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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,672 --> 00:00:08,842 Earth, a 4.5- Billion-year-old planet, still evolving. 2 00:00:08,842 --> 00:00:16,931 As continents shift and clash, volcanoes erupt, glaciers grow and recede, 3 00:00:16,931 --> 00:00:20,975 the Earth's crust is carved in numerous and fascinating ways, 4 00:00:21,392 --> 00:00:26,311 leaving a trail of geological mysteries behind. 5 00:00:28,313 --> 00:00:33,191 In this episode, Loch Ness, in the Highlands of Scotland, is explored. 6 00:00:33,191 --> 00:00:37,026 It holds more water than any other lake in Britain, 7 00:00:37,026 --> 00:00:42,863 with a bedrock containing some of the oldest rocks on the planet. 8 00:00:42,863 --> 00:00:45,614 Set in a landscape that was once part of America, 9 00:00:45,614 --> 00:00:51,702 Loch Ness is a lake with an enduring myth, the Loch Ness monster. 10 00:00:54,078 --> 00:00:59,039 A team of scientists investigate how Loch Ness was made. 11 00:00:59,039 --> 00:01:01,957 The clues they uncover also provide a window 12 00:01:01,957 --> 00:01:05,294 into the formation of the Earth itself. 13 00:01:15,341 --> 00:01:18,301 Deep, dark and full of mystery. 14 00:01:18,301 --> 00:01:23,095 This is Loch Ness in the Highlands of Scotland. 15 00:01:23,095 --> 00:01:26,931 For a thousand years, there have been claims that this vast lake 16 00:01:26,931 --> 00:01:32,142 hides a strange and terrible secret, the fabled Loch Ness monster. 17 00:01:32,142 --> 00:01:36,853 A mythical beast, suggested by some as a descendant of the dinosaurs 18 00:01:36,853 --> 00:01:39,855 which once roamed this part of Scotland. 19 00:01:41,773 --> 00:01:46,276 Loch Ness would be the perfect hiding place for a prehistoric monster. 20 00:01:46,276 --> 00:01:50,862 At 23 miles long, and a mile wide, this vast freshwater lake 21 00:01:50,862 --> 00:01:53,614 covers the same area as New York's Manhattan Island. 22 00:01:53,614 --> 00:01:56,699 And it's more than 700 feet deep. 23 00:01:56,699 --> 00:02:02,536 But the monster is not the only mystery that surrounds Loch Ness. 24 00:02:02,536 --> 00:02:06,079 In the hills above the loch, there is a type of rock 25 00:02:06,079 --> 00:02:08,123 whose origin baffled scientists for years. 26 00:02:08,123 --> 00:02:09,707 It's a sandstone, 27 00:02:09,707 --> 00:02:15,502 and it's the start of the investigation into how Loch Ness was made. 28 00:02:15,502 --> 00:02:17,337 It's known as the old red sandstone, 29 00:02:17,337 --> 00:02:20,422 and it's given that name because it's red and it's a sandstone, 30 00:02:20,422 --> 00:02:21,923 and it's called old 31 00:02:21,923 --> 00:02:24,590 because it's about 350 million years old. 32 00:02:26,717 --> 00:02:32,220 The old red sandstone runs down one side of Loch Ness. 33 00:02:32,220 --> 00:02:35,806 But the most astonishing fact about these rocks is not their age, 34 00:02:35,806 --> 00:02:38,015 but where they come from. 35 00:02:38,015 --> 00:02:42,185 These rocks actually belong to my homeland of North America, 36 00:02:42,185 --> 00:02:46,021 because these rocks originated on the North American continent, 37 00:02:46,021 --> 00:02:48,939 and then have separated from North America. 38 00:02:48,939 --> 00:02:53,442 But in many ways this is almost a little bit of home for me here in Scotland. 39 00:02:53,442 --> 00:02:57,235 But how do geologists know that this old red sandstone 40 00:02:57,235 --> 00:03:02,488 comes from 3,000 miles away, on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean? 41 00:03:02,488 --> 00:03:06,366 These rocks are identical in age and character 42 00:03:06,366 --> 00:03:08,951 to the rocks that actually form the Catskill Mountains, 43 00:03:08,951 --> 00:03:14,204 and so this part of Scotland belonged to northeastern North America. 44 00:03:17,164 --> 00:03:20,875 For more than a thousand years, old red sandstone has been used 45 00:03:20,875 --> 00:03:23,960 for building castles in this part of Scotland. 46 00:03:25,336 --> 00:03:27,754 But it's also been quarried in the US 47 00:03:27,754 --> 00:03:32,798 and used for brownstone buildings in New York City. 48 00:03:32,798 --> 00:03:34,174 Under the microscope, 49 00:03:34,174 --> 00:03:37,927 rocks from both continents have an identical crystal structure, 50 00:03:37,927 --> 00:03:44,181 and chemical analysis has also proved that they're exactly the same age. 51 00:03:44,181 --> 00:03:48,934 But how did part of America end up on the shores of Loch Ness? 52 00:03:48,934 --> 00:03:51,060 To answer this crucial question, 53 00:03:51,060 --> 00:03:54,770 the investigation must go much further back in time, 54 00:03:54,770 --> 00:04:00,607 to look for evidence in the ancient bedrock of northern Scotland. 55 00:04:00,607 --> 00:04:04,776 It's here that the story of Loch Ness begins. 56 00:04:06,777 --> 00:04:11,238 The trail starts north of Loch Ness, where the bedrock comes to the surface. 57 00:04:11,238 --> 00:04:14,574 This landscape is full of the extraordinary mysteries 58 00:04:14,574 --> 00:04:16,700 of an unimaginably ancient past. 59 00:04:16,700 --> 00:04:20,160 It's made of a type of rock called Lewisian gneiss. 60 00:04:22,704 --> 00:04:26,164 Recent drilling and blasting for a new road cut have exposed evidence 61 00:04:26,164 --> 00:04:30,375 which uncovers an amazing chapter in Earth's history. 62 00:04:30,375 --> 00:04:36,253 The long straight lines are the drill holes left in the rock face. 63 00:04:36,253 --> 00:04:39,839 Modern radioisotope dating has given geologists the first clue 64 00:04:39,839 --> 00:04:44,300 to understanding the origin and formation of these rocks. 65 00:04:44,300 --> 00:04:46,510 These rocks are very special to geologists. 66 00:04:46,510 --> 00:04:49,428 They are some of the very oldest rocks in the world. 67 00:04:49,428 --> 00:04:51,638 We see them in very few places, 68 00:04:51,638 --> 00:04:55,807 perhaps a dozen places across the globe contain rocks of this age, 69 00:04:55,807 --> 00:05:00,726 talking about two and a half to three billion years old. 70 00:05:00,726 --> 00:05:04,312 The origin of the grey Lewisian gneiss lies in the first crust 71 00:05:04,312 --> 00:05:07,439 that cooled on the surface of the Earth. 72 00:05:07,439 --> 00:05:13,192 After its formation 4.5 billion years ago, parts of this crust were mixed together 73 00:05:13,192 --> 00:05:18,445 with the earliest sediments, buried, re-melted and forced back up, 74 00:05:18,445 --> 00:05:21,573 again and again, for more than a billion years. 75 00:05:23,031 --> 00:05:25,366 These extraordinary rocks are the result 76 00:05:25,366 --> 00:05:28,410 of that devastating period in our planet's history. 77 00:05:28,410 --> 00:05:32,162 And there's more evidence exposed in this road cut, 78 00:05:32,162 --> 00:05:36,749 revealing crucial information about the early history of the Loch Ness region. 79 00:05:36,749 --> 00:05:38,249 This exposure contains 80 00:05:38,249 --> 00:05:42,751 three important pieces of geological jigsaw puzzle. 81 00:05:42,751 --> 00:05:50,298 First, we have the grey gneiss, 2.5 to 3 billion years old. 82 00:05:50,298 --> 00:05:53,841 Secondly, we have this black igneous material 83 00:05:53,841 --> 00:05:57,469 which has been intruded into the area. 84 00:05:57,469 --> 00:06:00,304 This is two billion years old. 85 00:06:00,304 --> 00:06:04,015 And thirdly, we have this pink granitic intrusion 86 00:06:04,015 --> 00:06:07,683 that both intrudes the black material and the gneiss, 87 00:06:07,683 --> 00:06:11,686 and this is 1.8 billion years old. 88 00:06:16,647 --> 00:06:20,649 This evidence reveals that after the formation of the Lewisian gneiss, 89 00:06:20,649 --> 00:06:25,486 much younger rocks were then melted and mixed into the ancient crust. 