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The heavens. The great bowl of
the heavens, of our sky.
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Just so beautiful!
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I love the sky because, wherever
I am in the world, if I can find
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00:00:36,123 --> 00:00:39,523
some space, I can look up at this
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big, blue, pristine space.
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And I like the apparent permanence -
the fact that I can stare into
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a sky that the dinosaurs stared
into, that Neanderthals stared into.
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The atmosphere is essential for the
Earth to be habitable at all.
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This thin layer of gas that
clings to our planet,
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00:01:10,163 --> 00:01:13,963
keeps liquid
water on the Earth's surface
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and shields life from the most
harmful of the sun's rays.
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00:01:21,203 --> 00:01:24,963
As far as we know,
our thin blue line is unique
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in the vast void of space...
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..and today,
scientists are beginning to piece
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00:01:33,523 --> 00:01:37,203
together just how our planet
got its special blue bubble.
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By going back to the Earth's
earliest origins,
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00:01:49,443 --> 00:01:54,883
we can now tell the almost
implausible story of our atmosphere.
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00:01:59,523 --> 00:02:03,523
How it emerged from
a toxic orange hell...
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00:02:05,523 --> 00:02:09,483
..and transformed the planet from
an exposed ball of rock...
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00:02:12,563 --> 00:02:14,723
..to a beautiful, living world...
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..capable of nurturing
a staggering abundance of life.
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This atmosphere has been
the planet's great protector
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for 2.5 billion years,
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00:02:31,803 --> 00:02:35,683
soaking up everything
that our planet has thrown at it.
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It's a thin, delicate,
fragile cloak that shields
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and protects all life on Earth.
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Our atmosphere is a unique
mix of gasses not found anywhere
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else in the solar system,
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gasses that allow Earth to be
a living, breathing world.
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78% of our atmosphere is nitrogen,
which can be taken up by
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bacteria in the soil and plants,
and it's an integral part of DNA.
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21% of our atmosphere is oxygen.
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It's there for animals to breathe,
but also for many living things
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to use to convert
their food into energy.
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00:04:01,523 --> 00:04:05,163
Even less abundant gasses
are crucial for sustaining life.
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A fraction of a percent is
water vapour, which condenses
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and falls as rain,
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and a tiny amount is carbon dioxide,
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which might be a waste product
to us but it's absolutely
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essential for plants
when it comes to photosynthesis.
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00:04:23,923 --> 00:04:28,843
It almost appears that this
unique cocktail of gasses
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is here as a sort of
life-support system.
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00:04:35,203 --> 00:04:38,763
So, where did this beautiful
atmosphere come from
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and how did it lead to the
origins of life here?
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Well, to answer that, we need to
go back to the very beginning...
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..4.6 billion years ago.
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00:05:07,443 --> 00:05:11,923
Our Earth began
as nothing more than dust and gas.
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00:05:14,883 --> 00:05:20,123
A nebulous cloud containing every
element our new world would need.
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00:05:24,123 --> 00:05:29,403
Over tens of millions of years,
the cloud begins to clump together,
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00:05:29,403 --> 00:05:31,643
forming rocks.
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00:05:31,643 --> 00:05:33,883
Pulled together by gravity...
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00:05:35,363 --> 00:05:38,083
..they grow bigger and bigger...
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..until, finally, a new world
is formed.
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00:05:57,283 --> 00:06:01,003
Asteroids rain down
on the young Earth
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00:06:01,003 --> 00:06:04,203
for hundreds
of millions of years...
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..its molten surface still searing
from the heat of its creation.
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00:06:23,883 --> 00:06:26,003
But something is missing.
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The colour blue.
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00:06:36,443 --> 00:06:39,803
You see,
the Earth has no atmosphere.
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00:06:41,643 --> 00:06:47,283
The sun and the newly formed moon
sit in a jet-black sky.
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00:06:54,763 --> 00:06:57,443
This is how the Earth could
have remained...
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..a lifeless ball of rock,
floating in the void of space.
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00:07:22,403 --> 00:07:24,923
This is what the
surface of the Earth may have
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00:07:24,923 --> 00:07:28,043
looked like 4 billion years ago.
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Stark, brutal and yet,
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00:07:31,723 --> 00:07:35,283
in some ways, beautiful landscape.
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00:07:37,843 --> 00:07:43,003
The early Earth was little more
than a ball of cooling rock,
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so where did the planet's
first atmosphere come from?
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Now it might surprise you, but
I've got some clues to the answer
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00:07:52,683 --> 00:07:56,363
to that question in my pocket,
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00:07:56,363 --> 00:07:59,323
in the form of this tiny,
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but extremely rare and valuable,
granular piece of rock.
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00:08:05,523 --> 00:08:11,683
This, you see, is a
carbonaceous chondrite meteorite,
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00:08:11,683 --> 00:08:17,603
and it was formed at the same
time our solar system was formed -
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and I've got it in my hand!
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I am holding the history
of our solar system
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and the Earth in my hand.
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4.5 billion years ago,
trillions of tonnes of this
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type of material came together
to form our planet.
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These meteorites are leftovers
from the Earth's creation.
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00:08:45,443 --> 00:08:47,803
So, through chemical analysis,
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scientists can discover the raw
ingredients that made our world.
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These meteorites contain
heavy elements, like iron,
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00:08:59,443 --> 00:09:03,443
and the rocky constituents
that formed the planet itself.
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00:09:05,363 --> 00:09:09,283
But chondrite meteorites contain
lighter elements too.
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00:09:11,123 --> 00:09:16,043
Chemical analysis reveals that
these rocks contain carbon,
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00:09:16,043 --> 00:09:17,923
hydrogen and sulphur,
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00:09:17,923 --> 00:09:21,443
and we can still see them
belching as gasses
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00:09:21,443 --> 00:09:24,083
from volcanic
vents around the world today.
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00:09:26,723 --> 00:09:31,963
When combined, these elements
form new compounds like methane,
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00:09:31,963 --> 00:09:36,483
carbon dioxide and
hydrogen sulphide,
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which are light
enough to exist as gasses
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but not so light they
drift off into space.
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00:09:45,723 --> 00:09:49,043
So, meteorites like this
weren't just the
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building blocks of our planet -
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they contained the essential
ingredients for its atmosphere.
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00:09:55,603 --> 00:09:58,363
And 4.5 billion years ago,
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that had begun to change everything.
