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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,206 --> 00:00:02,862 In the Peruvian jungle, 2 00:00:02,965 --> 00:00:05,344 could there really be a boiling river 3 00:00:05,448 --> 00:00:07,482 that kills on contact? 4 00:00:07,586 --> 00:00:10,379 I'm sitting here thinking, holy cow, 5 00:00:10,482 --> 00:00:12,655 this thing is massive! 6 00:00:12,758 --> 00:00:15,724 Will the identification of an unknown sailor 7 00:00:15,827 --> 00:00:19,896 reveal what happened in Australia's biggest naval disaster? 8 00:00:20,000 --> 00:00:23,068 This is the only body to be recovered from the tragedy. 9 00:00:25,655 --> 00:00:29,034 And has a dark secret being concealed from the world 10 00:00:29,137 --> 00:00:31,172 on this Caribbean wreck. 11 00:00:31,275 --> 00:00:35,448 It's highly probable that the owners of this wreck did not want it to be found. 12 00:00:40,344 --> 00:00:43,551 The underwater realm is another dimension. 13 00:00:44,793 --> 00:00:47,551 It's a physically hostile place 14 00:00:47,655 --> 00:00:52,448 where dreams of promise can sink into darkness. 15 00:00:54,965 --> 00:00:56,448 I'm Jeremy Wade, 16 00:00:56,551 --> 00:00:58,310 and I'm searching the world 17 00:00:58,413 --> 00:01:02,000 to bring you the most iconic and baffling underwater mysteries 18 00:01:02,103 --> 00:01:03,689 known to science. 19 00:01:05,275 --> 00:01:07,551 The vast majority of our ocean 20 00:01:07,655 --> 00:01:11,034 is unobserved, unmapped, and unexplored. 21 00:01:11,137 --> 00:01:15,482 It's a dangerous frontier that swallows evidence. 22 00:01:16,482 --> 00:01:18,620 You have nowhere to run. 23 00:01:18,724 --> 00:01:20,689 Where unknown is normal. 24 00:01:22,000 --> 00:01:24,758 And understanding is rare. 25 00:01:36,413 --> 00:01:41,862 In the Gulf of Mexico, an estimated 4,000 ship wrecks litter the sea floor. 26 00:01:41,965 --> 00:01:45,413 And tuned inside are countless secrets 27 00:01:45,517 --> 00:01:47,413 from America's past. 28 00:01:47,517 --> 00:01:49,896 The remains of a 19th century ship 29 00:01:50,000 --> 00:01:51,586 found near the Mexican coast, 30 00:01:51,689 --> 00:01:55,137 are rumored to have a sinister history. 31 00:01:55,241 --> 00:01:57,689 And if true, this will shock the world. 32 00:02:00,379 --> 00:02:05,068 2017, in the small coastal town of Sisal, Mexico, 33 00:02:05,172 --> 00:02:08,344 a local fisherman leads a team of archeologists 34 00:02:08,448 --> 00:02:12,379 to a mysterious wreck two miles offshore. 35 00:02:12,482 --> 00:02:14,931 As with much of maritime archaeology, 36 00:02:15,034 --> 00:02:17,793 we're often guided by local knowledge. 37 00:02:17,896 --> 00:02:20,689 And that's absolutely the case here. 38 00:02:20,793 --> 00:02:22,379 Some fisherman in Sisal, 39 00:02:22,482 --> 00:02:25,724 have known about this wreck for generations. 40 00:02:25,827 --> 00:02:29,793 And rumor suggests the ship has a shady past. 41 00:02:29,896 --> 00:02:33,689 There were rumors that this ship was conducting some sort of illegal activity. 42 00:02:33,793 --> 00:02:36,517 Perhaps transporting the most heinous of cargos. 43 00:02:38,034 --> 00:02:39,517 To uncover the truth, 44 00:02:39,620 --> 00:02:43,862 archeologists from Mexico's Institute of Anthropology and History, 45 00:02:43,965 --> 00:02:46,068 start looking for clues. 