90 00:06:25,486 --> 00:06:29,739 But this process took an incredible length of time. 91 00:06:29,739 --> 00:06:31,030 What we've got here 92 00:06:31,030 --> 00:06:34,574 are rocks that record over a billion years of Earth history. 93 00:06:34,574 --> 00:06:37,201 Now, to put that into perspective, 94 00:06:37,201 --> 00:06:41,829 that is almost a quarter of the age of the Earth recorded in this exposure. 95 00:06:43,747 --> 00:06:46,082 This is the bedrock of Loch Ness. 96 00:06:46,082 --> 00:06:51,418 It carries an extraordinary story of a major part of Earth's history. 97 00:06:51,418 --> 00:06:55,379 And there are yet more secrets hidden in these rocks. 98 00:06:55,379 --> 00:06:58,380 It looks very much because of the temperatures and pressures 99 00:06:58,380 --> 00:07:02,508 that these rocks were under that they've been to depths of perhaps 50 miles 100 00:07:02,508 --> 00:07:05,260 beneath the Earth's surface in the past. 101 00:07:05,260 --> 00:07:08,595 This suggests that these rocks have been to hell and back 102 00:07:08,595 --> 00:07:12,055 two or three occasions over a billion year period. 103 00:07:15,057 --> 00:07:18,518 Geologists now know that the only force powerful enough 104 00:07:18,518 --> 00:07:23,187 to produce this extraordinary mix of rocks is plate tectonics. 105 00:07:24,229 --> 00:07:29,108 Plate tectonics is the process by which the giant plates of the Earth's crust 106 00:07:29,108 --> 00:07:33,652 are driven slowly across the planet's surface by vast convection currents 107 00:07:33,652 --> 00:07:35,861 deep in the Earth's hot mantle. 108 00:07:37,946 --> 00:07:40,740 In the Loch Ness region, the evidence in the road cut 109 00:07:40,740 --> 00:07:45,493 reveals that incredible pressures forced the crust deep down into the earth, 110 00:07:45,493 --> 00:07:48,328 where it was melted, deformed, mixed together, 111 00:07:48,328 --> 00:07:51,871 then finally brought back to the surface. 112 00:07:54,498 --> 00:08:00,085 After that, for another billion years, this ancient land mass quietly eroded down 113 00:08:00,085 --> 00:08:02,378 to a rough, rolling landscape. 114 00:08:04,671 --> 00:08:07,881 But this wasn't the green terrain we see now. 115 00:08:07,881 --> 00:08:11,175 There was much less oxygen in the Earth's atmosphere than today, 116 00:08:11,175 --> 00:08:16,886 and the surface would have looked like a lunar landscape - desolate and sterile. 117 00:08:16,886 --> 00:08:22,848 Incredibly, remnants of that billion year old landscape are still preserved today. 118 00:08:22,848 --> 00:08:25,349 The clues are revealed in another road cut, 119 00:08:25,349 --> 00:08:27,851 where the trained eye can draw amazing conclusions 120 00:08:27,851 --> 00:08:30,686 from what looks like a jumble of rocks. 121 00:08:32,187 --> 00:08:36,398 At this road cut, we can see Lewisian gneiss 122 00:08:36,398 --> 00:08:40,942 which is between two and a half and three billion years old. 123 00:08:40,942 --> 00:08:44,278 But up here we have something completely different. 124 00:08:44,278 --> 00:08:47,864 If I go up to this level and look above it, 125 00:08:47,864 --> 00:08:52,074 we have horizontally bedded red sandstones. 126 00:08:53,866 --> 00:08:57,203 This sudden change in rock type helps to unravel the mystery 127 00:08:57,203 --> 00:08:59,996 hidden in these ancient formations. 128 00:08:59,996 --> 00:09:05,791 They're believed to have been laid down in a continental environment by rivers. 129 00:09:05,791 --> 00:09:11,586 We've got river systems that laid down horizontally bedded sedimentary rocks 130 00:09:11,586 --> 00:09:13,545 on an ancient landscape. 131 00:09:14,963 --> 00:09:18,674 So this simple outcrop reveals that even in a world with little oxygen, 132 00:09:18,674 --> 00:09:23,593 the ancient bedrock of Scotland was covered in rivers a billion years ago. 133 00:09:23,593 --> 00:09:27,387 And there's yet another secret hidden here. 134 00:09:27,387 --> 00:09:31,306 There is a junction between these rocks which are almost a billion years old 135 00:09:31,306 --> 00:09:36,267 and the rocks below that are two and a half to three billion years old. 136 00:09:36,267 --> 00:09:42,647 This is a major time gap of between one and a half and two billion years. 137 00:09:48,817 --> 00:09:51,610 The time gap revealed here is extraordinary. 138 00:09:51,610 --> 00:09:54,695 It shows that after the traumas of their early formation, 139 00:09:54,695 --> 00:09:59,031 the rocks of the Loch Ness region went through a period of calm 140 00:09:59,031 --> 00:10:02,658 which lasted more than a third of the age of the Earth. 141 00:10:07,202 --> 00:10:09,537 The investigation into how Loch Ness was made 142 00:10:09,537 --> 00:10:11,872 has uncovered its first evidence. 143 00:10:11,872 --> 00:10:14,624 Identical old red sandstone found on two continents 144 00:10:14,624 --> 00:10:18,459 proves that Scotland and America were once joined together. 145 00:10:18,459 --> 00:10:21,336 Some of the oldest rocks in the world 146 00:10:21,336 --> 00:10:23,838 reveal that the bedrock underlying Loch Ness 147 00:10:23,838 --> 00:10:28,966 was made during the primeval creation of the Earth's crust. 148 00:10:28,966 --> 00:10:31,593 Bedded sandstones lying on the ancient bedrock 149 00:10:31,593 --> 00:10:35,928 show that rivers flowed over this landscape a billion years ago, 150 00:10:35,928 --> 00:10:39,180 during a long period of tranquillity. 151 00:10:39,180 --> 00:10:42,974 But the calm couldn't last forever. 152 00:10:42,974 --> 00:10:45,100 A major continental collision was looming, 153 00:10:45,100 --> 00:10:50,729 and with it the union between Scotland and England. 154 00:10:55,482 --> 00:10:58,399 The investigation into how Loch Ness was made 155 00:10:58,399 --> 00:11:00,693 will next uncover the geological structures 156 00:11:00,693 --> 00:11:03,612 which would eventually create Loch Ness. 157 00:11:06,447 --> 00:11:12,200 The search for evidence begins with a 19th-century scientific mystery. 158 00:11:12,200 --> 00:11:17,953 In the 1880s, geologists in Scotland were baffled by a sequence of rocks 159 00:11:17,953 --> 00:11:19,996 they found north of Loch Ness. 160 00:11:21,789 --> 00:11:24,916 Here in a remote hillside lay the problem. 161 00:11:24,916 --> 00:11:32,420 A huge mass of very old Lewisian gneiss was lying on top of much younger rocks. 162 00:11:33,629 --> 00:11:37,715 But the 19th-century geologists had never encountered this before. 163 00:11:37,715 --> 00:11:42,218 In their experience, younger rocks always lay on top of older beds. 164 00:11:42,218 --> 00:11:48,180 Then, one scientist invented a novel approach to try to solve the puzzle. 165 00:11:48,180 --> 00:11:53,433 A survey geologist back in the Victorian age, 125 years ago, 166 00:11:53,433 --> 00:11:56,477 mapped this area and his name was Henry Cadell. 167 00:11:56,477 --> 00:12:00,228 He went back to Edinburgh and he worried about what he'd seen in the field 168 00:12:00,228 --> 00:12:03,856 and thought, "How do I replicate what I've seen? How does this happen?" 169 00:12:03,856 --> 00:12:07,525 So he built a model and he attempted then to show, using the model, 170 00:12:07,525 --> 00:12:10,027 what it was that he saw in the field. 