 --> 00:10:19.290
 Although today there is only a
 small sample remaining, it
 
 00:10:19.290 --> 00:10:22.430
 would be difficult to find a
 species of life that had a
 
 00:10:22.430 --> 00:10:26.160
 greater impact on this planet
 than these humble looking
 
 00:10:26.160 --> 00:10:27.680
 stromatolites.
 
 00:10:27.680 --> 00:10:29.890
 We animals, of course, would
 not be here without these
 
 00:10:29.890 --> 00:10:32.500
 stromatolites, or at least
 their great deep time
 
 00:10:32.500 --> 00:10:34.210
 forebearers.
 
 00:10:34.210 --> 00:10:36.330
 They gave us the oxygen
 atmosphere.
 
 00:10:36.330 --> 00:10:39.680
 Stromatolites made earth
 an earth-like planet.
 
 00:10:39.680 --> 00:10:43.440
 Charles Darwin recognized that
 all life on earth today came
 
 00:10:43.440 --> 00:10:46.410
 from one first cell somewhere.
 
 00:10:46.410 --> 00:10:51.480
 Each of us is at the top
 of a great rich tree.
 
 00:10:51.480 --> 00:10:55.120
 [? Our ?] family tree of ours
 has these stromatolites way
 
 00:10:55.120 --> 00:10:58.250
 down, down near it\'s
 very base.
 
 00:10:58.250 --> 00:10:59.690
 We should revere these things.
 
 00:10:59.690 --> 00:11:02.450
 They did their job, if
 you want to say that.
 
 00:11:02.450 --> 00:11:06.720
 But certainly without them,
 we would not be here.
 
 00:11:06.720 --> 00:11:09.780
 Life on this planet started
 in the ocean.
 
 00:11:09.780 --> 00:11:13.150
 And to this day, scientists
 are still discovering new
 
 00:11:13.150 --> 00:11:17.190
 species of life at every turn
 in some of the most extreme
 
 00:11:17.190 --> 00:11:18.490
 environments imaginable.
 
 00:11:18.490 --> 00:11:28.580
 
 
 00:11:28.580 --> 00:11:31.870
 Doctor Verena Tunnicliffe, an
 ocean biologist with the
 
 00:11:31.870 --> 00:11:35.350
 University of Victoria, has
 traveled to a part of this
 
 00:11:35.350 --> 00:11:39.700
 planet that few of us will ever
 get to see, a place where
 
 00:11:39.700 --> 00:11:43.670
 the energy of the sun doesn\'t
 reach, and where oxygen-hating
 
 00:11:43.670 --> 00:11:45.580
 bacteria still rule.
 
 00:11:45.580 --> 00:11:48.210
 
 
 00:11:48.210 --> 00:11:50.930
 The first time our expedition
 discovered hydrothermal vents
 
 00:11:50.930 --> 00:11:53.670
 was actually the first time
 on the Juan de Fuca
 
 00:11:53.670 --> 00:11:55.350
 ridge out off Canada.
 
 00:11:55.350 --> 00:11:58.050
 And that was about
 25 years ago.
 
 00:11:58.050 --> 00:12:01.470
 And the feeling was just like
 walking into another world.
 
 00:12:01.470 --> 00:12:06.950
 
 
 00:12:06.950 --> 00:12:10.160
 I was in a man submersible, so
 you\'re down under the ocean
 
 00:12:10.160 --> 00:12:11.500
 nearly 2000 meters.
 
 00:12:11.500 --> 00:12:16.850
 And it\'s totally alien, quiet
 world that\'s crystal clear.
 
 00:12:16.850 --> 00:12:26.700
 
 
 00:12:26.700 --> 00:12:32.360
 And then you go from black lavas
 into this vents with
 
 00:12:32.360 --> 00:12:34.912
 black smokers, and animals
 all over the place.
 
 00:12:34.912 --> 00:12:39.130
 
 
 00:12:39.130 --> 00:12:41.110
 It\'s just like going
 into an oasis.
 
 00:12:41.110 --> 00:12:45.200
 
 
 00:12:45.200 --> 00:12:49.210
 It may look lush and alive,
 but if there is a harsher
 
 00:12:49.210 --> 00:12:52.930
 place to live than a
 hydrothermal vent, it hasn\'t
 
 00:12:52.930 --> 00:12:54.180
 been found yet.
 
 00:12:54.180 --> 00:13:07.720
 
 
 00:13:07.720 --> 00:13:13.460
 Poisonous gas, searing hot
 water, heavy metals, extreme
 
 00:13:13.460 --> 00:13:17.070
 acidity, enormous underwater
 pressure.
 
 00:13:17.070 --> 00:13:21.460
 This seafloor ecosystem seems
 more like something from deep
 
 00:13:21.460 --> 00:13:24.005
 space than our own deep sea.
 
 00:13:24.005 --> 00:13:34.340
 
 
 00:13:34.340 --> 00:13:38.300
 Yet amazing communities of life
 have taken hold around
 
 00:13:38.300 --> 00:13:39.550
 these vents.
 
 00:13:39.550 --> 00:13:45.040
 
 
 00:13:45.040 --> 00:13:49.150
 Black smokers are powered by
 volcanoes, but that isn\'t
 
 00:13:49.150 --> 00:13:50.860
 smoke billowing out.
 
 00:13:50.860 --> 00:13:55.300
 It\'s hot, mineral-laced water.
 
 00:13:55.300 --> 00:13:58.630
 Water seeps down into the
 Earth\'s hot mantle through
 
 00:13:58.630 --> 00:14:02.730
 cracks on the ocean floor, where
 it gets superheated and
 
 00:14:02.730 --> 00:14:06.080
 starts to dissolve minerals
 and toxic, heavy metals.
 
 00:14:06.080 --> 00:14:09.310
 
 
 00:14:09.310 --> 00:14:14.360
 The water, now heated to 400
 degrees Celsius, boils back up
 
 00:14:14.360 --> 00:14:16.330
 through the sea floor.
 
 00:14:16.330 --> 00:14:19.780
 When the toxic mixture hits
 the frigid seawater, the
 
 00:14:19.780 --> 00:14:23.280
 dissolved minerals and heavy
 metals precipitate out,
 
 00:14:23.280 --> 00:14:27.350
 creating the billowing black
 flumes, and building up these
 
 00:14:27.350 --> 00:14:28.600
 chimney-like structures.
 
 00:14:28.600 --> 00:14:36.450
 
 
 00:14:36.450 --> 00:14:40.520
 That life can exist under these
 conditions is amazing,
 
 00:14:40.520 --> 00:14:44.680
 but even more so when we
 consider that these creatures,
 
 00:14:44.680 --> 00:14:49.320
 the tubeworm, clams, and crabs,
 are all sustained by
 
 00:14:49.320 --> 00:14:53.910
 one tiny bacterium that feeds
 off this toxic chemical stew.
 
 00:14:53.910 --> 00:15:01.150
 
 
 00:15:01.150 --> 00:15:04.030
 So the hydrothermal vent
 ecosystem is an ecosystem that
 
 00:15:04.030 --> 00:15:07.670
 works on something called
 chemosynthesis.
 