46 00:02:46,172 --> 00:02:47,896 When they were first examining it, 47 00:02:48,000 --> 00:02:50,172 they didn't know what they were looking at. 48 00:02:50,275 --> 00:02:54,827 The remains were scattered over an area of half a mile squared. 49 00:02:56,068 --> 00:02:58,448 The team use a portable magnetometer 50 00:02:58,551 --> 00:03:02,586 that can detect metal from nearly 1,500 feet away. 51 00:03:02,689 --> 00:03:04,724 This ship had a wooden hull. 52 00:03:06,586 --> 00:03:09,586 It's got paddle wheel and a boiler. 53 00:03:11,137 --> 00:03:13,517 The archeologists find elements of the propulsion system, 54 00:03:13,620 --> 00:03:16,344 including the rocker arm that helps power the paddle wheel. 55 00:03:17,413 --> 00:03:19,413 These specific features reveal 56 00:03:19,517 --> 00:03:23,517 that this is a vessel from a narrow slice of maritime history. 57 00:03:23,620 --> 00:03:25,551 A side paddle steamer. 58 00:03:26,482 --> 00:03:28,758 Steamers transported mail and cargo 59 00:03:28,862 --> 00:03:30,758 across the Atlantic to the Caribbean 60 00:03:30,862 --> 00:03:33,655 from the 1840s until the 1870s. 61 00:03:33,758 --> 00:03:35,827 All the original components were found, 62 00:03:35,931 --> 00:03:38,413 but that only tells us the type of ship. 63 00:03:38,517 --> 00:03:40,344 That doesn't tell us which ship. 64 00:03:42,172 --> 00:03:44,931 Then the divers get a lucky break. 65 00:03:45,034 --> 00:03:49,482 Hidden in the sand, they uncover several pieces of cutlery. 66 00:03:49,586 --> 00:03:51,448 And they're stamped with a name. 67 00:03:52,413 --> 00:03:54,827 Zangroniz Brothers and Company. 68 00:03:56,068 --> 00:03:59,862 Slowly, the pieces of the story come together. 69 00:03:59,965 --> 00:04:02,965 This is a really critical find, 70 00:04:03,068 --> 00:04:07,758 as it's a key emblem of who it was owned by. 71 00:04:07,862 --> 00:04:11,103 The Zangroniz family operated side paddle steamers 72 00:04:11,206 --> 00:04:12,827 across the Atlantic from Europe 73 00:04:12,931 --> 00:04:14,655 and around the Caribbean, 74 00:04:14,758 --> 00:04:18,172 trading in commodities like sugar and natural fibers. 75 00:04:19,206 --> 00:04:21,586 They were give literally carte blanche 76 00:04:21,689 --> 00:04:23,000 to do a lot of trade. 77 00:04:23,103 --> 00:04:25,896 Their reputation was relatively stellar. 78 00:04:27,482 --> 00:04:29,793 Searching for more clues about the wreck, 79 00:04:29,896 --> 00:04:34,344 the team delved deeper into the Zangroniz family. 80 00:04:34,448 --> 00:04:38,310 Once you began looking into the commerce and the company, 81 00:04:38,413 --> 00:04:42,413 then the documents literally begin to come out of the woodwork. 82 00:04:42,517 --> 00:04:43,862 Through detailed analysis, 83 00:04:43,965 --> 00:04:45,931 investigators were able to determine 84 00:04:46,034 --> 00:04:48,275 that this was the wreck of La Union. 85 00:04:50,413 --> 00:04:53,862 La Union was one of two side paddle steamers 86 00:04:53,965 --> 00:04:56,068 owned by the Zangroniz family. 87 00:04:56,172 --> 00:04:58,172 It sunk in 1861. 88 00:05:00,068 --> 00:05:02,275 But the team's investigations reveals 89 00:05:02,379 --> 00:05:05,206 much more about this merchant ship 90 00:05:05,310 --> 00:05:09,172 which has been hidden for more than 150 years. 91 00:05:09,275 --> 00:05:11,482 It's highly probable that the owners of this wreck, 92 00:05:11,586 --> 00:05:13,344 did not want it to be found. 93 00:05:15,241 --> 00:05:18,758 The Zangroniz family had free reign on the high seas. 94 00:05:19,827 --> 00:05:23,931 Their trade unchecked and inhumane. 