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00:10:18,363 --> 00:10:21,003
The ancient Earth holds within it
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00:10:21,003 --> 00:10:24,483
everything it needs to create
the first atmosphere.
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Those ingredients just have
to make it to the surface.
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00:10:39,683 --> 00:10:44,123
But deep within the young
Earth, something is stirring.
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00:11:02,883 --> 00:11:08,243
Across the globe,
molten magma races up from within...
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00:11:12,683 --> 00:11:16,843
..and these rivers of liquid fire
unleash gasses that will
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00:11:16,843 --> 00:11:19,043
transform our planet.
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00:11:35,563 --> 00:11:40,163
The world is smothered by a thick
toxic fog.
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00:11:58,083 --> 00:12:01,843
As the sun creeps above the horizon,
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00:12:01,843 --> 00:12:04,363
gas scatters the light.
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Earth gets its first colour-filled
sunrise.
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00:12:15,483 --> 00:12:20,083
This new world now
has an atmosphere...
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..but one like nothing
we've ever seen.
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00:12:40,923 --> 00:12:45,523
We're all familiar with the colours
in the early-morning sky,
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but a sunrise 4 billion years ago
would have been very different.
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Sunlight passing through that
churning mixture of methane
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00:12:54,723 --> 00:12:59,283
and carbon dioxide would have given
the whole planet an orange hue.
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00:13:00,603 --> 00:13:03,483
But this toxic atmosphere
was very important.
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It was the first time
that our planet had
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00:13:06,563 --> 00:13:09,523
a protective shield from space.
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00:13:09,523 --> 00:13:12,643
But, of course,
it was still a very alien world -
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00:13:12,643 --> 00:13:16,563
would have been to us - and not just
because of that noxious
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00:13:16,563 --> 00:13:21,683
orange fog, or the searing, hot,
black, bare volcanic rocks
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beneath our feet.
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00:13:22,923 --> 00:13:25,603
It was because something
fundamental,
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00:13:25,603 --> 00:13:29,043
something that we take for granted
every day, was missing.
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00:13:32,003 --> 00:13:33,163
Water.
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00:13:44,883 --> 00:13:49,203
Today, 70% of the Earth's surface
is covered in water.
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00:13:51,803 --> 00:13:54,683
A planet of
almost limitless blue...
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..with endless rivers...
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00:14:01,083 --> 00:14:02,443
..freezing ice caps...
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00:14:04,123 --> 00:14:06,243
..and turquoise tropical paradises.
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00:14:22,443 --> 00:14:24,563
But 4.5 billion years ago...
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..there wasn't a single
drop of liquid water
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on the ancient Earth's surface.
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00:14:42,483 --> 00:14:45,563
However,
the planet wasn't totally dry.
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00:14:48,723 --> 00:14:52,123
The young atmosphere
did contain water.
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00:14:53,923 --> 00:14:57,883
Asteroids and volcanic eruptions
have released a vast
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00:14:57,883 --> 00:14:59,603
ocean of water vapour.
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00:15:09,323 --> 00:15:12,283
Trillions of droplets
were floating in the sky...
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00:15:23,323 --> 00:15:27,003
..so small they soar
on moving air.
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00:15:35,363 --> 00:15:39,643
Colliding and merging
with each other, they slowly grow...
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00:15:43,043 --> 00:15:47,763
..until they can no longer
fight Earth's gravity.
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00:15:56,403 --> 00:16:00,003
En masse, they are pulled downwards,
towards the ground.
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00:16:10,923 --> 00:16:14,723
But with the atmosphere still
scorchingly hot from heat
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00:16:14,723 --> 00:16:16,363
trapped by Earth's formation...
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00:16:18,483 --> 00:16:20,803
..not a single drop of rain...
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00:16:24,803 --> 00:16:27,483
..has ever made it to the surface.
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00:16:30,723 --> 00:16:36,763
And it's been the same story every
day for tens of millions of years.
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The Earth is stuck -
a barren desert world
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totally incapable
of supporting life.
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00:16:53,363 --> 00:16:56,443
Water today is on a continual
journey.
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00:16:58,843 --> 00:17:03,083
It emerges from the leaves
of green plants as vapour,
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00:17:03,083 --> 00:17:06,323
rises up to the sky,
where it forms clouds,
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00:17:06,323 --> 00:17:08,643
which then condense into rain,
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00:17:08,643 --> 00:17:11,803
which falls onto the ground,
which drains into the rivers,
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which eventually flow into
our vast oceans.
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00:17:16,243 --> 00:17:21,083
And we're very used to seeing water
appear out of our atmosphere.
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00:17:21,083 --> 00:17:25,563
What about those lovely soft layers
of mist that we see over rivers,
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or the dew on your toes
if you scuff across a summer lawn,
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00:17:29,683 --> 00:17:32,483
or when it falls as rain or snow?
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00:17:40,363 --> 00:17:43,883
The only reason our planet is
a water world is because it's the
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right temperature and pressure for
water to form out of the atmosphere.
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00:17:51,323 --> 00:17:55,643
4.4 billion years ago,
Earth needed to cool down.
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00:17:59,003 --> 00:18:03,283
Slowly, heat has been radiating
out into space...
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00:18:07,803 --> 00:18:10,243
..over millions and millions
of years.
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00:18:26,323 --> 00:18:27,563
Until...
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..a tipping point is reached.
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00:18:51,643 --> 00:18:55,363
What starts with just a few drops
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becomes the greatest deluge
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00:18:57,883 --> 00:19:00,083
the solar system has ever seen.
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00:19:26,483 --> 00:19:29,363
Huge weather systems
sweep across the planet
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00:19:29,363 --> 00:19:34,323
and storms which last centuries dump
oceans of water from the skies.
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A key element in the equation
of life had been
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well and truly unleashed.
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Our planet is transformed.
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00:20:15,603 --> 00:20:19,443
As the Earth continued to cool,
the rains that fell from its thick,
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dense atmosphere created a new
water world.
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00:20:22,163 --> 00:20:24,883
And for the first
time in its history,
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it would have looked
a little bit like this.
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00:20:28,323 --> 00:20:31,483
If you gazed into the sky,
you would have seen clouds,
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00:20:31,483 --> 00:20:34,203
you would have felt the wind
and the rain on your face.
