1
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[water trickling]

2
00:00:05,797 --> 00:00:09,134
[narrator] <i>Beneath the waves,</i>

3
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<i>lives a mysterious creature,</i>

4
00:00:12,971 --> 00:00:16,307
<i>older than the dinosaurs.</i>

5
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<i>Octopus!</i>

6
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<i>So incredibly alien.</i>

7
00:00:31,614 --> 00:00:34,409
<i>Changing color in an instant.</i>

8
00:00:34,993 --> 00:00:39,247
<i>Shapeshifting into almost anything.</i>

9
00:00:40,248 --> 00:00:44,627
<i>They are the planet's
true masters of disguise.</i>

10
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<i>Now we're discovering,</i>

11
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<i>they are one of the
most intelligent beings</i>

12
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<i>on the planet.</i>

13
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<i>Two years immersed in their world,</i>

14
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<i>reveals they use tools.</i>

15
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I felt completely shocked at
the level of sophistication

16
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that I was witnessing.

17
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[narrator] <i>Think creatively.</i>

18
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<i>Communicate with other species.</i>

19
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<i>And maybe even dream.</i>

20
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I wonder sometimes if the
octopuses are dreaming about me,

21
00:01:25,085 --> 00:01:28,046
wondering what I am, who I am.

22
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[narrator] <i>We're just
beginning to understand</i>

23
00:01:32,425 --> 00:01:34,677
<i>what they have to tell us.</i>

24
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I have just had a
conversation with an octopus.

25
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[♪ theme music plays]

26
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[narrator] <i>Deep beneath
the ocean's surface,</i>

27
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<i>a female giant Pacific octopus,</i>

28
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<i>guards her eggs inside a hidden cave.</i>

29
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<i>She won't leave them, even to eat.</i>

30
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<i>They need her protection.</i>

31
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<i>She's been caring for them
for over seven months.</i>

32
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<i>Slowly starving to death.</i>

33
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<i>Keeping her babies safe,</i>

34
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<i>will be the last thing she'll ever do.</i>

35
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<i>This tiny octopus, about the
size of a grain of rice,</i>

36
00:03:20,617 --> 00:03:24,287
<i>will head out into the world alone.</i>

37
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<i>Never knowing its mother or siblings.</i>

38
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<i>Octopuses are nature's ultimate loners.</i>

39
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<i>Or so, scientists thought.</i>

40
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<i>National Geographic Explorer
Dr. Alex Schnell</i>

41
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<i>has spent years studying
Animal Psychology.</i>

42
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<i>She believes octopuses are
more social than we realize.</i>

43
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[Dr. Alex Schnell] When you
spend time with an octopus,

44
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you get the feeling that
they're as curious about you

45
00:04:28,309 --> 00:04:30,853
as you are about them.

46
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[narrator] <i>Over many hours of
diving in Northern Australia,</i>

47
00:04:41,447 --> 00:04:45,743
<i>she's gained the trust</i>

48
00:04:49,247 --> 00:04:52,834
<i>of a shy female day octopus.</i>

49
00:04:55,128 --> 00:04:56,963
[Dr. Alex Schnell] There was
a moment between us

50
00:04:57,046 --> 00:05:00,717
where she must have decided that
I wasn't a threat to her

51
00:05:00,800 --> 00:05:03,136
and let me follow her around.

52
00:05:07,390 --> 00:05:09,976
[narrator] <i>Alex has even given her a name.</i>

53
00:05:12,520 --> 00:05:14,856
[Dr. Alex Schnell] She'd had
a little scar below her eye

54
00:05:14,939 --> 00:05:17,525
and that's how I named her Scarlett.

55
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[narrator] <i>Although she might accept Alex,</i>

56
00:05:27,410 --> 00:05:32,415
<i>octopuses like Scarlett are
usually wary of their own kind.</i>

57
00:05:38,338 --> 00:05:41,049
[Dr. Alex Schnell] They're
essentially lone rangers.

58
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In fact, octopuses that bump
into each other

59
00:05:47,805 --> 00:05:52,643
will often either mate,
eat each other, or both.

60
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[narrator] <i>So, when another
day octopus approaches Scarlett,</i>

61
00:06:02,820 --> 00:06:05,239
<i>Alex is concerned.</i>

62
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[Dr. Alex Schnell] I was so nervous.

63
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Because you never know how these
things are gonna turn out.

64
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[narrator] <i>They size each other up,</i>

65
00:06:24,509 --> 00:06:27,220
<i>both darken their skin color,</i>

66
00:06:30,723 --> 00:06:34,227
<i>often a sign of aggression.</i>

67
00:06:37,397 --> 00:06:41,025
<i>Scarlett needs to work out
what the intruder wants.</i>

68
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<i>And there's only one way to do that.</i>

69
00:06:49,617 --> 00:06:53,371
[Dr. Alex Schnell] The really
strange thing about day octopuses

70
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is that they have to touch each other

71
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to figure out what the other one wants.

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[narrator] <i>Scarlett uses her suckers,</i>

73
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<i>25 times more sensitive
than a human fingertip,</i>

74
00:07:11,013 --> 00:07:14,600
<i>to shake hands with the stranger.</i>

75
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<i>He's a male, looking for a mate.</i>

76
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<i>Scarlett's not interested.</i>

77
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<i>But he won't give up.</i>

78
00:07:41,294 --> 00:07:43,421
<i>Scarlett's in trouble.</i>

79
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<i>If he gets his arms tight around her,</i>

80
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<i>she could be suffocated.</i>

81
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[♪ tense music]

82
00:07:57,852 --> 00:08:01,189
[Dr. Alex Schnell] It was such a
relief to watch her break free.

