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Viewed from above, Planet Earth
is a riot of colours.
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00:00:17,443 --> 00:00:23,923
But there's one particular colour
that marks Earth out as special.
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00:00:23,923 --> 00:00:29,203
The colour that shows it's a living,
breathing planet.
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00:00:32,923 --> 00:00:34,283
Green.
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00:00:51,243 --> 00:00:52,403
Here we go.
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00:00:53,323 --> 00:00:57,483
Take a look at this little beauty.
This is Lysimachia glutinosa.
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00:00:57,483 --> 00:00:59,043
And I know it's not the most
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00:00:59,043 --> 00:01:00,563
glamorous plant in the world,
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00:01:00,563 --> 00:01:03,683
but its claim to fame is that
it grows here
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and only here,
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00:01:05,043 --> 00:01:09,043
on this one side of this
one small island,
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00:01:09,043 --> 00:01:13,483
which makes it sound very fragile,
very vulnerable.
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That couldn't be further
from the truth.
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Because in the story of this plant,
indeed all plants,
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00:01:20,643 --> 00:01:23,963
lies the story of our Earth.
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00:01:26,883 --> 00:01:30,083
It's a story that begins
billions of years ago...
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00:01:31,883 --> 00:01:34,683
..in the chaos of Earth's
early years...
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00:01:35,963 --> 00:01:38,323
..before plant life
transformed it...
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00:01:40,043 --> 00:01:42,483
..into a world of opportunity...
20
00:01:48,043 --> 00:01:50,483
..as plants rose from the oceans...
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00:01:52,563 --> 00:01:57,843
..to conquer a hostile
and alien land,
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00:01:57,843 --> 00:02:02,283
fighting and evolving through
triumph and disaster.
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00:02:04,363 --> 00:02:10,243
And just as they finally built
the perfect garden world,
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00:02:10,243 --> 00:02:17,043
their global domination almost
wiped out all life on the planet.
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00:02:44,523 --> 00:02:48,963
The story of plants begins deep
in Earth's ancient history.
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00:02:52,643 --> 00:02:55,083
Four billion years ago.
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00:02:57,163 --> 00:03:00,123
When the planet was an inhospitable
world...
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00:03:03,043 --> 00:03:07,323
..shrouded in a noxious atmosphere
of methane clouds...
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00:03:08,403 --> 00:03:11,083
..and covered by an endless ocean...
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00:03:15,043 --> 00:03:19,563
..broken only by a few remote
volcanic islands...
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00:03:22,803 --> 00:03:24,923
..with no sign of life.
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00:03:29,963 --> 00:03:32,923
But to find plants' ancestors,
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00:03:32,923 --> 00:03:37,083
you'd have to go about as far from
the surface as you can get.
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00:03:46,043 --> 00:03:48,243
In the depths of the oceans...
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00:03:50,363 --> 00:03:52,483
..sheltered inside geothermal
vents...
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00:03:56,643 --> 00:03:58,883
..are something miraculous.
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00:04:03,203 --> 00:04:04,763
Extremophiles.
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00:04:05,883 --> 00:04:09,763
An extraordinary form of
single-celled life.
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00:04:11,243 --> 00:04:16,643
The ancestors of every living
organism on Earth,
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00:04:16,643 --> 00:04:18,483
including plants.
41
00:04:22,523 --> 00:04:25,083
But they are stuck here.
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00:04:30,723 --> 00:04:35,003
At this point, their chances of
making the leap onto dry land...
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00:04:38,003 --> 00:04:40,083
..are virtually nil.
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00:04:41,763 --> 00:04:43,123
CHRIS SIGHS
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00:04:43,123 --> 00:04:44,763
Four billion years ago,
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00:04:44,763 --> 00:04:48,043
any dry land on Earth would have
looked like this -
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00:04:48,043 --> 00:04:54,203
black, barren, volcanic islands
peeping out of a vast ocean.
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00:04:56,243 --> 00:05:00,043
If plants had any aspirations
to leap out onto land,
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00:05:00,043 --> 00:05:02,043
it was going to be very rapidly
disappointed,
50
00:05:02,043 --> 00:05:05,323
because this land was
very short-lived.
51
00:05:06,643 --> 00:05:10,963
The Earth's earliest islands
were made up of basalt.
52
00:05:14,843 --> 00:05:16,443
Solidified lava...
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00:05:20,443 --> 00:05:25,123
..that was easily devastated
by explosive eruptions...
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00:05:30,203 --> 00:05:33,083
..smashed by extreme tides.
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00:05:34,963 --> 00:05:38,083
This was no place for life.
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00:05:39,763 --> 00:05:41,243
So the question is,
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00:05:41,243 --> 00:05:43,123
and it's a big question,
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00:05:43,123 --> 00:05:48,923
how did plants forge a permanent
base on the land?
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00:05:48,923 --> 00:05:52,363
Because, if the Earth's only trick
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00:05:52,363 --> 00:05:55,683
when it came to land-building
was volcanism,
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00:05:55,683 --> 00:05:57,643
it's very likely that
that life
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00:05:57,643 --> 00:06:00,163
would've never made it out
of the ocean.
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00:06:00,163 --> 00:06:05,323
What was needed was another
land-creating force,
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00:06:05,323 --> 00:06:09,083
and it came in the form of a
celestial intervention.
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00:06:21,803 --> 00:06:25,083
The culprits were giant asteroids.
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00:06:30,763 --> 00:06:34,803
Some nearly 60km in diameter.
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00:06:37,043 --> 00:06:40,043
More than four times the size
of the one
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00:06:40,043 --> 00:06:43,763
believed to have caused
the extinction of the dinosaurs.
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00:07:09,803 --> 00:07:13,243
The consequences were
earth-shattering.
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00:07:15,883 --> 00:07:18,083
Fracturing our planet's crust...
71
00:07:23,043 --> 00:07:27,323
..and triggering a process that
would re-write Earth's story.
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00:07:29,003 --> 00:07:31,083
Plate tectonics.
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00:07:33,003 --> 00:07:36,803
Vast subterranean plates
were formed,
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00:07:36,803 --> 00:07:39,603
and where they meet and collide,
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00:07:39,603 --> 00:07:41,603
rocks like basalt,
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00:07:41,603 --> 00:07:44,203
along with sea water and sediment,
77
00:07:44,203 --> 00:07:47,083
are pulled into Earth's
fiery mantle...
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00:07:48,843 --> 00:07:52,403
..where they're transformed
into a new type of rock.
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00:07:54,443 --> 00:07:57,083
A rock with a superpower.
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00:07:58,603 --> 00:08:00,083
Granite.
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00:08:12,043 --> 00:08:14,443
So what is it about this
hard, heavy,
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00:08:14,443 --> 00:08:18,363
unforgiving rock that sets it
apart from the crowd?
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00:08:18,363 --> 00:08:22,323
Well, rather counterintuitively,
it's its buoyancy.
84
00:08:22,323 --> 00:08:25,203
Now, we know that ice is less dense
than water,
85
00:08:25,203 --> 00:08:26,883
therefore ice floats in water,
86
00:08:26,883 --> 00:08:29,123
therefore we have icebergs.
87
00:08:29,123 --> 00:08:35,403
But it turns out that granite, here,
is 10% less dense than basalt.
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00:08:35,403 --> 00:08:38,243
So, when it's formed deep down
inside the Earth,
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00:08:38,243 --> 00:08:40,963
it naturally rises to the surface.