95 00:05:24,034 --> 00:05:28,379 La Union stopped on one of its voyages 96 00:05:28,482 --> 00:05:31,724 just a year before it sank in 1860 97 00:05:31,827 --> 00:05:35,965 and it had a slave labor cargo onboard. 98 00:05:36,068 --> 00:05:40,551 There were at least 30 slaves on this ship including children. 99 00:05:40,655 --> 00:05:43,896 One was as young as 12 months old. 100 00:05:44,000 --> 00:05:46,000 The documentation is clear. 101 00:05:46,103 --> 00:05:49,517 The Zangroniz brothers were engaged in human trafficking. 102 00:05:52,793 --> 00:05:55,000 La Union was a slave ship. 103 00:05:56,965 --> 00:06:01,241 But slavery had been illegal in Mexico since the 1820's. 104 00:06:01,344 --> 00:06:04,310 32 years before the sinking of La Union. 105 00:06:05,655 --> 00:06:09,827 So what was a slave ship doing sailing from Mexico? 106 00:06:09,931 --> 00:06:11,827 And we have evidence of ship wrecks 107 00:06:11,931 --> 00:06:14,862 which were part of the Atlantic slave trade. 108 00:06:14,965 --> 00:06:17,586 But this is a different kind of network. 109 00:06:17,689 --> 00:06:18,827 We're seeing something new. 110 00:06:20,620 --> 00:06:23,103 Further investigations of historical records 111 00:06:23,206 --> 00:06:25,655 reveals something startling. 112 00:06:25,758 --> 00:06:28,724 The enslaved people aboard were Maya, 113 00:06:28,827 --> 00:06:30,413 indigenous Mexicans. 114 00:06:32,206 --> 00:06:36,034 This is the first Mayan slave ship ever discovered. 115 00:06:37,068 --> 00:06:40,103 So, where was this human cargo being taken 116 00:06:40,206 --> 00:06:44,000 when slavery was illegal in their homeland? 117 00:06:44,103 --> 00:06:47,620 The answer may lay in the Mexico's troubled past. 118 00:06:48,620 --> 00:06:50,034 The War of the Castes 119 00:06:50,137 --> 00:06:56,379 was one that basically persisted from about 1847 till 1901. 120 00:06:56,482 --> 00:07:00,206 This caste war pitted the wealthy European Mexicans, 121 00:07:00,310 --> 00:07:01,689 the Yucatecos, 122 00:07:01,793 --> 00:07:04,586 against the more modest and traditional Maya. 123 00:07:04,689 --> 00:07:07,172 Those are Maya in the northern Yucatan, 124 00:07:07,275 --> 00:07:09,965 found themselves being dispossessed of their land, 125 00:07:10,068 --> 00:07:11,689 they were engaged in a rebellion, 126 00:07:11,793 --> 00:07:14,586 they were seen as enemy combatants. 127 00:07:14,689 --> 00:07:18,655 Did this war provide the Yucatecos with a convenient excuse 128 00:07:18,758 --> 00:07:20,793 to banish their Maya enemy? 129 00:07:22,482 --> 00:07:26,310 Slavery might have been illegal in Mexico in the 1860s, 130 00:07:26,413 --> 00:07:30,517 but elsewhere in the Caribbean it was still thriving. 131 00:07:30,620 --> 00:07:33,000 Slavery isn't illegal in Cuba. 132 00:07:34,034 --> 00:07:35,689 With their ship, La Union, 133 00:07:35,793 --> 00:07:39,551 the Zangroniz family could take advantage of the demand for slaves 134 00:07:39,655 --> 00:07:42,206 on the Cuban sugar plantations. 135 00:07:42,310 --> 00:07:45,275 It was a marriage made in hell. 136 00:07:47,241 --> 00:07:48,896 The suffering would have began 137 00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:51,103 onboard La Union. 138 00:07:51,206 --> 00:07:55,689 The Maya were literally being placed in a cargo hold 139 00:07:55,793 --> 00:08:01,034 and these were right next to the actual boiler. 