83
00:08:04,484 --> 00:08:07,904
<i>[narrator] With social
interactions so dangerous,</i>

84
00:08:08,362 --> 00:08:10,698
<i>it's easy to see why an
octopus-like Scarlett</i>

85
00:08:10,781 --> 00:08:13,159
<i>would choose to be alone.</i>

86
00:08:22,084 --> 00:08:26,506
<i>But she seems perfectly
content to hang out with Alex.</i>

87
00:08:30,218 --> 00:08:32,720
[Dr. Alex Schnell] I can form a
social bond with an octopus

88
00:08:32,803 --> 00:08:38,142
so, maybe this idea that they're
complete loners isn't true.

89
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[narrator] <i>There's growing
evidence that octopuses are</i>

90
00:08:46,234 --> 00:08:51,239
<i>using their intelligence to
weigh up who to get close to.</i>

91
00:08:53,574 --> 00:08:58,162
<i>They're not anti-social, just discerning!</i>

92
00:08:59,830 --> 00:09:03,334
<i>Especially when it
comes to the opposite sex.</i>

93
00:09:11,008 --> 00:09:13,427
<i>To understand how octopuses choose</i>

94
00:09:13,511 --> 00:09:16,597
<i>who to spend their time with,</i>

95
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<i>we need to look at their dating habits.</i>

96
00:09:25,022 --> 00:09:30,444
<i>In Indonesia, the love life of one octopus</i>

97
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<i>is helping to rewrite the
rulebook on their relationships.</i>

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[squirting]

99
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<i>Trapped in his den by low tide,</i>

100
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<i>this male algae octopus
can't wait to be free.</i>

101
00:09:56,929 --> 00:10:00,433
<i>Because when the water rises,</i>

102
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<i>he goes looking for romance.</i>

103
00:10:12,320 --> 00:10:17,283
<i>Since he only comes out of
his den a few hours a day,</i>

104
00:10:18,784 --> 00:10:21,287
<i>he needs to fast-track it.</i>

105
00:10:24,624 --> 00:10:28,544
<i>Luckily, his zip code means mates aplenty.</i>

106
00:10:34,634 --> 00:10:36,177
<i>But all the local octopuses</i>

107
00:10:36,260 --> 00:10:38,512
<i>are making the most of high tide.</i>

108
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<i>It's octopus speed-dating!</i>

109
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[♪ curious music]

110
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<i>It's a social situation so unusual,</i>

111
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<i>marine biologist Dr. Christine Huffard</i>

112
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<i>has been studying it for two decades.</i>

113
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[Dr. Christine Huffard] The algae octopus

114
00:11:18,135 --> 00:11:20,971
interact frequently, many times a day.

115
00:11:23,432 --> 00:11:27,561
But the more I watch the algae
octopus the more questions I have

116
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about what really drives
these social interactions.

117
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[narrator] <i>Could this closely
packed arena be the reason</i>

118
00:11:37,738 --> 00:11:42,201
<i>algae octopuses break the mold
when it comes to socializing?</i>

119
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<i>The young male has spotted a female.</i>

120
00:11:54,922 --> 00:11:58,676
<i>But a more experienced striped
rival gets there first.</i>

121
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<i>His extended arm is an
open invitation to mate.</i>

122
00:12:07,184 --> 00:12:10,980
<i>Our young male is
prepared to fight for her.</i>

123
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[♪ intense music]

124
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<i>The males wrestle,</i>

125
00:12:21,031 --> 00:12:24,827
<i>each of their eight arms
moving independently,</i>

126
00:12:28,414 --> 00:12:31,667
<i>it's the ultimate showdown.</i>

127
00:12:38,591 --> 00:12:43,053
[♪ anticipatory music]

128
00:12:44,805 --> 00:12:47,683
<i>But it's more than just a physical fight,</i>

129
00:12:47,975 --> 00:12:50,186
<i>it's intelligence gathering.</i>

130
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It learns its rank among the
other neighbors around it

131
00:12:55,649 --> 00:12:58,235
and what resources it
might be able to take.

132
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What it can get away with behaviorally.

133
00:13:00,070 --> 00:13:02,114
What it needs to fight for.

134
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[narrator] <i>These octopuses
are not only living together,</i>

135
00:13:09,413 --> 00:13:12,583
<i>they're getting smarter because of it.</i>

136
00:13:15,002 --> 00:13:17,963
<i>It's social learning.</i>

137
00:13:21,675 --> 00:13:25,763
<i>And scientists didn't know
wild octopuses could do it.</i>

138
00:13:31,352 --> 00:13:35,064
<i>The young male is still
on his quest for love.</i>

139
00:13:36,273 --> 00:13:39,068
<i>But now, he's got a new strategy.</i>

140
00:13:41,153 --> 00:13:45,032
<i>Best to go for a female
who's not already taken.</i>

141
00:13:47,493 --> 00:13:50,454
<i>He starts the conversation.</i>

142
00:13:51,747 --> 00:13:55,417
<i>His tens of thousands of
color-changing skin cells,</i>

143
00:13:56,710 --> 00:13:58,629
<i>send a message.</i>

144
00:14:02,550 --> 00:14:06,971
<i>Scientists call this
"Passing Cloud display."</i>

145
00:14:11,225 --> 00:14:16,522
[♪ magical music]

146
00:14:17,314 --> 00:14:20,484
<i>Her reply looks promising.</i>

147
00:14:25,030 --> 00:14:27,575
<i>He moves in.</i>

148
00:14:28,450 --> 00:14:30,744
[♪ tango music]

149
00:14:30,828 --> 00:14:33,998
[Dr. Christine Huffard]
He sticks up his papillae over his eye,

150
00:14:34,081 --> 00:14:37,459
which is a little finger-like,
fleshy projection.

151
00:14:37,918 --> 00:14:40,379
He looks as big as he can be.

152
00:14:40,462 --> 00:14:42,631
He's got a white background
with a big black stripe

153
00:14:42,715 --> 00:14:46,385
that says I will either
fight you or mate with you.

