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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:23,003 --> 00:00:27,963 The heavens. The great bowl of the heavens, of our sky. 2 00:00:29,203 --> 00:00:31,523 Just so beautiful! 3 00:00:31,523 --> 00:00:36,123 I love the sky because, wherever I am in the world, if I can find 4 00:00:36,123 --> 00:00:39,523 some space, I can look up at this 5 00:00:39,523 --> 00:00:43,443 big, blue, pristine space. 6 00:00:47,363 --> 00:00:52,803 And I like the apparent permanence - the fact that I can stare into 7 00:00:52,803 --> 00:00:57,563 a sky that the dinosaurs stared into, that Neanderthals stared into. 8 00:00:59,923 --> 00:01:04,483 The atmosphere is essential for the Earth to be habitable at all. 9 00:01:05,803 --> 00:01:10,163 This thin layer of gas that clings to our planet, 10 00:01:10,163 --> 00:01:13,963 keeps liquid water on the Earth's surface 11 00:01:13,963 --> 00:01:18,283 and shields life from the most harmful of the sun's rays. 12 00:01:21,203 --> 00:01:24,963 As far as we know, our thin blue line is unique 13 00:01:24,963 --> 00:01:27,323 in the vast void of space... 14 00:01:30,123 --> 00:01:33,523 ..and today, scientists are beginning to piece 15 00:01:33,523 --> 00:01:37,203 together just how our planet got its special blue bubble. 16 00:01:45,923 --> 00:01:49,443 By going back to the Earth's earliest origins, 17 00:01:49,443 --> 00:01:54,883 we can now tell the almost implausible story of our atmosphere. 18 00:01:59,523 --> 00:02:03,523 How it emerged from a toxic orange hell... 19 00:02:05,523 --> 00:02:09,483 ..and transformed the planet from an exposed ball of rock... 20 00:02:12,563 --> 00:02:14,723 ..to a beautiful, living world... 21 00:02:16,283 --> 00:02:20,363 ..capable of nurturing a staggering abundance of life. 22 00:02:24,083 --> 00:02:28,923 This atmosphere has been the planet's great protector 23 00:02:28,923 --> 00:02:31,803 for 2.5 billion years, 24 00:02:31,803 --> 00:02:35,683 soaking up everything that our planet has thrown at it. 25 00:02:37,163 --> 00:02:42,043 It's a thin, delicate, fragile cloak that shields 26 00:02:42,043 --> 00:02:46,083 and protects all life on Earth. 27 00:03:21,843 --> 00:03:26,323 Our atmosphere is a unique mix of gasses not found anywhere 28 00:03:26,323 --> 00:03:28,563 else in the solar system, 29 00:03:28,563 --> 00:03:32,763 gasses that allow Earth to be a living, breathing world. 30 00:03:39,683 --> 00:03:44,843 78% of our atmosphere is nitrogen, which can be taken up by 31 00:03:44,843 --> 00:03:49,883 bacteria in the soil and plants, and it's an integral part of DNA. 32 00:03:49,883 --> 00:03:53,123 21% of our atmosphere is oxygen. 33 00:03:53,123 --> 00:03:56,763 It's there for animals to breathe, but also for many living things 34 00:03:56,763 --> 00:03:59,443 to use to convert their food into energy. 35 00:04:01,523 --> 00:04:05,163 Even less abundant gasses are crucial for sustaining life. 36 00:04:07,203 --> 00:04:11,443 A fraction of a percent is water vapour, which condenses 37 00:04:11,443 --> 00:04:13,123 and falls as rain, 38 00:04:13,123 --> 00:04:16,403 and a tiny amount is carbon dioxide, 39 00:04:16,403 --> 00:04:20,123 which might be a waste product to us but it's absolutely 40 00:04:20,123 --> 00:04:23,923 essential for plants when it comes to photosynthesis. 41 00:04:23,923 --> 00:04:28,843 It almost appears that this unique cocktail of gasses 42 00:04:28,843 --> 00:04:32,283 is here as a sort of life-support system. 43 00:04:35,203 --> 00:04:38,763 So, where did this beautiful atmosphere come from 44 00:04:38,763 --> 00:04:42,123 and how did it lead to the origins of life here? 45 00:04:46,203 --> 00:04:49,403 Well, to answer that, we need to go back to the very beginning... 46 00:04:56,603 --> 00:04:59,483 ..4.6 billion years ago. 47 00:05:07,443 --> 00:05:11,923 Our Earth began as nothing more than dust and gas. 48 00:05:14,883 --> 00:05:20,123 A nebulous cloud containing every element our new world would need. 49 00:05:24,123 --> 00:05:29,403 Over tens of millions of years, the cloud begins to clump together, 50 00:05:29,403 --> 00:05:31,643 forming rocks. 