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00:08:40,963 --> 00:08:44,203
So you could say that the continents
on which we are walking
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00:08:44,203 --> 00:08:48,883
are vast floating granite icebergs.
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00:08:48,883 --> 00:08:54,043
So, when the tectonic plates collide
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00:08:54,043 --> 00:08:57,243
and the basaltic crust
is forced down,
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00:08:57,243 --> 00:08:58,923
granite isn't.
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00:08:58,923 --> 00:09:01,243
Granite is pushed up,
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00:09:01,243 --> 00:09:06,883
where it's crumpled into these giant
mountain ranges that we see today.
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00:09:31,003 --> 00:09:33,403
And over the course of
geological time,
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00:09:33,403 --> 00:09:36,963
more and more granite accumulates
on the surface,
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00:09:36,963 --> 00:09:39,443
perched on those tectonic plates,
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00:09:39,443 --> 00:09:42,643
which are gyrating around
the planet
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00:09:42,643 --> 00:09:45,163
in a grand continental dance.
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00:09:47,483 --> 00:09:50,923
Now, you may be wondering
how we know this.
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00:09:50,923 --> 00:09:53,643
Ten, nine...
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Ignition sequence started.
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00:09:55,603 --> 00:09:59,523
Part of the answer is that,
since the 1960s...
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00:09:59,523 --> 00:10:02,043
Zero, all engines running.
107
00:10:02,043 --> 00:10:06,283
..the space programme has provided
a unique insight
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00:10:06,283 --> 00:10:08,123
into the workings of our planet.
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00:10:12,843 --> 00:10:15,363
For the last 42 years,
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00:10:15,363 --> 00:10:20,043
we've been able observe the movement
of the Earth's tectonic plates
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from orbit.
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00:10:24,923 --> 00:10:31,043
In 1976, Nasa launched Lageos -
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00:10:31,043 --> 00:10:34,563
the Laser Geodynamic Satellite -
114
00:10:34,563 --> 00:10:38,683
which used a high precision
laser measuring system
115
00:10:38,683 --> 00:10:40,763
and thousands of reflectors...
116
00:10:43,963 --> 00:10:47,043
..to confirm the theory
that the continents
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are constantly moving.
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00:10:52,163 --> 00:10:55,243
Nothing on Earth is staying still.
119
00:10:57,603 --> 00:11:00,763
And by combining this data
with other measurements,
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00:11:00,763 --> 00:11:04,043
we've been able to rewind the clock,
121
00:11:04,043 --> 00:11:07,043
to see how the continents
have evolved
122
00:11:07,043 --> 00:11:09,243
over hundreds of millions of years.
123
00:11:11,923 --> 00:11:14,323
And what this tells us
124
00:11:14,323 --> 00:11:17,083
is that one billion years ago...
125
00:11:18,763 --> 00:11:21,643
..the surface of the Earth
was a place
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00:11:21,643 --> 00:11:25,483
full of possibility and promise.
127
00:11:38,243 --> 00:11:42,443
Vast granite landmasses
covered the planet.
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00:11:44,643 --> 00:11:48,483
All a potential home for life.
129
00:11:55,043 --> 00:11:58,483
If only it could find
its way there.
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00:12:14,483 --> 00:12:16,043
And, fortunately,
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00:12:16,043 --> 00:12:19,243
one life form was waiting
in the wings,
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00:12:19,243 --> 00:12:21,443
ready to seize its opportunity.
133
00:12:22,803 --> 00:12:24,083
Plants.
134
00:12:28,043 --> 00:12:33,083
Life had migrated from the depths
to the shallows...
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00:12:35,043 --> 00:12:37,563
..in the form of marine algae.
136
00:12:42,443 --> 00:12:49,683
The first instantly recognisable
plant-like organism on Earth.
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00:12:52,043 --> 00:12:55,083
They had mastered a revolutionary
new art.
138
00:12:56,923 --> 00:12:59,243
Harvesting energy from the sun...
139
00:13:01,803 --> 00:13:04,763
..using photosynthesis.
140
00:13:08,563 --> 00:13:12,043
But before these plants could
escape the ocean,
141
00:13:12,043 --> 00:13:14,483
they needed to overcome a hurdle...
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00:13:17,803 --> 00:13:21,363
..greater than anything they'd
faced before.
143
00:13:36,163 --> 00:13:38,043
It's quite difficult to get
your head around
144
00:13:38,043 --> 00:13:42,043
just what a challenge getting onto
dry land was for plant life.
145
00:13:42,043 --> 00:13:46,483
The world that it would have to
overcome was harsh, hostile,
146
00:13:46,483 --> 00:13:51,363
gravity bound, constantly battered
by storms, wind, rain,
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00:13:51,363 --> 00:13:55,723
UV light, pounded by hot sunlight.
148
00:13:55,723 --> 00:13:59,043
So, just like these contemporary
relatives,
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00:13:59,043 --> 00:14:02,723
green algae rapidly chose
the easy pickings,
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00:14:02,723 --> 00:14:05,763
living in those freshwater rivers
and lakes that formed
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00:14:05,763 --> 00:14:07,643
on the early landmasses.
152
00:14:09,243 --> 00:14:12,523
Cocooned in the safety of the water,
153
00:14:12,523 --> 00:14:15,563
where nutrients and minerals
were abundant.
154
00:14:31,603 --> 00:14:37,123
Life stayed in the water
for 500 million years...
155
00:14:41,323 --> 00:14:45,443
..until a moment about
half a billion years ago,
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00:14:45,443 --> 00:14:48,643
when, for reasons we don't
entirely understand,
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plants' ancestors set off
into the unknown.
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00:14:57,243 --> 00:15:02,083
Making base camp on rocky sediments
at the water's edge.
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00:15:04,523 --> 00:15:08,363
Having evolved a thick waxy coating
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00:15:08,363 --> 00:15:12,523
to stop themselves drying out in
their harsh new environment.
161
00:15:16,323 --> 00:15:20,963
But this brilliant adaptation proved
to be a double-edged sword...
162
00:15:23,723 --> 00:15:28,083
..making it much harder to absorb
the nutrients they needed.
163
00:15:33,363 --> 00:15:36,283
So, despite their best efforts,
164
00:15:36,283 --> 00:15:39,523
they slowly dried out,
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00:15:39,523 --> 00:15:41,563
dying on the rocks.
166
00:15:49,523 --> 00:15:52,523
But plants aren't the type
to give up easily.
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They just needed to find something
to help them.
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00:16:02,883 --> 00:16:04,163
And they did,
169
00:16:04,163 --> 00:16:06,603
because, as it turned out...
170
00:16:09,043 --> 00:16:10,883
..they were not alone.
171
00:16:23,923 --> 00:16:25,843
Half a billion years before plants
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00:16:25,843 --> 00:16:28,043
successfully made it onto dry land,
173
00:16:28,043 --> 00:16:31,043
it's believed that another group
of organisms were surviving
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00:16:31,043 --> 00:16:34,683
on these hostile early landmasses.
175
00:16:34,683 --> 00:16:37,523
In this small rock are the
fossilised remains
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00:16:37,523 --> 00:16:39,803
of Tortotubus protuberans,
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00:16:39,803 --> 00:16:43,523
a 440-million-year-old species.
