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[thunder rumbling]
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NARRATOR:
The story of life on Earth...
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[loud roar]
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has been marked by a series of
catastrophic extinction events.
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Natural disasters which have
threatened to wipe out
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many of the creatures
that call our planet home.
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But, after every brush with
death, life has come back
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even stronger.
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[peaceful music]
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NARRATOR: One such event took
place 305 million years ago,
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when huge swamp forests
dominated much of the earth.
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And were home to strange
new creatures.
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[loud growling]
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But the forests were
so astonishingly successful,
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they changed the planet,
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making Earth colder and drier.
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Unfortunately, this then
drove them to extinction.
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But life returned
more resilient and diverse...
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than ever.
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[theme song]
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[insects buzzing]
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[soft roar]
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NARRATOR:
Long before the dinosaurs
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the world is dominated
by plants.
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Lush, water-logged swamp
forests cover the land.
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And down among the roots,
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live countless strange
and wonderful creatures.
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A little amphibian
called Diplocaulus.
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This is a very special
night for her.
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It’s that time of year
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when she looks for a burrow
to lay her eggs.
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[Diplocaulus croaks]
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But this riverbank
is fully booked.
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Every mother is taking
advantage of the damp night
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to find their own nesting spot.
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[loud croaks]
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All the burrows are occupied.
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As morning dawns,
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she realizes she waited
too long to book a burrow.
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So, she makes her own.
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[bright music]
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The world she lives in is
a triumph of plant power.
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Herbivores have yet to evolve
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so the vegetation can grow
untouched by all but insects.
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Horsetails and tree ferns
stretch as far
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as the eye can see.
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Towering above are scale trees,
the giants of this forest,
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but they are nothing
like the trees we know today.
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Their trunks are rigid hollow
tubes that can grow as tall
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as a 14 story building
in less than 15 years.
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[crickets chirping]
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The extent of these forests
is staggering.
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For 50 million years
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plants have been the dominant
life force on land.
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As the continents have drifted
together vast lowland basins
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have formed along the equator
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and these have filled with
billions of swamp trees.
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These forests have released
so much oxygen,
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that they’ve supercharged
the Earth’s atmosphere.
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Oxygen levels are the highest
the planet has ever seen.
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This has boosted the animals.
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Some insects have grown
enormous,
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like the Griffinfly...
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with a wingspan
as big as a crow’s.
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[Griffinfly buzzing]
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But oxygen doesn’t just
fuel growth.
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But it also fuels fire.
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Even in this wet swamp,
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a single lightning strike
can set off a forest inferno.
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Our little Diplocaulus
will be safe here
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in a labyrinth
of drowned roots.
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But water isn’t
the natural habitat
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for many forest dwellers.
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Dendromaia.
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Her dry scaly skin shows
she is a reptile,
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one of the first vertebrates
to leave the water
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and live permanently on land.
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[wood cracking]
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So, for her,
the fire is a huge threat.
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In this oxygen rich atmosphere,
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one ember can quickly
become a raging blaze.
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[tense music]
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To save herself she needs
to run now but she has a nest
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full of babies nearby
and she won’t abandon them.
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[dramatic music]
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The fire is moving so fast
she only has seconds.
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[babies Dendromaiae chitters]
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She and her babies
are surrounded by chaos.
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[babies Dendromaiae chitters]
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[wood cracking]
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NARRATOR: 305 million years ago
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dense fast-growing forests
cover the equator.
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They are so successful they
have pushed up the amount of
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oxygen in the atmosphere
to record levels.
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But all this oxygen has
intensified forest fires
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so much so that even
waterlogged wood burns.
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The fire has cut this mother
off from her babies.
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[babies Dendromaiae chitters]
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[dramatic music]
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She is desperately trying to
reach them before the flames.
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She’s got them, but now she
needs to get them out of there.
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[wood cracking]
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[calming music]
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She’s done it.
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As the wind changes direction,
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it starts to drive
the fire away.