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00:20:34,203 --> 00:20:36,083
And if you listened,
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00:20:36,083 --> 00:20:39,243
you'd have heard waves
carving a new coastline.
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00:20:40,403 --> 00:20:43,203
But that's where the similarities
would have ended,
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00:20:43,203 --> 00:20:48,203
because this rocky,
wet world was devoid of life.
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00:20:48,203 --> 00:20:51,323
But it was a world
where life could begin.
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00:21:10,763 --> 00:21:13,923
Water was the crucial ingredient.
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00:21:19,363 --> 00:21:24,563
Not long after Earth's oceans
rained from the sky,
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a shallow pool was about to
play host to the most important
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00:21:30,043 --> 00:21:33,123
moment in the history of the Earth.
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00:21:48,523 --> 00:21:52,003
So much of how life began
is still a mystery.
191
00:21:56,043 --> 00:22:01,363
It's not known exactly
when, where or how it happened.
192
00:22:03,683 --> 00:22:08,123
But we do know that,
one day on Earth,
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00:22:08,123 --> 00:22:11,803
a living thing
came into existence.
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00:22:15,683 --> 00:22:18,923
The first microscopic organism.
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00:22:25,283 --> 00:22:30,203
And in that instant of pure chance,
everything changed.
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00:22:32,203 --> 00:22:35,563
The Earth became a living world.
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00:22:41,043 --> 00:22:45,843
All trace of the first life has
vanished, lost to history.
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00:22:48,483 --> 00:22:50,123
But even today,
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00:22:50,123 --> 00:22:54,443
we can get clues as to what
early life might have been like.
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00:22:59,203 --> 00:23:03,683
High in the Andes is one of the
largest geyser fields in the world.
201
00:23:08,963 --> 00:23:13,363
The water in this vent is
boiling at 85 degrees Centigrade
202
00:23:13,363 --> 00:23:17,123
and NASA scientists have
looked into this water and found
203
00:23:17,123 --> 00:23:20,123
that it contains one of the highest
concentrations of arsenic,
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00:23:20,123 --> 00:23:22,803
a serious toxin,
anywhere in the world.
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00:23:24,883 --> 00:23:28,283
And these toxic conditions
are similar to those
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00:23:28,283 --> 00:23:30,523
found on the early Earth.
207
00:23:30,523 --> 00:23:33,403
But amongst the poison
and boiling water,
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something ancient is flourishing.
209
00:23:37,723 --> 00:23:40,363
Just look at all of these
beautiful colours here.
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00:23:43,963 --> 00:23:50,563
That's life - a primordial mat
of billions of thriving bacteria.
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00:23:54,563 --> 00:23:58,923
These hardy bacteria are called
extremophiles and, just
212
00:23:58,923 --> 00:24:03,283
like their predecessors, they've
adapted to live in this hot water.
213
00:24:03,283 --> 00:24:07,003
In fact, they've carved out a niche
where they can proliferate.
214
00:24:07,003 --> 00:24:09,803
There are a great range of species
here and an enormous
215
00:24:09,803 --> 00:24:12,283
number of individual organisms.
216
00:24:15,323 --> 00:24:19,523
Which just goes to show that
even the simplest life is inherently
217
00:24:19,523 --> 00:24:23,083
flexible, adaptable and tough.
218
00:24:23,083 --> 00:24:27,043
So, perhaps it's not surprising
that that early life grabbed
219
00:24:27,043 --> 00:24:31,163
an opportunity to try and live
in an environment which, for us,
220
00:24:31,163 --> 00:24:33,603
is incredibly harsh and hostile,
221
00:24:33,603 --> 00:24:35,803
but where they could prosper.
222
00:24:42,483 --> 00:24:44,843
Today, life is prolific.
223
00:24:44,843 --> 00:24:49,043
It thrives in the most
unlikely of places across the world.
224
00:24:49,043 --> 00:24:52,803
But living in these extreme
environments comes
225
00:24:52,803 --> 00:24:54,323
with severe limitations.
226
00:24:56,123 --> 00:24:59,083
The extremophile bacteria
living around these
227
00:24:59,083 --> 00:25:01,523
hot springs are essentially
locked in,
228
00:25:01,523 --> 00:25:04,803
defined by the very precise
requirements in terms of the
229
00:25:04,803 --> 00:25:08,683
heat of the water and the nutrients
in it. And if we were to remove
230
00:25:08,683 --> 00:25:13,323
them from this highly specialised
environment, they would likely die.
231
00:25:13,323 --> 00:25:17,083
And things were pretty much
the same for early life on Earth.
232
00:25:17,083 --> 00:25:21,403
It was essentially stuck, trapped
in the niches that it evolved to
233
00:25:21,403 --> 00:25:25,363
survive in. And because all
of the nutrients were in the water,
234
00:25:25,363 --> 00:25:29,363
the option for life on land
simply wasn't there.
235
00:25:29,363 --> 00:25:33,683
Early life wasn't prolific,
widespread, or even visible.
236
00:25:54,243 --> 00:25:57,683
The ancient Earth is harsh
and unforgiving...
237
00:26:02,843 --> 00:26:04,363
..with barren black land...
238
00:26:09,923 --> 00:26:11,723
..and acidic green oceans.
239
00:26:16,043 --> 00:26:20,883
But the biggest barrier to life's
flourishing is the atmosphere,
240
00:26:20,883 --> 00:26:22,963
toxic and orange.
241
00:26:24,203 --> 00:26:27,683
An atmosphere in constant turmoil.
242
00:26:38,563 --> 00:26:43,563
Tectonic movements in the Earth's
crust drives land formation,
243
00:26:43,563 --> 00:26:47,843
which in turn creates massive
atmospheric instability.
244
00:26:53,363 --> 00:26:56,203
Vicious winds sweep dust
high up into the air...
245
00:26:59,683 --> 00:27:02,523
..and these dust particles
create more clouds.
246
00:27:06,683 --> 00:27:12,203
Storms rage across the planet,
laced with poisonous gasses...
247
00:27:14,283 --> 00:27:17,603
..deadly to the vast majority
of life we know today.
248
00:27:25,603 --> 00:27:30,643
But whilst chaos rages
above the waves, deep underwater
249
00:27:30,643 --> 00:27:34,803
our ancestors are simply existing,
250
00:27:34,803 --> 00:27:36,443
seemingly trapped...