 00:15:07.670 --> 00:15:10.220
 Not photosynthesis like the
 rest of the planet does.
 
 00:15:10.220 --> 00:15:13.140
 
 
 00:15:13.140 --> 00:15:16.900
 The chemical energy that powers
 this remote ecosystem
 
 00:15:16.900 --> 00:15:20.920
 is harnessed by anaerobic
 bacteria, similar to the first
 
 00:15:20.920 --> 00:15:24.200
 life in the ocean, who literally
 eat the dissolved
 
 00:15:24.200 --> 00:15:29.080
 rocks and minerals belching
 out of these vents.
 
 00:15:29.080 --> 00:15:33.600
 So the fundamental grass in
 this system are microbes.
 
 00:15:33.600 --> 00:15:35.660
 That\'s the basis of the
 whole ecosystem.
 
 00:15:35.660 --> 00:15:42.110
 
 
 00:15:42.110 --> 00:15:45.960
 These hardy microbes that
 survive on the fuel provided
 
 00:15:45.960 --> 00:15:49.830
 by the black smokers in turn
 attract a range of
 
 00:15:49.830 --> 00:15:52.360
 extraordinarily adapted
 creatures to
 
 00:15:52.360 --> 00:15:53.950
 this deep, dark site.
 
 00:15:53.950 --> 00:16:04.970
 
 
 00:16:04.970 --> 00:16:07.930
 So the basic food source in
 this system is bacteria.
 
 00:16:07.930 --> 00:16:10.090
 And all of these animals have
 to figure out some way of
 
 00:16:10.090 --> 00:16:13.370
 getting that bacteria.
 
 00:16:13.370 --> 00:16:15.560
 There are some animals that
 have gotten to the point
 
 00:16:15.560 --> 00:16:16.880
 where, well, I don\'t want
 to spend all my
 
 00:16:16.880 --> 00:16:19.660
 energy grazing bacteria.
 
 00:16:19.660 --> 00:16:24.190
 There\'s some crabs that grow the
 bacteria on their claws.
 
 00:16:24.190 --> 00:16:27.790
 And they put their front claws
 out into the water flow, and
 
 00:16:27.790 --> 00:16:31.150
 they sit there growing the
 bacteria like grass.
 
 00:16:31.150 --> 00:16:33.620
 And then they bring them in and
 they just lick their hands
 
 00:16:33.620 --> 00:16:34.990
 and then they put them
 back out again.
 
 00:16:34.990 --> 00:16:38.690
 
 
 00:16:38.690 --> 00:16:41.980
 An even more ingenious strategy
 of getting at those
 
 00:16:41.980 --> 00:16:46.210
 life-sustaining microbes is
 employed by the red tubeworm.
 
 00:16:46.210 --> 00:16:50.750
 
 
 00:16:50.750 --> 00:16:54.320
 They\'re very special to many
 biologists because they
 
 00:16:54.320 --> 00:16:58.970
 represent almost a pinnacle of
 the evolutionary process.
 
 00:16:58.970 --> 00:17:02.690
 Apparently lowly worm has done
 something that is quite
 
 00:17:02.690 --> 00:17:04.460
 extraordinary.
 
 00:17:04.460 --> 00:17:07.060
 It has no mouth, has no gut.
 
 00:17:07.060 --> 00:17:11.109
 Instead, its taken microbes,
 bacteria from the environment,
 
 00:17:11.109 --> 00:17:14.910
 and inserted them in its body,
 and the bacteria do all the
 
 00:17:14.910 --> 00:17:19.099
 work in terms of making
 food for them.
 
 00:17:19.099 --> 00:17:22.660
 Bacteria enter young, developing
 worms through an
 
 00:17:22.660 --> 00:17:24.579
 opening at the end
 of their tube.
 
 00:17:24.579 --> 00:17:29.700
 But as the worm matures, the
 openings in the tube close,
 
 00:17:29.700 --> 00:17:32.552
 trapping the bacteria inside.
 
 00:17:32.552 --> 00:17:37.720
 And so this has become almost a
 poster child of adaptation,
 
 00:17:37.720 --> 00:17:39.920
 of how evolution has
 gone through to a
 
 00:17:39.920 --> 00:17:41.750
 very extreme limit.
 
 00:17:41.750 --> 00:17:44.190
 And when we look at these
 tubeworms, we can understand
 
 00:17:44.190 --> 00:17:47.360
 many of these kinds of
 intriguing adaptations to very
 
 00:17:47.360 --> 00:17:48.610
 unusual conditions.
 
 00:17:48.610 --> 00:17:54.950
 
 
 00:17:54.950 --> 00:17:59.160
 A harsh environment like this
 promotes adaptation.
 
 00:17:59.160 --> 00:18:02.100
 There is no easy way
 to make a living.
 
 00:18:02.100 --> 00:18:04.730
 For creatures to survive
 down here,
 
 00:18:04.730 --> 00:18:05.980
 they have to be creative.
 
 00:18:05.980 --> 00:18:09.460
 
 
 00:18:09.460 --> 00:18:11.800
 When we look at an ecosystem
 like the hydrothermal vents,
 
 00:18:11.800 --> 00:18:17.035
 we realize that life often
 can make the most
 
 00:18:17.035 --> 00:18:19.970
 of almost any setting.
 
 00:18:19.970 --> 00:18:22.900
 And so, given just the slightest
 chance, life is
 
 00:18:22.900 --> 00:18:26.820
 probably going to take it.
 
 00:18:26.820 --> 00:18:31.420
 When it has to, life can adapt
 to extreme environments.
 
 00:18:31.420 --> 00:18:34.270
 But given a more forgiving
 and bountiful
 
 00:18:34.270 --> 00:18:36.210
 ecosystem, life explodes.
 
 00:18:36.210 --> 00:18:44.240
 
 
 00:18:44.240 --> 00:18:49.260
 Around 600 million years ago,
 multicellular animals started
 
 00:18:49.260 --> 00:18:51.230
 to take over the ocean.
 
 00:18:51.230 --> 00:18:57.740
 The first coral and sponge reefs
 provided the ideal home.
 
 00:18:57.740 --> 00:19:02.060
 The tight spaces and maze-like
 design feed and protect a
 
 00:19:02.060 --> 00:19:06.150
 multitude of species, and offer
 a steady diet for the
 
 00:19:06.150 --> 00:19:07.400
 many predators.
 
 00:19:07.400 --> 00:19:12.470
 
 
 00:19:12.470 --> 00:19:15.780
 This is what a coral reef
 looks like from above.
 
 00:19:15.780 --> 00:19:19.340
 It\'s an inviting image of
 crystal clear blue water,
 
 00:19:19.340 --> 00:19:22.730
 teeming with life of every
 shape, size, and color.
 
 00:19:22.730 --> 00:19:29.460
 
 
 00:19:29.460 --> 00:19:32.790
 And this is what a coral reef
 looks like after it\'s been
 
 00:19:32.790 --> 00:19:36.555
 left out in the sun for over
 400 million years.
 