171 00:12:11,027 --> 00:12:12,736 Cadell's model was simple. 172 00:12:12,736 --> 00:12:15,988 He suspected that some force had squeezed the rocks horizontally 173 00:12:15,988 --> 00:12:17,906 to make this upside-down sequence, 174 00:12:17,906 --> 00:12:25,619 so he built an apparatus containing layers of sand and clay to test his ideas. 175 00:12:30,414 --> 00:12:34,082 Professor Underhill is using a replica of Cadell's equipment, 176 00:12:34,082 --> 00:12:38,502 filled with alternating layers of black sand and plaster of Paris, 177 00:12:38,502 --> 00:12:42,088 to try and duplicate Cadell's experiment. 178 00:12:43,380 --> 00:12:45,672 Turning the screw winds the block forward, 179 00:12:45,672 --> 00:12:50,509 imitating the horizontal pushing force that Cadell thought was the culprit. 180 00:12:52,135 --> 00:12:56,804 As the horizontal force increases, the layers are pushed over each other 181 00:12:56,804 --> 00:13:01,891 along a shallow plane which geologists now call a thrust fault. 182 00:13:01,891 --> 00:13:05,226 And we've got the first thrust appearing. 183 00:13:12,356 --> 00:13:15,524 Oh, look at that, another thrust going in. 184 00:13:18,484 --> 00:13:21,653 The experiment showed Cadell exactly how older layers, 185 00:13:21,653 --> 00:13:23,654 the ones on the bottom, 186 00:13:23,654 --> 00:13:26,739 are pushed over and on top of the younger layers 187 00:13:26,739 --> 00:13:29,491 along the plane of the thrust fault. 188 00:13:29,491 --> 00:13:31,075 There's some beautiful structures in here, 189 00:13:31,075 --> 00:13:35,828 there's a thrust fault running through here which duplicates the white layer, 190 00:13:35,828 --> 00:13:39,748 and another one through here and the final thrust fault 191 00:13:39,748 --> 00:13:43,999 which is at the lowest angle, out here towards the left-hand side. 192 00:13:43,999 --> 00:13:46,543 A success in terms of a simple model 193 00:13:46,543 --> 00:13:50,838 replicating what we see on the ground, and I can see how Cadell and others, 194 00:13:50,838 --> 00:13:52,629 when attempting such things, 195 00:13:52,629 --> 00:13:55,715 began to understand what it was that they saw in the field. 196 00:13:55,715 --> 00:13:58,508 They could replicate it in a simple, crude model, 197 00:13:58,508 --> 00:14:01,593 but replicate it in a very successful manner. 198 00:14:04,763 --> 00:14:08,681 Once Cadell and his colleagues understood the principle of thrust faults, 199 00:14:08,681 --> 00:14:13,767 the apparently illogical sequence of the rocks they saw in northwest Scotland 200 00:14:13,767 --> 00:14:16,144 began to make sense. 201 00:14:16,144 --> 00:14:18,104 Well, the slope represents a thrust fault. 202 00:14:18,104 --> 00:14:22,981 What we have underneath it is a bedded younger quartzite succession 203 00:14:22,981 --> 00:14:24,441 which is pink. 204 00:14:24,441 --> 00:14:28,234 Above it, the grey rock, the rubbly grey hillside we see above 205 00:14:28,234 --> 00:14:30,903 is the Lewisian gneiss again. 206 00:14:30,903 --> 00:14:33,738 And the surface in between, which is putting older rock, 207 00:14:33,738 --> 00:14:37,615 the grey material, onto the pink rock, the younger material, 208 00:14:37,615 --> 00:14:40,617 is the thrust fault, just like in the model that we saw before. 209 00:14:42,117 --> 00:14:45,579 Geologists now know that a thrust fault is the smoking gun 210 00:14:45,579 --> 00:14:48,455 that shows where continents have collided. 211 00:14:49,956 --> 00:14:54,125 But which continents were colliding to make the thrust faults in Scotland? 212 00:14:54,125 --> 00:14:57,169 And how were they involved in making Loch Ness? 213 00:14:59,712 --> 00:15:03,172 The scientists' trail now led them to another thrust fault, 214 00:15:03,172 --> 00:15:04,799 the Moine Thrust. 215 00:15:04,799 --> 00:15:09,551 The Moine Thrust is one of the biggest thrust faults on Earth. 216 00:15:09,551 --> 00:15:12,261 Running for 120 miles down the northwest of Scotland, 217 00:15:12,261 --> 00:15:15,305 it's mostly hidden from view, 218 00:15:15,305 --> 00:15:18,640 but Professor Underhill has found one of the rare locations 219 00:15:18,640 --> 00:15:21,266 where the thrust can be seen on the surface. 220 00:15:21,266 --> 00:15:25,894 This apparently insignificant join between two rock layers 221 00:15:25,894 --> 00:15:34,691 is the actual line of the thrust, and it reveals a geological bombshell. 222 00:15:34,691 --> 00:15:37,151 The dark layer above the thrust comes from England, 223 00:15:37,151 --> 00:15:42,446 but the surprise lies in the yellow limestone below it. 224 00:15:42,446 --> 00:15:44,655 Just like the old red sandstone at Loch Ness, 225 00:15:44,655 --> 00:15:48,408 this rock comes from North America. 226 00:15:48,408 --> 00:15:51,451 This one small piece of evidence has enormous implications 227 00:15:51,451 --> 00:15:54,495 for the formation of Loch Ness. 228 00:15:54,495 --> 00:15:56,120 The amazing thing about this contact 229 00:15:56,120 --> 00:15:59,164 is that it's the meeting point between two continents. 230 00:15:59,164 --> 00:16:02,875 So here we are on a wet Scottish hillside on a Sunday afternoon 231 00:16:02,875 --> 00:16:05,877 and I am touching the contact between, effectively, 232 00:16:05,877 --> 00:16:10,088 America and northwestern Scotland on one hand, and England on the other 233 00:16:10,088 --> 00:16:13,214 as was 425 million years ago. 234 00:16:18,635 --> 00:16:22,470 But how did these two ancient continents collide? 235 00:16:22,470 --> 00:16:27,806 450 million years ago, a supercontinent containing North America and Scotland 236 00:16:27,806 --> 00:16:30,225 lay deep in the southern hemisphere. 237 00:16:31,225 --> 00:16:34,644 At its margin was an ocean wider than the present-day Atlantic. 238 00:16:34,644 --> 00:16:37,938 On the other side was England and Europe. 239 00:16:37,938 --> 00:16:40,522 But the forces of plate tectonics 240 00:16:40,522 --> 00:16:42,024 were slowly pushing 241 00:16:42,024 --> 00:16:44,817 the two land masses together. 242 00:16:44,817 --> 00:16:48,403 Well, around 450 million years ago there was a major ocean 243 00:16:48,403 --> 00:16:49,778 where we're standing now. 244 00:16:49,778 --> 00:16:51,988 It was called the lapetus Ocean 245 00:16:51,988 --> 00:16:55,740 and it separated America and northwestern Scotland on one hand, 246 00:16:55,740 --> 00:16:59,534 from, effectively, southeastern Scotland and England on the other hand. 247 00:16:59,534 --> 00:17:02,495 Now, what happened in the 20 million years after that, 248 00:17:02,495 --> 00:17:06,288 that ocean closed, and eventually was closed sufficiently 249 00:17:06,288 --> 00:17:09,499 that two continents collided into each other. 250 00:17:12,583 --> 00:17:16,252 The collision between America and Europe pushed massive layers of rock 251 00:17:16,252 --> 00:17:20,588 over each other, forcing upwards a range of mountains 252 00:17:20,588 --> 00:17:23,924 higher than the Himalayas are today. 253 00:17:23,924 --> 00:17:28,719 Still firmly attached to America, Scotland and England became fused together. 254 00:17:30,761 --> 00:17:34,054 But what did this collision have to do with the making of Loch Ness? 255 00:17:34,054 --> 00:17:38,974 The loch itself provides the most fundamental evidence. 256 00:17:38,974 --> 00:17:42,018 The one thing that's quite striking about Loch Ness 257 00:17:42,018 --> 00:17:44,728 is that when you look at it, particularly from this perspective, 258 00:17:44,728 --> 00:17:47,979 you can see that it runs straight, almost straight as an arrow, 259 00:17:47,979 --> 00:17:52,232 and that straightness goes on for about 20 miles. 