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Our heroic mother has saved
her babies from the flames.
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The next morning,
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it looks as though
the smoke is still lingering.
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But this isn’t smoke.
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It’s something very different.
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Spores, billions of them,
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So small they are almost
invisible to the naked eye.
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These tiny spores are
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how these extraordinary
scale trees begin life.
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They need just the right
conditions to germinate,
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and the damp soil here
is perfect.
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Our Diplocaulus mom
has been busy digging.
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And she’s made her own burrow
in the riverbank.
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Here, water from the swamp
has created a tiny pool.
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This is where
she has laid her eggs.
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Over the next few weeks this
mom will dedicate herself
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to protecting her brood
until they hatch.
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Because these swamps
are filled with predators.
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[predator growling]
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They can be heard calling
through the forest.
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[growling]
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The calls are coming from giant
amphibians called Eryops.
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They are carnivores and
can grow up to eight feet long.
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These beasts are among
the largest land animals
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on the planet and things are
about to get steamy.
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It’s time for their
annual courtship.
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[Eryops calling]
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Their calls are booming
through the forest
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for one purpose...
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to attract a female
and it’s worked.
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[soft growling]
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Let the serenading begin!
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[Eryops calling]
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Hardly a classic love
ballad but it’ll do.
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Now a couple of the males want
to show off different skills.
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One male starts a new contest.
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[Eryops deep calling]
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His low frequency rumbles
make the water...dance.
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Interesting.
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But the other guy
can do that too.
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[Eryops deep calling]
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She’s still not sure
who to choose.
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This could get ugly.
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NARRATOR: Over 300 million years
before humans evolve,
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the Earth’s equatorial regions
are cloaked
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in dense swamp forests dominated
by mosses and ferns.
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The animals here thrive in the
damp, oxygen-rich atmosphere.
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These Eryops are amphibians
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and among the largest creatures
on land.
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Each as big
a silverback gorilla,
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they are formidable predators
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with a mouthful
of curved fangs.
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But they are not here to hunt,
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they are here to win a mate.
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These two suitors are
sumo wrestling, swamp-style.
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Battling to impress
a potential mate.
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[Eryops cries]
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[growling]
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[loud growling]
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Finally, a champion.
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[Eryops calling]
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The winner will stay
firmly attached
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in a slippery embrace
for hours.
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When she finally lays
her eggs,
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he will be ready
to fertilize them.
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Then, both parents abandon them.
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Of the 500 eggs she lays,
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only about 10 will survive
to adulthood.
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Down in her burrow our
Diplocaulus mom
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is a much more caring parent.
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Two weeks on and she’s still
devotedly tending her eggs.
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But she can tell something’s
not right.
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When she laid her eggs
they were underwater,
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now some are exposed.
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The water level is dropping
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and the reason lies far
beyond her little burrow.
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305 million years ago,
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while the endless forests are
producing loads of oxygen,
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they are also absorbing
huge amounts of carbon dioxide,
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a greenhouse gas that keeps
the planet warm.
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As each tree falls,
and submerges into the swamp,
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it locks the carbon away
underground.
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For millions of years,
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these trees have been rotting
down on top of each other.
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Eventually, this one period
in Earth’s history
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will create 90 per cent
of all our coal.
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This also means carbon dioxide
levels in the atmosphere
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have been dropping
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and the whole planet
has started to cool.
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Several ice sheets
have begun to grow
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over the southern continents,
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and they are expanding towards
the equator.
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With cooler seas,
there is less evaporation,
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less water in the atmosphere,
and, therefore, a drier climate.
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This means dry seasons
are getting longer
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and droughts worse
in the swamp forest.
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The consequences
could be devastating
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for our caring mother.
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As the swamp drains,
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she tries everything to keep
her babies from drying out.
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00:18:32,152 --> 00:18:33,821
And she’s not the only one.
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00:18:36,740 --> 00:18:38,826
If this drought continues
much longer,
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00:18:38,867 --> 00:18:42,704
her baby-filled burrow
will become a tomb.