154
00:14:48,429 --> 00:14:51,807
[narrator] <i>His come-on has done the trick.</i>

155
00:14:58,981 --> 00:15:02,401
<i>He extends his specialized mating arm.</i>

156
00:15:09,617 --> 00:15:13,245
<i>Its modified tip will
deliver a packet of sperm.</i>

157
00:15:15,789 --> 00:15:19,001
<i>If he can just find the right spot.</i>

158
00:15:22,254 --> 00:15:24,882
<i>Nope, still not it!</i>

159
00:15:31,889 --> 00:15:35,267
<i>But she's getting impatient and hungry.</i>

160
00:15:38,354 --> 00:15:41,941
<i>He's gotten this far, so if
she wants to go hunting,</i>

161
00:15:42,024 --> 00:15:44,902
<i>he'll hang on.</i>

162
00:15:47,029 --> 00:15:50,282
<i>Mating on the move.</i>

163
00:15:59,041 --> 00:16:03,003
<i>It's been a steep learning
curve for this little guy.</i>

164
00:16:06,048 --> 00:16:08,592
<i>But his decision to interact with others,</i>

165
00:16:08,676 --> 00:16:13,764
<i>whether fighting,
communicating, or mating,</i>

166
00:16:14,640 --> 00:16:17,309
<i>has made him smarter,</i>

167
00:16:18,227 --> 00:16:21,271
<i>and, more successful.</i>

168
00:16:24,900 --> 00:16:27,945
<i>But is the algae octopus a one-off?</i>

169
00:16:32,241 --> 00:16:35,244
<i>Christine thinks not.</i>

170
00:16:36,036 --> 00:16:38,080
We might learn that there
are other social octopuses

171
00:16:38,163 --> 00:16:41,458
out there, that it's maybe not
as uncommon as we think.

172
00:16:46,380 --> 00:16:49,925
[narrator] <i>Algae octopuses
are forced to interact,</i>

173
00:16:53,846 --> 00:16:56,348
<i>but there are places where octopuses</i>

174
00:16:56,432 --> 00:16:59,560
<i>choose to come together.</i>

175
00:17:05,190 --> 00:17:08,610
<i>Over 100 miles
off the coast of Costa Rica.</i>

176
00:17:15,117 --> 00:17:19,038
<i>And nearly two miles beneath
the surface of the ocean,</i>

177
00:17:22,249 --> 00:17:26,170
<i>in one of the most extreme
environments on Earth,</i>

178
00:17:30,507 --> 00:17:34,511
<i>a team of scientists made
a remarkable discovery.</i>

179
00:17:42,269 --> 00:17:45,439
<i>A brand-new species.</i>

180
00:17:49,443 --> 00:17:52,112
<i>Nicknamed the Dorado octopus,</i>

181
00:17:52,196 --> 00:17:53,989
<i>but so new to science,</i>

182
00:17:54,073 --> 00:17:57,159
<i>they're yet to be given an official name.</i>

183
00:18:01,705 --> 00:18:04,708
<i>And they didn't just find a few,</i>

184
00:18:06,460 --> 00:18:09,588
<i>they found over 100.</i>

185
00:18:18,764 --> 00:18:23,477
<i>Almost all are females,
caring for their eggs.</i>

186
00:18:26,355 --> 00:18:29,983
<i>This is one of only four
deep-sea octopus nurseries</i>

187
00:18:30,067 --> 00:18:33,320
<i>known to exist on our planet.</i>

188
00:18:38,033 --> 00:18:42,996
<i>What attracts so many moms-to-be
to this particular spot?</i>

189
00:18:47,668 --> 00:18:50,003
<i>A deep-sea spring,</i>

190
00:18:50,379 --> 00:18:53,757
<i>where warm water flows out of
cracks in the sea floor.</i>

191
00:18:57,261 --> 00:19:00,556
<i>Speeding up the development of their eggs.</i>

192
00:19:06,895 --> 00:19:10,691
<i>Being so close to each
other is a price worth paying.</i>

193
00:19:16,780 --> 00:19:20,826
<i>These moms will be down here
together, for almost two years,</i>

194
00:19:20,909 --> 00:19:24,913
<i>as their babies grow.</i>

195
00:19:32,212 --> 00:19:36,717
<i>Each tiny hatchling a symbol
of their mutual tolerance.</i>

196
00:19:40,554 --> 00:19:45,809
<i>Scientists believe more sites
like this remain undiscovered.</i>

197
00:19:49,605 --> 00:19:53,567
<i>There could be thousands
of octopus putting their differences aside</i>

198
00:19:53,650 --> 00:19:56,069
<i>to secure the next generation.</i>

199
00:20:03,702 --> 00:20:08,165
<i>But what happens when octopuses
of different species meet?</i>

200
00:20:13,795 --> 00:20:17,257
[birds cawing]

201
00:20:27,935 --> 00:20:33,148
<i>Dr. Alex Schnell has heard that underneath
this unassuming pier,</i>

202
00:20:34,441 --> 00:20:37,527
<i>something highly unusual is happening.</i>

203
00:20:44,243 --> 00:20:47,788
<i>The action happens at night.</i>

204
00:20:52,876 --> 00:20:55,170
[splashing]

205
00:21:00,801 --> 00:21:07,224
[♪ mysterious music]

206
00:21:08,183 --> 00:21:11,353
[Dr. Alex Schnell] I only have
the tiny light from my torch

207
00:21:11,436 --> 00:21:14,231
to guide me.

208
00:21:15,482 --> 00:21:19,569
[bubbles]

209
00:21:21,822 --> 00:21:24,992
You have this eerie feeling

210
00:21:25,075 --> 00:21:27,828
as you're moving through the water.

211
00:21:33,959 --> 00:21:40,757
[♪ mysterious music]

212
00:21:43,302 --> 00:21:47,556
I noticed two little eyes popping out.

213
00:21:51,393 --> 00:21:56,064
And it's a pale octopus.

214
00:22:00,319 --> 00:22:04,865
She comes out, and

215
00:22:04,948 --> 00:22:07,451
we have this wonderful moment where

216
00:22:07,534 --> 00:22:11,580
her suckers touch my gloved hand.

217
00:22:15,876 --> 00:22:20,047
It felt like she was inviting
me to go on a swim with her.