260 00:17:52,232 --> 00:17:56,110 And as a geologist, that tells me that there has to be a control 261 00:17:56,110 --> 00:17:58,278 on this topographic straightness, 262 00:17:58,278 --> 00:18:00,738 because nature doesn't produce things in straight lines. 263 00:18:00,738 --> 00:18:02,780 And so there is a structure here 264 00:18:02,780 --> 00:18:05,699 that is controlling the overall shape of Loch Ness itself. 265 00:18:05,699 --> 00:18:11,119 This structure is the Great Glen Fault, a major geological fault line 266 00:18:11,119 --> 00:18:15,413 formed during the continental collision 425 million years ago. 267 00:18:16,831 --> 00:18:20,875 It runs for more than 300 miles right across Scotland, 268 00:18:20,875 --> 00:18:23,042 slicing the country in two. 269 00:18:23,042 --> 00:18:28,088 Loch Ness exactly follows the line of the Great Glen Fault. 270 00:18:28,088 --> 00:18:32,006 The Great Glen Fault is not a thrust fault like the Moine Thrust 271 00:18:32,006 --> 00:18:33,841 where material has been pushed up over, 272 00:18:33,841 --> 00:18:39,178 it's not a normal fault where material drops down vertically, it's lateral motion. 273 00:18:42,220 --> 00:18:46,140 The Great Glen Fault is Scotland's version of the San Andreas Fault, 274 00:18:46,140 --> 00:18:48,599 it's just 400 million years older. 275 00:18:48,599 --> 00:18:51,352 The Great Glen Fault is no longer active, 276 00:18:51,352 --> 00:18:54,478 but this giant split in the Earth's crust has been a feature 277 00:18:54,478 --> 00:18:58,647 of the Scottish landscape for more than 400 million years. 278 00:18:58,647 --> 00:19:03,442 It's the foundation of Loch Ness, and without it the loch could not exist. 279 00:19:03,442 --> 00:19:08,444 Nor could the legend of the Loch Ness monster. 280 00:19:08,444 --> 00:19:10,988 The investigation into how Loch Ness was made 281 00:19:10,988 --> 00:19:13,156 has uncovered more evidence. 282 00:19:13,156 --> 00:19:16,867 The discovery of thrust faults showed geologists what happens 283 00:19:16,867 --> 00:19:19,243 when continents collide. 284 00:19:19,243 --> 00:19:22,871 Yellow limestone from North America found at the Moine Thrust 285 00:19:22,871 --> 00:19:24,622 proves that America and Scotland 286 00:19:24,622 --> 00:19:29,541 crashed into England 450 million years ago. 287 00:19:29,541 --> 00:19:32,710 And the shape of Loch Ness reveals the straight line 288 00:19:32,710 --> 00:19:37,212 of the underlying Great Glen Fault, formed during that continental collision. 289 00:19:38,547 --> 00:19:41,298 After the collision, the forces of plate tectonics 290 00:19:41,298 --> 00:19:45,967 drove Scotland south round the surface of the Earth. 291 00:19:45,967 --> 00:19:50,428 Now the investigation must follow its amazing journey. 292 00:19:53,972 --> 00:19:57,850 The next step in the investigation into how Loch Ness was made 293 00:19:57,850 --> 00:20:00,935 traces Scotland's journey round the surface of the Earth, 294 00:20:00,935 --> 00:20:03,728 driven by the forces of plate tectonics. 295 00:20:03,728 --> 00:20:08,648 Understanding what the environment was like in the past gives clues 296 00:20:08,648 --> 00:20:12,025 to the location of Loch Ness millions of years ago. 297 00:20:13,317 --> 00:20:18,529 So the investigation now moves on to the Jurassic period, 298 00:20:18,529 --> 00:20:21,822 165 million years ago. 299 00:20:23,573 --> 00:20:29,493 The trail leads to the Isle of Skye, an island off the west coast of Scotland. 300 00:20:29,493 --> 00:20:33,537 At Staffin Bay there is an incredible piece of evidence 301 00:20:33,537 --> 00:20:36,581 which sheds light on this period in Scotland's past. 302 00:20:36,581 --> 00:20:42,209 Astonishingly, it lay in plain sight but undiscovered until 1994, 303 00:20:42,209 --> 00:20:46,253 when an amateur geologist made an extraordinary find. 304 00:20:46,253 --> 00:20:50,381 On the flat, rocky shoreline of this popular beach, 305 00:20:50,381 --> 00:20:55,050 he discovered a fossilised footprint of a giant dinosaur. 306 00:20:59,012 --> 00:21:04,973 Dr Anjana Khatwa has come to analyse the details of this remarkable evidence. 307 00:21:04,973 --> 00:21:07,975 When you walk across these ledges, it's just an incredible feeling 308 00:21:07,975 --> 00:21:12,686 to think that dinosaurs walked on the same ledge that I'm walking on now, 309 00:21:12,686 --> 00:21:15,521 165 million years ago. 310 00:21:15,521 --> 00:21:19,274 This ledge, we've got this wonderful megalosaurus footprint. 311 00:21:19,274 --> 00:21:23,609 The megalosaur was a 25-foot high carnivorous dinosaur, 312 00:21:23,609 --> 00:21:26,569 quite a formidable predator during Jurassic times. 313 00:21:27,946 --> 00:21:29,071 (ROARS) 314 00:21:29,071 --> 00:21:33,157 With some individuals standing as tall as a football goalpost, 315 00:21:33,157 --> 00:21:36,534 megalosaurus was a fearsome monster. 316 00:21:37,534 --> 00:21:40,453 But how could something as temporary as a footprint 317 00:21:40,453 --> 00:21:43,830 be preserved for 165 million years? 318 00:21:45,040 --> 00:21:46,540 The footprints are so unique. 319 00:21:46,540 --> 00:21:52,502 What's happened is that a dinosaur has travelled over a kind of sticky gooey mud 320 00:21:52,502 --> 00:21:54,879 and their impressions have been left behind. 321 00:21:54,879 --> 00:21:59,048 That mud has dried off and it's hardened and then, over time, 322 00:21:59,048 --> 00:22:02,674 wind-blown sand has come in and covered that footprint over 323 00:22:02,674 --> 00:22:04,676 and then as further time has developed, 324 00:22:04,676 --> 00:22:07,928 we get layers of clay and sand building up over that footprint 325 00:22:07,928 --> 00:22:10,722 and that footprint becomes fossilised over time. 326 00:22:10,722 --> 00:22:13,223 Now, over a few million years, 327 00:22:13,223 --> 00:22:18,768 erosion occurs and those footprints become exposed for us to see today. 328 00:22:18,768 --> 00:22:22,187 Dr Khatwa is making a plaster cast of one of the footprints 329 00:22:22,187 --> 00:22:25,105 so she will be able to examine it more closely. 330 00:22:26,814 --> 00:22:30,566 We take the cast in order to have a record of the footprints 331 00:22:30,566 --> 00:22:33,777 so we can take them back to the lab and have a look at them and understand 332 00:22:33,777 --> 00:22:36,737 how this creature used to live. 333 00:22:36,737 --> 00:22:38,821 As she carefully removes the plaster cast, 334 00:22:38,821 --> 00:22:44,158 its shape reveals a 165-million-year-old secret. 335 00:22:44,158 --> 00:22:47,618 One thing that really strikes me, actually, is the deep impression 336 00:22:47,618 --> 00:22:52,038 that this front toe has made, and how pointed it is, 337 00:22:52,038 --> 00:22:55,665 and this tells me that this dinosaur was moving at a fast speed 338 00:22:55,665 --> 00:22:58,375 and really pushing down on its front three toes, 339 00:22:58,375 --> 00:23:02,461 so it might have been chasing some kind of prey. 340 00:23:04,254 --> 00:23:06,880 (SCREECHING) 341 00:23:06,880 --> 00:23:08,673 But megalosaurus wasn't the only dinosaur 342 00:23:08,673 --> 00:23:13,884 to leave its footprints in these rocks only 60 miles from Loch Ness. 343 00:23:18,179 --> 00:23:23,348 This the smallest dinosaur footprint that anybody has ever found in the world. 344 00:23:23,348 --> 00:23:26,058 You can actually see it's about the size of my fingernail. 