 00:19:36.555 --> 00:19:39.550
 
 
 00:19:39.550 --> 00:19:44.000
 Professor Peter Ward has come to
 Western Australia to study
 
 00:19:44.000 --> 00:19:47.830
 this ancient reef and try to
 unlock the secrets it holds.
 
 00:19:47.830 --> 00:19:50.410
 
 
 00:19:50.410 --> 00:19:52.350
 I\'ve seen plenty of
 Devonian reefs.
 
 00:19:52.350 --> 00:19:55.830
 But every single Devonian reef
 I\'ve ever seen has been
 
 00:19:55.830 --> 00:20:00.510
 subjected to millions of years
 of insult by the planet,
 
 00:20:00.510 --> 00:20:04.242
 tilted up, or squished, or
 turned into some other rock.
 
 00:20:04.242 --> 00:20:07.610
 The extraordinary aspect of this
 place, this reef lived
 
 00:20:07.610 --> 00:20:10.300
 and died, and then was
 left completely
 
 00:20:10.300 --> 00:20:11.550
 alone by Mother Earth.
 
 00:20:11.550 --> 00:20:16.580
 
 
 00:20:16.580 --> 00:20:21.460
 These razor sharp formations are
 gravestones for what was
 
 00:20:21.460 --> 00:20:24.800
 once a global network
 of reefs.
 
 00:20:24.800 --> 00:20:29.170
 During the Devonian period, over
 400 million years ago,
 
 00:20:29.170 --> 00:20:32.550
 barrier reefs built up in the
 shallow waters around the
 
 00:20:32.550 --> 00:20:33.800
 continents.
 
 00:20:33.800 --> 00:20:44.000
 
 
 00:20:44.000 --> 00:20:46.970
 We could go to the Great Barrier
 Reef in Australia,
 
 00:20:46.970 --> 00:20:49.940
 look at that clear water,
 examine those reefs, and we
 
 00:20:49.940 --> 00:20:51.730
 would have a very good
 picture of what it
 
 00:20:51.730 --> 00:20:53.720
 would have looked like.
 
 00:20:53.720 --> 00:20:55.830
 Biodiversity is enormous.
 
 00:20:55.830 --> 00:20:58.260
 The water would be
 crystal clear.
 
 00:20:58.260 --> 00:20:59.280
 We would see a wall.
 
 00:20:59.280 --> 00:21:01.770
 The wall would be covered
 with corals.
 
 00:21:01.770 --> 00:21:03.980
 But way more than that, there\'d
 be archaic creatures
 
 00:21:03.980 --> 00:21:05.542
 now extinct.
 
 00:21:05.542 --> 00:21:09.290
 We\'re looking at a time before
 we had all the fish of today.
 
 00:21:09.290 --> 00:21:12.640
 These are archaic, they have
 big scales, they\'re clunky.
 
 00:21:12.640 --> 00:21:15.340
 They kind of look like
 swimming tanks.
 
 00:21:15.340 --> 00:21:19.330
 But it would be so colorful,
 so diverse, so filled with
 
 00:21:19.330 --> 00:21:22.175
 life, that we could compare it
 to the modern day reefs.
 
 00:21:22.175 --> 00:21:26.330
 
 
 00:21:26.330 --> 00:21:28.080
 I\'m holding a piece of
 reef that came from
 
 00:21:28.080 --> 00:21:29.740
 this rock behind me.
 
 00:21:29.740 --> 00:21:32.500
 Every bit of white that you see
 in this hunk of rock was
 
 00:21:32.500 --> 00:21:33.740
 formed by an animal.
 
 00:21:33.740 --> 00:21:35.180
 Not just an animal.
 
 00:21:35.180 --> 00:21:37.690
 Thousands of species
 of animals.
 
 00:21:37.690 --> 00:21:40.650
 Coral-like animals entered
 corals themselves, building
 
 00:21:40.650 --> 00:21:43.780
 skeletons, growing up into
 sunlight, making
 
 00:21:43.780 --> 00:21:45.620
 a giant coral city.
 
 00:21:45.620 --> 00:21:47.270
 Now look right behind that.
 
 00:21:47.270 --> 00:21:48.610
 The rocks turn black.
 
 00:21:48.610 --> 00:21:51.630
 The rocks above us, the younger
 rocks, have been taken
 
 00:21:51.630 --> 00:21:53.430
 over by something entirely
 different.
 
 00:21:53.430 --> 00:21:56.700
 
 
 00:21:56.700 --> 00:21:58.900
 It\'s no longer an animal reef.
 
 00:21:58.900 --> 00:22:01.130
 It\'s now a microbial reef.
 
 00:22:01.130 --> 00:22:02.390
 The animals are wiped out.
 
 00:22:02.390 --> 00:22:05.560
 What takes over was what
 was present on
 
 00:22:05.560 --> 00:22:07.070
 earth before animals.
 
 00:22:07.070 --> 00:22:08.320
 Microbes.
 
 00:22:08.320 --> 00:22:11.180
 
 
 00:22:11.180 --> 00:22:12.960
 It was one of the greatest
 mass extinctions in the
 
 00:22:12.960 --> 00:22:14.470
 history of the planet.
 
 00:22:14.470 --> 00:22:16.060
 This place is a graveyard.
 
 00:22:16.060 --> 00:22:17.490
 And we are just now
 beginning to
 
 00:22:17.490 --> 00:22:19.360
 understand what caused that.
 
 00:22:19.360 --> 00:22:22.430
 And personally, it scares the
 holy business out of me.
 
 00:22:22.430 --> 00:22:24.460
 Because what caused that
 very much could happen
 
 00:22:24.460 --> 00:22:27.620
 again in our world.
 
 00:22:27.620 --> 00:22:32.810
 Over 99.9% of species that ever
 lived on this planet are
 
 00:22:32.810 --> 00:22:34.320
 now extinct.
 
 00:22:34.320 --> 00:22:36.090
 They\'ve come, and
 they\'ve gone.
 
 00:22:36.090 --> 00:22:38.950
 
 
 00:22:38.950 --> 00:22:43.360
 Over the past 540 million years,
 there have been five
 
 00:22:43.360 --> 00:22:47.770
 major extinctions when over
 50% of the planet\'s animal
 
 00:22:47.770 --> 00:22:50.830
 species were wiped out.
 
 00:22:50.830 --> 00:22:53.620
 When I began my career, we
 thought that every one of the
 
 00:22:53.620 --> 00:22:56.565
 mass extinctions had been caused
 by a large body impact,
 
 00:22:56.565 --> 00:22:59.035
 a comet or an asteroid
 hitting the planet.
 
 00:22:59.035 --> 00:23:01.360
 It made great sense.
 
 00:23:01.360 --> 00:23:05.320
 But Professor Ward and many
 other paleontologists now
 
 00:23:05.320 --> 00:23:08.660
 believe that the extinctions
 weren\'t caused by a huge
 
 00:23:08.660 --> 00:23:13.320
 asteroid, but by a
 tiny bacterium.
 
 00:23:13.320 --> 00:23:16.660
 The edge of this really stagnant
 river in Australia is
 
 00:23:16.660 --> 00:23:19.330
 a great place to illustrate what
 happened at the end of
 
 00:23:19.330 --> 00:23:21.090
 the Devonian.
 