51 00:05:31,643 --> 00:05:33,883 Pulled together by gravity... 52 00:05:35,363 --> 00:05:38,083 ..they grow bigger and bigger... 53 00:05:43,083 --> 00:05:46,803 ..until, finally, a new world is formed. 54 00:05:57,283 --> 00:06:01,003 Asteroids rain down on the young Earth 55 00:06:01,003 --> 00:06:04,203 for hundreds of millions of years... 56 00:06:06,963 --> 00:06:11,603 ..its molten surface still searing from the heat of its creation. 57 00:06:23,883 --> 00:06:26,003 But something is missing. 58 00:06:28,563 --> 00:06:30,283 The colour blue. 59 00:06:36,443 --> 00:06:39,803 You see, the Earth has no atmosphere. 60 00:06:41,643 --> 00:06:47,283 The sun and the newly formed moon sit in a jet-black sky. 61 00:06:54,763 --> 00:06:57,443 This is how the Earth could have remained... 62 00:07:03,323 --> 00:07:08,283 ..a lifeless ball of rock, floating in the void of space. 63 00:07:22,403 --> 00:07:24,923 This is what the surface of the Earth may have 64 00:07:24,923 --> 00:07:28,043 looked like 4 billion years ago. 65 00:07:29,483 --> 00:07:31,723 Stark, brutal and yet, 66 00:07:31,723 --> 00:07:35,283 in some ways, beautiful landscape. 67 00:07:37,843 --> 00:07:43,003 The early Earth was little more than a ball of cooling rock, 68 00:07:43,003 --> 00:07:46,363 so where did the planet's first atmosphere come from? 69 00:07:48,443 --> 00:07:52,683 Now it might surprise you, but I've got some clues to the answer 70 00:07:52,683 --> 00:07:56,363 to that question in my pocket, 71 00:07:56,363 --> 00:07:59,323 in the form of this tiny, 72 00:07:59,323 --> 00:08:05,523 but extremely rare and valuable, granular piece of rock. 73 00:08:05,523 --> 00:08:11,683 This, you see, is a carbonaceous chondrite meteorite, 74 00:08:11,683 --> 00:08:17,603 and it was formed at the same time our solar system was formed - 75 00:08:17,603 --> 00:08:19,803 and I've got it in my hand! 76 00:08:19,803 --> 00:08:24,323 I am holding the history of our solar system 77 00:08:24,323 --> 00:08:26,363 and the Earth in my hand. 78 00:08:28,083 --> 00:08:33,283 4.5 billion years ago, trillions of tonnes of this 79 00:08:33,283 --> 00:08:38,603 type of material came together to form our planet. 80 00:08:40,243 --> 00:08:44,363 These meteorites are leftovers from the Earth's creation. 81 00:08:45,443 --> 00:08:47,803 So, through chemical analysis, 82 00:08:47,803 --> 00:08:52,803 scientists can discover the raw ingredients that made our world. 83 00:08:55,723 --> 00:08:59,443 These meteorites contain heavy elements, like iron, 84 00:08:59,443 --> 00:09:03,443 and the rocky constituents that formed the planet itself. 85 00:09:05,363 --> 00:09:09,283 But chondrite meteorites contain lighter elements too. 86 00:09:11,123 --> 00:09:16,043 Chemical analysis reveals that these rocks contain carbon, 87 00:09:16,043 --> 00:09:17,923 hydrogen and sulphur, 88 00:09:17,923 --> 00:09:21,443 and we can still see them belching as gasses 89 00:09:21,443 --> 00:09:24,083 from volcanic vents around the world today. 90 00:09:26,723 --> 00:09:31,963 When combined, these elements form new compounds like methane, 91 00:09:31,963 --> 00:09:36,483 carbon dioxide and hydrogen sulphide, 92 00:09:36,483 --> 00:09:40,403 which are light enough to exist as gasses 93 00:09:40,403 --> 00:09:43,803 but not so light they drift off into space. 94 00:09:45,723 --> 00:09:49,043 So, meteorites like this weren't just the 95 00:09:49,043 --> 00:09:50,643 building blocks of our planet - 96 00:09:50,643 --> 00:09:55,603 they contained the essential ingredients for its atmosphere. 97 00:09:55,603 --> 00:09:58,363 And 4.5 billion years ago, 98 00:09:58,363 --> 00:10:01,763 that had begun to change everything. 99 00:10:18,363 --> 00:10:21,003 The ancient Earth holds within it 100 00:10:21,003 --> 00:10:24,483 everything it needs to create the first atmosphere. 101 00:10:28,603 --> 00:10:32,403 Those ingredients just have to make it to the surface. 