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00:16:43,523 --> 00:16:44,803
Now, you can't see it.
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It's 200 micrometres in length.
180
00:16:48,443 --> 00:16:53,923
But its earlier ancestors were those
that were surviving on that land.
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00:16:53,923 --> 00:16:56,763
Their ongoing success was down
to their ability
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00:16:56,763 --> 00:17:02,123
to chemically degrade that substrate
to get nutrients.
183
00:17:02,123 --> 00:17:06,443
They were feasting on the
bare rock itself.
184
00:17:06,443 --> 00:17:09,523
Now, if that sounds otherworldly,
I've got to tell you,
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you probably know these organisms
very well.
186
00:17:12,243 --> 00:17:14,243
You might have even had some
on toast
187
00:17:14,243 --> 00:17:15,923
for breakfast this morning.
188
00:17:15,923 --> 00:17:18,723
Because they're fungi.
189
00:17:27,043 --> 00:17:31,043
The next waves of plant life making
their way onto the land
190
00:17:31,043 --> 00:17:32,523
developed a new trick.
191
00:17:36,323 --> 00:17:41,243
They evolved specialised cells that
could connect with fungi,
192
00:17:41,243 --> 00:17:43,803
allowing them to trade resources
193
00:17:43,803 --> 00:17:46,803
like nutrients and food
between each other.
194
00:17:49,523 --> 00:17:53,683
And this new, mutually beneficial
partnership
195
00:17:53,683 --> 00:17:56,643
turned out to be a match
made in heaven.
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00:17:58,283 --> 00:18:01,443
This was truly a pivotal moment.
197
00:18:01,443 --> 00:18:04,043
Fungi and plants had come together
to produce
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00:18:04,043 --> 00:18:08,803
the first complex terrestrial
ecosystem on Earth.
199
00:18:08,803 --> 00:18:10,883
Now, the plants got from the fungi
200
00:18:10,883 --> 00:18:13,283
the nutrients they could extract
from the rocks -
201
00:18:13,283 --> 00:18:16,363
and they repaid their fungal
partners with glucose,
202
00:18:16,363 --> 00:18:18,843
the sugar product of photosynthesis,
203
00:18:18,843 --> 00:18:23,203
using energy from the sun and CO2
from the atmosphere.
204
00:18:23,203 --> 00:18:27,403
And this symbiosis meant that
plants could survive
205
00:18:27,403 --> 00:18:31,083
permanently on these
new landmasses.
206
00:18:33,043 --> 00:18:36,163
They'd finally made it
out of the water,
207
00:18:36,163 --> 00:18:39,083
and they were ready to start
conquering the world.
208
00:19:08,243 --> 00:19:11,043
It's incredible to think that
that first collaboration
209
00:19:11,043 --> 00:19:13,243
between fungi and plants
would lead to such
210
00:19:13,243 --> 00:19:15,043
an extraordinary relationship,
211
00:19:15,043 --> 00:19:18,523
and one which would endure
till today.
212
00:19:18,523 --> 00:19:21,043
Look at this bracket fungus here,
growing on this log.
213
00:19:21,043 --> 00:19:24,843
This species is all about decay
and decomposition,
214
00:19:24,843 --> 00:19:28,563
but we mustn't think about fungi
being about death.
215
00:19:28,563 --> 00:19:31,563
Here in the forest, they're very
much about life.
216
00:19:31,563 --> 00:19:34,443
There's an extensive network
of their hyphae,
217
00:19:34,443 --> 00:19:38,323
their roots if you like, stretching
out into the woodland here,
218
00:19:38,323 --> 00:19:41,723
intrinsically linking with the roots
of all of the trees.
219
00:19:47,043 --> 00:19:50,403
And they are allowing them
to share nutrients,
220
00:19:50,403 --> 00:19:52,883
even communicate with one another.
221
00:19:59,363 --> 00:20:03,403
And the key thing is that none of
these plants could survive
222
00:20:03,403 --> 00:20:04,803
without the fungi
223
00:20:04,803 --> 00:20:08,483
and the fungi couldn't survive
without the plants.
224
00:20:08,483 --> 00:20:12,203
And yet we always think of them
being down here in the damp,
225
00:20:12,203 --> 00:20:15,963
in the undergrowth, very much
subservient to the plants
226
00:20:15,963 --> 00:20:18,283
which are up here, towering
above them.
227
00:20:26,923 --> 00:20:29,763
But in the earliest days
of terrestrial plants,
228
00:20:29,763 --> 00:20:32,323
the situation couldn't have been
more different.
229
00:20:37,403 --> 00:20:41,243
The clues were strange
circular fossils.
230
00:20:44,043 --> 00:20:47,363
At first, scientists thought
they were ancient trees.
231
00:20:49,763 --> 00:20:55,523
But, looking closer, they found
microscopic filaments,
232
00:20:55,523 --> 00:20:58,483
revealing them to be fungi,
233
00:20:58,483 --> 00:21:02,243
but on a scale bigger than anything
we know today.
234
00:21:15,403 --> 00:21:21,043
70 million years after plants
and fungi first teamed up,
235
00:21:21,043 --> 00:21:25,483
something utterly astonishing
has happened to fungi.
236
00:21:28,043 --> 00:21:30,403
They are now giants.
237
00:21:32,523 --> 00:21:36,643
In the staggering form
of Prototaxites.
238
00:21:43,763 --> 00:21:50,523
Gargantuan, leathery, spore-bearing
fungal monsters
239
00:21:50,523 --> 00:21:54,483
standing an incredible
eight metres tall.
240
00:21:58,563 --> 00:22:02,283
They towered over the tiny plants
241
00:22:02,283 --> 00:22:05,083
still clinging to the water's edge.
242
00:22:13,883 --> 00:22:18,323
Before plants could challenge
the dominance of fungi,
243
00:22:18,323 --> 00:22:22,083
they needed to come up with yet
another cunning plan.
244
00:22:24,603 --> 00:22:27,283
The problem was that most
of the planet's surface
245
00:22:27,283 --> 00:22:29,323
was just rock.
246
00:22:29,323 --> 00:22:31,283
So, away from the water's edge,
247
00:22:31,283 --> 00:22:34,043
where plants had ready access
to that water,
248
00:22:34,043 --> 00:22:36,003
they really had no hope.
249
00:22:37,043 --> 00:22:41,043
As soon as any moisture appeared
on those impervious surfaces,
250
00:22:41,043 --> 00:22:45,763
it drained away into the streams,
into the rivers, into the lakes,
251
00:22:45,763 --> 00:22:50,843
leaving the rock too exposed,
too dry for plants to survive.
252
00:22:50,843 --> 00:22:54,043
So, at this point, it did appear
as if the Earth would be
253
00:22:54,043 --> 00:22:57,843
a fungal paradise for all eternity.
254
00:22:59,043 --> 00:23:01,283
If the plants wanted to compete,
255
00:23:01,283 --> 00:23:04,043
if they wanted to stake their claim
on the land,
256
00:23:04,043 --> 00:23:07,403
they would have to change
their equation.
257
00:23:07,403 --> 00:23:10,203
They needed some magic.
258
00:23:22,883 --> 00:23:26,003
Today, plants are everywhere.
259
00:23:28,923 --> 00:23:32,643
In every niche and every
environment.
260
00:23:39,763 --> 00:23:44,603
But almost all plants have one thing
that allows them to thrive.