218
00:22:25,260 --> 00:22:27,679
[narrator] <i>The pale octopus
leads Alex to an up-cycled</i>

219
00:22:27,763 --> 00:22:32,059
<i>artificial reef created by divers.</i>

220
00:22:37,397 --> 00:22:41,026
<i>It may not look like much,</i>

221
00:22:41,109 --> 00:22:43,653
<i>but it offers octopuses
everything they need</i>

222
00:22:43,737 --> 00:22:46,782
<i>to feel at home.</i>

223
00:22:56,750 --> 00:23:01,171
<i>They are everywhere.</i>

224
00:23:01,588 --> 00:23:05,467
<i>Peeking back at Alex
from every cubby hole.</i>

225
00:23:09,471 --> 00:23:13,141
<i>But that's not the only thing
that caught Alex's attention.</i>

226
00:23:15,477 --> 00:23:17,896
[Dr. Alex Schnell] Normally,
I'd see about one or two octopuses

227
00:23:17,979 --> 00:23:20,732
and they're usually of the same species.

228
00:23:23,235 --> 00:23:26,738
But down here you have
about 100 individuals,

229
00:23:26,822 --> 00:23:29,241
of five different species,

230
00:23:29,866 --> 00:23:32,702
and they're all just living together.

231
00:23:35,747 --> 00:23:38,333
From octopuses as small as a golf ball,

232
00:23:40,335 --> 00:23:43,088
to octopuses as big as a beach ball.

233
00:23:44,923 --> 00:23:48,260
That is an extraordinary
octopus oasis down there,

234
00:23:48,343 --> 00:23:51,638
with several species co-existing.

235
00:23:56,143 --> 00:23:58,270
<i>[narrator] Great real estate
may have attracted so many</i>

236
00:23:58,353 --> 00:24:01,189
<i>octopuses here.</i>

237
00:24:11,616 --> 00:24:14,578
<i>But it doesn't explain how
animals that would normally</i>

238
00:24:14,661 --> 00:24:19,583
<i>fight, even kill each other,</i>

239
00:24:19,666 --> 00:24:22,169
<i>are living harmoniously.</i>

240
00:24:26,131 --> 00:24:31,470
[♪ curious music]

241
00:24:31,553 --> 00:24:33,472
I've got a theory that might help explain

242
00:24:33,555 --> 00:24:35,265
what we're seeing here.

243
00:24:35,348 --> 00:24:36,683
We've got five different species,

244
00:24:36,766 --> 00:24:39,227
with very different personalities.

245
00:24:40,604 --> 00:24:43,440
The Maori, one of the largest
species in the world,

246
00:24:43,523 --> 00:24:46,109
is quite shy.

247
00:24:48,528 --> 00:24:53,158
And then a really tiny octopus,
the Southern Keeled,

248
00:24:53,241 --> 00:24:56,161
has a lot of sass.

249
00:24:57,579 --> 00:24:59,372
It's a perfect mix of personalities

250
00:24:59,456 --> 00:25:01,791
for them all to co-exist.

251
00:25:03,001 --> 00:25:07,297
[narrator] <i>So perhaps, just like us,</i>

252
00:25:07,380 --> 00:25:11,801
<i>sometimes it's their differences
that allow them to get along.</i>

253
00:25:14,721 --> 00:25:17,933
<i>In this thriving octopolis,</i>

254
00:25:18,016 --> 00:25:21,144
<i>they've learned to defy their instincts</i>

255
00:25:21,895 --> 00:25:25,065
<i>and live peacefully with their neighbors.</i>

256
00:25:28,443 --> 00:25:32,572
[birds cawing]

257
00:25:37,160 --> 00:25:39,496
<i>Octopuses are smart enough
to choose companionship</i>

258
00:25:39,579 --> 00:25:42,123
<i>when it counts,</i>

259
00:25:45,293 --> 00:25:50,131
<i>but are there any limits to
who they'll cooperate with?</i>

260
00:25:57,764 --> 00:26:01,685
<i>Alex's favorite loner, Scarlett,</i>

261
00:26:01,768 --> 00:26:05,105
<i>is out hunting on the reef.</i>

262
00:26:08,108 --> 00:26:10,569
<i>And she's not the only one.</i>

263
00:26:10,652 --> 00:26:14,281
[♪ threatening music]

264
00:26:14,364 --> 00:26:16,700
<i>A coral trout.</i>

265
00:26:19,786 --> 00:26:22,664
<i>Growing up to three feet long
and weighing three times</i>

266
00:26:22,747 --> 00:26:25,584
<i>as much as Scarlett.</i>

267
00:26:28,128 --> 00:26:31,423
<i>Big enough to be a threat.</i>

268
00:26:34,384 --> 00:26:37,554
<i>Scarlett is certainly
keeping an eye on him.</i>

269
00:26:40,348 --> 00:26:44,352
<i>But not because she's scared.</i>

270
00:26:45,937 --> 00:26:48,815
[♪ threatening music]

271
00:26:48,898 --> 00:26:52,402
<i>When the small fish flee,</i>

272
00:26:55,280 --> 00:26:57,991
<i>they're out of his reach.</i>

273
00:27:00,493 --> 00:27:03,496
<i>Not Scarlett's though!</i>

274
00:27:06,041 --> 00:27:08,460
<i>He needs to call in the octopus cavalry,</i>

275
00:27:09,169 --> 00:27:13,465
<i>and changes his body color
from patterned to pale.</i>

276
00:27:17,594 --> 00:27:21,473
<i>It's the beginning of a signal
Scarlett's been waiting for.</i>

277
00:27:23,016 --> 00:27:27,479
<i>Because this trout is
now her hunting buddy!</i>

278
00:27:33,109 --> 00:27:37,238
<i>Scarlett watches as he
shows her where to look.</i>

279
00:27:44,412 --> 00:27:47,749
<i>Then begins a sweep search.</i>

280
00:27:52,587 --> 00:27:54,631
<i>When she's in the right place,</i>

281
00:27:54,714 --> 00:27:57,884
<i>the trout returns to his normal pattern.</i>

282
00:28:01,971 --> 00:28:05,266
<i>They appear to be using their
bodies to talk to each other.</i>

283
00:28:11,439 --> 00:28:14,859
One really fundamental
component of human language

284
00:28:14,943 --> 00:28:17,404
is a thing called referential signaling.