140 00:08:01,137 --> 00:08:04,379 So, they were literally put in harm's way 141 00:08:04,482 --> 00:08:07,379 every time they were loaded into these very tight 142 00:08:07,482 --> 00:08:08,896 and confined quarters. 143 00:08:10,275 --> 00:08:13,448 The discovery of this wreck has for the first time, 144 00:08:13,551 --> 00:08:16,758 revealed a missing chapter for Mexico's past. 145 00:08:17,758 --> 00:08:20,137 So, why is this immoral trade 146 00:08:20,241 --> 00:08:22,344 omitted from the history books? 147 00:08:22,448 --> 00:08:27,000 We really don't know very much at all about the Mayan slave trade. 148 00:08:27,103 --> 00:08:29,310 The Yucatecos, who were in charge, 149 00:08:29,413 --> 00:08:31,137 would have wanted this minimized. 150 00:08:31,241 --> 00:08:32,896 So, it remained a dirty secret 151 00:08:33,000 --> 00:08:35,275 in one that went in the bottom of the sea. 152 00:08:36,620 --> 00:08:38,482 Archeologists now know, 153 00:08:38,586 --> 00:08:41,172 that people were trafficked onboard La Union, 154 00:08:41,275 --> 00:08:43,413 the year before it sank. 155 00:08:43,517 --> 00:08:46,379 But they still don't know exactly what happened to the ship 156 00:08:46,482 --> 00:08:48,862 on that fated last journey, 157 00:08:48,965 --> 00:08:51,103 until the team exploring the wreck 158 00:08:51,206 --> 00:08:54,758 uncover new critical pieces of evidence. 159 00:08:54,862 --> 00:08:57,068 Fireboxes being found in fragments, 160 00:08:57,172 --> 00:08:59,482 the chimneys being found in fragments 161 00:08:59,586 --> 00:09:02,000 and there is large chunks of the wreck 162 00:09:02,103 --> 00:09:05,275 which have been exposed to intense heat. 163 00:09:05,379 --> 00:09:07,551 The charred evidence on the sea floor, 164 00:09:07,655 --> 00:09:10,586 matches records on land. 165 00:09:10,689 --> 00:09:14,758 Minutes after leaving port, the boiler dramatically explodes. 166 00:09:20,241 --> 00:09:23,517 It caused the total destruction of the ship instantaneously. 167 00:09:24,551 --> 00:09:26,344 What's still unanswered though 168 00:09:26,448 --> 00:09:29,827 is whether human cargo is onboard the ship 169 00:09:29,931 --> 00:09:31,241 when it explodes. 170 00:09:40,379 --> 00:09:44,448 A Mayan slave ship has been identified off the coast of Mexico. 171 00:09:44,551 --> 00:09:47,689 The only one ever discovered in the world. 172 00:09:47,793 --> 00:09:50,758 Evidence on the wreck shows that it exploded. 173 00:09:50,862 --> 00:09:53,068 But one question remains, 174 00:09:53,172 --> 00:09:56,758 were the Maya captives onboard when it sank? 175 00:10:00,206 --> 00:10:01,965 Records indicate that roughly 176 00:10:02,068 --> 00:10:04,655 half of the 80 crew and the 60 passengers 177 00:10:04,758 --> 00:10:07,068 lost their lives in the explosion. 178 00:10:07,172 --> 00:10:11,344 We have no idea what the real death toll was. 179 00:10:11,448 --> 00:10:15,310 It was not customary for customs agents 180 00:10:15,413 --> 00:10:17,724 and Mexican officials 181 00:10:17,827 --> 00:10:21,689 to document this infernal trafficking in human lives. 182 00:10:24,931 --> 00:10:27,793 The divers find no human remains. 183 00:10:27,896 --> 00:10:32,551 So, does this mean this fated journey was without a slave cargo? 184 00:10:32,655 --> 00:10:37,137 The ocean may have hidden the true scale of this tragedy. 185 00:10:37,241 --> 00:10:39,344 Once you enter the dimension 186 00:10:39,448 --> 00:10:42,862 of a very shallow settling of human remains, 187 00:10:42,965 --> 00:10:45,310 you're going to see an accelerated decomposition 188 00:10:45,413 --> 00:10:48,413 because you'll still have sunlight entering the freight. 