261
00:23:48,043 --> 00:23:49,203
Soil.
262
00:23:52,403 --> 00:23:55,683
In the modern world, there are many
different types of soil.
263
00:23:55,683 --> 00:24:00,603
Most, like this crumbling brown
wonder stuff here,
264
00:24:00,603 --> 00:24:03,563
are made through the activities
of invertebrates, fungi,
265
00:24:03,563 --> 00:24:07,363
bacteria, enzymes, all breaking
down organic matter -
266
00:24:07,363 --> 00:24:10,043
like leaf litter or animal
excrement -
267
00:24:10,043 --> 00:24:12,763
and then mixing it with minerals
that have eroded
268
00:24:12,763 --> 00:24:14,563
from the bedrock below.
269
00:24:14,563 --> 00:24:19,043
And the result is this
magical substance,
270
00:24:19,043 --> 00:24:23,923
packed full of nutrients and,
essentially, able to hold moisture,
271
00:24:23,923 --> 00:24:27,683
meaning that plants can get what
they want from it all year round,
272
00:24:27,683 --> 00:24:31,203
those nutrients and that water.
273
00:24:31,203 --> 00:24:35,243
But 450 million years ago,
274
00:24:35,243 --> 00:24:37,483
there was no soil.
275
00:24:37,483 --> 00:24:42,443
No soil because there were few
or no animals living on land
276
00:24:42,443 --> 00:24:46,323
and precious little organic matter
for anything to work with.
277
00:24:46,323 --> 00:24:52,483
The very idea of making soil
was seemingly impossible.
278
00:24:58,963 --> 00:25:03,083
But plants weren't going to let a
little thing like that stop them.
279
00:25:12,563 --> 00:25:17,803
So they began scratching the rock
with tiny root-like hairs...
280
00:25:19,803 --> 00:25:21,683
..turning it to dust...
281
00:25:28,763 --> 00:25:32,523
..which they mixed with enzymes
secreted by fungi.
282
00:25:36,683 --> 00:25:39,563
But the truly transformative
ingredient...
283
00:25:42,603 --> 00:25:44,523
..was the plants themselves.
284
00:25:48,283 --> 00:25:50,763
Generation after generation...
285
00:25:53,643 --> 00:25:59,923
..laying themselves down to form
the magical substance
286
00:25:59,923 --> 00:26:02,283
that would set their
descendants free.
287
00:26:23,683 --> 00:26:28,043
Fast forward 30 million years
and, thanks to soil,
288
00:26:28,043 --> 00:26:30,443
plants have transformed.
289
00:26:38,123 --> 00:26:40,043
They are much bigger
290
00:26:40,043 --> 00:26:44,363
and in possession of brand-new
evolutionary tricks.
291
00:26:45,763 --> 00:26:49,283
A vascular system that allows them
to move water
292
00:26:49,283 --> 00:26:51,283
through their tissues.
293
00:26:51,283 --> 00:26:57,043
And the first true roots that draw
nutrients from the soil
294
00:26:57,043 --> 00:26:59,683
and support taller stems.
295
00:27:04,963 --> 00:27:09,083
The colossal Prototaxites
still tower over them.
296
00:27:16,883 --> 00:27:21,043
But now the soil offers
fertile ground
297
00:27:21,043 --> 00:27:26,083
for countless wind-borne, seed-like
spores released by plants.
298
00:27:31,643 --> 00:27:35,803
Thanks to this, plants can finally
break free
299
00:27:35,803 --> 00:27:37,563
and move away from the water...
300
00:27:45,963 --> 00:27:49,603
..riding the wind far and wide,
301
00:27:49,603 --> 00:27:52,563
spreading across plains
and hillsides.
302
00:28:05,683 --> 00:28:09,043
For the first time in history,
303
00:28:09,043 --> 00:28:13,963
Planet Earth was turning green.
304
00:28:22,243 --> 00:28:24,763
Ironically, there was a very
real danger
305
00:28:24,763 --> 00:28:27,523
that this new-found success
could have instigated
306
00:28:27,523 --> 00:28:29,443
the beginning of the end.
307
00:28:29,443 --> 00:28:32,323
You see, no matter how big
we think it is,
308
00:28:32,323 --> 00:28:35,043
the Earth is essentially
a closed system.
309
00:28:35,043 --> 00:28:39,763
So any massive increase or decrease
in the amount of plants
310
00:28:39,763 --> 00:28:41,043
wouldn't occur in isolation,
311
00:28:41,043 --> 00:28:44,043
it would have a profound effect
both then and now.
312
00:28:44,043 --> 00:28:47,683
I mean, just imagine, if we were
monumentally stupid enough
313
00:28:47,683 --> 00:28:51,763
to cut down all of the trees and
poison all of the plants,
314
00:28:51,763 --> 00:28:54,363
then the amount of CO2
in the atmosphere
315
00:28:54,363 --> 00:28:57,043
would rocket up, along with
the global temperature,
316
00:28:57,043 --> 00:28:59,723
and the amount of oxygen
would decrease.
317
00:28:59,723 --> 00:29:02,723
So ultimately we wouldn't be able
to breathe.
318
00:29:02,723 --> 00:29:06,043
But of course, we wouldn't be silly
enough to do that.
319
00:29:06,043 --> 00:29:09,243
400 million years ago, however,
320
00:29:09,243 --> 00:29:11,603
the situation was the polar
opposite,
321
00:29:11,603 --> 00:29:15,043
there was a massive increase
in the amount
322
00:29:15,043 --> 00:29:16,803
of terrestrial plants.
323
00:29:16,803 --> 00:29:18,323
And as a consequence,
324
00:29:18,323 --> 00:29:20,723
the amount of carbon dioxide
in the atmosphere
325
00:29:20,723 --> 00:29:22,043
began to plummet.
326
00:29:22,043 --> 00:29:26,043
In fact, in the first 30 million
years of the Devonian period,
327
00:29:26,043 --> 00:29:29,523
it went down by 25%.
328
00:29:31,483 --> 00:29:34,483
Now, given that CO2 is one
of the most important
329
00:29:34,483 --> 00:29:36,523
resources for terrestrial plants,
330
00:29:36,523 --> 00:29:41,243
this had the potential to develop
into a very real problem.
331
00:29:46,483 --> 00:29:50,323
You see, if plants wanted to
continue to grow bigger,
332
00:29:50,323 --> 00:29:54,403
they were going to need some new,
well, inspiration.
333
00:30:00,243 --> 00:30:02,563
The funny thing about plants
334
00:30:02,563 --> 00:30:06,083
is that we generally think of them
as fairly inanimate.
335
00:30:09,443 --> 00:30:13,643
But look closer and there's
an awful lot going on.
336
00:30:16,483 --> 00:30:20,563
Such as the photosynthetic dance
of green chloroplast,
337
00:30:20,563 --> 00:30:23,523
excited by the sunlight
they capture.
338
00:30:29,923 --> 00:30:31,763
But most incredibly,
339
00:30:31,763 --> 00:30:33,683
looked at the right way,
340
00:30:33,683 --> 00:30:36,323
you might almost swear
341
00:30:36,323 --> 00:30:38,443
you can see them breathing.
342
00:30:42,203 --> 00:30:46,083
Stomata - like tiny green mouths...
343
00:30:49,123 --> 00:30:51,363
..taking in carbon dioxide
344
00:30:51,363 --> 00:30:54,883
and exhaling oxygen and
water vapour.