251
00:27:38,723 --> 00:27:40,203
..with no means of escape...
252
00:27:44,483 --> 00:27:49,443
..day after day,
for nearly a billion years
253
00:27:49,443 --> 00:27:51,763
where nothing appears to happen.
254
00:28:06,563 --> 00:28:10,083
Today, life is no longer
confined to the water.
255
00:28:11,363 --> 00:28:13,483
Oh, yes, what a view!
256
00:28:14,483 --> 00:28:18,803
Both life and the atmosphere
that supports it have undergone
257
00:28:18,803 --> 00:28:20,563
an astonishing transformation.
258
00:28:34,523 --> 00:28:35,683
It's a male.
259
00:28:35,683 --> 00:28:38,843
It's got the comb on top of its head
and its feathers are all silvery,
260
00:28:38,843 --> 00:28:42,883
rippling in the wind as it glides
along the edge of this escarpment.
261
00:28:44,803 --> 00:28:47,443
With a wingspan of more than 3m,
262
00:28:47,443 --> 00:28:51,403
the giant Andean condor is
one of the largest birds on Earth.
263
00:28:52,563 --> 00:28:55,443
Oh, goodness me! Look at that!
264
00:28:58,923 --> 00:29:01,883
Absolutely sensational.
Now I can see its eye.
265
00:29:01,883 --> 00:29:05,803
I'm looking into the eye
of an Andean condor.
266
00:29:05,803 --> 00:29:07,123
Oh!
267
00:29:07,123 --> 00:29:08,923
It's ornithological nirvana!
268
00:29:11,963 --> 00:29:15,923
Watching these giant birds
soaring here
269
00:29:15,923 --> 00:29:21,123
just reveals how their life
is completely intertwined with
270
00:29:21,123 --> 00:29:24,963
that thin cloak of air that's
wrapped around our planet.
271
00:29:24,963 --> 00:29:29,403
But then, when you think about it,
everything - every plant,
272
00:29:29,403 --> 00:29:33,723
fungi, every bacteria, every tiny
insect, every giant reptile,
273
00:29:33,723 --> 00:29:38,763
even us - are completely
dependent on this atmosphere.
274
00:29:44,523 --> 00:29:48,923
So, how DID the atmosphere
go from a toxic orange haze to the
275
00:29:48,923 --> 00:29:51,923
nurturing cocktail of gasses
we know today?
276
00:29:56,003 --> 00:30:01,283
Well, it was life itself that would
make the difference...
277
00:30:03,363 --> 00:30:06,323
..thanks to a giant
evolutionary leap.
278
00:30:09,523 --> 00:30:13,003
The development of complex life
was far from inevitable.
279
00:30:13,003 --> 00:30:14,123
When you think about it,
280
00:30:14,123 --> 00:30:16,483
there are plenty of forks
in the road of evolution,
281
00:30:16,483 --> 00:30:18,203
trillions of dead ends
282
00:30:18,203 --> 00:30:21,043
and there is no definitive
end point.
283
00:30:21,043 --> 00:30:25,483
But the very fact that we exist
proves that whatever card
284
00:30:25,483 --> 00:30:28,923
is thrown at life,
it plays it and it survives.
285
00:30:34,003 --> 00:30:35,603
And that's precisely
286
00:30:35,603 --> 00:30:39,163
what was happening 3.5 billion years
ago.
287
00:30:39,163 --> 00:30:45,123
Life was playing its card - slowly
evolving, gently proliferating -
288
00:30:45,123 --> 00:30:49,163
and it wasn't quite as stuck as
we might have thought it was.
289
00:30:49,163 --> 00:30:53,923
In fact, a significant development
in a single cell was about to
290
00:30:53,923 --> 00:30:57,363
change the way that life
could exist.
291
00:30:57,363 --> 00:31:01,803
Life was about to take
a quantum leap forward.
292
00:31:05,083 --> 00:31:09,203
A leap, that would
change our atmosphere forever.
293
00:31:19,123 --> 00:31:23,883
It started with a mutation
that altered the fundamental
294
00:31:23,883 --> 00:31:26,563
chemistry of the cells...
295
00:31:27,843 --> 00:31:30,963
..giving them the ability
to capture the sun's rays...
296
00:31:33,563 --> 00:31:37,083
..and store the energy as glucose,
297
00:31:37,083 --> 00:31:41,883
energy the cells can then use
to grow and reproduce.
298
00:31:47,283 --> 00:31:50,483
This was photosynthesis...
299
00:31:51,963 --> 00:31:55,803
..an evolutionary
innovation that will change
300
00:31:55,803 --> 00:31:59,243
the course of Earth's
history forever.
301
00:32:13,283 --> 00:32:17,083
The ancestors of this
cell are still around today.
302
00:32:20,923 --> 00:32:23,963
They can be found in almost
every puddle, lake,
303
00:32:23,963 --> 00:32:25,963
sea or ocean across our planet.
304
00:32:29,843 --> 00:32:33,803
Peering down through this microscope
is like taking a look
305
00:32:33,803 --> 00:32:39,603
back at life on Earth
almost 3.5 billion years ago.
306
00:32:39,603 --> 00:32:45,843
You see, these rod-shaped structures
here are cyanobacteria,
307
00:32:45,843 --> 00:32:48,803
and we think they're pretty similar
to those that existed
308
00:32:48,803 --> 00:32:54,283
trillions of generations ago, when
our atmosphere was very different.
309
00:32:54,283 --> 00:32:57,443
Now, they may not look impressive,
but I've got to tell you,
310
00:32:57,443 --> 00:33:02,203
they're probably one of the most
successful organisms to ever live.
311
00:33:02,203 --> 00:33:07,483
A little over 3 billion years ago,
these tiny flecks,
312
00:33:07,483 --> 00:33:09,603
these microscopic organisms
313
00:33:09,603 --> 00:33:13,803
just a fraction of a millimetre
across, started to build
314
00:33:13,803 --> 00:33:18,923
an atmosphere which humans
could live and breathe in.
315
00:33:24,283 --> 00:33:28,283
Thanks to energy from the sun,
these cells are able to steal
316
00:33:28,283 --> 00:33:33,883
hydrogen from water molecules and
combine it with the carbon dioxide
317
00:33:33,883 --> 00:33:39,363
dissolved in the oceans, fabricating
essential tools for life.