285
00:28:17,487 --> 00:28:19,155
My little girl, she's one year old,

286
00:28:19,239 --> 00:28:21,241
and she's already started
pointing to certain things

287
00:28:21,324 --> 00:28:23,493
and so I can deduce
that she might want a drink

288
00:28:23,576 --> 00:28:25,036
if she points to my water bottle,

289
00:28:25,704 --> 00:28:28,331
but of course, a fish doesn't
have a hand to point,

290
00:28:28,415 --> 00:28:30,917
so they do a headstand.

291
00:28:31,626 --> 00:28:34,129
Here we have really unique communication

292
00:28:34,212 --> 00:28:37,298
occurring between different species.

293
00:28:40,176 --> 00:28:43,304
[narrator] <i>Scarlett
gets help finding food.</i>

294
00:28:48,893 --> 00:28:52,313
<i>If she misses,</i>

295
00:28:52,397 --> 00:28:55,108
<i>more for the trout.</i>

296
00:28:57,068 --> 00:28:59,821
<i>It's teamwork.</i>

297
00:29:07,203 --> 00:29:11,374
<i>It's given Alex an idea
for an impromptu experiment.</i>

298
00:29:13,710 --> 00:29:15,920
[Dr. Alex Schnell] Science often
starts with an idea,

299
00:29:16,004 --> 00:29:18,298
even if they're crazy ideas.

300
00:29:18,381 --> 00:29:20,717
After witnessing the octopus
hunting with the fish,

301
00:29:20,800 --> 00:29:23,428
I decided to try something.

302
00:29:27,724 --> 00:29:30,268
[narrator] <i>Today
Scarlett is hunting alone.</i>

303
00:29:35,648 --> 00:29:37,734
[Dr. Alex Schnell] I follow
her around and wait until

304
00:29:37,817 --> 00:29:41,362
she flushes out crustaceans
from the coral rubble.

305
00:29:42,697 --> 00:29:46,701
I can see that she misses a
few crabs here and there.

306
00:29:56,753 --> 00:29:59,839
I start pointing towards them.

307
00:30:05,553 --> 00:30:11,976
[♪ energetic music]

308
00:30:12,060 --> 00:30:14,062
And to my surprise, she responded.

309
00:30:19,609 --> 00:30:21,486
She had an understanding
of what I was trying to

310
00:30:21,569 --> 00:30:24,364
communicate to her.

311
00:30:28,243 --> 00:30:30,620
[narrator] <i>Scarlett is
quick to catch the prey</i>

312
00:30:30,703 --> 00:30:32,956
<i>Alex has shown her.</i>

313
00:30:35,834 --> 00:30:37,418
[Dr. Alex Schnell] Maybe she preferred me

314
00:30:37,502 --> 00:30:38,962
as a hunting partner,

315
00:30:39,045 --> 00:30:41,047
I was playing the role of the fish,

316
00:30:41,130 --> 00:30:44,467
but I wasn't taking any of her catch.

317
00:30:46,469 --> 00:30:49,222
It felt weird, and wonderful

318
00:30:49,305 --> 00:30:52,350
to be having this
interaction with Scarlett.

319
00:30:55,478 --> 00:31:02,110
Here we are, separated by over
550 million years of evolution,

320
00:31:02,193 --> 00:31:04,988
but we're having a conversation.

321
00:31:08,950 --> 00:31:12,078
It just felt like magic.

322
00:31:15,248 --> 00:31:18,710
[♪ majestic music]

323
00:31:18,793 --> 00:31:20,795
[narrator] <i>The more time
we spend in the water</i>

324
00:31:20,879 --> 00:31:22,797
<i>with octopuses,</i>

325
00:31:22,881 --> 00:31:25,884
<i>the more they surprise us.</i>

326
00:31:28,177 --> 00:31:31,764
<i>Every remarkable new discovery,</i>

327
00:31:33,600 --> 00:31:35,393
<i>breaking down our beliefs</i>

328
00:31:35,977 --> 00:31:41,149
<i>about what they could, or should do.</i>

329
00:31:45,028 --> 00:31:49,198
<i>Far from being lifelong loners,</i>

330
00:31:49,282 --> 00:31:53,286
<i>they can be social animals,</i>

331
00:31:54,329 --> 00:32:01,002
<i>but ones that use their
skills, selectively,</i>

332
00:32:01,085 --> 00:32:03,296
<i>to get ahead.</i>

333
00:32:04,714 --> 00:32:10,136
<i>From octopus moms, doing
the best for their babies,</i>

334
00:32:12,472 --> 00:32:17,477
<i>to cross-species partnerships,</i>

335
00:32:17,560 --> 00:32:20,229
<i>even with us.</i>

336
00:32:21,522 --> 00:32:25,485
<i>As long as it suits them.</i>

337
00:32:31,157 --> 00:32:34,786
<i>What more secrets are yet to be revealed?</i>

338
00:32:35,954 --> 00:32:40,291
<i>Only time will tell.</i>

339
00:32:51,719 --> 00:32:54,013
[splashing]

340
00:32:54,097 --> 00:32:56,474
[bubbles]

341
00:32:56,557 --> 00:32:59,644
<i>When National Geographic
Explorer Dr. Alex Schnell</i>

342
00:32:59,727 --> 00:33:02,689
<i>first went looking for a day octopus,</i>

343
00:33:04,232 --> 00:33:07,402
<i>she couldn't have imagined
the journey she'd begun.</i>

344
00:33:08,903 --> 00:33:11,906
<i>Or the friend she would make.</i>

345
00:33:16,077 --> 00:33:17,787
[James Cameron] So this is pretty amazing,

346
00:33:17,870 --> 00:33:20,415
it's really fascinated by you.