189 00:10:48,517 --> 00:10:53,000 You'll have oxygen and other factors to contend with. 190 00:10:53,103 --> 00:10:56,034 So, there's still the possibility that the trafficked Maya 191 00:10:56,137 --> 00:10:58,241 were on La Union when it sank. 192 00:10:59,482 --> 00:11:01,413 And it has since been revealed 193 00:11:01,517 --> 00:11:05,103 that up to 20,000 Maya were transported to Cuba 194 00:11:05,206 --> 00:11:07,448 on the ships of the Zangroniz family. 195 00:11:09,655 --> 00:11:11,827 The Maya have always been a proud 196 00:11:11,931 --> 00:11:13,379 and noble people. 197 00:11:13,482 --> 00:11:18,172 To be enslaved would have been the worst condition for them. 198 00:11:18,275 --> 00:11:20,172 This was not the Maya way. 199 00:11:20,275 --> 00:11:23,379 The true scale of this industry of terror, 200 00:11:23,482 --> 00:11:25,689 is yet to be fully uncovered. 201 00:11:25,793 --> 00:11:27,413 We're only beginning to understand 202 00:11:27,517 --> 00:11:29,620 the extent to which indigenous people 203 00:11:29,724 --> 00:11:32,448 from Central America were enslaved. 204 00:11:32,551 --> 00:11:35,241 But the secrets that La Union has revealed 205 00:11:35,344 --> 00:11:36,793 from this watery grave, 206 00:11:36,896 --> 00:11:39,724 brings us one step closer to the truth. 207 00:11:47,034 --> 00:11:49,103 As I know from my own explorations, 208 00:11:49,206 --> 00:11:51,517 the jungle rivers of South America, 209 00:11:51,620 --> 00:11:56,206 can embody a deadly mix of mystery and danger. 210 00:11:56,310 --> 00:11:57,931 And there's one stretch of water 211 00:11:58,034 --> 00:12:00,000 that has captured my imagination. 212 00:12:00,103 --> 00:12:03,655 A mythical boiling river in Peru. 213 00:12:03,758 --> 00:12:06,482 Legend has it, the water flows so hot 214 00:12:06,586 --> 00:12:08,827 it can kill in seconds. 215 00:12:08,931 --> 00:12:11,724 Now, could one man using the latest science 216 00:12:11,827 --> 00:12:15,310 finally separate myth from reality? 217 00:12:17,655 --> 00:12:19,758 As an eight year old boy in Peru, 218 00:12:19,862 --> 00:12:22,758 Andres Ruzo is told by his grandfather 219 00:12:22,862 --> 00:12:26,137 about the legend of a mysterious boiling river 220 00:12:26,241 --> 00:12:28,103 in the heart of the Amazon. 221 00:12:28,206 --> 00:12:31,034 My grand father told me this crazy story 222 00:12:31,137 --> 00:12:32,758 about the Spanish conquest of Peru. 223 00:12:33,758 --> 00:12:35,827 We're talking about giant anacondas, 224 00:12:36,931 --> 00:12:38,862 fierce warriors with poison arrows, 225 00:12:38,965 --> 00:12:41,724 piranhas that will strip your flesh to the bone, 226 00:12:42,586 --> 00:12:44,241 and a lost city of gold. 227 00:12:46,551 --> 00:12:48,931 The boiling river was one of the details 228 00:12:49,034 --> 00:12:50,413 in this legend. 229 00:12:52,275 --> 00:12:56,000 Years later, the little boy is a geo scientist 230 00:12:56,103 --> 00:12:58,620 investigating the waters of Peru. 231 00:12:58,724 --> 00:13:01,482 When a clue to the existence of boiling river 232 00:13:01,586 --> 00:13:03,965 comes from somewhere close to home. 233 00:13:04,068 --> 00:13:07,689 I tell my aunt this thing about the boiling river and that starts to come out 234 00:13:07,793 --> 00:13:09,517 and she goes, "Andres, it's real, I've been there." 