345
00:31:02,963 --> 00:31:05,443
Back in the Devonian period,
346
00:31:05,443 --> 00:31:09,163
most stomata existed only
in plant stems.
347
00:31:12,883 --> 00:31:16,803
But falling atmospheric carbon
dioxide meant they needed
348
00:31:16,803 --> 00:31:21,243
more stomata to absorb the same
quantity to survive.
349
00:31:22,683 --> 00:31:25,403
The problem was where to put them.
350
00:31:27,203 --> 00:31:32,363
The answer was as elegant as
it was revolutionary.
351
00:31:39,243 --> 00:31:40,403
Leaves.
352
00:31:40,403 --> 00:31:41,603
Just look at these beauties.
353
00:31:41,603 --> 00:31:44,603
These are called elephant's ear.
354
00:31:44,603 --> 00:31:48,043
Now, of course, the earliest leaves
were nowhere near as big,
355
00:31:48,043 --> 00:31:52,203
but they were a similar triumph
of botanical form and function.
356
00:31:52,203 --> 00:31:54,323
Waxy on top, keeping them
waterproof.
357
00:31:54,323 --> 00:31:57,803
And underneath, these strong ribs
to keep them flat.
358
00:31:57,803 --> 00:31:59,883
Also, a greater surface area,
359
00:31:59,883 --> 00:32:04,603
allowing many more stomata in here
for better gas exchange.
360
00:32:04,603 --> 00:32:08,403
And on the top, that surface area
provides more room
361
00:32:08,403 --> 00:32:12,523
for more chlorophyll to harvest
more sunlight from the sun.
362
00:32:13,683 --> 00:32:15,603
But there is one problem
with leaves -
363
00:32:15,603 --> 00:32:17,043
they generate shade,
364
00:32:17,043 --> 00:32:19,043
which promotes competition.
365
00:32:19,043 --> 00:32:23,043
And this fired the starting gun
on a race for light
366
00:32:23,043 --> 00:32:26,043
that once again would completely
transform
367
00:32:26,043 --> 00:32:27,963
the surface of the Earth.
368
00:32:37,043 --> 00:32:40,643
Leaves did far more than just
allow plants to harvest
369
00:32:40,643 --> 00:32:43,203
more carbon dioxide.
370
00:32:43,203 --> 00:32:47,243
They made photosynthesis
more efficient,
371
00:32:47,243 --> 00:32:49,083
which boosted energy...
372
00:32:52,163 --> 00:32:57,203
..leading to the birth of a new
magic ingredient
373
00:32:57,203 --> 00:32:59,803
in the form of wood.
374
00:33:01,403 --> 00:33:04,603
This wonder material led
to the creation
375
00:33:04,603 --> 00:33:07,043
of biological machines,
376
00:33:07,043 --> 00:33:10,083
unlike anything Earth
had ever seen.
377
00:33:12,203 --> 00:33:16,043
With strong, durable trunks
that could push past
378
00:33:16,043 --> 00:33:18,803
the competition towards
the sunlight.
379
00:33:21,523 --> 00:33:23,083
Trees.
380
00:33:49,043 --> 00:33:50,483
For terrestrial plants,
381
00:33:50,483 --> 00:33:54,043
trees represented a quantum leap
forwards.
382
00:33:54,043 --> 00:33:55,363
I suppose we could say
383
00:33:55,363 --> 00:33:58,403
they were the epitome of everything
that plants had learned
384
00:33:58,403 --> 00:33:59,883
up until this point.
385
00:33:59,883 --> 00:34:02,043
Deep-rooted, long-lived
386
00:34:02,043 --> 00:34:04,043
photosynthetic powerhouses,
387
00:34:04,043 --> 00:34:07,043
perfectly adapted to exploiting
all of the resources
388
00:34:07,043 --> 00:34:08,603
that they required.
389
00:34:08,603 --> 00:34:12,443
And perhaps most ahead of its time
was Archaeopteris,
390
00:34:12,443 --> 00:34:15,403
considered by many to be
the first true tree -
391
00:34:15,403 --> 00:34:17,043
enormously successful,
392
00:34:17,043 --> 00:34:19,803
fossils found all over the world.
393
00:34:19,803 --> 00:34:22,523
And just like this contemporary
Sitka spruce,
394
00:34:22,523 --> 00:34:26,843
it had a timber trunk, thick bark
and lateral branches
395
00:34:26,843 --> 00:34:31,563
covered with masses of green
photosynthetic leaves
396
00:34:31,563 --> 00:34:33,883
competing for light.
397
00:34:33,883 --> 00:34:38,603
And with that competition came the
need to grow ever taller.
398
00:34:44,683 --> 00:34:46,443
And they did.
399
00:34:46,443 --> 00:34:49,483
Until they towered above
everything else,
400
00:34:49,483 --> 00:34:52,083
reaching heights of 30 metres.
401
00:35:05,923 --> 00:35:10,083
Earth was now on its way to
becoming a forest world.
402
00:35:15,523 --> 00:35:19,043
A home for countless new species
of plants
403
00:35:19,043 --> 00:35:21,603
and insects at every level,
404
00:35:21,603 --> 00:35:24,203
from the canopy to the forest floor.
405
00:35:33,043 --> 00:35:36,803
The former masters of the land,
Prototaxites,
406
00:35:36,803 --> 00:35:39,243
were gone, never to return.
407
00:35:46,403 --> 00:35:50,843
Fungi were reduced to life
in the shadows,
408
00:35:50,843 --> 00:35:52,403
where they've remained,
409
00:35:52,403 --> 00:35:55,563
working their quiet magic,
ever since.
410
00:36:06,283 --> 00:36:09,243
The meteoric rise of plant life,
411
00:36:09,243 --> 00:36:11,483
from uncertain pioneers
412
00:36:11,483 --> 00:36:14,323
to undisputed masters of the land,
413
00:36:14,323 --> 00:36:15,603
was complete.
414
00:36:22,043 --> 00:36:25,403
It was a new chapter
in Earth's story.
415
00:36:32,043 --> 00:36:34,403
But this triumph brought with it
416
00:36:34,403 --> 00:36:36,483
the threat of global catastrophe.
417
00:36:49,163 --> 00:36:52,843
If you've never stood and gazed up
into the high canopy of a forest,
418
00:36:52,843 --> 00:36:55,043
then it's something that I can
thoroughly recommend.
419
00:36:55,043 --> 00:36:57,803
Because if you're in the right place
at the right time,
420
00:36:57,803 --> 00:37:01,043
with the right species, you might
see something special.
421
00:37:01,043 --> 00:37:03,043
So stand, stare and blink,
422
00:37:03,043 --> 00:37:06,123
and look for a unique pattern.
423
00:37:06,123 --> 00:37:08,403
You see, all of the branches
and leaves
424
00:37:08,403 --> 00:37:10,883
from neighbouring trees
don't quite meet,
425
00:37:10,883 --> 00:37:13,643
leaving a silvery line between them.
426
00:37:13,643 --> 00:37:17,483
It's almost as if they're being kind
to their neighbours.
427
00:37:17,483 --> 00:37:21,643
It's a phenomenon called
crown shyness,
428
00:37:21,643 --> 00:37:24,043
part of a peaceful process
of evolution
429
00:37:24,043 --> 00:37:27,723
which has allowed all of the species
in this ecosystem
430
00:37:27,723 --> 00:37:30,883
to come together and live
harmoniously.