347
00:33:20,915 --> 00:33:24,293
As fascinated by me as I am by her.

348
00:33:30,133 --> 00:33:31,968
But what do you think it is,
do you think it's the eyes

349
00:33:32,051 --> 00:33:35,179
that it, it recognizes a,
a thinking being?

350
00:33:35,263 --> 00:33:38,725
Well, I feel like they're
driven by so much curiosity.

351
00:33:38,808 --> 00:33:40,143
[James Cameron] Yeah.

352
00:33:40,226 --> 00:33:44,272
No, you can really sense
her curiosity about you.

353
00:33:47,525 --> 00:33:50,111
[narrator] <i>Day octopus are normally timid,</i>

354
00:33:50,194 --> 00:33:53,781
<i>but this one seemed to
welcome Alex into her world.</i>

355
00:33:55,366 --> 00:33:59,203
I think it's amazing how
quickly she discarded the idea

356
00:33:59,287 --> 00:34:01,414
-that you might be threatening.
-Mmm.

357
00:34:01,497 --> 00:34:04,292
Curiosity outweighed the danger signals.

358
00:34:04,375 --> 00:34:05,376
Yeah, yeah.

359
00:34:05,501 --> 00:34:08,254
A bigger creature, unfamiliar,
could be anything.

360
00:34:08,337 --> 00:34:09,422
-Uh-huh.
-you know.

361
00:34:09,505 --> 00:34:12,341
-Yeah, absolutely and she initiates...
-[James Cameron] Yeah.

362
00:34:12,425 --> 00:34:15,303
[Dr. Alex Schnell] The touch,
which is really important.

363
00:34:24,937 --> 00:34:28,566
[narrator] <i>Alex never dreamt
that an animal so alien,</i>

364
00:34:28,649 --> 00:34:30,485
<i>so different,</i>

365
00:34:30,568 --> 00:34:33,446
<i>would reach out to her.</i>

366
00:34:35,031 --> 00:34:37,450
How could she have any basis for that,

367
00:34:37,533 --> 00:34:40,787
there wouldn't have been any
kind of innate memory of that.

368
00:34:40,870 --> 00:34:42,330
[sighing]

369
00:34:42,413 --> 00:34:44,248
-I ask myself that question all the time.
-Yeah.

370
00:34:46,918 --> 00:34:49,712
[Dr. Alex Schnell] There's a
lot going on in that brain.

371
00:34:49,796 --> 00:34:52,090
[James Cameron] Yeah.

372
00:34:56,177 --> 00:34:58,763
[narrator] <i>The time spent with
Scarlett was further proof</i>

373
00:34:58,846 --> 00:35:02,725
<i>of just how intelligent octopus are.</i>

374
00:35:03,059 --> 00:35:06,854
<i>They learn fast, because they have to.</i>

375
00:35:08,815 --> 00:35:11,984
They don't have anyone to learn from, uh,

376
00:35:12,068 --> 00:35:13,945
they don't live with brothers or sisters.

377
00:35:14,028 --> 00:35:16,030
Right, so it's not... it's not culturally

378
00:35:16,114 --> 00:35:18,866
passed down and taught
by parents or you know.

379
00:35:18,950 --> 00:35:22,286
[Dr. Alex Schnell] No, and I
think everything is learnt

380
00:35:22,370 --> 00:35:23,663
from their environment.

381
00:35:23,746 --> 00:35:25,957
[James Cameron] Yeah.

382
00:35:30,545 --> 00:35:33,381
Don't their brains develop very
rapidly compared to say ours,

383
00:35:33,464 --> 00:35:35,133
just, just physiologically?

384
00:35:35,216 --> 00:35:37,468
[Dr. Alex Schnell] Yeah, so
it's life in the fast lane.

385
00:35:37,552 --> 00:35:38,761
The stakes are high,

386
00:35:38,845 --> 00:35:40,930
-they don't have anyone to protect them.
-[James Cameron] Right.

387
00:35:41,013 --> 00:35:42,765
[Dr. Alex Schnell] So they
have to learn really quickly.

388
00:35:42,849 --> 00:35:44,725
Yeah and they don't have
any natural protection

389
00:35:44,809 --> 00:35:47,270
like shell, teeth,
claws, anything like that,

390
00:35:47,353 --> 00:35:50,314
so they, yeah, they can just,
they can hide, they can plan,

391
00:35:50,398 --> 00:35:52,400
they can watch, they can strategize.

392
00:35:52,483 --> 00:35:53,901
[Dr. Alex Schnell] Exactly.

393
00:35:53,985 --> 00:35:55,278
Their mind is their weapon.

394
00:35:55,361 --> 00:35:57,488
[James Cameron] Yeah.

395
00:35:59,490 --> 00:36:01,409
They're kind of scientists.

396
00:36:01,492 --> 00:36:04,036
You know, like the way
kids are scientists.

397
00:36:04,120 --> 00:36:05,872
Kids just wanna know how
things work, right?

398
00:36:05,955 --> 00:36:08,749
So they're these young,
curious minds that are

399
00:36:08,833 --> 00:36:12,879
figuring out a theory of how
their world works around them.

400
00:36:12,962 --> 00:36:16,632
Mm-hm, yeah, it's a completely
alternative pathway

401
00:36:16,716 --> 00:36:18,593
-to intelligence, and that's...
-[James Cameron] Yeah.

402
00:36:18,676 --> 00:36:22,263
...what draws me to
studying these animals.

403
00:36:22,346 --> 00:36:25,516
And these guys are just
breaking all of the rules.

404
00:36:26,017 --> 00:36:29,270
[narrator] <i>With their remarkable
intelligence and curiosity,</i>

405
00:36:29,353 --> 00:36:32,148
<i>octopuses overcome almost any obstacle</i>

406
00:36:32,231 --> 00:36:34,275
<i>their habitat throws at them.</i>

407
00:36:35,318 --> 00:36:38,779
<i>Problem-solving masterminds
that never switch off.</i>

408
00:36:44,243 --> 00:36:45,620
She's out, she's sleeping.