345 00:23:26,058 --> 00:23:29,269 And we think it's a coelophysis, and it's quite interesting 346 00:23:29,269 --> 00:23:33,062 because the small footprint here, which we think is from a hatchling, 347 00:23:33,062 --> 00:23:36,190 is embedded in the larger one here that you can see. 348 00:23:36,190 --> 00:23:37,899 What we think this tells us 349 00:23:37,899 --> 00:23:40,567 is that the young travelled with their parents in groups 350 00:23:40,567 --> 00:23:44,652 and that most probably that adults were looking after the young. 351 00:23:46,738 --> 00:23:49,364 Geologists have used the amazing evidence 352 00:23:49,364 --> 00:23:52,240 of the footprints of coelophysis and megalosaurus, 353 00:23:52,240 --> 00:23:54,617 together with the muddy rocks they were found in, 354 00:23:54,617 --> 00:23:59,703 to better reveal the story of Loch Ness in the Jurassic period. 355 00:24:01,246 --> 00:24:04,874 At the time, Scotland was still attached to America. 356 00:24:04,874 --> 00:24:09,460 Plate tectonics had driven this land mass much nearer the equator, 357 00:24:09,460 --> 00:24:12,420 2,000 miles further south than it is now. 358 00:24:12,420 --> 00:24:17,339 And that had a major effect on the climate and environment of Loch Ness. 359 00:24:17,339 --> 00:24:18,882 Back during the Jurassic times, 360 00:24:18,882 --> 00:24:22,843 the climate and the environment was very, very different to what we see today. 361 00:24:22,843 --> 00:24:27,095 There would have been lush jungles full of tropical vegetation 362 00:24:27,095 --> 00:24:30,389 and the dinosaurs would have been living on the edge of these jungles, 363 00:24:30,389 --> 00:24:32,890 travelling over lagoonal type of wetlands. 364 00:24:32,890 --> 00:24:36,100 This climate was ideal for dinosaurs to live in, 365 00:24:36,100 --> 00:24:39,561 because it supported a huge ecosystem of wildlife 366 00:24:39,561 --> 00:24:42,021 that they would have predated on. 367 00:24:44,063 --> 00:24:45,898 The bones of one more dinosaur 368 00:24:45,898 --> 00:24:48,649 have recently been found on the Isle of Skye - 369 00:24:48,649 --> 00:24:51,109 the plesiosaur. 370 00:24:52,569 --> 00:24:56,613 But this discovery generated a completely different kind of interest. 371 00:24:59,406 --> 00:25:03,367 Enthusiasts see a strong resemblance between the shape of the plesiosaur 372 00:25:03,367 --> 00:25:06,327 and some descriptions of the Loch Ness monster. 373 00:25:08,996 --> 00:25:11,413 Could a descendant of the long-extinct plesiosaur 374 00:25:11,413 --> 00:25:14,624 really be the source of the legend? 375 00:25:14,624 --> 00:25:16,542 (GROWLS) 376 00:25:16,542 --> 00:25:19,626 The evidence to unravel the extraordinary geological history 377 00:25:19,626 --> 00:25:21,753 of Loch Ness is getting stronger. 378 00:25:21,753 --> 00:25:25,922 The findings of megalosaurus and coelophysis footprints 379 00:25:25,922 --> 00:25:31,300 prove that dinosaurs lived in Scotland 165 million years ago, 380 00:25:31,300 --> 00:25:34,553 and that Loch Ness was then a sub-tropical paradise, 381 00:25:34,553 --> 00:25:38,055 2,000 miles further south than it is today. 382 00:25:38,055 --> 00:25:40,139 But about 60 million years ago, 383 00:25:40,139 --> 00:25:43,808 five million years after the dinosaurs became extinct, 384 00:25:43,808 --> 00:25:48,143 plate tectonics would tear Loch Ness and America apart. 385 00:25:56,231 --> 00:25:59,150 The investigation into how Loch Ness was made 386 00:25:59,150 --> 00:26:02,652 now moves forward to a time 60 million years ago. 387 00:26:02,652 --> 00:26:06,488 Scotland and America are still firmly joined together. 388 00:26:06,488 --> 00:26:12,116 The next question is, when and how did they become separated? 389 00:26:13,784 --> 00:26:16,911 On the Isle of Skye, the landscape is full of evidence 390 00:26:16,911 --> 00:26:21,748 which can unlock the secrets of this turbulent period in Scotland's past. 391 00:26:23,790 --> 00:26:28,085 At Talisker Bay, the massive sea cliffs provide the first clue 392 00:26:28,085 --> 00:26:30,294 to the events that devastated the region. 393 00:26:30,294 --> 00:26:33,796 They're made entirely of volcanic lava. 394 00:26:34,255 --> 00:26:36,422 I'm standing here on a single lava flow, 395 00:26:36,422 --> 00:26:39,341 and this lava flow is only about ten feet thick. 396 00:26:39,341 --> 00:26:46,054 But this whole cliff above me is made up of lava flows, maybe 150 feet or more, 397 00:26:46,054 --> 00:26:49,430 and stretching for miles in all directions. 398 00:26:49,430 --> 00:26:52,224 Now, these lava flows are composed of basalt, 399 00:26:52,224 --> 00:26:56,727 that's the same type of rock that is being erupted today 400 00:26:56,727 --> 00:27:00,104 from modern volcanoes like Hawaii or Iceland. 401 00:27:04,815 --> 00:27:09,109 Geologists have calculated that these basalt lavas on Skye 402 00:27:09,109 --> 00:27:11,736 are about 60 million years old, 403 00:27:11,736 --> 00:27:14,946 but where is the volcano which erupted them? 404 00:27:16,822 --> 00:27:21,324 The clue comes from a range of mountains on the southern tip of Skye, 405 00:27:21,324 --> 00:27:24,077 the Cuillin hills. 406 00:27:24,077 --> 00:27:26,786 It's the type of rock that makes up these craggy peaks 407 00:27:26,786 --> 00:27:29,621 which provide the evidence. 408 00:27:29,621 --> 00:27:32,248 They're made of a rock called gabbro. 409 00:27:32,248 --> 00:27:35,291 Now, these are the same chemical composition 410 00:27:35,291 --> 00:27:38,335 as the basalt that's been erupted on to the surface, 411 00:27:38,335 --> 00:27:39,919 but there's a difference. 412 00:27:39,919 --> 00:27:43,713 The basalt that was erupted was cooled very quickly 413 00:27:43,713 --> 00:27:45,673 because it was exposed to the air. 414 00:27:45,673 --> 00:27:48,299 Geologists call that fine-grained. 415 00:27:48,299 --> 00:27:51,427 On the other hand, the magma that was trapped 416 00:27:51,427 --> 00:27:55,220 maybe a mile down beneath the Earth's surface, that cooled pretty slowly, 417 00:27:55,220 --> 00:27:57,596 it was kept warm for quite a long time, 418 00:27:57,596 --> 00:27:59,722 and so you've got very large crystals growing. 419 00:27:59,722 --> 00:28:01,933 And when you get a rock with large crystals, 420 00:28:01,933 --> 00:28:04,059 that's what we call coarse-grained. 421 00:28:06,852 --> 00:28:10,772 The large crystals in the gabbro rocks give away their origin. 422 00:28:10,772 --> 00:28:14,107 They tell geologists that the Cuillin hills are the remains 423 00:28:14,107 --> 00:28:17,651 of an enormous magma chamber deep below the volcano, 424 00:28:17,651 --> 00:28:21,986 where lava was stored before being erupted on to the surface. 425 00:28:23,904 --> 00:28:26,530 But how much lava was there? 426 00:28:26,530 --> 00:28:28,574 We may be looking now 427 00:28:28,574 --> 00:28:30,450 at a beautiful green valley, 428 00:28:30,450 --> 00:28:34,036 but actually all these hills around here are made up of rocks 429 00:28:34,036 --> 00:28:37,329 that were formed in a series of massive volcanic eruptions, 430 00:28:37,329 --> 00:28:39,455 about 60 million years ago. 431 00:28:39,455 --> 00:28:43,666 And at that time, there were volcanoes erupting all over Scotland. 432 00:28:43,666 --> 00:28:47,043 Here we are on Skye and it's just one of those volcanoes. 433 00:28:50,170 --> 00:28:55,089 It's now known that an incredible 500 cubic miles of lava 434 00:28:55,089 --> 00:28:58,133 was erupted on Skye alone. 