 00:23:21.090 --> 00:23:24.120
 All over the edge of this,
 we find bacteria.
 
 00:23:24.120 --> 00:23:26.550
 This is blue green algae,
 we call it.
 
 00:23:26.550 --> 00:23:27.450
 But it is a bacterium.
 
 00:23:27.450 --> 00:23:30.330
 It\'s here because there\'s almost
 no oxygen in this water
 
 00:23:30.330 --> 00:23:31.950
 because it\'s so hot.
 
 00:23:31.950 --> 00:23:34.950
 These things cover over whatever
 animals were present
 
 00:23:34.950 --> 00:23:36.125
 and suffocate them.
 
 00:23:36.125 --> 00:23:38.190
 Well, the same thing happened
 at the end of the Devonian
 
 00:23:38.190 --> 00:23:39.760
 with these coral reefs.
 
 00:23:39.760 --> 00:23:42.340
 The water got so warm,
 it lost its oxygen.
 
 00:23:42.340 --> 00:23:44.620
 The microbes grew over
 the top of the corals
 
 00:23:44.620 --> 00:23:46.300
 and smothered them.
 
 00:23:46.300 --> 00:23:48.360
 Microbes, which love hot.
 
 00:23:48.360 --> 00:23:52.270
 Microbes, which love dirty,
 oxygen-free water.
 
 00:23:52.270 --> 00:23:57.150
 Microbes, which use slime to
 build, and to build upon what
 
 00:23:57.150 --> 00:23:59.470
 the animals left behind.
 
 00:23:59.470 --> 00:24:02.530
 These bacteria are anaerobic.
 
 00:24:02.530 --> 00:24:04.990
 Oxygen is like kryptonite
 to them.
 
 00:24:04.990 --> 00:24:08.640
 It kills them on contact.
 
 00:24:08.640 --> 00:24:11.890
 So if the ancient coral reefs
 were covered with
 
 00:24:11.890 --> 00:24:16.010
 oxygen-hating microbes, the
 ocean must have lost all of
 
 00:24:16.010 --> 00:24:17.460
 its oxygen.
 
 00:24:17.460 --> 00:24:19.000
 But how could that
 have happened?
 
 00:24:19.000 --> 00:24:24.600
 
 
 00:24:24.600 --> 00:24:28.640
 Oxygen gets mixed into the ocean
 by the churning action
 
 00:24:28.640 --> 00:24:32.520
 of waves, currents, and
 tides on the surface.
 
 00:24:32.520 --> 00:24:36.510
 But it\'s the great ocean
 conveyor that takes oxygen to
 
 00:24:36.510 --> 00:24:39.330
 the ocean\'s deepest depths.
 
 00:24:39.330 --> 00:24:43.500
 The conveyor moves surface water
 warmed at the equator
 
 00:24:43.500 --> 00:24:45.180
 toward the poles.
 
 00:24:45.180 --> 00:24:49.510
 As the water cools, it becomes
 denser and sinks to the deep
 
 00:24:49.510 --> 00:24:52.960
 ocean, taking life sustaining
 oxygen with it.
 
 00:24:52.960 --> 00:24:56.100
 
 
 00:24:56.100 --> 00:24:58.240
 How do we turn off
 the conveyor?
 
 00:24:58.240 --> 00:25:00.830
 We simply remove the difference
 in temperature
 
 00:25:00.830 --> 00:25:03.210
 between the poles
 and the tropics.
 
 00:25:03.210 --> 00:25:04.490
 We warm the poles.
 
 00:25:04.490 --> 00:25:06.860
 We keep the tropics the
 same temperature.
 
 00:25:06.860 --> 00:25:11.940
 That conveyor, which is driven
 by heat differences, stops.
 
 00:25:11.940 --> 00:25:15.450
 When it stops, we lose oxygen
 on the bottom, and we start
 
 00:25:15.450 --> 00:25:17.060
 the mechanism to mass
 extinction.
 
 00:25:17.060 --> 00:25:23.920
 
 
 00:25:23.920 --> 00:25:27.310
 Once the conveyor shuts down
 and the ocean becomes
 
 00:25:27.310 --> 00:25:31.346
 stagnant, a deadly chain
 reaction is put in motion.
 
 00:25:31.346 --> 00:25:34.420
 
 
 00:25:34.420 --> 00:25:37.660
 The reefs were in water that
 became warmer and warmer.
 
 00:25:37.660 --> 00:25:39.680
 Warm water holds less oxygen.
 
 00:25:39.680 --> 00:25:41.990
 The animals strangled
 and died.
 
 00:25:41.990 --> 00:25:45.430
 The microbes grew right
 over the top.
 
 00:25:45.430 --> 00:25:47.400
 Worse things then started
 to happen.
 
 00:25:47.400 --> 00:25:50.790
 In that warm water, not only did
 we get green microbes like
 
 00:25:50.790 --> 00:25:54.140
 this, but a second entire
 type began to grow.
 
 00:25:54.140 --> 00:25:56.410
 A microbe that produces
 the very toxic
 
 00:25:56.410 --> 00:25:59.250
 poison hydrogen sulfide.
 
 00:25:59.250 --> 00:26:01.300
 Hydrogen sulfide is a killer.
 
 00:26:01.300 --> 00:26:05.530
 This lethal form of bacterium
 gets its energy by breaking
 
 00:26:05.530 --> 00:26:07.210
 down sulfur.
 
 00:26:07.210 --> 00:26:11.460
 However in doing so, it creates
 hydrogen sulfide, a
 
 00:26:11.460 --> 00:26:13.232
 deadly byproduct.
 
 00:26:13.232 --> 00:26:16.200
 These microbes began to take
 over not just the reefs, not
 
 00:26:16.200 --> 00:26:18.700
 just the shallow waters,
 but all the oceans.
 
 00:26:18.700 --> 00:26:22.280
 
 
 00:26:22.280 --> 00:26:24.930
 Huge bubbles of hydrogen sulfide
 come out of solution.
 
 00:26:24.930 --> 00:26:28.500
 They hit the surface, they pop
 out, they rise into the sky.
 
 00:26:28.500 --> 00:26:32.140
 
 
 00:26:32.140 --> 00:26:34.660
 In so doing, they poison
 the animals.
 
 00:26:34.660 --> 00:26:37.290
 They poison plants on land.
 
 00:26:37.290 --> 00:26:40.090
 They fill the atmosphere with
 toxic hydrogen sulfide.
 
 00:26:40.090 --> 00:26:44.470
 
 
 00:26:44.470 --> 00:26:46.760
 The bodies are stacked up
 on the beach or on the
 
 00:26:46.760 --> 00:26:47.920
 bottom of the ocean.
 
 00:26:47.920 --> 00:26:49.870
 But the ocean itself has
 changed, changed
 
 00:26:49.870 --> 00:26:51.420
 entirely in its color.
 
 00:26:51.420 --> 00:26:52.560
 It\'s purple now.
 
 00:26:52.560 --> 00:26:54.563
 It\'s totally filled with
 purple sulfur bacteria.
 