431
00:37:30,883 --> 00:37:32,123
And it works.
432
00:37:32,123 --> 00:37:33,803
It's beautiful.
433
00:37:33,803 --> 00:37:35,043
And when they're living,
434
00:37:35,043 --> 00:37:38,803
these magnificent trees are
providing homes,
435
00:37:38,803 --> 00:37:42,403
shelter and food for a whole range
of different animals,
436
00:37:42,403 --> 00:37:45,403
other species of plants and fungi.
437
00:37:45,403 --> 00:37:48,043
And you know, even when
they're dead,
438
00:37:48,043 --> 00:37:49,563
even when they are dead,
439
00:37:49,563 --> 00:37:52,403
they just keep giving.
440
00:37:52,403 --> 00:37:54,763
Through this process of
decomposition,
441
00:37:54,763 --> 00:37:59,123
again, they're feeding animals,
other species of plants and fungi.
442
00:37:59,123 --> 00:38:01,443
But it hasn't always been like this.
443
00:38:01,443 --> 00:38:03,043
There was a time when
it was different,
444
00:38:03,043 --> 00:38:07,043
when intense competition was driving
an arms race
445
00:38:07,043 --> 00:38:10,883
that produced a very
dangerous substance,
446
00:38:10,883 --> 00:38:15,523
a substance which could have led to
the end of all life on Earth.
447
00:38:49,923 --> 00:38:54,083
The rapid spread of terrestrial
plants has changed the Earth.
448
00:38:57,843 --> 00:39:02,603
Atmospheric carbon dioxide
has fallen even further,
449
00:39:02,603 --> 00:39:04,643
causing global cooling.
450
00:39:10,043 --> 00:39:11,603
In the southern hemisphere,
451
00:39:11,603 --> 00:39:15,043
ice sheets have formed for
the first time
452
00:39:15,043 --> 00:39:18,083
in more than a quarter of
a billion years.
453
00:39:22,843 --> 00:39:24,843
But near the equator,
454
00:39:24,843 --> 00:39:29,083
the climate is still extremely hot
and very wet.
455
00:39:48,363 --> 00:39:54,043
Fluctuating sea levels have caused
huge deltas to form,
456
00:39:54,043 --> 00:39:58,363
where vast carbon-hungry swamp
forests have sprung up...
457
00:40:00,043 --> 00:40:04,643
..covering as much as 20 million
square kilometres.
458
00:40:07,123 --> 00:40:10,803
A sweltering jungle paradise
459
00:40:10,803 --> 00:40:12,483
teeming with life...
460
00:40:14,963 --> 00:40:17,963
..where intense competition
for light
461
00:40:17,963 --> 00:40:22,643
has given rise to a whole host
of new plant species...
462
00:40:24,043 --> 00:40:26,723
..who would go on to threaten
the future
463
00:40:26,723 --> 00:40:28,803
of terrestrial life on Earth.
464
00:40:34,683 --> 00:40:38,043
The largest amongst them
were Lepidodendrons,
465
00:40:38,043 --> 00:40:40,963
known as "scale trees",
466
00:40:40,963 --> 00:40:45,083
towering up to an incredible
50 metres tall.
467
00:41:12,043 --> 00:41:15,043
In many ways, we can see this
as the modern equivalent
468
00:41:15,043 --> 00:41:17,843
of a carboniferous swamp forest.
469
00:41:19,323 --> 00:41:21,603
It's certainly very swampy,
soft underfoot.
470
00:41:21,603 --> 00:41:23,043
And in spring and summer,
471
00:41:23,043 --> 00:41:27,043
green, lush, very productive -
as it was back then,
472
00:41:27,043 --> 00:41:30,763
when large scale trees proliferated
473
00:41:30,763 --> 00:41:33,483
because their roots had adapted
to allow them to grow
474
00:41:33,483 --> 00:41:37,043
on the land and beneath the surface
of the water.
475
00:41:37,043 --> 00:41:40,163
But unlike these modern day
cypresses -
476
00:41:40,163 --> 00:41:42,483
and Archaeopteris, which
preceded them -
477
00:41:42,483 --> 00:41:44,563
their trunks were very different.
478
00:41:44,563 --> 00:41:46,323
They weren't made of wood.
479
00:41:46,323 --> 00:41:49,883
The interior was a soft,
corky material
480
00:41:49,883 --> 00:41:55,403
and the exterior, a very robust,
tough structural shell,
481
00:41:55,403 --> 00:41:58,763
which allowed them to perhaps grow
to 50 metres
482
00:41:58,763 --> 00:42:02,043
in as little as 15 years.
483
00:42:02,043 --> 00:42:06,043
But maybe that tough
structural shell
484
00:42:06,043 --> 00:42:08,483
was just a little too
indestructible.
485
00:42:08,483 --> 00:42:11,843
Because when they finally matured
and died and toppled
486
00:42:11,843 --> 00:42:15,043
into this oxygen depleted ooze,
487
00:42:15,043 --> 00:42:18,643
they didn't decompose as
modern trees do -
488
00:42:18,643 --> 00:42:22,883
breaking down slowly, giving their
carbon back to the system.
489
00:42:22,883 --> 00:42:27,403
No, those scale trees hung on to it,
they hoarded that carbon,
490
00:42:27,403 --> 00:42:29,923
and the consequences
for planet Earth
491
00:42:29,923 --> 00:42:31,803
were astonishingly dire.
492
00:42:48,283 --> 00:42:52,043
The floor of the swamp forests
became log-jammed
493
00:42:52,043 --> 00:42:54,803
with fallen trees and decaying
plant matter.
494
00:43:05,043 --> 00:43:08,323
When this carbon-rich mixture
was then buried
495
00:43:08,323 --> 00:43:11,203
under millions of tonnes
of sediment,
496
00:43:11,203 --> 00:43:17,283
all the elements were in place
for a remarkable alchemy.
497
00:43:37,483 --> 00:43:39,523
Under intense heat and pressure,
498
00:43:39,523 --> 00:43:41,483
and consumed by the passage of time,
499
00:43:41,483 --> 00:43:45,683
this vast swathe of plant material
was transformed
500
00:43:45,683 --> 00:43:48,563
by the Earth into a new type
of rock,
501
00:43:48,563 --> 00:43:51,363
a type of rock that would come back
to haunt us.
502
00:43:53,643 --> 00:43:54,963
Here we are.
503
00:43:57,363 --> 00:43:59,323
It's coal.
504
00:43:59,323 --> 00:44:01,923
Yes, coal.
505
00:44:01,923 --> 00:44:06,483
And there's a seam of coal running
through this cliff here -
506
00:44:06,483 --> 00:44:08,043
that black line -
507
00:44:08,043 --> 00:44:13,403
which is constantly being eroded
by the wind, waves and rain.
508
00:44:15,843 --> 00:44:20,163
Now, throughout the 60 million
years of the Carboniferous,
509
00:44:20,163 --> 00:44:23,043
plants fixed carbon in the form
of coal
510
00:44:23,043 --> 00:44:29,363
to the tune of 100,000 million
tonnes every single year,
511
00:44:29,363 --> 00:44:33,683
taking an enormous amount of free
carbon out of the carbon cycle.