435 00:28:59,634 --> 00:29:05,137 That's enough to cover the whole of Texas with a layer of lava ten feet thick. 436 00:29:08,639 --> 00:29:10,932 But this was just the tip of the iceberg. 437 00:29:10,932 --> 00:29:15,602 The rocks themselves reveal that volcanoes erupted all over Scotland 438 00:29:15,602 --> 00:29:17,103 on a massive scale. 439 00:29:18,145 --> 00:29:19,938 The evidence is here. 440 00:29:19,938 --> 00:29:23,023 Huge, regular columns in the lava flows, 441 00:29:23,023 --> 00:29:26,108 looking like they've been carved out of the rock. 442 00:29:26,108 --> 00:29:31,528 In reality, these amazing formations are made by gentle cooling of thick lavas. 443 00:29:32,612 --> 00:29:36,656 Exactly the same type of columns are found in outcrops 444 00:29:36,656 --> 00:29:41,951 of basalt lava 80 miles away off the west coast of Scotland, 445 00:29:41,951 --> 00:29:48,830 and as far away as the coast of Ireland, 150 miles from Skye. 446 00:29:48,830 --> 00:29:52,624 These lavas have all been dated at about 60 million years old, 447 00:29:52,624 --> 00:29:56,627 and they were also part of the same series of massive eruptions 448 00:29:56,627 --> 00:29:59,587 which spread out for hundreds of miles in all directions. 449 00:29:59,587 --> 00:30:02,964 But what was the cause of the eruptions? 450 00:30:02,964 --> 00:30:05,340 Dr Goodenough has found another clue 451 00:30:05,340 --> 00:30:07,883 which points to the origins of these lavas, 452 00:30:07,883 --> 00:30:11,427 and their role in the creation of Loch Ness. 453 00:30:11,427 --> 00:30:14,721 This is the ropey top to a lava flow. 454 00:30:14,721 --> 00:30:16,889 In Hawaii they call it pahoehoe. 455 00:30:16,889 --> 00:30:22,517 And what happens is that the lava gets a thin skin on its surface as it cools, 456 00:30:22,517 --> 00:30:24,935 but it's still flowing underneath that skin. 457 00:30:24,935 --> 00:30:28,021 And the thin skin wrinkles and gets pushed forward, 458 00:30:28,021 --> 00:30:30,605 giving this ropey texture that we can see here. 459 00:30:30,605 --> 00:30:34,149 But it's really quite rare to see them like this in these old lava flows. 460 00:30:34,149 --> 00:30:37,025 But it tells us a lot about the type of magma 461 00:30:37,025 --> 00:30:39,360 that was erupting from that volcano. 462 00:30:41,778 --> 00:30:46,115 Geologists know that this kind of magma comes from deep within the Earth. 463 00:30:46,115 --> 00:30:48,408 It usually erupts on the surface 464 00:30:48,408 --> 00:30:51,785 when tectonic forces split the Earth's crust apart. 465 00:30:51,785 --> 00:30:55,537 Is that what happened here, 60 million years ago? 466 00:30:55,537 --> 00:30:59,373 GOODENOUGH: At that time, Scotland was still joined to North America, 467 00:30:59,373 --> 00:31:02,875 but the two continents were being stretched and thinned, 468 00:31:02,875 --> 00:31:04,751 due to tectonic forces. 469 00:31:04,751 --> 00:31:09,212 And that allowed molten rock, or magma, from deep within the Earth 470 00:31:09,212 --> 00:31:12,255 to well up and to be erupted from those volcanoes, 471 00:31:12,255 --> 00:31:16,633 and eventually that volcanic activity led to the development of a new ocean 472 00:31:16,633 --> 00:31:20,302 between Scotland and North America, the Atlantic Ocean. 473 00:31:21,803 --> 00:31:24,262 So the lavas are the trail of evidence 474 00:31:24,262 --> 00:31:26,973 which show that the opening up of the Atlantic Ocean 475 00:31:26,973 --> 00:31:31,266 began with volcanic eruptions all over Scotland. 476 00:31:32,310 --> 00:31:36,436 As magma erupted under the ocean, the sea floor spread out, 477 00:31:36,436 --> 00:31:40,898 slowly pushing Scotland and America apart. 478 00:31:40,898 --> 00:31:43,774 The birth of the Atlantic Ocean had a direct effect 479 00:31:43,774 --> 00:31:45,734 on the making of Loch Ness. 480 00:31:45,734 --> 00:31:50,111 As the ocean grew, the huge forces involved reawakened 481 00:31:50,111 --> 00:31:54,072 the 400-million-year-old Great Glen Fault. 482 00:31:54,072 --> 00:31:56,241 So faults like the Great Glen, 483 00:31:56,241 --> 00:31:58,825 these are zones of weakness in Earth's crust 484 00:31:58,825 --> 00:32:02,327 and they're like scars or wounds, they can reopen. 485 00:32:02,327 --> 00:32:04,829 And in the case of the Great Glen, 486 00:32:04,829 --> 00:32:08,248 it was reactivated when the Atlantic began opening 487 00:32:08,248 --> 00:32:10,082 50 to 60 million years ago. 488 00:32:10,082 --> 00:32:15,168 And this is why you see this feature now present in today's landscape, 489 00:32:15,168 --> 00:32:18,170 even though the fault itself is 400 million years old. 490 00:32:18,170 --> 00:32:21,172 The massive geological movements shattered 491 00:32:21,172 --> 00:32:23,465 and weakened the rocks along the fault. 492 00:32:23,465 --> 00:32:25,758 Along this line of weakness, 493 00:32:25,758 --> 00:32:28,635 a river started cutting down through the shattered rocks, 494 00:32:28,635 --> 00:32:30,595 slowly carving out a valley. 495 00:32:32,470 --> 00:32:34,972 For the next 55 million years, 496 00:32:34,972 --> 00:32:38,683 the landscape of Scotland weathered and eroded. 497 00:32:38,683 --> 00:32:40,809 The outlines of the mountains softened, 498 00:32:40,809 --> 00:32:44,769 and the coastline began to take on its present shape. 499 00:32:44,769 --> 00:32:50,648 Loch Ness became a long river valley, following the line of the Great Glen Fault. 500 00:32:52,566 --> 00:32:55,985 The investigation is close to uncovering the final stages 501 00:32:55,985 --> 00:32:58,778 in the story of how Loch Ness was made. 502 00:32:58,778 --> 00:33:04,323 Huge lava flows on the Isle of Skye reveal that massive volcanic eruptions 503 00:33:04,323 --> 00:33:07,449 60 million years ago were the start of the separation 504 00:33:07,449 --> 00:33:10,410 of Scotland and America. 505 00:33:10,410 --> 00:33:14,579 The sharp outline of the 400-million-year-old Great Glen Fault 506 00:33:14,579 --> 00:33:19,957 shows that the fault was reawakened as Scotland and America were torn apart. 507 00:33:21,250 --> 00:33:25,961 But there was one final land-changing event to come. 508 00:33:25,961 --> 00:33:27,878 Nature wasn't finished with Loch Ness, 509 00:33:27,878 --> 00:33:32,548 and it was this event that created the lake we see today. 510 00:33:36,301 --> 00:33:40,512 Tracing a violent history that lasted for three billion years, 511 00:33:40,512 --> 00:33:42,971 the investigation into how Loch Ness was made 512 00:33:42,971 --> 00:33:48,683 now moves forward to the recent past, only 10,000 years ago. 513 00:33:49,767 --> 00:33:53,019 The final link in the chain of evidence is to discover 514 00:33:53,019 --> 00:33:56,437 how the wide, deep waters of Loch Ness were finally made, 515 00:33:56,437 --> 00:33:59,565 and whether a descendant of the dinosaurs 516 00:33:59,565 --> 00:34:01,190 could possibly have survived there 517 00:34:01,190 --> 00:34:04,567 to create the myth of the Loch Ness monster. 518 00:34:05,818 --> 00:34:08,945 A vital clue was uncovered in the 19th century 519 00:34:08,945 --> 00:34:12,864 by one of the greatest scientific minds the world has ever known, 520 00:34:12,864 --> 00:34:15,324 Charles Darwin. 