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00:18:46,374 --> 00:18:50,629
But a drier swamp is not a
problem for all creatures here.
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Down under the ferns
a Dendromaia shows
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00:18:56,259 --> 00:19:00,848
how reptiles managed to escape
being so dependent on water.
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00:19:04,392 --> 00:19:06,895
They lay eggs with
waterproof shells.
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00:19:08,230 --> 00:19:09,899
So they can stay on land
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00:19:09,940 --> 00:19:12,651
without the fear of their eggs
drying out.
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00:19:13,610 --> 00:19:16,738
[crickets chirping]
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00:19:22,494 --> 00:19:25,914
[soft instrumental music]
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00:19:28,875 --> 00:19:33,422
As night falls moonlight picks
out the glowing wing cases
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of a million insects.
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00:19:37,175 --> 00:19:41,263
The deep forests belong
to the creepy crawlies,
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and the biggest of these
is perhaps
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the most bizarre creature
in an already weird world.
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Arthropleura, a giant millipede,
eight feet long.
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00:20:07,122 --> 00:20:08,457
Using her antenna,
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00:20:08,498 --> 00:20:11,543
she probes
the forest floor for food...
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00:20:14,796 --> 00:20:17,925
creeping closer and closer
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00:20:17,966 --> 00:20:22,304
to our young mom’s burrow
full of babies.
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00:20:24,806 --> 00:20:26,391
[squeaking]
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00:20:28,518 --> 00:20:33,399
[dramatic instrumental playing]
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00:20:33,440 --> 00:20:35,317
[chirping]
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00:20:45,160 --> 00:20:47,037
Deep in the swamp forest,
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00:20:47,078 --> 00:20:51,292
a Diplocaulus mom has laid
her eggs in a flooded burrow
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00:20:51,333 --> 00:20:55,045
to protect them from
the many predators outside.
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00:20:56,087 --> 00:21:00,384
Unfortunately, tonight,
the entrance has been discovered
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00:21:00,425 --> 00:21:03,262
by an eight-foot-long
Arthropleura,
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00:21:03,303 --> 00:21:05,597
a monstrous millipede.
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00:21:07,932 --> 00:21:13,856
[tense instrumental playing]
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00:21:13,897 --> 00:21:15,607
[chirping]
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00:21:25,283 --> 00:21:26,952
[chirping angrily]
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00:21:27,869 --> 00:21:29,705
But this eight-foot monster
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00:21:29,746 --> 00:21:32,916
hasn’t met our fiercely
protective mother.
242
00:21:38,046 --> 00:21:41,508
In fact,
she is no threat at all.
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00:21:45,178 --> 00:21:47,139
She’s a gentle giant.
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00:21:48,807 --> 00:21:53,854
[wondrous instrumental playing]
245
00:22:00,235 --> 00:22:05,198
Soon, she finds the food
she was looking for all along...
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00:22:07,075 --> 00:22:09,578
something rich in nutrients.
247
00:22:12,747 --> 00:22:14,624
Eryops droppings.
248
00:22:18,503 --> 00:22:25,135
[expansive instrumental playing]
249
00:22:26,010 --> 00:22:28,513
The drought is intensifying.
250
00:22:33,226 --> 00:22:36,105
The drier soil
no longer holds enough water
251
00:22:36,146 --> 00:22:38,899
to sustain
the giant scale trees.
252
00:22:41,151 --> 00:22:43,236
[loud crash]
253
00:22:44,237 --> 00:22:46,115
The swamp is
no longer wet enough
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00:22:46,156 --> 00:22:48,450
for the spores
to germinate,
255
00:22:48,491 --> 00:22:50,869
and the trees cannot recover.
256
00:22:52,495 --> 00:22:57,209
The once endless groves
are becoming patchy and sparse.
257
00:22:59,794 --> 00:23:02,506
[chirping quietly]
258
00:23:08,511 --> 00:23:10,139
Against all the odds,
259
00:23:10,180 --> 00:23:13,225
our Diplocaulus mom has managed
to keep enough water
260
00:23:13,266 --> 00:23:16,561
in her burrow for her
eggs to survive.