512
00:44:35,723 --> 00:44:40,523
And what this added up to was
a deadly downward spiral.
513
00:45:02,603 --> 00:45:05,803
These carbon-hoarding swamp forests
514
00:45:05,803 --> 00:45:07,963
had pushed the Earth to the brink.
515
00:45:17,323 --> 00:45:19,043
In the frozen south,
516
00:45:19,043 --> 00:45:22,083
the Archaeopteris forests
are long dead.
517
00:45:24,443 --> 00:45:26,563
And to make matters worse,
518
00:45:26,563 --> 00:45:31,283
atmospheric carbon dioxide
is plummeting fast.
519
00:45:31,283 --> 00:45:34,043
Nearly a quarter of
the world's land
520
00:45:34,043 --> 00:45:37,403
is now buried beneath a blanket
of ice.
521
00:45:41,603 --> 00:45:45,403
Earth sits within a hair's breadth
of descending
522
00:45:45,403 --> 00:45:47,243
into a snowball event...
523
00:45:49,363 --> 00:45:53,643
..where reflection of the sun's rays
by the frozen surface
524
00:45:53,643 --> 00:45:57,123
could lead to the total glaciation
of the planet...
525
00:46:01,603 --> 00:46:04,923
..threatening almost all life
on Earth.
526
00:46:13,363 --> 00:46:16,603
This could've been the end
of plants' journey...
527
00:46:18,803 --> 00:46:21,563
..but for another timely
intervention.
528
00:46:39,203 --> 00:46:41,443
Beneath the frozen surface,
529
00:46:41,443 --> 00:46:45,283
the giant tectonic plates that set
all these events in motion
530
00:46:45,283 --> 00:46:46,923
in the first place
531
00:46:46,923 --> 00:46:50,083
had been continuing their
perpetual dance.
532
00:46:56,723 --> 00:47:00,443
And over the 60 million years
of the Carboniferous,
533
00:47:00,443 --> 00:47:03,443
they'd slowly been shifting
the landmasses
534
00:47:03,443 --> 00:47:05,763
where the swamp forests thrived...
535
00:47:07,163 --> 00:47:11,883
..raising huge granite mountains
in their place,
536
00:47:11,883 --> 00:47:14,323
which changed weather patterns,
537
00:47:14,323 --> 00:47:17,203
denying water to the deltas below.
538
00:47:26,323 --> 00:47:28,843
And with this intervention
539
00:47:28,843 --> 00:47:32,883
about 280 million years ago,
540
00:47:32,883 --> 00:47:37,403
most of the coal-producing swamps
dried up for good.
541
00:47:41,243 --> 00:47:45,643
Atmospheric carbon dioxide
began to rebound.
542
00:47:45,643 --> 00:47:47,243
Temperatures rose...
543
00:47:50,883 --> 00:47:53,083
..melting the southern glaciers...
544
00:48:00,043 --> 00:48:02,083
..which eventually disappeared...
545
00:48:08,243 --> 00:48:12,043
..setting the scene for a plant
renaissance.
546
00:48:15,043 --> 00:48:18,923
Allowing plants to diversify,
547
00:48:18,923 --> 00:48:23,203
developing flowers and fruit,
548
00:48:23,203 --> 00:48:25,803
grasses and grains.
549
00:48:28,603 --> 00:48:34,083
Transforming their signature green
into a kaleidoscope of colour.
550
00:48:39,243 --> 00:48:44,723
Evolving new species to exploit
every niche on the planet.
551
00:48:47,043 --> 00:48:51,563
Right down to one side of one
small island.
552
00:48:53,523 --> 00:48:57,483
Like our old friend,
Lysimachia glutinosa.
553
00:49:07,043 --> 00:49:10,243
Plants' long journey has been
an astonishing
554
00:49:10,243 --> 00:49:14,323
four-billion-year struggle
from humble beginnings...
555
00:49:18,523 --> 00:49:21,363
..through the deadly fight to escape
the water...
556
00:49:22,403 --> 00:49:25,763
..to the countless generations
that have reshaped
557
00:49:25,763 --> 00:49:27,403
the surface of our planet.
558
00:49:29,563 --> 00:49:33,323
Transforming it from bare rock
559
00:49:33,323 --> 00:49:37,563
to a lush and verdant
home for life.
560
00:49:43,163 --> 00:49:46,043
In the aftermath of all of these
tumultuous events
561
00:49:46,043 --> 00:49:48,963
came a new world order.
562
00:49:48,963 --> 00:49:52,043
That partnership of forces which had
been shaping the planet
563
00:49:52,043 --> 00:49:53,723
found a harmony.
564
00:49:53,723 --> 00:49:56,483
Even plants finally found a balance,
565
00:49:56,483 --> 00:50:00,043
instinctively aligning the amount
of biomass on Earth
566
00:50:00,043 --> 00:50:01,483
with the carbon cycle
567
00:50:01,483 --> 00:50:04,643
and the composition of
the atmosphere.
568
00:50:04,643 --> 00:50:11,723
And this equilibrium has lasted more
than a quarter of a billion years.
569
00:50:11,723 --> 00:50:16,043
You see, plants had taken up
that role as guardians
570
00:50:16,043 --> 00:50:17,643
of the Earth's climate,
571
00:50:17,643 --> 00:50:20,603
breathing in and out as
and when required
572
00:50:20,603 --> 00:50:24,763
and paving the way for the world
that we've inherited today.
573
00:50:24,763 --> 00:50:27,483
This bountiful, blooming miracle.
574
00:50:27,483 --> 00:50:30,883
This blue-green jewel.
575
00:50:30,883 --> 00:50:32,723
This Eden.
576
00:51:04,043 --> 00:51:08,843
How do scientists piece together
what was happening on our Earth
577
00:51:08,843 --> 00:51:11,563
millions or even billions
of years ago?
578
00:51:14,643 --> 00:51:19,043
Our planet has a 4.5-billion-year
history of change.
579
00:51:19,043 --> 00:51:22,683
And when I say change, I mean
radical, dramatic,
580
00:51:22,683 --> 00:51:24,643
just astonishing change.
581
00:51:26,403 --> 00:51:31,323
This episode featured the bizarre
giant fungi, Prototaxites,
582
00:51:31,323 --> 00:51:35,323
that dominated land over 400 million
years ago.
583
00:51:36,763 --> 00:51:40,603
Prototaxites was a fossil
fungal spike.
584
00:51:40,603 --> 00:51:44,363
They could grow up to be
about 26 feet tall.
585
00:51:44,363 --> 00:51:46,723
So about the size of a
two-storey house.
586
00:51:49,803 --> 00:51:53,163
Not only are these one of
the strangest organisms
587
00:51:53,163 --> 00:51:55,043
ever to grace the planet,
588
00:51:55,043 --> 00:51:58,043
the only clue to their existence
were a series
589
00:51:58,043 --> 00:52:03,883
of mysterious fossils first
discovered in 1843.
590
00:52:03,883 --> 00:52:05,643
So here you have this great
big thing.
591
00:52:05,643 --> 00:52:08,043
And when they started finding more
of them, they were like,
592
00:52:08,043 --> 00:52:09,483
"Well, this is kind of like a trunk,
593
00:52:09,483 --> 00:52:11,403
"or it's shaped like a chunk
of wood."
594
00:52:11,403 --> 00:52:12,683
But there's no wood.