318
00:33:46,643 --> 00:33:50,603
Individually,
these revolutionary cells,
319
00:33:50,603 --> 00:33:53,643
which you can still find in
water bodies like this all across
320
00:33:53,643 --> 00:33:56,683
the planet, produced a negligible,
321
00:33:56,683 --> 00:33:59,923
unremarkable, nonexistent effect.
322
00:34:01,363 --> 00:34:04,123
But when they combined
in their trillions,
323
00:34:04,123 --> 00:34:08,003
when they combined en masse,
they were about to demonstrate,
324
00:34:08,003 --> 00:34:13,923
for the very first time, the awesome
power of life on Earth,
325
00:34:13,923 --> 00:34:18,243
and that would have a profound,
long-lasting
326
00:34:18,243 --> 00:34:21,363
physical resonance on our planet.
327
00:34:25,483 --> 00:34:28,843
Life powered by photosynthesis
thrived.
328
00:34:33,323 --> 00:34:37,123
Cells with this new ability to
harness energy from the sun
329
00:34:37,123 --> 00:34:39,923
out-competed those that couldn't.
330
00:34:41,483 --> 00:34:43,683
So, they began to multiply.
331
00:34:47,403 --> 00:34:49,083
One becomes two.
332
00:34:50,403 --> 00:34:51,723
Two become four.
333
00:35:03,923 --> 00:35:07,363
Until there are literally
trillions of offspring.
334
00:35:10,083 --> 00:35:16,003
Enough to fundamentally change
the chemistry of our world.
335
00:35:24,123 --> 00:35:29,403
Photosynthesis was a game-changer
for life because the
336
00:35:29,403 --> 00:35:34,003
ingredients that it required were
so readily available and abundant.
337
00:35:34,003 --> 00:35:40,083
But the by-products of many types
of photosynthesis include a very
338
00:35:40,083 --> 00:35:42,883
reactive and dangerous gas.
339
00:35:42,883 --> 00:35:46,843
Now, for these revolutionary
early organisms,
340
00:35:46,843 --> 00:35:50,123
this was just a waste product,
something to be thrown away.
341
00:35:50,123 --> 00:35:52,443
But for the likes of you and I,
342
00:35:52,443 --> 00:35:57,923
and the rest of complex life
on Earth, it's absolutely essential.
343
00:35:57,923 --> 00:36:01,083
I'm talking, of course,
about oxygen.
344
00:36:06,763 --> 00:36:10,683
Trillions of bacteria are spread
across the ancient oceans...
345
00:36:15,603 --> 00:36:20,083
..and the waste oxygen they
throw away is enough to build a new
346
00:36:20,083 --> 00:36:22,523
atmosphere for our planet.
347
00:36:27,523 --> 00:36:30,763
Bubbles of oxygen race upwards,
towards the surface.
348
00:36:35,443 --> 00:36:36,763
But they can't escape.
349
00:36:41,163 --> 00:36:44,203
The bubbles are absorbed and vanish.
350
00:36:53,003 --> 00:36:58,203
Earth seems trapped,
with a toxic atmosphere of methane
351
00:36:58,203 --> 00:36:59,883
and carbon dioxide.
352
00:37:14,123 --> 00:37:17,723
The Earth was essentially in stasis.
353
00:37:17,723 --> 00:37:21,643
You see, that toxic orange
atmosphere still enveloped
354
00:37:21,643 --> 00:37:23,003
the planet.
355
00:37:23,003 --> 00:37:27,363
Life was still microscopic
and could only exist in the oceans,
356
00:37:27,363 --> 00:37:31,403
and there was no
oxygen in the atmosphere.
357
00:37:31,403 --> 00:37:35,443
To all intents and purposes,
you could say, well,
358
00:37:35,443 --> 00:37:37,563
that the planet was stuck.
359
00:37:40,323 --> 00:37:42,843
But that was about to change.
360
00:37:47,203 --> 00:37:51,243
Because it wasn't just oxygen
dissolved in the water -
361
00:37:51,243 --> 00:37:53,043
there were metals, too...
362
00:37:55,963 --> 00:37:58,523
..including iron.
363
00:38:03,523 --> 00:38:07,003
The iron, like oxygen, is invisible
364
00:38:07,003 --> 00:38:09,963
to us when it's dissolved in water.
365
00:38:09,963 --> 00:38:13,003
But we all know what
happens when iron,
366
00:38:13,003 --> 00:38:15,043
oxygen and water come together...
367
00:38:17,923 --> 00:38:21,803
..and there's plenty
of evidence of that on this old bus.
368
00:38:24,723 --> 00:38:28,483
Just look here - this lovely brown,
369
00:38:28,483 --> 00:38:30,243
orange and red.
370
00:38:31,563 --> 00:38:32,763
Rust.
371
00:38:32,763 --> 00:38:36,643
The iron is being oxidised -
aggressively attacked
372
00:38:36,643 --> 00:38:40,523
by the oxygen in the
presence of water, or water vapour.
373
00:38:40,523 --> 00:38:43,843
But what's interesting
is that, whilst the iron
374
00:38:43,843 --> 00:38:48,243
and whilst the oxygen are soluble
in water,
375
00:38:48,243 --> 00:38:50,203
the rust is not.
376
00:39:07,723 --> 00:39:10,083
The newly released oxygen reacts
377
00:39:10,083 --> 00:39:12,683
with the dissolved iron
already present
378
00:39:12,683 --> 00:39:15,363
in the oceans,
379
00:39:15,363 --> 00:39:19,523
and that causes
something extraordinary to happen.
380
00:39:21,403 --> 00:39:24,123
Rust pours onto the ocean floor.
381
00:39:34,163 --> 00:39:36,323
The world's oceans turn red.
382
00:39:48,563 --> 00:39:50,723
And if you know where to look,
you can
383
00:39:50,723 --> 00:39:53,763
still find evidence for this
bizarre effect.
384
00:39:56,083 --> 00:39:57,963
I'm armed with a rock hammer.
385
00:39:57,963 --> 00:40:01,083
If I have a little tap at this
stone, there we are.
386
00:40:01,083 --> 00:40:02,843
Let's have a look at what's inside.
387
00:40:04,043 --> 00:40:07,443
This rock once formed
part of an ancient seafloor.
388
00:40:07,443 --> 00:40:10,163
Hm, look at that.