261
00:23:17,353 --> 00:23:21,817
[sweeping instrumental playing]
262
00:23:27,614 --> 00:23:30,992
And now,
they’re starting to hatch.
263
00:23:31,367 --> 00:23:33,870
A miracle of new life.
264
00:23:35,288 --> 00:23:36,999
But unlike their mother,
265
00:23:37,040 --> 00:23:39,626
they can only breathe
underwater.
266
00:23:40,543 --> 00:23:42,963
For now,
they have feathery gills
267
00:23:43,004 --> 00:23:45,298
that absorb all
the oxygen they need.
268
00:23:47,008 --> 00:23:49,970
It will be eight weeks
before their lungs develop
269
00:23:50,011 --> 00:23:52,097
and they can breathe on land.
270
00:23:54,724 --> 00:23:56,310
Despite all her hard work,
271
00:23:56,351 --> 00:23:59,104
their birthing pool
is shrinking.
272
00:24:02,690 --> 00:24:05,318
Our mom is running out of time,
273
00:24:05,902 --> 00:24:10,699
and digging around on this bank
just got riskier.
274
00:24:16,663 --> 00:24:20,792
Forced by the drought to hunt
in these shallow waters...
275
00:24:21,751 --> 00:24:25,714
Orthacanthus,
a freshwater shark.
276
00:24:29,717 --> 00:24:31,678
Aquatic animals here
are now pushed
277
00:24:31,719 --> 00:24:34,097
into smaller
and smaller pockets.
278
00:24:35,557 --> 00:24:39,769
Global cooling has brought
the forests to a tipping point.
279
00:24:42,939 --> 00:24:46,735
These baby Eryops,
abandoned by their parents,
280
00:24:46,776 --> 00:24:48,612
are now stuck.
281
00:24:50,446 --> 00:24:54,743
Thousands of them,
with no space and no food.
282
00:24:59,747 --> 00:25:03,168
It’s not long before
they turn on each other.
283
00:25:06,796 --> 00:25:13,345
[sorrowful instrumental playing]
284
00:25:22,687 --> 00:25:28,235
Just one tiny tragedy in
a world that is falling apart.
285
00:25:34,198 --> 00:25:36,243
In her underground nursery,
286
00:25:36,284 --> 00:25:39,913
our Diplocaulus mom
is also desperate.
287
00:25:49,505 --> 00:25:51,550
To save her remaining babies,
288
00:25:51,591 --> 00:25:55,345
she carries them in her mouth
down to the stream.
289
00:26:36,469 --> 00:26:40,557
She has spent weeks fiercely
defending these little ones.
290
00:26:41,182 --> 00:26:44,269
Now, there’s
nothing more she can do.
291
00:26:45,144 --> 00:26:47,063
They are on their own.
292
00:26:48,898 --> 00:26:52,402
But they’re not
the ones in danger.
293
00:26:55,697 --> 00:26:59,743
[menacing instrumental playing]
294
00:27:12,588 --> 00:27:15,676
NARRATOR: After an unnaturally
long dry season,
295
00:27:15,717 --> 00:27:18,053
the swamp forest is suffering.
296
00:27:20,638 --> 00:27:24,142
Our Diplocaulus mom
has had to abandon her burrow
297
00:27:24,183 --> 00:27:25,935
to save her babies.
298
00:27:27,770 --> 00:27:29,398
Holding them in her mouth,
299
00:27:29,439 --> 00:27:31,816
she has carried
them down to the river.
300
00:27:33,401 --> 00:27:37,405
She has no idea
she’s being stalked.
301
00:27:38,197 --> 00:27:41,868
[tense instrumental playing]
302
00:27:52,170 --> 00:27:56,883
[fraught instrumental playing]
303
00:28:17,236 --> 00:28:20,407
The starving shark
has overreached.