235 00:13:10,965 --> 00:13:14,344 A skeptical Andres is persuaded to follow his aunt 236 00:13:14,448 --> 00:13:16,758 into the depths of the rain forest. 237 00:13:16,862 --> 00:13:20,724 The boiling river is a place that sounds like it's straight out of folklore. 238 00:13:20,827 --> 00:13:23,620 It was a one hour flight from Lima, 239 00:13:23,724 --> 00:13:27,551 on a truck on a dirt road for like about two hours. 240 00:13:27,655 --> 00:13:30,310 Then we take a Peke Peke, a motorized canoe. 241 00:13:31,103 --> 00:13:32,206 And then boom. 242 00:13:33,310 --> 00:13:35,896 You've entered into another universe. 243 00:13:37,034 --> 00:13:40,724 Andres starts to hear a low rumble. 244 00:13:40,827 --> 00:13:44,758 It sounded like an ocean wave that was crashing constantly. 245 00:13:44,862 --> 00:13:47,724 And you'd see these wisps of white cloud, 246 00:13:47,827 --> 00:13:50,655 It's vapor, high up in the canopy of these trees. 247 00:13:52,068 --> 00:13:54,931 What greets him is astonishing. 248 00:13:55,034 --> 00:13:58,344 A river running boiling hot for four miles. 249 00:13:59,862 --> 00:14:01,482 What was your reaction? 250 00:14:01,586 --> 00:14:05,724 I'm sitting here thinking, holy cow, this thing is massive! 251 00:14:07,620 --> 00:14:11,103 The boiling river is real. 252 00:14:11,206 --> 00:14:15,103 So as you know, Jeremy, the great thing about myths and legends is, 253 00:14:15,206 --> 00:14:17,655 sometimes they do come true. 254 00:14:17,758 --> 00:14:21,965 A river running at more than 200 degrees Fahrenheit. 255 00:14:22,068 --> 00:14:24,172 Reaching 80 feet at its widest, 256 00:14:24,275 --> 00:14:27,241 and 20 feet at its deepest. 257 00:14:27,344 --> 00:14:30,241 It's hot enough that you can boil food in it. 258 00:14:30,344 --> 00:14:34,103 It gives humans third degree burns in second. 259 00:14:34,206 --> 00:14:39,206 Any animals which are unfortunate to fall into the river are boiled alive. 260 00:14:39,310 --> 00:14:41,379 Where is this heat coming from? 261 00:14:41,482 --> 00:14:45,310 What's causing the water to have an increased temperature? 262 00:14:57,068 --> 00:14:58,827 The Peruvian Amazon, 263 00:14:58,931 --> 00:15:02,344 and a boiling river thought to be no more than a legend, 264 00:15:02,448 --> 00:15:04,275 is very real. 265 00:15:04,379 --> 00:15:07,413 But how this watery inferno came to be, 266 00:15:07,517 --> 00:15:09,068 remains a mystery. 267 00:15:10,793 --> 00:15:13,275 Can an answer to this bizarre phenomenon, 268 00:15:13,379 --> 00:15:17,379 be hidden in the science of geothermal waters? 269 00:15:17,482 --> 00:15:19,586 They exist across the world. 270 00:15:19,689 --> 00:15:23,655 Water rising up through areas of scorching geology. 271 00:15:23,758 --> 00:15:25,724 Especially near volcanoes. 272 00:15:25,827 --> 00:15:27,379 But they're in particular locations. 273 00:15:27,482 --> 00:15:30,310 I mean, we know where to find these things. 274 00:15:30,413 --> 00:15:35,137 What is strange in the case of this river is it is, A, so hot, 275 00:15:36,344 --> 00:15:39,965 and B, so far away from volcanoes. 276 00:15:41,620 --> 00:15:45,931 Most of Peru, sits in what's known as a geo gap. 277 00:15:46,034 --> 00:15:49,344 But there has been no volcanic activity near the boiling river, 278 00:15:49,448 --> 00:15:51,758 for over 2 million years, 279 00:15:51,862 --> 00:15:57,310 and the nearest volcanic area, is more than 430 miles away. 280 00:15:57,413 --> 00:16:01,586 So what could be powering this scorching hot river? 