389
00:40:10,163 --> 00:40:12,923
You see that there, that red?
390
00:40:12,923 --> 00:40:14,923
That's iron
391
00:40:14,923 --> 00:40:18,323
laid down billions of years ago,
392
00:40:18,323 --> 00:40:22,083
a volatile memory of oxygen reacting
393
00:40:22,083 --> 00:40:24,923
with iron in the early seas.
394
00:40:26,043 --> 00:40:28,763
A sort of geological tattoo.
395
00:40:28,763 --> 00:40:30,003
I love that.
396
00:40:32,483 --> 00:40:35,123
This rust was to have
a profound effect
397
00:40:35,123 --> 00:40:37,723
on our Earth's young atmosphere.
398
00:40:44,843 --> 00:40:50,003
For half a billion years, oxygen
has been trapped in the oceans.
399
00:40:52,283 --> 00:40:56,923
But now, iron has almost been
totally flushed from the seas.
400
00:41:02,323 --> 00:41:07,723
At last, the oxygen in the water
has nothing else to react with.
401
00:41:09,643 --> 00:41:12,123
It can break free.
402
00:41:37,403 --> 00:41:42,203
Over millions years,
oxygen flooded from the oceans...
403
00:41:46,283 --> 00:41:49,163
..and our atmosphere
was transformed.
404
00:42:09,483 --> 00:42:12,723
When those bubbles first breached
the surface of the ocean,
405
00:42:12,723 --> 00:42:15,563
you might have thought that
the atmosphere was getting
406
00:42:15,563 --> 00:42:18,723
a breath of fresh air,
and to some extent it was.
407
00:42:18,723 --> 00:42:23,403
But this wasn't the moment
when life suddenly flourished,
408
00:42:23,403 --> 00:42:28,083
or when it developed that complete
and utter dependence that
409
00:42:28,083 --> 00:42:31,043
contemporary complex life
has upon oxygen.
410
00:42:32,523 --> 00:42:37,483
But that's not to say that
when those bubbles first fizzed
411
00:42:37,483 --> 00:42:40,323
out there that this
wasn't a momentous moment.
412
00:42:40,323 --> 00:42:41,803
It was.
413
00:42:41,803 --> 00:42:44,963
The planet was about
to be re-calibrated,
414
00:42:44,963 --> 00:42:48,083
and the relationship
between the ocean,
415
00:42:48,083 --> 00:42:52,483
the land and the atmosphere
was going to change forever.
416
00:42:52,483 --> 00:42:57,923
And as this volatile, reactive gas
flooded into the atmosphere, the
417
00:42:57,923 --> 00:43:03,243
full destructive force of oxygen was
felt across the planet's surface.
418
00:43:25,803 --> 00:43:28,163
Oxygen attacks the Earth.
419
00:43:37,203 --> 00:43:42,763
Any rocks containing iron
and aluminium rust and crumble,
420
00:43:42,763 --> 00:43:45,683
driving vast dust storms.
421
00:43:49,443 --> 00:43:52,883
The world is being torn
apart by its own atmosphere...
422
00:43:55,683 --> 00:43:59,243
..and this has a startling
side-effect -
423
00:43:59,243 --> 00:44:02,643
the entire Earth turns a vivid red.
424
00:44:10,483 --> 00:44:14,363
Scientists find evidence for this
red Earth in
425
00:44:14,363 --> 00:44:17,803
rock formations in landscapes
all over the world.
426
00:44:17,803 --> 00:44:22,083
Direct evidence of the action
of all of those
427
00:44:22,083 --> 00:44:26,243
trillions of cyanobacteria
churning out oxygen.
428
00:44:26,243 --> 00:44:32,443
And before oxygen, the planet
was barren, grey and black.
429
00:44:32,443 --> 00:44:38,163
You see, it's oxidation that
gives us this wonderful red hue.
430
00:44:54,963 --> 00:44:57,883
But oxygen's effect on the land
went further.
431
00:45:00,723 --> 00:45:04,243
You see, oxygen doesn't just
react with iron -
432
00:45:04,243 --> 00:45:06,603
it reacts with pretty much anything.
433
00:45:07,643 --> 00:45:10,883
It attacks minerals within
the Earth's crust...
434
00:45:14,763 --> 00:45:19,083
..creating as many as 3,000
exotic new minerals,
435
00:45:19,083 --> 00:45:22,283
all previously unknown
to the solar system.
436
00:45:28,683 --> 00:45:32,723
Minerals that led to an explosion
of colour right across the planet.
437
00:45:41,283 --> 00:45:43,643
Minerals that, to this day,
438
00:45:43,643 --> 00:45:48,163
play a vital role in sustaining
the rich complexity of life we know.
439
00:45:53,483 --> 00:45:59,803
Now, one of the colours
unleashed by oxygen is this rather
440
00:45:59,803 --> 00:46:02,763
wonderful sea green here.
441
00:46:03,883 --> 00:46:06,363
You see, when copper, the metal,
442
00:46:06,363 --> 00:46:10,563
comes into contact with
oxygen in the air, it oxidises,
443
00:46:10,563 --> 00:46:13,403
producing this - copper oxide.
444
00:46:13,403 --> 00:46:16,603
And it turns out that this compound
445
00:46:16,603 --> 00:46:21,323
was fundamentally important
in the development of more complex
446
00:46:21,323 --> 00:46:27,083
life. And what's more, it retains
its biological importance today.
447
00:46:27,083 --> 00:46:32,283
It's necessary for the synthesis
of neurotransmitters in our brains,
448
00:46:32,283 --> 00:46:34,203
and the brains of other animals,
449
00:46:34,203 --> 00:46:37,723
and also for the production
of hormones and pigments.
450
00:46:37,723 --> 00:46:40,723
So, even in today's world,
451
00:46:40,723 --> 00:46:46,003
life is dependent on that chemical
complexity that was unlocked
452
00:46:46,003 --> 00:46:51,603
so long ago, when our atmosphere
became richer in oxygen.
453
00:47:03,483 --> 00:47:07,283
Thanks to oxygen, we live
in a world of extraordinary colour
454
00:47:07,283 --> 00:47:08,883
and diversity.
455
00:47:12,283 --> 00:47:16,003
A myriad of minerals
colours the Earth's surface...