102 00:10:39,683 --> 00:10:44,123 But deep within the young Earth, something is stirring. 103 00:11:02,883 --> 00:11:08,243 Across the globe, molten magma races up from within... 104 00:11:12,683 --> 00:11:16,843 ..and these rivers of liquid fire unleash gasses that will 105 00:11:16,843 --> 00:11:19,043 transform our planet. 106 00:11:35,563 --> 00:11:40,163 The world is smothered by a thick toxic fog. 107 00:11:58,083 --> 00:12:01,843 As the sun creeps above the horizon, 108 00:12:01,843 --> 00:12:04,363 gas scatters the light. 109 00:12:08,163 --> 00:12:12,083 Earth gets its first colour-filled sunrise. 110 00:12:15,483 --> 00:12:20,083 This new world now has an atmosphere... 111 00:12:25,843 --> 00:12:28,483 ..but one like nothing we've ever seen. 112 00:12:40,923 --> 00:12:45,523 We're all familiar with the colours in the early-morning sky, 113 00:12:45,523 --> 00:12:50,203 but a sunrise 4 billion years ago would have been very different. 114 00:12:50,203 --> 00:12:54,723 Sunlight passing through that churning mixture of methane 115 00:12:54,723 --> 00:12:59,283 and carbon dioxide would have given the whole planet an orange hue. 116 00:13:00,603 --> 00:13:03,483 But this toxic atmosphere was very important. 117 00:13:03,483 --> 00:13:06,563 It was the first time that our planet had 118 00:13:06,563 --> 00:13:09,523 a protective shield from space. 119 00:13:09,523 --> 00:13:12,643 But, of course, it was still a very alien world - 120 00:13:12,643 --> 00:13:16,563 would have been to us - and not just because of that noxious 121 00:13:16,563 --> 00:13:21,683 orange fog, or the searing, hot, black, bare volcanic rocks 122 00:13:21,683 --> 00:13:22,923 beneath our feet. 123 00:13:22,923 --> 00:13:25,603 It was because something fundamental, 124 00:13:25,603 --> 00:13:29,043 something that we take for granted every day, was missing. 125 00:13:32,003 --> 00:13:33,163 Water. 126 00:13:44,883 --> 00:13:49,203 Today, 70% of the Earth's surface is covered in water. 127 00:13:51,803 --> 00:13:54,683 A planet of almost limitless blue... 128 00:13:57,843 --> 00:13:59,403 ..with endless rivers... 129 00:14:01,083 --> 00:14:02,443 ..freezing ice caps... 130 00:14:04,123 --> 00:14:06,243 ..and turquoise tropical paradises. 131 00:14:22,443 --> 00:14:24,563 But 4.5 billion years ago... 132 00:14:26,883 --> 00:14:30,883 ..there wasn't a single drop of liquid water 133 00:14:30,883 --> 00:14:32,883 on the ancient Earth's surface. 134 00:14:42,483 --> 00:14:45,563 However, the planet wasn't totally dry. 135 00:14:48,723 --> 00:14:52,123 The young atmosphere did contain water. 136 00:14:53,923 --> 00:14:57,883 Asteroids and volcanic eruptions have released a vast 137 00:14:57,883 --> 00:14:59,603 ocean of water vapour. 138 00:15:09,323 --> 00:15:12,283 Trillions of droplets were floating in the sky... 139 00:15:23,323 --> 00:15:27,003 ..so small they soar on moving air. 140 00:15:35,363 --> 00:15:39,643 Colliding and merging with each other, they slowly grow... 141 00:15:43,043 --> 00:15:47,763 ..until they can no longer fight Earth's gravity. 142 00:15:56,403 --> 00:16:00,003 En masse, they are pulled downwards, towards the ground. 143 00:16:10,923 --> 00:16:14,723 But with the atmosphere still scorchingly hot from heat 144 00:16:14,723 --> 00:16:16,363 trapped by Earth's formation... 145 00:16:18,483 --> 00:16:20,803 ..not a single drop of rain... 146 00:16:24,803 --> 00:16:27,483 ..has ever made it to the surface. 147 00:16:30,723 --> 00:16:36,763 And it's been the same story every day for tens of millions of years. 148 00:16:38,763 --> 00:16:42,843 The Earth is stuck - a barren desert world 149 00:16:42,843 --> 00:16:46,523 totally incapable of supporting life. 150 00:16:53,363 --> 00:16:56,443 Water today is on a continual journey. 151 00:16:58,843 --> 00:17:03,083 It emerges from the leaves of green plants as vapour, 152 00:17:03,083 --> 00:17:06,323 rises up to the sky, where it forms clouds, 153 00:17:06,323 --> 00:17:08,643 which then condense into rain, 154 00:17:08,643 --> 00:17:11,803 which falls onto the ground, which drains into the rivers, 155 00:17:11,803 --> 00:17:16,243 which eventually flow into our vast oceans. 