304
00:28:26,496 --> 00:28:28,331
His last mistake.
305
00:28:33,127 --> 00:28:35,422
[chirping quietly]
306
00:28:38,090 --> 00:28:40,844
Our mom returns
to her empty burrow.
307
00:28:41,803 --> 00:28:46,516
Her best hope now is to wait
out the dry season underground.
308
00:28:53,856 --> 00:29:01,239
[poignant instrumental playing]
309
00:29:08,037 --> 00:29:09,414
The swampland forests
310
00:29:09,455 --> 00:29:12,250
are the architects of
their own destruction.
311
00:29:14,836 --> 00:29:18,715
By absorbing so much carbon
dioxide from the atmosphere,
312
00:29:18,756 --> 00:29:22,385
they set in motion
unstoppable global cooling.
313
00:29:22,969 --> 00:29:26,264
And a cooler world
is a drier world.
314
00:29:32,687 --> 00:29:35,065
Inside her burrow,
our Diplocaulus
315
00:29:35,106 --> 00:29:38,193
has made herself
a mucus cocoon to hibernate.
316
00:29:40,194 --> 00:29:42,155
But her time has passed.
317
00:29:42,196 --> 00:29:44,949
She will raise
no more babies in this forest.
318
00:29:45,741 --> 00:29:50,371
Outside, the age of plants
is coming to an end.
319
00:29:55,376 --> 00:29:57,712
Millions of years pass.
320
00:29:58,796 --> 00:30:00,465
From the west to the east,
321
00:30:00,506 --> 00:30:05,094
nearly 90% of
swamp forest trees are lost.
322
00:30:06,637 --> 00:30:07,889
And along with them,
323
00:30:07,930 --> 00:30:10,976
many of the strange
and wonderful creatures
324
00:30:11,017 --> 00:30:12,811
that depended on them.
325
00:30:13,978 --> 00:30:19,275
Eventually, the earth warms
and the ice starts to melt.
326
00:30:21,986 --> 00:30:25,406
But the land remains
a drier place.
327
00:30:26,157 --> 00:30:31,329
[sweeping instrumental playing]
328
00:30:41,005 --> 00:30:42,841
Instead of scale trees,
329
00:30:42,882 --> 00:30:46,010
other trees
now dominate the landscape.
330
00:30:48,471 --> 00:30:49,722
Conifers.
331
00:30:59,231 --> 00:31:01,234
Their crucial advantage
332
00:31:01,275 --> 00:31:04,654
is that instead of
using spores to reproduce,
333
00:31:04,695 --> 00:31:06,281
they use seeds.
334
00:31:09,408 --> 00:31:14,038
These simple packets of food
give seedlings a head start.
335
00:31:18,459 --> 00:31:23,757
[dramatic instrumental playing]
336
00:31:23,798 --> 00:31:26,092
The animals
that live in and around
337
00:31:26,133 --> 00:31:29,304
these conifer forests
have evolved...
338
00:31:32,390 --> 00:31:35,810
and become much, much bigger.
339
00:31:37,728 --> 00:31:40,523
[growling]
340
00:31:41,607 --> 00:31:46,821
[dramatic instrumental playing]
341
00:32:01,252 --> 00:32:04,422
This is a Dimetrodon.
342
00:32:08,801 --> 00:32:11,054
As long as a dump truck,
343
00:32:11,095 --> 00:32:14,432
she is the apex predator
in these forests.
344
00:32:15,599 --> 00:32:18,311
And she smells something
in the ground.
345
00:32:32,742 --> 00:32:34,285
An amphibian.
346
00:32:35,119 --> 00:32:36,663
Even in this new world,
347
00:32:36,704 --> 00:32:39,541
amphibians can survive
drier periods
348
00:32:39,582 --> 00:32:41,584
by hibernating underground.
349
00:32:45,921 --> 00:32:49,259
Unless a giant reptile with
a good sense of smell
350
00:32:49,300 --> 00:32:51,135
finds them first.