 00:26:54.563 --> 00:26:57.870
 
 
 00:26:57.870 --> 00:27:00.740
 This sky takes on a vaguely
 greenish cast.
 
 00:27:00.740 --> 00:27:03.920
 A purple ocean, a green sky, a
 world without animals, a world
 
 00:27:03.920 --> 00:27:05.980
 replete, filled with microbes.
 
 00:27:05.980 --> 00:27:09.530
 That\'s the aftermath of a
 greenhouse mass extinction.
 
 00:27:09.530 --> 00:27:13.220
 Scientists now believe that
 this catastrophic chain of
 
 00:27:13.220 --> 00:27:17.930
 events caused all but one of
 the five major extinctions.
 
 00:27:17.930 --> 00:27:21.210
 Well the mass extinctions, we
 now believe, were times when
 
 00:27:21.210 --> 00:27:23.730
 the evil empire, if you will,
 the first life on earth, the
 
 00:27:23.730 --> 00:27:26.750
 microbial life, fights back.
 
 00:27:26.750 --> 00:27:28.950
 It makes a huge comeback.
 
 00:27:28.950 --> 00:27:30.560
 We animals think with our
 
 00:27:30.560 --> 00:27:32.000
 complexity, we\'re here forever.
 
 00:27:32.000 --> 00:27:33.640
 But that\'s not the case.
 
 00:27:33.640 --> 00:27:37.840
 Environmental conditions are
 so narrow for we animals.
 
 00:27:37.840 --> 00:27:40.110
 Our conditions for temperature
 are narrow.
 
 00:27:40.110 --> 00:27:42.700
 For acidity, for the
 salt in the water.
 
 00:27:42.700 --> 00:27:45.170
 Slight variation, and we die.
 
 00:27:45.170 --> 00:27:47.270
 Microbes can take hotter
 temperatures, colder
 
 00:27:47.270 --> 00:27:47.840
 temperatures.
 
 00:27:47.840 --> 00:27:50.980
 Greater acid, less acid, greater
 salt, less salt.
 
 00:27:50.980 --> 00:27:56.710
 In all ways, they\'re much more
 widely adapted and adaptable.
 
 00:27:56.710 --> 00:28:00.230
 Microbes will be the last
 life on this planet.
 
 00:28:00.230 --> 00:28:02.620
 But are there certain creatures
 that are better
 
 00:28:02.620 --> 00:28:05.225
 suited for surviving
 mass extinctions?
 
 00:28:05.225 --> 00:28:09.000
 
 
 00:28:09.000 --> 00:28:12.136
 Extinction is the fate
 of all species.
 
 00:28:12.136 --> 00:28:16.530
 However, there are creatures
 called living fossils that are
 
 00:28:16.530 --> 00:28:20.210
 somehow able to survive the
 constant onslaught of new
 
 00:28:20.210 --> 00:28:22.550
 predators and drastically
 changing
 
 00:28:22.550 --> 00:28:24.125
 conditions in the ocean.
 
 00:28:24.125 --> 00:28:26.750
 
 
 00:28:26.750 --> 00:28:28.780
 Just like in any good
 army movie,
 
 00:28:28.780 --> 00:28:29.870
 there\'s always some survivors.
 
 00:28:29.870 --> 00:28:31.960
 You can\'t wipe out everybody.
 
 00:28:31.960 --> 00:28:35.540
 In the mass extinctions, not all
 the animals got wiped out.
 
 00:28:35.540 --> 00:28:37.267
 Obviously, here we are,
 surrounded by
 
 00:28:37.267 --> 00:28:38.517
 this animal-rich world.
 
 00:28:38.517 --> 00:28:43.560
 
 
 00:28:43.560 --> 00:28:46.500
 Living fossils are just examples
 of the fact that once
 
 00:28:46.500 --> 00:28:49.590
 in a while, evolution gets
 it supremely right
 
 00:28:49.590 --> 00:28:51.100
 early in the game.
 
 00:28:51.100 --> 00:28:52.850
 You never have to
 change anything.
 
 00:28:52.850 --> 00:29:01.440
 
 
 00:29:01.440 --> 00:29:04.365
 But really, one of the most
 interesting areas of research
 
 00:29:04.365 --> 00:29:06.386
 is to figure out why.
 
 00:29:06.386 --> 00:29:10.290
 Why did some die and
 why did some live?
 
 00:29:10.290 --> 00:29:14.300
 To answer that question,
 Professor Peter Ward is going
 
 00:29:14.300 --> 00:29:17.500
 in search of one of the greatest
 survivors this planet
 
 00:29:17.500 --> 00:29:19.510
 has ever known, the nautilus.
 
 00:29:19.510 --> 00:29:22.520
 
 
 00:29:22.520 --> 00:29:24.350
 It wasn\'t the biggest, or the
 
 00:29:24.350 --> 00:29:27.080
 deadliest, or even the fastest.
 
 00:29:27.080 --> 00:29:30.780
 And yet somehow, it outlasted
 them all.
 
 00:29:30.780 --> 00:29:35.140
 Here\'s an animal, 500
 million years.
 
 00:29:35.140 --> 00:29:38.820
 I put my 500 million year old
 nautilus up against any other
 
 00:29:38.820 --> 00:29:40.930
 animal on this planet.
 
 00:29:40.930 --> 00:29:43.910
 How do you survive
 500,000 years?
 
 00:29:43.910 --> 00:29:46.240
 I mean, humans are only
 200,000 years.
 
 00:29:46.240 --> 00:29:47.810
 We\'re not a million.
 
 00:29:47.810 --> 00:29:48.840
 500 million.
 
 00:29:48.840 --> 00:29:49.650
 They\'ve got secrets.
 
 00:29:49.650 --> 00:29:50.600
 They know something.
 
 00:29:50.600 --> 00:29:51.620
 They\'re doing something right.
 
 00:29:51.620 --> 00:29:53.480
 Well, and what have they got
 to teach us about surviving
 
 00:29:53.480 --> 00:29:54.930
 mass extinctions?
 
 00:29:54.930 --> 00:29:57.270
 So could be some pretty
 important things to learn.
 
 00:29:57.270 --> 00:30:03.850
 
 
 00:30:03.850 --> 00:30:07.150
 Professor Ward and Andy Dunstan
 from the University of
 
 00:30:07.150 --> 00:30:11.680
 Queensland have come to Osprey
 reef to trap nautilus and
 
 00:30:11.680 --> 00:30:15.036
 study their unique adaptations
 for survival.
 
 00:30:15.036 --> 00:30:16.494
 OK, here you go Pete.
 
 00:30:16.494 --> 00:30:16.980
 Got it.
 
 00:30:16.980 --> 00:30:18.438
 One piggy-back trap.
 
 00:30:18.438 --> 00:30:19.688
 Got it.
 
 00:30:19.688 --> 00:30:32.560
 
 
 00:30:32.560 --> 00:30:37.570
 The traps will be lowered into
 the Coral Sea 150 meters down,
 
 00:30:37.570 --> 00:30:39.320
 the depth at which
 the nocturnal
 
 00:30:39.320 --> 00:30:40.880
 nautilus like to feed.
 