281 00:16:01,689 --> 00:16:06,000 The volcanoes are not the only type of geothermal activity. 282 00:16:06,103 --> 00:16:10,275 There's hydrothermal flows, underground geothermal rivers. 283 00:16:10,379 --> 00:16:14,482 We have them, but it's really cool and unusual, 284 00:16:14,586 --> 00:16:18,655 when we see them in places that are not necessarily coupled, 285 00:16:18,758 --> 00:16:21,103 to geothermal activity. 286 00:16:21,206 --> 00:16:25,137 This river seems to go for so long and so hot, 287 00:16:26,172 --> 00:16:28,827 that it looks to be something else. 288 00:16:28,931 --> 00:16:33,379 Could it be caused by something outside our scientific understanding? 289 00:16:33,482 --> 00:16:36,034 Indigenous communities have, 290 00:16:36,137 --> 00:16:39,724 attached the river tremendous spiritual power. 291 00:16:39,827 --> 00:16:42,655 It's become incredibly sacred. 292 00:16:42,758 --> 00:16:46,793 The river is known by its ancient name, Shanay-Timpishka. 293 00:16:46,896 --> 00:16:50,448 Meaning 'Boiled with heat of the Sun.' 294 00:16:50,551 --> 00:16:53,413 But nowhere on Earth, can the Sun do this. 295 00:16:56,482 --> 00:17:02,172 Digging deeper, local folklore suggests an alternative explanation. 296 00:17:02,275 --> 00:17:06,034 At the head of the river, the waters actually cold. 297 00:17:06,137 --> 00:17:08,379 And as it starts flowing down, 298 00:17:08,482 --> 00:17:12,793 it reaches the place where there's the first warm water injection. 299 00:17:13,931 --> 00:17:17,586 And that's where there's this giant stone. 300 00:17:17,689 --> 00:17:22,448 The stone bears a striking resemblance to the head of a constrictor. 301 00:17:22,551 --> 00:17:26,517 Traditionally, this is believed to be the home of Yacumama. 302 00:17:26,620 --> 00:17:30,034 And in indigenous traditions, Yacumama gives birth 303 00:17:30,137 --> 00:17:31,827 to the waters of the Amazon. 304 00:17:35,034 --> 00:17:39,344 For a decade, Andres and his team have been trying to find out the truth. 305 00:17:39,448 --> 00:17:43,310 Boiling water is an inhospitable environment, 306 00:17:43,413 --> 00:17:45,413 for any kind of technology. 307 00:17:45,517 --> 00:17:47,517 And of course, also for scientists. 308 00:17:49,965 --> 00:17:54,000 Thermal drone cameras help the teams study the boiling water. 309 00:17:55,517 --> 00:18:00,931 You wanna get a good grasp on the temperature at various locations. 310 00:18:01,034 --> 00:18:04,172 Are there any chemical signatures that might indicate 311 00:18:04,275 --> 00:18:06,724 what has happened to this body of water? 312 00:18:06,827 --> 00:18:11,310 What clues do those components give us about origins? 313 00:18:11,413 --> 00:18:14,551 There are only a few scientific laboratories in the world, 314 00:18:14,655 --> 00:18:17,931 that can help reveal the rivers unseen power. 315 00:18:18,034 --> 00:18:22,241 So have you discovered the secret behind the immense heat of this river? 316 00:18:22,344 --> 00:18:25,034 I'm in the middle of analyzing more data right now. 317 00:18:25,137 --> 00:18:26,862 But in basic terms, 318 00:18:26,965 --> 00:18:30,482 what we are seeing thus far is that this is a hot spring on steroids. 319 00:18:31,655 --> 00:18:33,896 Waters could be falling to Earth, 320 00:18:34,000 --> 00:18:36,137 as far away as the Andes. 321 00:18:37,172 --> 00:18:39,206 Seeping down into the Earth. 