351
00:32:54,472 --> 00:32:57,517
[distant bellowing]
352
00:32:57,558 --> 00:33:02,605
A curious call reaches the
Dimetrodon like a dinner bell.
353
00:33:03,230 --> 00:33:07,193
[bellowing continues]
354
00:33:19,038 --> 00:33:20,790
Cotylorhynchus.
355
00:33:22,792 --> 00:33:25,670
A cumbersome,
plant-eating machine.
356
00:33:28,631 --> 00:33:31,342
His ancestors were carnivores,
357
00:33:31,383 --> 00:33:33,636
but his species has evolved
to become one of
358
00:33:33,677 --> 00:33:36,264
the first large herbivores.
359
00:33:38,474 --> 00:33:40,477
In the time of
the swamp forests,
360
00:33:40,518 --> 00:33:43,938
the only creatures
that ate plants were insects.
361
00:33:45,439 --> 00:33:48,026
But plants aren’t
as nutritious as meat,
362
00:33:48,067 --> 00:33:53,239
so he needs a massive gut
to break down his tough diet.
363
00:34:02,289 --> 00:34:05,376
Today, though,
something is wrong.
364
00:34:09,088 --> 00:34:10,548
Dizziness.
365
00:34:12,216 --> 00:34:13,718
Drooling.
366
00:34:15,177 --> 00:34:16,846
-Gas.
-[flatulence]
367
00:34:17,721 --> 00:34:20,767
All the signs of poisoning.
368
00:34:22,768 --> 00:34:25,271
The moment animals
started eating plants,
369
00:34:25,312 --> 00:34:29,108
plants started producing toxins
to put the herbivores off.
370
00:34:30,234 --> 00:34:34,739
And today, he swallowed
the wrong kind of leaves.
371
00:34:37,199 --> 00:34:38,785
Another symptom?
372
00:34:40,369 --> 00:34:41,579
Collapse.
373
00:34:41,620 --> 00:34:43,706
[quiet flatulence]
374
00:34:44,582 --> 00:34:46,751
He’ll have to sleep it off.
375
00:34:48,085 --> 00:34:50,379
But this could be fatal.
376
00:34:51,714 --> 00:34:57,011
Nearby,
hungry eyes are watching.
377
00:34:58,095 --> 00:35:02,934
[growling]
378
00:35:07,438 --> 00:35:08,940
NARRATOR: It is 20 million years
379
00:35:08,981 --> 00:35:11,568
since the collapse of
the swamp forests.
380
00:35:11,609 --> 00:35:14,487
Conifers now cover the land.
381
00:35:20,075 --> 00:35:24,122
Beneath their branches,
reptiles have thrived,
382
00:35:24,163 --> 00:35:26,332
and some have grown enormous.
383
00:35:26,373 --> 00:35:29,919
[distant bellowing]
384
00:35:33,297 --> 00:35:37,427
This giant herbivore has eaten
some poisonous plants
385
00:35:37,468 --> 00:35:39,345
and decided to sleep it off.
386
00:35:39,762 --> 00:35:42,056
But this
has left him vulnerable,
387
00:35:42,097 --> 00:35:44,350
and he has attracted
the attention
388
00:35:44,391 --> 00:35:46,853
of a predatory Dimetrodon.
389
00:36:01,533 --> 00:36:03,703
[Dimetrodon exhaling]
390
00:36:06,121 --> 00:36:08,040
[growling]
391
00:36:14,797 --> 00:36:18,050
[hissing]
392
00:36:21,095 --> 00:36:22,722
[hissing]
393
00:36:25,599 --> 00:36:28,144
[distant growling]
394
00:36:30,562 --> 00:36:33,065
Luckily, he has friends.
395
00:36:39,071 --> 00:36:41,157
Big friends.