456
00:47:19,603 --> 00:47:21,843
..and the biological world
has continued
457
00:47:21,843 --> 00:47:24,123
to make use of this
ever-increasing
458
00:47:24,123 --> 00:47:28,163
chemical complexity to transform
the planet.
459
00:47:28,163 --> 00:47:31,483
From the rich green
carpet of plant life...
460
00:47:33,803 --> 00:47:34,843
SHUTTER CLICKS
461
00:47:36,203 --> 00:47:40,403
..to the fluorescent
pink feathers of flamingos.
462
00:47:53,803 --> 00:47:58,563
Oxygen has allowed life to
flourish in ways unimaginable
463
00:47:58,563 --> 00:48:00,123
3 billion years ago.
464
00:48:01,563 --> 00:48:06,403
But this volatile gas had
one more gift to bestow.
465
00:48:10,203 --> 00:48:15,163
As oxygen enriches the atmosphere,
it reacts with methane,
466
00:48:15,163 --> 00:48:16,963
stripping it away.
467
00:48:20,083 --> 00:48:25,803
And as methane levels drop,
the orange haze lifts.
468
00:48:28,883 --> 00:48:32,043
Nitrogen and oxygen
in the atmosphere are left
469
00:48:32,043 --> 00:48:33,643
to scatter the light.
470
00:48:35,243 --> 00:48:37,523
The colour begins to change.
471
00:48:41,763 --> 00:48:46,523
For the first time in Earth's
history, the sky
472
00:48:46,523 --> 00:48:49,203
is an oxygen-rich, brilliant blue.
473
00:49:04,323 --> 00:49:09,723
Today, this lovely thin blue line
marks our Earth as unique
474
00:49:09,723 --> 00:49:12,603
in the entire known universe.
475
00:49:12,603 --> 00:49:16,883
It's a spectacular
demonstration of a 4 billion-year
476
00:49:16,883 --> 00:49:20,683
dance between our atmosphere
and life -
477
00:49:20,683 --> 00:49:23,043
an atmosphere that was
478
00:49:23,043 --> 00:49:27,603
created, shaped
and calibrated by life itself.
479
00:49:31,323 --> 00:49:37,483
Our planet went from volatile,
fiery and dead to the beautiful
480
00:49:37,483 --> 00:49:40,003
living and breathing blue bubble
481
00:49:40,003 --> 00:49:42,683
floating in the darkness of space.
482
00:50:04,083 --> 00:50:08,483
How do scientists unravel billions
of years of our planet's history?
483
00:50:12,283 --> 00:50:17,643
In this episode, we saw how
meteorites -
484
00:50:17,643 --> 00:50:20,163
rocks that have fallen from space -
485
00:50:20,163 --> 00:50:23,923
can tell us what Earth's
early atmosphere was made from.
486
00:50:25,043 --> 00:50:27,563
This is a chondrite meteorite.
487
00:50:27,563 --> 00:50:31,363
4.567 billion years old -
488
00:50:31,363 --> 00:50:33,643
the oldest thing you could hold
in your hand -
489
00:50:33,643 --> 00:50:35,683
and it's made of all these
tiny droplets
490
00:50:35,683 --> 00:50:39,203
that were part of the
earliest solar nebula, including
491
00:50:39,203 --> 00:50:43,003
all the gasses that eventually would
wind up in the atmosphere.
492
00:50:47,003 --> 00:50:50,803
Meteorites are
so valuable to science
493
00:50:50,803 --> 00:50:54,083
that researchers go to great
lengths to track them down.
494
00:50:57,403 --> 00:51:02,403
In 2020, scientists from the
University of Manchester set out
495
00:51:02,403 --> 00:51:07,363
on a nine-week expedition to one of
the most remote areas of Antarctica.
496
00:51:09,843 --> 00:51:12,923
Meteorite hunters
go into the depths of Antarctica,
497
00:51:12,923 --> 00:51:16,923
into the extremes of the cold,
near the South Pole, because
498
00:51:16,923 --> 00:51:20,243
they can find so many meteorites
in one expedition, because the
499
00:51:20,243 --> 00:51:24,803
meteorites show up so well
on the white ice...
500
00:51:24,803 --> 00:51:28,683
..compared to, say, other
places where the meteorites are
501
00:51:28,683 --> 00:51:31,043
very hard to spot from normal rocks.
502
00:51:33,923 --> 00:51:36,443
Studying meteorites has
helped answer some of the most
503
00:51:36,443 --> 00:51:39,523
fundamental questions
about our planet.
504
00:51:41,163 --> 00:51:44,483
So, the question of where
the water on Earth came from
505
00:51:44,483 --> 00:51:48,203
and when it arrived is really
central to everything.
506
00:51:49,403 --> 00:51:54,523
Some water was present in the
material that formed our planet,
507
00:51:54,523 --> 00:51:56,723
but that's not the whole story.
508
00:51:58,363 --> 00:52:02,163
We think that one of the other
ways that the Earth got its water
509
00:52:02,163 --> 00:52:04,123
is through meteorites.
510
00:52:04,123 --> 00:52:08,363
So, these meteorites would have
had water locked into their rocks,
511
00:52:08,363 --> 00:52:12,203
or perhaps even on their surface,
as frozen, in outer space.
512
00:52:13,763 --> 00:52:15,963
And then, the water would
have been degassed
513
00:52:15,963 --> 00:52:18,203
into our atmosphere
as water vapour.
514
00:52:18,203 --> 00:52:20,963
Later on,
when the Earth cooled even further,
515
00:52:20,963 --> 00:52:22,923
that atmosphere would have condensed
516
00:52:22,923 --> 00:52:26,803
and the water vapour would have then
formed liquid water on our surface.
517
00:52:30,323 --> 00:52:35,203
Scientists think it's only after
the arrival of water that life
518
00:52:35,203 --> 00:52:37,083
was able to get started.
519
00:52:39,243 --> 00:52:43,443
The origin of life is one of the
greatest questions in science and
520
00:52:43,443 --> 00:52:47,843
it's fair to say that we don't know
when, where or how life started.
521
00:52:49,723 --> 00:52:53,123
A shallow rock pool is
one of the leading theories.
522
00:52:54,203 --> 00:52:57,043
People think that shallow pools
would have been a potentially
523
00:52:57,043 --> 00:52:59,763
important site for the origin
of life because they can get
524
00:52:59,763 --> 00:53:01,763
wet and dry over and over again.