595
00:52:12,683 --> 00:52:14,283
There's no trees.
596
00:52:14,283 --> 00:52:15,523
So what is this?
597
00:52:16,923 --> 00:52:19,043
Until, in 2007,
598
00:52:19,043 --> 00:52:23,163
when microscope technology was able
to take a closer look,
599
00:52:23,163 --> 00:52:27,803
revealing a cellular structure
that was strangely familiar.
600
00:52:27,803 --> 00:52:31,123
So what this is, is a very thin
slice of Prototaxites.
601
00:52:35,603 --> 00:52:37,803
And we find that, unlike a log,
602
00:52:37,803 --> 00:52:39,603
which would be full
of woody cells,
603
00:52:39,603 --> 00:52:42,563
instead we find a mass of these
fungal filaments.
604
00:52:43,923 --> 00:52:45,723
Looking at it more closely,
605
00:52:45,723 --> 00:52:49,123
they realised the structures were
actually more similar to fungi.
606
00:52:51,363 --> 00:52:54,563
These were gigantic tree-like fungi.
607
00:52:57,643 --> 00:53:01,363
It creates, in my mind, one of
the most bizarre
608
00:53:01,363 --> 00:53:03,803
prehistoric landscapes of all.
609
00:53:03,803 --> 00:53:08,323
And it's a great example of how
ancient organisms
610
00:53:08,323 --> 00:53:12,603
sometimes look completely different
from anything that's alive today.
611
00:53:16,243 --> 00:53:20,683
Sometimes the challenge isn't
identifying what a fossil is,
612
00:53:20,683 --> 00:53:24,083
it's figuring out how the parts
fit together.
613
00:53:27,443 --> 00:53:30,043
As it was with Archaeopteris,
614
00:53:30,043 --> 00:53:32,683
one of the earliest trees on Earth.
615
00:53:34,443 --> 00:53:37,843
Archaeopteris has a remarkable
fossil history.
616
00:53:37,843 --> 00:53:40,043
So, first, the stem was discovered,
617
00:53:40,043 --> 00:53:43,083
and they recognised it because of
its distinct type of wood.
618
00:53:44,803 --> 00:53:48,083
And then, at the same time, they
found lots of fern-like foliage.
619
00:53:49,203 --> 00:53:51,323
However, we didn't think
they were connected
620
00:53:51,323 --> 00:53:53,763
because they looked so drastically
different.
621
00:53:57,363 --> 00:54:02,523
Scientists initially thought they
had two distinct plants.
622
00:54:02,523 --> 00:54:05,963
Eventually, someone found a specimen
that showed
623
00:54:05,963 --> 00:54:07,643
the two structures connected.
624
00:54:07,643 --> 00:54:11,043
And that's how we discovered
that this was all
625
00:54:11,043 --> 00:54:12,283
part of the same plant.
626
00:54:14,483 --> 00:54:17,683
And so Archaeopteris
was discovered...
627
00:54:19,163 --> 00:54:23,443
..and another chapter of the story
of plants came into focus.
628
00:54:25,363 --> 00:54:28,443
Archaeopteris fundamentally changed
the Earth's landscape.
629
00:54:28,443 --> 00:54:29,603
For the first time,
630
00:54:29,603 --> 00:54:32,283
we had forests that we're
so familiar with today.
631
00:54:33,283 --> 00:54:37,083
Now, finding ancient fossilised
plant life is one thing.
632
00:54:38,483 --> 00:54:41,683
How do we begin to learn about
geological processes
633
00:54:41,683 --> 00:54:44,083
billions of years in the past?
634
00:54:45,563 --> 00:54:50,643
Like the origin of plate tectonics,
an event still shrouded in mystery.
635
00:54:52,723 --> 00:54:54,803
Studying the onset of
plate tectonics
636
00:54:54,803 --> 00:54:56,723
is a hugely controversial area,
637
00:54:56,723 --> 00:54:59,323
and that's because the evidence
is just so scant.
638
00:55:03,963 --> 00:55:08,043
An eye-catching new idea leads
some scientists to think
639
00:55:08,043 --> 00:55:10,763
plate tectonics started with a bang.
640
00:55:18,283 --> 00:55:21,043
I would so love to have been there
to watch
641
00:55:21,043 --> 00:55:24,083
a 30-mile asteroid smash into Earth.
642
00:55:34,043 --> 00:55:36,203
Now, I'd want to be out
in space someplace,
643
00:55:36,203 --> 00:55:37,563
maybe on the moon.
644
00:55:40,283 --> 00:55:44,123
But what's the evidence for such
a cataclysmic event?
645
00:55:44,123 --> 00:55:46,403
One thing that geologists can do
is they can pick out
646
00:55:46,403 --> 00:55:51,403
small minerals from rocks and date
them using isotopes.
647
00:55:51,403 --> 00:55:56,363
For example, there are now evidence
for very large asteroid impacts -
648
00:55:56,363 --> 00:55:59,043
in Australia, in South Africa -
649
00:55:59,043 --> 00:56:01,883
and that seems to correlate
with some of the starting
650
00:56:01,883 --> 00:56:03,923
of plate tectonics.
651
00:56:03,923 --> 00:56:09,043
Inside ancient rocks, geologists
have discovered spherules,
652
00:56:09,043 --> 00:56:12,363
tiny droplets of melted material
that form
653
00:56:12,363 --> 00:56:16,763
under the intense heat and pressure
of asteroid impacts.
654
00:56:18,043 --> 00:56:22,403
Modelling of these impacts indicates
that these massive bombardments
655
00:56:22,403 --> 00:56:25,643
played a role in triggering
plate tectonics.
656
00:56:28,683 --> 00:56:31,363
What happens if an asteroid hits
that crust?
657
00:56:31,363 --> 00:56:34,603
Well, it smashes it like a plate
falling on the floor,
658
00:56:34,603 --> 00:56:37,483
and those pieces get pushed down
and moved around.
659
00:56:37,483 --> 00:56:39,483
And that's how the mantle
and the crust
660
00:56:39,483 --> 00:56:42,363
could begin plate tectonics.
661
00:56:42,363 --> 00:56:44,643
By hunting down clues today,
662
00:56:44,643 --> 00:56:49,563
scientists can unlock the secrets
of the Earth's deep history,
663
00:56:49,563 --> 00:56:53,083
allowing us to tell our planet's
story like never before.
664
00:57:00,603 --> 00:57:02,723
We journey back to where it
all began...
665
00:57:04,763 --> 00:57:07,763
..to tell the story of
our atmosphere.
666
00:57:09,363 --> 00:57:13,523
How it emerged from a toxic
orange hell
667
00:57:13,523 --> 00:57:17,723
and transformed a violent ball
of rock
668
00:57:17,723 --> 00:57:22,043
into a beautiful, life-sustaining
blue bubble,
669
00:57:22,043 --> 00:57:24,683
unique in the universe.
670
00:57:28,643 --> 00:57:31,443
If the Earth could talk,
what would it tell us?
671
00:57:31,443 --> 00:57:34,043
Well, the Open University imagine
how it might answer
672
00:57:34,043 --> 00:57:35,603
some of our questions.
673
00:57:35,603 --> 00:57:38,043
To experience this interactive
presentation,
674
00:57:38,043 --> 00:57:39,803
go to the website on the screen
675
00:57:39,803 --> 00:57:42,043
and follow the links to
the Open University.
86224
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