 00:30:40.880 --> 00:30:43.900
 
 
 00:30:43.900 --> 00:30:47.130
 During the day, the nautilus
 stay undercover.
 
 00:30:47.130 --> 00:30:49.860
 But as night approaches,
 they venture out
 
 00:30:49.860 --> 00:30:51.193
 onto the reef to feed.
 
 00:30:51.193 --> 00:30:56.640
 
 
 00:30:56.640 --> 00:31:00.190
 The nautilus can\'t see in the
 dark, but they use their
 
 00:31:00.190 --> 00:31:03.370
 tentacles to smell and track
 down their prey.
 
 00:31:03.370 --> 00:31:07.070
 
 
 00:31:07.070 --> 00:31:11.790
 Hard to imagine today, but 500
 million years ago, these
 
 00:31:11.790 --> 00:31:16.490
 humble looking creatures ruled
 as the ocean\'s top predator.
 
 00:31:16.490 --> 00:31:20.680
 The nautilus use their mobility
 to silently stalk
 
 00:31:20.680 --> 00:31:24.290
 crab-like creatures called
 trilobites, attacking from
 
 00:31:24.290 --> 00:31:27.700
 above and snapping through their
 thin armour with their
 
 00:31:27.700 --> 00:31:28.950
 powerful jaws.
 
 00:31:28.950 --> 00:31:31.380
 
 
 00:31:31.380 --> 00:31:33.550
 Evolution is very
 much like a war.
 
 00:31:33.550 --> 00:31:36.190
 And we can think of the
 nautiloids as the first
 
 00:31:36.190 --> 00:31:38.355
 airplanes coming in
 on ground troops.
 
 00:31:38.355 --> 00:31:43.340
 And so, the ability of them to
 crunch through creatures with
 
 00:31:43.340 --> 00:31:46.110
 their armour, thought they
 were already impervious.
 
 00:31:46.110 --> 00:31:48.130
 No, these are like
 big tank busters.
 
 00:31:48.130 --> 00:31:50.740
 These things are coming in,
 swooping down, busting open
 
 00:31:50.740 --> 00:31:53.130
 these trilobites, and then
 eating the crew.
 
 00:31:53.130 --> 00:31:58.480
 
 
 00:31:58.480 --> 00:32:02.420
 The nautilus is no longer the
 top predator on this reef.
 
 00:32:02.420 --> 00:32:03.800
 It\'s the shark.
 
 00:32:03.800 --> 00:32:06.950
 Another living fossil that
 has defied the odds.
 
 00:32:06.950 --> 00:32:11.980
 
 
 00:32:11.980 --> 00:32:16.040
 Sharks have been around for at
 least 400 million years, and
 
 00:32:16.040 --> 00:32:18.770
 have flourished in every
 part of the ocean.
 
 00:32:18.770 --> 00:32:21.280
 
 
 00:32:21.280 --> 00:32:25.180
 Like the nautilus, they respire
 while swimming, and
 
 00:32:25.180 --> 00:32:26.845
 can survive low oxygen.
 
 00:32:26.845 --> 00:32:32.560
 
 
 00:32:32.560 --> 00:32:36.780
 But it\'s their hydrodynamic,
 streamlined body design that
 
 00:32:36.780 --> 00:32:40.000
 gives them such a tactical
 advantage over all of the
 
 00:32:40.000 --> 00:32:42.640
 other creatures in the ocean.
 
 00:32:42.640 --> 00:32:46.770
 All sharks have a pliable
 skeleton made from cartilage,
 
 00:32:46.770 --> 00:32:48.750
 with no bones.
 
 00:32:48.750 --> 00:32:51.550
 It gives them strength
 without weight.
 
 00:32:51.550 --> 00:32:55.690
 And it helps that sharks will
 eat just about anything.
 
 00:32:55.690 --> 00:32:58.820
 During the mass extinctions,
 sharks fed off the dead
 
 00:32:58.820 --> 00:33:02.090
 species piling up on
 the ocean bottom.
 
 00:33:02.090 --> 00:33:05.980
 And when most of the fish were
 gone, well, there were always
 
 00:33:05.980 --> 00:33:07.230
 other sharks.
 
 00:33:07.230 --> 00:33:13.340
 
 
 00:33:13.340 --> 00:33:16.980
 This nautilus is going to be
 fitted with a transmitter that
 
 00:33:16.980 --> 00:33:19.790
 will allow the scientists
 to monitor its every
 
 00:33:19.790 --> 00:33:21.040
 move along the reef.
 
 00:33:21.040 --> 00:33:35.320
 
 
 00:33:35.320 --> 00:33:38.870
 With this particular
 transmitter, it will give us
 
 00:33:38.870 --> 00:33:40.930
 two very important bits
 of information.
 
 00:33:40.930 --> 00:33:44.690
 At any time, we can find out
 what depth he is at, and also
 
 00:33:44.690 --> 00:33:46.490
 his position.
 
 00:33:46.490 --> 00:33:49.740
 And it\'s the depth where the
 nautilus live and reproduce
 
 00:33:49.740 --> 00:33:52.530
 that is the key to understanding
 how they
 
 00:33:52.530 --> 00:33:55.115
 survived what the dinosaurs
 couldn\'t.
 
 00:33:55.115 --> 00:33:57.310
 A deadly asteroid impact.
 
 00:33:57.310 --> 00:34:09.760
 
 
 00:34:09.760 --> 00:34:12.520
 The environmental impact of an
 asteroid or comet on the
 
 00:34:12.520 --> 00:34:14.909
 surface is that the surface
 of the sea really
 
 00:34:14.909 --> 00:34:16.820
 got fried and acidified.
 
 00:34:16.820 --> 00:34:21.000
 
 
 00:34:21.000 --> 00:34:24.800
 If the nautilus were living in
 the shallow ocean, they too
 
 00:34:24.800 --> 00:34:26.739
 would have been wiped out.
 
 00:34:26.739 --> 00:34:28.070
 But they weren\'t.
 
 00:34:28.070 --> 00:34:31.650
 They had already been
 chased away.
 
 00:34:31.650 --> 00:34:34.489
 After millions of years of
 being preyed upon by the
 
 00:34:34.489 --> 00:34:39.110
 nautilus, the trilobites and
 early fish had evolved.
 
 00:34:39.110 --> 00:34:43.980
 They became the bigger,
 faster predators.
 
 00:34:43.980 --> 00:34:47.790
 The nautilus was now
 under attack.
 
 00:34:47.790 --> 00:34:50.630
 If they could, they would
 live at the surface.
 
 00:34:50.630 --> 00:34:52.260
 That\'s where they evolved.
 
 00:34:52.260 --> 00:34:55.219
 But they have been shoved
 down by the predators.
 
 00:34:55.219 --> 00:34:58.920
 Shoved down by changing
 conditions in the ocean.
 
 00:34:58.920 --> 00:35:03.370
 Ironically, those prehistoric
 predators saved the nautilus
 
 00:35:03.370 --> 00:35:06.613
 from extinction when they
 pursued it into the depths.
 
 00:35:06.613 --> 00:35:09.390
 
 
 00:35:09.390 --> 00:35:11.190
 There was this big asteroid
 collision.
 