525
00:53:04,563 --> 00:53:07,883
Through this repeated
cycling of wetting and drying,
526
00:53:07,883 --> 00:53:11,083
re-flooding and evaporating,
maybe through a tide, maybe through
527
00:53:11,083 --> 00:53:15,123
seasonal variation, more
and more complex molecules can form.
528
00:53:17,283 --> 00:53:21,043
And that process could have been
the precursors for things like DNA,
529
00:53:21,043 --> 00:53:23,963
which is what makes up
the information in our cells today.
530
00:53:27,883 --> 00:53:29,883
But there are other theories.
531
00:53:35,283 --> 00:53:39,963
Some scientists think life began
in a deep-sea hydrothermal vent.
532
00:53:43,523 --> 00:53:47,163
Hydrothermal vents
are sources of gases,
533
00:53:47,163 --> 00:53:49,683
like hydrogen sulphide for example,
and provide
534
00:53:49,683 --> 00:53:53,123
the kind of reactive conditions to
make the building blocks of life.
535
00:53:55,203 --> 00:53:59,443
Others think that life originated
somewhere completely else -
536
00:53:59,443 --> 00:54:03,283
not on the Earth at all -
and landed here on a meteorite.
537
00:54:08,203 --> 00:54:11,683
All of these different theories
have sort of different details,
538
00:54:11,683 --> 00:54:15,003
but the punch line is that
life needed water
539
00:54:15,003 --> 00:54:17,603
and it needed a way
to harness energy.
540
00:54:21,563 --> 00:54:24,523
Although life's
origins are still debated,
541
00:54:24,523 --> 00:54:28,083
scientists have some idea
when it happened.
542
00:54:30,203 --> 00:54:34,963
This is one of the clear-cut
examples that life was living
543
00:54:34,963 --> 00:54:36,523
even 3 billion years ago.
544
00:54:36,523 --> 00:54:38,683
This is a formation called
a stromatolite.
545
00:54:38,683 --> 00:54:41,123
What you're looking at shows
a structure
546
00:54:41,123 --> 00:54:45,003
created by a lot of microorganisms,
single-celled organisms.
547
00:54:45,003 --> 00:54:50,443
And as they grow and they reach
for the light, they secrete various
548
00:54:50,443 --> 00:54:56,243
gluey substances that glue together
bits of sand in the environment,
549
00:54:56,243 --> 00:55:00,123
and that actually helps keep
it from dispersing and blowing away.
550
00:55:00,123 --> 00:55:03,683
They are astounding in that they
have the ability to adapt to
551
00:55:03,683 --> 00:55:06,603
environmental change
and to change the environment
552
00:55:06,603 --> 00:55:08,443
because they can be so abundant.
553
00:55:10,523 --> 00:55:15,883
These fossilised structures were
created by cyanobacteria
554
00:55:15,883 --> 00:55:18,923
and millions of them
can still be found along the coast
555
00:55:18,923 --> 00:55:20,563
of Western Australia.
556
00:55:22,243 --> 00:55:25,403
Cyanobacteria might not seem
so impressive,
557
00:55:25,403 --> 00:55:28,163
but they're probably
one of the most influential
558
00:55:28,163 --> 00:55:31,563
and successful organisms
ever to appear on planet Earth.
559
00:55:32,963 --> 00:55:37,483
They were the organisms that
invented this ability to
560
00:55:37,483 --> 00:55:41,883
break water into oxygen and hydrogen
561
00:55:41,883 --> 00:55:44,403
and spit out that oxygen.
562
00:55:45,963 --> 00:55:49,203
That oxygen was able to get
released into our atmosphere.
563
00:55:51,443 --> 00:55:55,083
They completely
transformed the world.
564
00:55:58,363 --> 00:56:02,163
There are these moments
in the history of life that seem to
565
00:56:02,163 --> 00:56:04,283
have only happened once.
566
00:56:04,283 --> 00:56:07,683
Oxygen producing photosynthesis
is one of them.
567
00:56:07,683 --> 00:56:10,243
Was it a freak accident?
We just don't know.
568
00:56:12,923 --> 00:56:15,883
The evolution of our atmosphere is,
in many respects,
569
00:56:15,883 --> 00:56:19,163
the story of the evolution
of life on our planet.
570
00:56:19,163 --> 00:56:21,763
Life can change a planet
fundamentally.
571
00:56:25,203 --> 00:56:28,683
But it's always this
cause-and-effect kind of dance
572
00:56:28,683 --> 00:56:31,203
between the environment
changing life
573
00:56:31,203 --> 00:56:33,083
and life changing the environment.
574
00:56:36,683 --> 00:56:40,723
The story of our changing
atmosphere is not over.
575
00:56:40,723 --> 00:56:43,763
It will continue to evolve
both naturally
576
00:56:43,763 --> 00:56:46,523
and under the influence of human
activity.
577
00:56:48,843 --> 00:56:51,883
If we don't understand
the history of the atmosphere,
578
00:56:51,883 --> 00:56:55,843
how can we possibly be the stewards
of the atmosphere moving forward?
579
00:56:59,723 --> 00:57:01,563
By understanding the huge
580
00:57:01,563 --> 00:57:05,483
and complex steps it took to
develop our atmosphere, hopefully
581
00:57:05,483 --> 00:57:08,923
we can develop approaches to take
care of it for generations to come.
582
00:57:17,523 --> 00:57:18,683
Next time...
583
00:57:23,043 --> 00:57:25,363
..the making of the modern world.
584
00:57:26,803 --> 00:57:28,963
How the end of the dinosaurs...
585
00:57:31,443 --> 00:57:34,883
..through cataclysm and chaos,
586
00:57:34,883 --> 00:57:37,923
set the stage for a human planet...
587
00:57:39,563 --> 00:57:41,203
..to take its place.
588
00:57:47,323 --> 00:57:50,083
If the Earth could talk,
what would it tell us?
589
00:57:50,083 --> 00:57:52,603
Well, the Open University imagine
how it might answer
590
00:57:52,603 --> 00:57:54,443
some of our questions.
591
00:57:54,443 --> 00:57:57,283
To experience this interactive
presentation, go to the
592
00:57:57,283 --> 00:58:01,043
website on the screen and follow
the links to the Open University.
79699
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