521 00:34:15,324 --> 00:34:18,201 In 1838, Darwin came to Scotland 522 00:34:18,201 --> 00:34:20,619 to investigate a mystery in the remote valley 523 00:34:20,619 --> 00:34:24,621 of Glen Roy, about 20 miles from Loch Ness. 524 00:34:26,456 --> 00:34:28,082 For hundreds of years, 525 00:34:28,082 --> 00:34:31,626 people had been baffled by three extraordinary parallel lines 526 00:34:31,626 --> 00:34:34,877 which run round both sides of the valley - 527 00:34:34,877 --> 00:34:41,423 strange horizontal cuts in the hillside, in some places more than 30 feet wide. 528 00:34:41,423 --> 00:34:44,842 These Parallel Roads, as they are called, 529 00:34:44,842 --> 00:34:47,718 run exactly level for more than 20 miles. 530 00:34:47,718 --> 00:34:49,762 What could have made them? 531 00:34:51,513 --> 00:34:53,639 Dr Pete Nienow is following in Darwin's footsteps 532 00:34:53,639 --> 00:34:58,850 to the Glen Roy Parallel Roads and the story they reveal. 533 00:34:59,976 --> 00:35:02,352 Their creation was a mystery for a very long time 534 00:35:02,352 --> 00:35:04,687 and initially people, you know, just thought they were, 535 00:35:04,687 --> 00:35:08,147 you know, perhaps created by giants, a thing of myth or legend. 536 00:35:08,147 --> 00:35:11,816 And then in the... in the 19th century, a number of scientists came here, 537 00:35:11,816 --> 00:35:14,568 including Charles Darwin, and when he saw them, 538 00:35:14,568 --> 00:35:16,611 he thought they were exactly the same 539 00:35:16,611 --> 00:35:18,862 as features he'd seen in South America, 540 00:35:18,862 --> 00:35:22,656 where earthquakes had uplifted old marine shorelines 541 00:35:22,656 --> 00:35:24,824 and left them abandoned higher up from the sea. 542 00:35:26,742 --> 00:35:28,243 Darwin was so convinced 543 00:35:28,243 --> 00:35:31,036 the Parallel Roads were the remains of old seashores 544 00:35:31,036 --> 00:35:33,371 that he published a paper with his results, 545 00:35:33,371 --> 00:35:35,413 and the world of science believed him. 546 00:35:37,332 --> 00:35:40,834 But for once, Darwin was wrong. 547 00:35:40,834 --> 00:35:44,378 In 1840, two years after Darwin's visit, 548 00:35:44,378 --> 00:35:48,171 a Swiss scientist named Louis Agassiz came to Glen Roy. 549 00:35:49,922 --> 00:35:52,299 Agassiz had spent a lifetime studying glaciers 550 00:35:52,299 --> 00:35:56,926 and the effects of glaciation on the landscape of the Swiss Alps. 551 00:36:01,263 --> 00:36:03,430 When he examined the parallel roads, 552 00:36:03,430 --> 00:36:06,849 Agassiz realised that they were ancient shorelines, 553 00:36:06,849 --> 00:36:09,726 but that the valley had been filled not by the sea, 554 00:36:09,726 --> 00:36:12,686 but by a freshwater lake. 555 00:36:14,896 --> 00:36:17,231 From his knowledge of glaciers in the Alps, 556 00:36:17,231 --> 00:36:19,899 Agassiz was able to show that a freshwater lake 557 00:36:19,899 --> 00:36:21,483 had once filled the valley. 558 00:36:23,150 --> 00:36:28,238 The lake was kept full by a huge glacier which blocked the end of the valley. 559 00:36:28,238 --> 00:36:31,489 As the glacier melted and froze again three times, 560 00:36:31,489 --> 00:36:35,366 the water in the valley emptied and filled up to a different level, 561 00:36:35,366 --> 00:36:38,410 carving out the three relic beaches. 562 00:36:39,452 --> 00:36:41,912 Initially, Agassiz wasn't believed, 'cause people believed Darwin, 563 00:36:41,912 --> 00:36:45,206 and then over time it became clear that Agassiz was correct 564 00:36:45,206 --> 00:36:48,416 and Darwin claimed, you know, it was one of his great embarrassments 565 00:36:48,416 --> 00:36:50,793 that he'd got something so terribly wrong, 566 00:36:50,793 --> 00:36:52,544 which sort of shows that, you know, 567 00:36:52,544 --> 00:36:54,420 even great scientists can make mistakes. 568 00:36:55,629 --> 00:36:58,589 The evidence at Glen Roy convinced Agassiz that many features 569 00:36:58,589 --> 00:37:02,216 in the Scottish landscape must have been made by glaciers. 570 00:37:02,216 --> 00:37:06,135 And that led him to the startling conclusion at the time, 571 00:37:06,135 --> 00:37:09,512 that the whole of Scotland had once been covered by ice. 572 00:37:11,389 --> 00:37:13,264 The moment you make that leap 573 00:37:13,264 --> 00:37:15,724 that what you've got here was created by glaciers, 574 00:37:15,724 --> 00:37:17,600 you've instantly got to make the leap to the fact 575 00:37:17,600 --> 00:37:20,060 that we must have had a very cold climate here in the past, 576 00:37:20,060 --> 00:37:24,146 cold enough for... for ice sheets and glaciers to... to build up. 577 00:37:24,146 --> 00:37:26,439 This site is... is of... of world importance 578 00:37:26,439 --> 00:37:29,399 in terms of the understanding of glaciations 579 00:37:29,399 --> 00:37:31,484 and the... you know, the... the fact that, in the past, 580 00:37:31,484 --> 00:37:35,444 ice covered a much larger proportion of the planet than it currently covers. 581 00:37:36,653 --> 00:37:41,615 This extraordinary investigation led eventually to the idea of the Ice Age, 582 00:37:41,615 --> 00:37:45,617 periods in the geological past when much of the northern hemisphere 583 00:37:45,617 --> 00:37:48,869 was covered in glaciers and ice sheets. 584 00:37:50,329 --> 00:37:55,164 Since Agassiz's discoveries, scientists have been investigating the role of ice 585 00:37:55,164 --> 00:37:56,915 in making Loch Ness. 586 00:37:56,915 --> 00:38:00,417 About two and a half million years ago, the global climate started to cool 587 00:38:00,417 --> 00:38:03,712 and since then we've had a series of repeated glaciations, 588 00:38:03,712 --> 00:38:06,505 roughly about once every 100,000 years. 589 00:38:08,089 --> 00:38:11,591 Each time the ice advanced, temperatures plummeted. 590 00:38:11,591 --> 00:38:15,551 Average winter temperatures were at least 30 degrees colder than today. 591 00:38:15,551 --> 00:38:19,513 As the ice built up, it reached extraordinary thicknesses. 592 00:38:20,722 --> 00:38:22,764 The ice sheet over the centre of Scotland 593 00:38:22,764 --> 00:38:24,974 would have been three or four thousand feet thick. 594 00:38:24,974 --> 00:38:26,641 And here in Loch Ness, 595 00:38:26,641 --> 00:38:30,019 it would have certainly been a couple of thousand feet thick. 596 00:38:30,019 --> 00:38:32,687 You might have seen a few of the highest mountains 597 00:38:32,687 --> 00:38:34,480 just peeking out the top of the ice sheet, 598 00:38:34,480 --> 00:38:36,564 but in the main, the whole of the landscape 599 00:38:36,564 --> 00:38:38,982 would have just been blanketed by... by ice. 600 00:38:40,859 --> 00:38:46,362 But what effect did this vast weight of ice have on the creation of Loch Ness? 601 00:38:46,362 --> 00:38:49,989 The loch itself is difficult to investigate, because it's full of water. 602 00:38:49,989 --> 00:38:53,783 But there's another location where the evidence is clear. 603 00:38:53,783 --> 00:38:58,536 Just 20 miles from Loch Ness is the forbidding valley of Glencoe. 604 00:39:00,662 --> 00:39:03,122 Glencoe is a legendary place in Scottish history, 605 00:39:03,122 --> 00:39:07,958 as it was here that an infamous massacre took place in 1692, 606 00:39:07,958 --> 00:39:10,918 when the MacDonald clan were murdered in their beds 607 00:39:10,918 --> 00:39:12,545 by the Campbells. 608 00:39:14,504 --> 00:39:19,048 The shape of this valley sheds light on the way Loch Ness was made. 609 00:39:19,048 --> 00:39:22,133 If you could actually drain the water out of Loch Ness, 610 00:39:22,133 --> 00:39:26,595 what you'd actually end up with is a valley with this sort of shape. 