 00:35:11.190 --> 00:35:13.500
 The surface oceans
 are wiped out.
 
 00:35:13.500 --> 00:35:17.560
 Deep down, 600 feet deep, the
 tiny little nautilus\' are just
 
 00:35:17.560 --> 00:35:19.290
 biding their time.
 
 00:35:19.290 --> 00:35:21.260
 When they finally come up,
 the arthropods and the
 
 00:35:21.260 --> 00:35:23.050
 fish are all gone.
 
 00:35:23.050 --> 00:35:25.900
 So what we have is this one
 survivor of that one great
 
 00:35:25.900 --> 00:35:27.150
 catastrophe.
 
 00:35:27.150 --> 00:35:31.630
 
 
 00:35:31.630 --> 00:35:35.310
 Professor Ward contends that
 ultimately, the nautilus
 
 00:35:35.310 --> 00:35:39.650
 survival record is based on
 unique adaptations, good
 
 00:35:39.650 --> 00:35:43.080
 genes, and a measure
 of good luck.
 
 00:35:43.080 --> 00:35:47.470
 Luck which may now
 be running out.
 
 00:35:47.470 --> 00:35:50.320
 They\'ve gone through there for
 every single one of the big
 
 00:35:50.320 --> 00:35:52.910
 five mass extinctions.
 
 00:35:52.910 --> 00:35:55.290
 They\'ve gotten through
 greenhouses extinctions.
 
 00:35:55.290 --> 00:35:57.630
 They\'ve gotten through
 asteroid extinctions.
 
 00:35:57.630 --> 00:36:00.910
 They\'ve done it through a
 multiplicity of ways, and luck
 
 00:36:00.910 --> 00:36:03.150
 was certainly one of them.
 
 00:36:03.150 --> 00:36:05.200
 The real question now for a
 lot of these animals and
 
 00:36:05.200 --> 00:36:07.280
 plants is, yeah, they\'ve gotten
 through the past.
 
 00:36:07.280 --> 00:36:09.240
 But will they get through
 the near future?
 
 00:36:09.240 --> 00:36:12.770
 And a lot of people say that we
 are in a sixth extinction.
 
 00:36:12.770 --> 00:36:15.530
 I don\'t know if we are,
 or we are not.
 
 00:36:15.530 --> 00:36:18.580
 But the chances are that
 biodiversity is dropping and
 
 00:36:18.580 --> 00:36:19.740
 dropping fast right now.
 
 00:36:19.740 --> 00:36:22.050
 So you ask, can these long-term
 
 00:36:22.050 --> 00:36:24.510
 survivors survive us?
 
 00:36:24.510 --> 00:36:28.820
 Living fossils stopped evolving,
 while other species
 
 00:36:28.820 --> 00:36:32.520
 made incredible adaptations that
 would allow them to crawl
 
 00:36:32.520 --> 00:36:34.970
 out of the ocean
 and onto land.
 
 00:36:34.970 --> 00:36:56.790
 
 
 00:36:56.790 --> 00:37:01.190
 In 2004, Ted Daeschler, a
 paleontologist with the
 
 00:37:01.190 --> 00:37:05.560
 Academy of Natural Sciences in
 Philadelphia, had the chance
 
 00:37:05.560 --> 00:37:11.490
 to travel back in time, back
 to when the first creature
 
 00:37:11.490 --> 00:37:14.360
 crawled out of the ocean
 and onto land.
 
 00:37:14.360 --> 00:37:16.060
 Or onto the mud,
 more precisely.
 
 00:37:16.060 --> 00:37:25.930
 
 
 00:37:25.930 --> 00:37:29.730
 It was up in the high Canadian
 Arctic where Ted uncovered a
 
 00:37:29.730 --> 00:37:33.340
 375 million year old fossil.
 
 00:37:33.340 --> 00:37:37.250
 It was a missing link that
 reinforced Darwin\'s original
 
 00:37:37.250 --> 00:37:43.110
 theory that land-based animals
 originally came from the sea.
 
 00:37:43.110 --> 00:37:45.740
 When we went up to Ellesmere
 Island and we first started to
 
 00:37:45.740 --> 00:37:48.370
 see it in our quarry, and we
 were first excavating and
 
 00:37:48.370 --> 00:37:53.260
 realizing we actually
 had found something.
 
 00:37:53.260 --> 00:37:58.670
 One of our colleagues saw two
 jaws stuck to a merge from the
 
 00:37:58.670 --> 00:38:00.270
 rock and called us over.
 
 00:38:00.270 --> 00:38:03.310
 And we all got very excited,
 because when you see two jaws
 
 00:38:03.310 --> 00:38:07.460
 coming together in articulation,
 as we say, then
 
 00:38:07.460 --> 00:38:09.790
 perhaps the whole skull
 is going to be there.
 
 00:38:09.790 --> 00:38:13.260
 And indeed, as we started to
 excavate a little further, we
 
 00:38:13.260 --> 00:38:14.230
 saw these two jaws.
 
 00:38:14.230 --> 00:38:15.470
 We saw a piece of a snout.
 
 00:38:15.470 --> 00:38:19.130
 And we knew that we\'d found a
 complete skull with jaws.
 
 00:38:19.130 --> 00:38:21.445
 And if we were lucky, even
 more of the body.
 
 00:38:21.445 --> 00:38:24.770
 And that was the first big
 find of Tiktaalik.
 
 00:38:24.770 --> 00:38:32.130
 
 
 00:38:32.130 --> 00:38:35.750
 There were many of those Eureka
 moments, but it\'s one
 
 00:38:35.750 --> 00:38:38.410
 the reasons I\'m in paleontology
 is for those
 
 00:38:38.410 --> 00:38:39.720
 discovery moments.
 
 00:38:39.720 --> 00:38:42.290
 It\'s really exciting.
 
 00:38:42.290 --> 00:38:46.250
 They dubbed the fossil
 Tiktaalik, or fishapod, half
 
 00:38:46.250 --> 00:38:50.870
 fish and half four-footed
 animal, the iconic creature
 
 00:38:50.870 --> 00:38:53.920
 that changed the earth forever
 when it crawled out of the
 
 00:38:53.920 --> 00:38:56.630
 primordial ooze and onto land.
 
 00:38:56.630 --> 00:38:58.330
 So when we look at
 the Tiktaalik.
 
 00:38:58.330 --> 00:39:01.620
 We see an animal that has a lot
 of features of fish, but
 
 00:39:01.620 --> 00:39:04.640
 also many features of the
 earliest limbed animals.
 
 00:39:04.640 --> 00:39:08.170
 And that\'s what makes Tiktaalik
 very important.
 
 00:39:08.170 --> 00:39:12.580
 It shows us that transition
 between finned animals and
 
 00:39:12.580 --> 00:39:15.720
 limbed animals.
 
 00:39:15.720 --> 00:39:19.780
 Ted has come to this coastal
 estuary here in Delaware Bay
 
 00:39:19.780 --> 00:39:23.630
 along the Atlantic Ocean, to
 get a better idea of the
 
 00:39:23.630 --> 00:39:28.421
 natural environment where
 Tiktaalik first emerged.
 