156 00:17:16,243 --> 00:17:21,083 And we're very used to seeing water appear out of our atmosphere. 157 00:17:21,083 --> 00:17:25,563 What about those lovely soft layers of mist that we see over rivers, 158 00:17:25,563 --> 00:17:29,683 or the dew on your toes if you scuff across a summer lawn, 159 00:17:29,683 --> 00:17:32,483 or when it falls as rain or snow? 160 00:17:40,363 --> 00:17:43,883 The only reason our planet is a water world is because it's the 161 00:17:43,883 --> 00:17:48,483 right temperature and pressure for water to form out of the atmosphere. 162 00:17:51,323 --> 00:17:55,643 4.4 billion years ago, Earth needed to cool down. 163 00:17:59,003 --> 00:18:03,283 Slowly, heat has been radiating out into space... 164 00:18:07,803 --> 00:18:10,243 ..over millions and millions of years. 165 00:18:26,323 --> 00:18:27,563 Until... 166 00:18:30,483 --> 00:18:33,243 ..a tipping point is reached. 167 00:18:51,643 --> 00:18:55,363 What starts with just a few drops 168 00:18:55,363 --> 00:18:57,883 becomes the greatest deluge 169 00:18:57,883 --> 00:19:00,083 the solar system has ever seen. 170 00:19:26,483 --> 00:19:29,363 Huge weather systems sweep across the planet 171 00:19:29,363 --> 00:19:34,323 and storms which last centuries dump oceans of water from the skies. 172 00:19:43,003 --> 00:19:47,683 A key element in the equation of life had been 173 00:19:47,683 --> 00:19:49,283 well and truly unleashed. 174 00:20:00,083 --> 00:20:03,363 Our planet is transformed. 175 00:20:15,603 --> 00:20:19,443 As the Earth continued to cool, the rains that fell from its thick, 176 00:20:19,443 --> 00:20:22,163 dense atmosphere created a new water world. 177 00:20:22,163 --> 00:20:24,883 And for the first time in its history, 178 00:20:24,883 --> 00:20:28,323 it would have looked a little bit like this. 179 00:20:28,323 --> 00:20:31,483 If you gazed into the sky, you would have seen clouds, 180 00:20:31,483 --> 00:20:34,203 you would have felt the wind and the rain on your face. 181 00:20:34,203 --> 00:20:36,083 And if you listened, 182 00:20:36,083 --> 00:20:39,243 you'd have heard waves carving a new coastline. 183 00:20:40,403 --> 00:20:43,203 But that's where the similarities would have ended, 184 00:20:43,203 --> 00:20:48,203 because this rocky, wet world was devoid of life. 185 00:20:48,203 --> 00:20:51,323 But it was a world where life could begin. 186 00:21:10,763 --> 00:21:13,923 Water was the crucial ingredient. 187 00:21:19,363 --> 00:21:24,563 Not long after Earth's oceans rained from the sky, 188 00:21:24,563 --> 00:21:30,043 a shallow pool was about to play host to the most important 189 00:21:30,043 --> 00:21:33,123 moment in the history of the Earth. 190 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, 193 00:22:08,123 --> 00:22:11,803 a living thing came into existence. 194 00:22:15,683 --> 00:22:18,923 The first microscopic organism. 195 00:22:25,283 --> 00:22:30,203 And in that instant of pure chance, everything changed. 196 00:22:32,203 --> 00:22:35,563 The Earth became a living world. 197 00:22:41,043 --> 00:22:45,843 All trace of the first life has vanished, lost to history. 198 00:22:48,483 --> 00:22:50,123 But even today, 199 00:22:50,123 --> 00:22:54,443 we can get clues as to what early life might have been like. 200 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, 204 00:23:20,123 --> 00:23:22,803 a serious toxin, anywhere in the world. 205 00:23:24,883 --> 00:23:28,283 And these toxic conditions are similar to those 206 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, 208 00:23:33,403 --> 00:23:36,003 something ancient is flourishing. 209 00:23:37,723 --> 00:23:40,363 Just look at all of these beautiful colours here. 210 00:23:43,963 --> 00:23:50,563 That's life - a primordial mat of billions of thriving bacteria. 211 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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