396
00:36:41,949 --> 00:36:48,373
[dramatic instrumental playing]
397
00:36:48,414 --> 00:36:51,542
[growling]
398
00:36:51,583 --> 00:36:56,714
[hissing]
399
00:37:04,096 --> 00:37:07,934
The Cotylorhynchus
is part of a herd,
400
00:37:07,975 --> 00:37:10,270
a new social grouping
herbivores use
401
00:37:10,311 --> 00:37:11,938
to defend themselves.
402
00:37:17,526 --> 00:37:19,153
Some other time.
403
00:37:24,074 --> 00:37:25,910
The collapse of
the swamp forests
404
00:37:25,951 --> 00:37:28,621
ushered in
a new era on land.
405
00:37:30,831 --> 00:37:33,918
It is the dawn of
the age of reptiles.
406
00:37:34,835 --> 00:37:38,089
And there are more
and more large herbivores
407
00:37:38,130 --> 00:37:40,633
who are starting
to break up the forests.
408
00:37:41,050 --> 00:37:44,178
And their dung
helps fertilize the ground.
409
00:37:47,806 --> 00:37:49,934
For the first time,
410
00:37:49,975 --> 00:37:53,813
animals are beginning
to shape their habitats
411
00:37:53,854 --> 00:37:55,982
on a massive scale.
412
00:37:59,651 --> 00:38:02,154
It’s the way of the future.
413
00:38:03,655 --> 00:38:09,829
[sweeping instrumental playing]
414
00:38:13,874 --> 00:38:19,672
[soft instrumental playing]
415
00:38:19,713 --> 00:38:22,800
NARRATOR: Today,
rainforests once again
416
00:38:22,841 --> 00:38:25,177
dominate the Earth’s
tropical regions.
417
00:38:31,392 --> 00:38:33,102
They have evolved to be
418
00:38:33,143 --> 00:38:36,022
the most diverse
environments on Earth.
419
00:38:38,399 --> 00:38:43,070
Home to half of all our plant
and animal species.
420
00:38:44,696 --> 00:38:48,743
It’s only recently they have
come under threat from humans.
421
00:38:54,915 --> 00:38:57,377
The rate at which
they are now shrinking
422
00:38:57,418 --> 00:39:00,713
is greater than any time
in Earth’s history.
423
00:39:10,889 --> 00:39:13,768
Could our impact cause
a tipping point,
424
00:39:13,809 --> 00:39:16,062
like the ancient swamp forests,
425
00:39:16,103 --> 00:39:18,856
that brings about
a complete collapse?
426
00:39:27,072 --> 00:39:31,619
Hope for the rainforests lies in
their incredible biodiversity.
427
00:39:33,287 --> 00:39:37,249
No one part of the forest
is quite like another.
428
00:39:39,793 --> 00:39:41,546
Along with this diversity
429
00:39:41,587 --> 00:39:44,840
comes a powerful ability
to regenerate.
430
00:39:47,426 --> 00:39:52,348
Where humans abandon land,
the forest recovers.
431
00:39:56,185 --> 00:39:59,272
Two-thirds of
today’s global rainforests
432
00:39:59,313 --> 00:40:01,232
are secondary regrowth.
433
00:40:02,357 --> 00:40:05,820
Bouncing back
after human impact.
434
00:40:16,038 --> 00:40:18,082
Modern tropical rainforests
435
00:40:18,123 --> 00:40:21,293
have proven themselves
to be remarkably resilient.
436
00:40:30,469 --> 00:40:34,765
Humans just need
to give them space to recover.
437
00:40:38,101 --> 00:40:42,607
♪ I see trees of green ♪
438
00:40:42,648 --> 00:40:45,401
♪ Red roses too ♪
439
00:40:45,442 --> 00:40:50,907
♪ I watch them bloom
for me and you ♪
440
00:40:50,948 --> 00:40:55,161
♪ And I think to myself ♪
441
00:40:55,202 --> 00:41:02,043
♪ What a wonderful world ♪
442
00:41:02,084 --> 00:41:07,298
♪ Yes, I think to myself ♪
443
00:41:07,339 --> 00:41:11,677
♪ What a wonderful world ♪
33080
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