 00:39:28.421 --> 00:39:31.230
 One of the questions that always
 interests us is to
 
 00:39:31.230 --> 00:39:33.740
 understand the selective
 pressures that would have
 
 00:39:33.740 --> 00:39:37.200
 created animals like Tiktaalik
 And the environments where we
 
 00:39:37.200 --> 00:39:40.950
 find the fossils are ancient
 settings, not unlike where I\'m
 
 00:39:40.950 --> 00:39:45.510
 standing right now, the flood
 plains of streams, very muddy.
 
 00:39:45.510 --> 00:39:47.830
 Lots of these sort of
 backwater settings.
 
 00:39:47.830 --> 00:39:50.110
 And these are places where it
 would\'ve been a selective
 
 00:39:50.110 --> 00:39:53.980
 advantage to be able to move
 through shallow water, around
 
 00:39:53.980 --> 00:39:57.510
 plants, around stumps,
 and find your prey.
 
 00:39:57.510 --> 00:40:00.110
 And also to escape the
 larger predators.
 
 00:40:00.110 --> 00:40:06.000
 
 
 00:40:06.000 --> 00:40:09.580
 In Tiktaalik, we see the
 emergence of several physical
 
 00:40:09.580 --> 00:40:12.160
 characteristics for
 the first time.
 
 00:40:12.160 --> 00:40:15.620
 Characteristics that would
 be incorporated by many
 
 00:40:15.620 --> 00:40:17.970
 subsequent species.
 
 00:40:17.970 --> 00:40:21.170
 Looking at Tiktaalik, we\'re
 looking at an animal that\'s
 
 00:40:21.170 --> 00:40:25.990
 really at the base of the branch
 in the tree of life
 
 00:40:25.990 --> 00:40:29.280
 that leads to all
 limbed animals.
 
 00:40:29.280 --> 00:40:30.520
 And we\'re a limbed animal.
 
 00:40:30.520 --> 00:40:34.450
 In fact, there\'s many features
 of Tiktaalik that we see in
 
 00:40:34.450 --> 00:40:38.550
 all of the subsequent limbed
 animals, including ourselves.
 
 00:40:38.550 --> 00:40:41.000
 Turn your head from
 side to side.
 
 00:40:41.000 --> 00:40:43.810
 This simple movement
 all started with
 
 00:40:43.810 --> 00:40:46.620
 this ancient creature.
 
 00:40:46.620 --> 00:40:50.030
 Tiktaalik is the first
 vertebrate to develop a free
 
 00:40:50.030 --> 00:40:52.770
 neck that allows the
 head to move
 
 00:40:52.770 --> 00:40:54.875
 independently of the shoulders.
 
 00:40:54.875 --> 00:40:59.380
 A good adaptation for catching
 prey in confined environments
 
 00:40:59.380 --> 00:41:00.920
 like a swamp.
 
 00:41:00.920 --> 00:41:02.600
 And there were other anatomical
 
 00:41:02.600 --> 00:41:04.950
 innovations that stuck.
 
 00:41:04.950 --> 00:41:08.840
 Tiktaalik developed mobility
 in its wrist joint.
 
 00:41:08.840 --> 00:41:12.430
 It could flex the wrist to
 propel itself forward, a
 
 00:41:12.430 --> 00:41:15.780
 physical trait that was passed
 down through all limbed
 
 00:41:15.780 --> 00:41:20.380
 animals, all the way to us.
 
 00:41:20.380 --> 00:41:23.190
 It\'s important to realize that
 Tiktaalik was an animal that
 
 00:41:23.190 --> 00:41:26.580
 was developing features that
 were useful for survival in
 
 00:41:26.580 --> 00:41:31.170
 that environment, to catch prey
 and to escape predation.
 
 00:41:31.170 --> 00:41:33.480
 And then later on,
 as new ecological
 
 00:41:33.480 --> 00:41:35.090
 opportunities occurred--
 
 00:41:35.090 --> 00:41:39.130
 and we\'re talking millions
 and millions of years--
 
 00:41:39.130 --> 00:41:42.720
 descendants of Tiktaalik
 developed additional features
 
 00:41:42.720 --> 00:41:46.320
 that allowed them to exploit
 the land, and eventually be
 
 00:41:46.320 --> 00:41:48.410
 free of the water completely.
 
 00:41:48.410 --> 00:41:51.080
 So what we see in Tiktaalik is
 an animal that was still
 
 00:41:51.080 --> 00:41:54.930
 primarily aquatic, but
 developing the features that
 
 00:41:54.930 --> 00:41:58.140
 would become useful in the
 future for animals that would
 
 00:41:58.140 --> 00:42:00.840
 exploit the land.
 
 00:42:00.840 --> 00:42:04.590
 Each of us carries over three
 and a half billion years of
 
 00:42:04.590 --> 00:42:07.120
 history inside of us.
 
 00:42:07.120 --> 00:42:12.010
 In every organ, cell, and gene
 in our bodies is a physical
 
 00:42:12.010 --> 00:42:15.700
 connection to the rest of
 life on our planet.
 
 00:42:15.700 --> 00:42:19.260
 To make sense of our own
 bodies, we need only to
 
 00:42:19.260 --> 00:42:22.970
 examine the evolutionary
 history we share with
 
 00:42:22.970 --> 00:42:27.690
 everything, from microbes
 to mammals.
 
 00:42:27.690 --> 00:42:30.130
 When we look at our own bodies,
 we can see that we
 
 00:42:30.130 --> 00:42:33.410
 share an awful lot in common
 with our closest relatives,
 
 00:42:33.410 --> 00:42:34.180
 the great apes.
 
 00:42:34.180 --> 00:42:37.460
 And further down to amphibians
 and even fishes.
 
 00:42:37.460 --> 00:42:40.660
 And Tiktaalik is that connection
 to fishes.
 
 00:42:40.660 --> 00:42:44.600
 But we can go even deeper in the
 evolutionary tree, and we
 
 00:42:44.600 --> 00:42:46.700
 can see even more
 primitive forms.
 
 00:42:46.700 --> 00:42:50.490
 And the innovations and the
 adaptations of those primitive
 
 00:42:50.490 --> 00:42:52.970
 forms for life in the oceans.
 
 00:42:52.970 --> 00:42:55.810
 It\'s something that we
 still carry with us.
 
 00:42:55.810 --> 00:42:58.590
 And so I think we really
 do have this deep, deep
 
 00:42:58.590 --> 00:43:02.890
 connection to our history, which
 started in the ocean.
 
 00:43:02.890 --> 00:43:04.520
 And it\'s here in
 our own bodies.
 
 00:43:04.520 --> 00:43:06.195
 We can see it.
 
 00:43:06.195 --> 00:43:07.650
 And it\'s in our psyche
 as well.
 
 00:43:07.650 --> 00:43:20.550
 
 
 00:43:20.550 --> 00:43:51.472
 [MUSIC PLAYING]
Distributor: Bullfrog Films
Length: 44 minutes
Date: 2012
Genre: Expository
Language: English
Grade: 8-12, College, Adult
		Color/BW: 
		 
	
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