409
00:36:45,703 --> 00:36:46,871
She's sleeping, yeah.

410
00:36:46,954 --> 00:36:48,956
Octopus snoring.

411
00:36:49,332 --> 00:36:51,584
[Dr. Alex Schnell] It's really
interesting because she goes through

412
00:36:51,667 --> 00:36:53,920
like this still sleep cycle here,

413
00:36:54,003 --> 00:36:56,589
but then she'll have a
moment when she starts to

414
00:36:56,672 --> 00:36:58,257
move quite a bit,

415
00:36:58,341 --> 00:37:00,343
this is what we call an
active phase of sleep.

416
00:37:00,426 --> 00:37:01,510
[James Cameron] Yeah, like REM sleep.

417
00:37:01,594 --> 00:37:02,887
-Absolutely.
-Yeah.

418
00:37:02,970 --> 00:37:05,932
And what happens when humans
have an active phase of sleep

419
00:37:06,015 --> 00:37:08,059
-is we dream.
-Right.

420
00:37:08,142 --> 00:37:11,729
And so it might mean
that she's also dreaming.

421
00:37:11,812 --> 00:37:13,856
Yeah. Oh, she's dreaming.

422
00:37:13,940 --> 00:37:15,441
Trust me, she's dreaming.

423
00:37:15,524 --> 00:37:16,734
Come on, look.

424
00:37:16,901 --> 00:37:19,362
I mean it's like a, like a
dog's paws, you know,

425
00:37:19,445 --> 00:37:20,571
when they're chasing rabbits
in their, in their dream.

426
00:37:20,655 --> 00:37:21,656
Absolutely.

427
00:37:21,739 --> 00:37:23,282
Of course, we don't know
dogs are dreaming,

428
00:37:23,366 --> 00:37:25,910
but we know dogs are dreaming, we know it.

429
00:37:27,078 --> 00:37:28,454
Well, dreaming is really important to me,

430
00:37:28,537 --> 00:37:30,790
I mean I do a lot of my creative work,

431
00:37:30,873 --> 00:37:32,250
I think, in dreams.

432
00:37:32,333 --> 00:37:33,459
You know.

433
00:37:34,043 --> 00:37:35,711
I mean I always said it's my
own private streaming channel

434
00:37:35,795 --> 00:37:37,296
that's free.

435
00:37:37,380 --> 00:37:40,383
But you know <i>Avatar</i> was
based on dream imagery,

436
00:37:40,466 --> 00:37:42,468
<i>Terminator</i> was based on dream imagery,

437
00:37:42,551 --> 00:37:46,472
scenes in <i>Aliens</i> were
based on dream imagery.

438
00:37:47,223 --> 00:37:50,309
Seems pretty obvious she's dreaming to me.

439
00:37:50,685 --> 00:37:53,437
Now what she's dreaming about,
that we can't answer.

440
00:37:53,521 --> 00:37:56,315
[Dr. Alex Schnell] No,
that we can't answer.

441
00:37:57,233 --> 00:37:59,777
You'll notice during the active phase,

442
00:37:59,860 --> 00:38:01,612
she's twitching and also...

443
00:38:01,696 --> 00:38:02,697
-She's doing it.
-Changing color.

444
00:38:02,780 --> 00:38:04,323
-She's doing it right now. Yeah.
-Mmm.

445
00:38:04,407 --> 00:38:07,326
That could mean that
she's processing memory.

446
00:38:07,410 --> 00:38:10,871
Yeah, so that could be
experience, could be location,

447
00:38:10,955 --> 00:38:14,375
could be building, you know,
some kind of geographic map...

448
00:38:14,458 --> 00:38:15,501
-Exactly.
-Memory map.

449
00:38:15,918 --> 00:38:17,253
[Dr. Alex Schnell] Building
a mental map of her habitat,

450
00:38:17,545 --> 00:38:21,340
which could save her life in a,
you know, in a future encounter.

451
00:38:21,424 --> 00:38:25,011
Even looking at their
behaviors and the way that

452
00:38:25,094 --> 00:38:26,929
their skin changes,

453
00:38:27,013 --> 00:38:29,682
that in itself is a
window into their mind.

454
00:38:30,891 --> 00:38:34,854
While we can't talk to them,
their skin tell the stories.

455
00:38:34,937 --> 00:38:36,480
It does tell a story.

456
00:38:38,316 --> 00:38:40,526
[narrator] <i>If octopuses do dream,</i>

457
00:38:40,609 --> 00:38:42,028
<i>it is one of many secrets</i>

458
00:38:42,111 --> 00:38:45,197
<i>that scientists have yet to discover.</i>

459
00:38:46,991 --> 00:38:49,160
<i>The more time we spend in their world,</i>

460
00:38:49,660 --> 00:38:53,247
<i>the more we learn about the
intelligent ways they survive.</i>

461
00:38:56,459 --> 00:39:00,546
<i>Just ten years ago, a large
gathering of Dorado females</i>

462
00:39:00,629 --> 00:39:03,799
<i>was discovered 10,000 feet deep.</i>

463
00:39:06,010 --> 00:39:07,928
[Dr. Alex Schnell] So this
is more your territory.

464
00:39:08,012 --> 00:39:09,597
[James Cameron] Well, I've seen
these guys plenty of times

465
00:39:09,680 --> 00:39:13,100
but I, I haven't seen this kind of
uh, aggregating behavior

466
00:39:13,184 --> 00:39:14,935
where you see a bunch of
them in one place,

467
00:39:15,019 --> 00:39:17,271
they're usually solo acts.

468
00:39:17,355 --> 00:39:19,357
Out of the 300 species of octopus,

469
00:39:19,440 --> 00:39:20,691
most of them are loners.

470
00:39:20,775 --> 00:39:21,942
Right.

471
00:39:22,276 --> 00:39:24,904
But you have a handful of
species where you will see them

472
00:39:24,987 --> 00:39:26,781
aggregate into these small communities.