611 00:39:26,595 --> 00:39:28,179 And looking down Glencoe 612 00:39:28,179 --> 00:39:31,931 you can see it's a very, very steep-sided, flat-bottomed valley 613 00:39:31,931 --> 00:39:35,058 and it's basically been created by glaciers 614 00:39:35,058 --> 00:39:37,184 repeatedly flowing down the valley, 615 00:39:37,184 --> 00:39:41,062 eroding it and basically gouging out what was originally a V-shaped valley 616 00:39:41,062 --> 00:39:43,355 and turning it into an over-deepened U-shaped valley. 617 00:39:45,231 --> 00:39:48,274 Glaciers are extremely efficient at eroding the landscape. 618 00:39:48,274 --> 00:39:50,525 They pick up vast amounts of rock debris, 619 00:39:50,525 --> 00:39:53,736 which is carried along at the base of the glacier. 620 00:39:53,736 --> 00:39:57,155 With the weight of millions of tons of ice on top of it, 621 00:39:57,155 --> 00:40:00,907 this rock debris grinds away the bedrock like sandpaper, 622 00:40:00,907 --> 00:40:05,117 scouring and deepening the valleys to a characteristic U shape. 623 00:40:07,328 --> 00:40:09,203 Across Scotland, there are hundreds of valleys 624 00:40:09,203 --> 00:40:10,954 with this distinctive U shape, 625 00:40:10,954 --> 00:40:14,040 bearing witness to the huge number of glaciers 626 00:40:14,040 --> 00:40:17,083 which once covered this whole region. 627 00:40:19,418 --> 00:40:21,753 At Loch Ness, underwater mapping has revealed 628 00:40:21,753 --> 00:40:24,671 that the loch has this signature U shape. 629 00:40:24,671 --> 00:40:28,632 It's flat-bottomed, with very steep sides. 630 00:40:28,632 --> 00:40:31,341 In some places only 50 feet from the shoreline, 631 00:40:31,341 --> 00:40:33,385 the water is over 500 feet deep, 632 00:40:33,385 --> 00:40:38,471 further proof that Loch Ness was made by a glacier. 633 00:40:38,471 --> 00:40:40,514 There was already a long river valley 634 00:40:40,514 --> 00:40:42,515 which had formed along the line of weakness 635 00:40:42,515 --> 00:40:46,517 created by the shattered rocks along the Great Glen Fault. 636 00:40:46,517 --> 00:40:49,436 Then, during the last Ice Age, 637 00:40:49,436 --> 00:40:54,981 a giant glacier flowed down the valley, slowly carving out Loch Ness. 638 00:40:54,981 --> 00:40:58,400 As ice flows down it, it scours it out, deepens it 639 00:40:58,400 --> 00:41:00,693 and over a... over a series of glaciations 640 00:41:00,693 --> 00:41:04,987 it deepens it to the extent that it's now, you know, a loch 750 feet deep. 641 00:41:06,946 --> 00:41:10,741 The investigation is now faced with two final questions. 642 00:41:10,741 --> 00:41:13,992 How did Loch Ness fill up with freshwater? 643 00:41:13,992 --> 00:41:15,536 And what keeps it full? 644 00:41:16,744 --> 00:41:21,205 Loose rock and boulders found on a huge ridge 250 feet high 645 00:41:21,205 --> 00:41:24,624 at the head of the loch could provide the answer. 646 00:41:26,375 --> 00:41:30,210 The immediately obvious thing about these large rocks 647 00:41:30,210 --> 00:41:32,670 is that they're extremely smooth and well-rounded 648 00:41:32,670 --> 00:41:35,923 and that indicates that they've been transported by... by water. 649 00:41:35,923 --> 00:41:39,425 They're also very large, this is very heavy, so you need a lot of energy, 650 00:41:39,425 --> 00:41:42,468 so that tells you that you've got a lot of meltwater that's carried it 651 00:41:42,468 --> 00:41:45,470 and then subsequently dumped it where we are now. 652 00:41:47,304 --> 00:41:50,848 This evidence, combined with discoveries about climate change, 653 00:41:50,848 --> 00:41:52,974 shows what happened here. 654 00:41:52,974 --> 00:41:57,685 About 10,000 years ago, global temperatures rose rapidly, 655 00:41:57,685 --> 00:42:01,396 the ice began to melt, and the glaciers retreated. 656 00:42:01,396 --> 00:42:05,899 Glaciers down there would have been eroding Loch Ness, 657 00:42:05,899 --> 00:42:07,691 bringing up large amounts of sediment 658 00:42:07,691 --> 00:42:11,027 and that sediment is then being transported in this direction 659 00:42:11,027 --> 00:42:14,696 by the... by the flowing ice and also by flowing meltwater. 660 00:42:16,363 --> 00:42:21,075 As the ice melted, a huge river formed under the Loch Ness glacier, 661 00:42:21,075 --> 00:42:24,076 carrying with it vast amounts of rock debris. 662 00:42:24,076 --> 00:42:28,204 And then what we've got here, what we're standing on is in effect the zone 663 00:42:28,204 --> 00:42:30,664 where the glacier is now dumping that sediment. 664 00:42:32,039 --> 00:42:35,167 Millions of tons of rocks created an enormous plug 665 00:42:35,167 --> 00:42:39,460 which dammed the river and stopped the water from escaping. 666 00:42:39,460 --> 00:42:42,962 As the ice melted, the valley filled up, 667 00:42:42,962 --> 00:42:46,631 finally making the lake we know as Loch Ness. 668 00:42:47,966 --> 00:42:50,968 Loch Ness is only 10,000 years old, 669 00:42:50,968 --> 00:42:55,303 but the investigation into its history has revealed an amazing story. 670 00:42:55,303 --> 00:42:58,680 Old red sandstone rocks show that Scotland and the US 671 00:42:58,680 --> 00:43:00,556 were once joined together. 672 00:43:00,556 --> 00:43:04,476 The shape of Loch Ness is controlled by the Great Glen Fault, 673 00:43:04,476 --> 00:43:08,061 formed when Scotland and America crashed into England 674 00:43:08,061 --> 00:43:11,146 more than 400 million years ago. 675 00:43:11,146 --> 00:43:15,357 Fossilised dinosaur footprints place Loch Ness near the equator 676 00:43:15,357 --> 00:43:17,900 during the Jurassic period. 677 00:43:17,900 --> 00:43:22,362 Lava flows reveal that massive volcanic eruptions 60 million years ago 678 00:43:22,362 --> 00:43:26,406 began the separation of Scotland and America. 679 00:43:26,406 --> 00:43:28,115 And the profile of Loch Ness 680 00:43:28,115 --> 00:43:32,284 proves that it was carved out by glaciers 10,000 years ago, 681 00:43:32,284 --> 00:43:36,495 finally creating the Loch Ness we know today. 682 00:43:36,495 --> 00:43:40,122 But what of the Loch Ness monster? 683 00:43:40,122 --> 00:43:43,624 The iconic image is now known to be a fake. 684 00:43:43,624 --> 00:43:46,126 But is there any way that the mythical beast 685 00:43:46,126 --> 00:43:49,169 could be a descendant of the dinosaurs? 686 00:43:49,169 --> 00:43:52,046 We have two geological facts 687 00:43:52,046 --> 00:43:53,881 that tell us that Loch Ness 688 00:43:53,881 --> 00:43:56,299 could not be inhabited by a dinosaur - 689 00:43:56,299 --> 00:44:00,385 one is the dinosaurs died a long, long, long time ago, 690 00:44:00,385 --> 00:44:04,303 and the loch itself, geologically, is very young. 691 00:44:04,303 --> 00:44:07,347 Dinosaurs went extinct 65 million years ago. 692 00:44:07,347 --> 00:44:12,058 So, 65 million years to 10,000 years, 693 00:44:12,058 --> 00:44:16,519 it's a long time distance and there is no chance at all that you would have, 694 00:44:16,519 --> 00:44:19,563 preserved in this loch, an ancient monster 695 00:44:19,563 --> 00:44:21,605 from times millions of years ago. 696 00:44:21,605 --> 00:44:23,273 The loch's too young. 697 00:44:23,273 --> 00:44:25,816 (GROWLS) 698 00:44:26,900 --> 00:44:30,152 So the geological evidence proves that Loch Ness 699 00:44:30,152 --> 00:44:33,904 could not be home to a dinosaur that somehow survived there 700 00:44:33,904 --> 00:44:36,364 since the Jurassic. 701 00:44:36,364 --> 00:44:42,660 The awesome geological history of Loch Ness has thrown up many mysteries. 702 00:44:42,660 --> 00:44:46,537 But for science, the Loch Ness monster is not one of them. 64139

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