473
00:39:26,864 --> 00:39:28,908
[James Cameron] Yeah.

474
00:39:30,326 --> 00:39:33,037
[Dr. Alex Schnell] They've come
together here collectively,

475
00:39:33,120 --> 00:39:35,164
to take advantage of the hot water

476
00:39:35,247 --> 00:39:36,707
that's seeping out of the vent.

477
00:39:36,791 --> 00:39:41,462
Right, and, and you're thinking
that the warmth of that,

478
00:39:41,921 --> 00:39:45,132
that hydro-thermal flow,
that warm water coming up,

479
00:39:45,216 --> 00:39:47,885
-is causing the eggs to develop faster.
-Yeah.

480
00:39:47,968 --> 00:39:49,512
Like a bird keeping its eggs warm.

481
00:39:49,595 --> 00:39:50,596
[Dr. Alex Schnell] Exactly,
otherwise it would just

482
00:39:50,679 --> 00:39:52,556
take too long.

483
00:39:54,517 --> 00:39:57,103
We don't even have a
name for an octopus group.

484
00:39:57,186 --> 00:39:58,354
[laughs].

485
00:39:58,437 --> 00:39:59,730
Uh, well, what would you call it?

486
00:39:59,814 --> 00:40:01,357
A flock of, of octopuses?

487
00:40:01,440 --> 00:40:03,192
-Yeah.
-A flocktopus!

488
00:40:03,275 --> 00:40:04,652
Flocktopus.

489
00:40:04,735 --> 00:40:06,237
[laughs].

490
00:40:09,156 --> 00:40:10,699
[James Cameron] What's amazing,
every time you go into

491
00:40:10,783 --> 00:40:14,995
the deep ocean, you're always
finding out something new.

492
00:40:15,079 --> 00:40:16,622
So how deep have you gone then?

493
00:40:16,705 --> 00:40:19,083
Well, I've gone a lot deeper than this.

494
00:40:19,166 --> 00:40:23,003
Uh, actually to the deepest
place in the, in the world,

495
00:40:23,087 --> 00:40:26,006
but once you get down below,
you know 500 or 1,000 feet,

496
00:40:26,090 --> 00:40:28,300
it's all pitch black, all the way down,

497
00:40:28,384 --> 00:40:30,219
and I think we're at, what 10,000?

498
00:40:30,302 --> 00:40:32,471
-10,000 feet.
-10,000 feet here.

499
00:40:32,555 --> 00:40:34,723
Yeah so, it's pitch black
all day every day,

500
00:40:34,807 --> 00:40:36,517
you know, and cold.

501
00:40:36,600 --> 00:40:40,438
But I've heard that you have
also seen a dumbo octopus.

502
00:40:40,521 --> 00:40:42,231
-Oh, the dumbos are beautiful.
-Yeah.

503
00:40:42,314 --> 00:40:44,233
Absolutely gorgeous and
they have their little

504
00:40:44,316 --> 00:40:46,527
head fins, their little cephalic fins.

505
00:40:47,903 --> 00:40:51,407
They look like dumbo ears
but they're really fins.

506
00:40:51,490 --> 00:40:52,950
[Dr. Alex Schnell] Yeah.

507
00:40:53,033 --> 00:40:54,660
[James Cameron] I don't think
any other species have fins

508
00:40:54,743 --> 00:40:57,413
like that on their head, but
they're gorgeous, they're,

509
00:40:57,496 --> 00:40:58,706
they're translucent

510
00:40:58,789 --> 00:41:01,333
and they have a kind of
an iridescent quality,

511
00:41:01,417 --> 00:41:03,919
they're really quite beautiful.

512
00:41:04,003 --> 00:41:05,838
Do you draw creative inspiration

513
00:41:05,921 --> 00:41:07,381
from these explorations?

514
00:41:07,465 --> 00:41:08,549
[James Cameron] Absolutely.

515
00:41:08,632 --> 00:41:11,969
I've got some characters in an
upcoming <i>Avatar</i> film that are inspired

516
00:41:12,052 --> 00:41:14,805
by some of the deep, uh, deep creature,

517
00:41:14,889 --> 00:41:16,140
deep cephalopods.

518
00:41:16,223 --> 00:41:18,350
-Oh, excellent.
-Thanks.

519
00:41:18,434 --> 00:41:20,394
Can't say anything more
about that right now.

520
00:41:20,478 --> 00:41:21,896
[laughing]

521
00:41:22,396 --> 00:41:24,148
I mean not only are these, like,

522
00:41:24,231 --> 00:41:27,943
particularly alien-looking octopus,

523
00:41:28,027 --> 00:41:33,324
but I think all octopuses
are kind of alien.

524
00:41:33,407 --> 00:41:35,576
I think that's what draws us to them,

525
00:41:35,659 --> 00:41:39,163
because we, as humans are so
fascinated by the unknown

526
00:41:39,246 --> 00:41:42,333
and by the alien, and here we have

527
00:41:42,416 --> 00:41:44,960
a very alien-like creature,

528
00:41:45,044 --> 00:41:47,129
but then we can
resonate with them as well,

529
00:41:47,213 --> 00:41:49,048
they show these familiar traits

530
00:41:49,131 --> 00:41:50,883
that we can really connect to.

531
00:41:50,966 --> 00:41:53,135
I mean the ocean still
has so much to teach us,

532
00:41:53,219 --> 00:41:54,929
even in the places we think we know.

533
00:41:55,012 --> 00:41:56,305
Oh, absolutely.

534
00:41:56,388 --> 00:41:58,182
Yeah, there's so much to learn still.

535
00:41:58,265 --> 00:42:01,393
We've got a whole different
alien world down there.

536
00:42:01,477 --> 00:42:03,479
[James Cameron] That's right.

537
00:42:07,858 --> 00:42:12,905
[♪ closing theme music]

538
00:42:43,978 --> 00:42:45,521
Captioned by Cotter Media Group.