322 00:18:39,310 --> 00:18:42,827 Rainwater could have traveled underground for 60 miles, 323 00:18:42,931 --> 00:18:47,000 from the East Andes, and it may not be the only source of the water, 324 00:18:47,103 --> 00:18:51,275 which is somehow, heated underground before being driven to the surface, 325 00:18:51,379 --> 00:18:54,827 in this one particular place in the Peruvian jungle. 326 00:18:54,931 --> 00:18:58,137 In this hot water in the subsurface is hidden an area, 327 00:18:59,103 --> 00:19:01,517 a fault zone, a unique geologic setting, 328 00:19:01,620 --> 00:19:05,379 that allows a mass of hot water, 329 00:19:05,482 --> 00:19:07,586 to get up to the surface quickly. 330 00:19:09,413 --> 00:19:14,103 The boiling river, seems to be part of an enormous hydrothermal system. 331 00:19:14,206 --> 00:19:17,896 One of the worlds largest and most extreme. 332 00:19:18,000 --> 00:19:22,793 The exact nature of that system however, is still being worked out. 333 00:19:22,896 --> 00:19:28,689 As far as a large tropical non-volcanic thermal river, 334 00:19:28,793 --> 00:19:31,827 we have still not found anything quite like this one. 335 00:19:33,586 --> 00:19:38,275 While we still can't fully explain the extreme heat of the river, 336 00:19:38,379 --> 00:19:40,241 the life that's found within it, 337 00:19:40,344 --> 00:19:44,000 opens up a whole new area of study. 338 00:19:44,103 --> 00:19:49,896 On planet Earth, we have organisms that thrive in extreme environments. 339 00:19:50,000 --> 00:19:53,379 We call those organisms extremophiles. 340 00:19:53,482 --> 00:19:56,206 They're microbial organisms that have the ability 341 00:19:56,310 --> 00:20:01,862 to withstand extremes in temperature, chemistry and sometimes pressure. 342 00:20:01,965 --> 00:20:05,206 Do these microscopic survivors in the boiling river 343 00:20:05,310 --> 00:20:09,793 have the potential to transform the future of humanity? 344 00:20:09,896 --> 00:20:13,931 Better understanding of these adaptations might give us clues 345 00:20:14,034 --> 00:20:17,241 to how life might be adapted elsewhere. 346 00:20:17,344 --> 00:20:19,689 So this mysterious stretch of river, 347 00:20:19,793 --> 00:20:23,896 could be an ecosystem with untold capability. 348 00:20:24,000 --> 00:20:25,793 These are the kind of places where 349 00:20:25,896 --> 00:20:28,793 we're gonna make discoveries about pharmaceuticals. 350 00:20:28,896 --> 00:20:31,586 Could the boiling river's jungle, specifically, 351 00:20:31,689 --> 00:20:35,103 hold the keys to solving a humanitarian crisis? 352 00:20:35,206 --> 00:20:37,724 Or to helping us fix the next pandemic? 353 00:20:39,275 --> 00:20:41,931 At this point we don't know, but we're definitely looking into it, 354 00:20:42,034 --> 00:20:45,793 because that is a real possibility. 355 00:20:45,896 --> 00:20:50,448 So the discovery of the boiling river was just the beginning of a bigger story. 356 00:20:50,551 --> 00:20:53,103 One potentially full of promise. 357 00:20:53,206 --> 00:20:55,034 Even after ten years, 358 00:20:55,137 --> 00:20:59,000 I mean, we really have barely begun to scratch the surface of what we can do. 359 00:21:11,965 --> 00:21:16,172 Conflicts at sea are usually won by the bigger more powerful vessel, 360 00:21:16,275 --> 00:21:19,620 they have the size and weaponry to prevail. 361 00:21:19,724 --> 00:21:22,965 So, when the grand Australian warship, HMAS Sydney 362 00:21:23,068 --> 00:21:26,724 is destroyed by an inferior Nazi vessel in World War II, 363 00:21:26,827 --> 00:21:29,379 it shocks the world. 364 00:21:29,482 --> 00:21:35,517 How did the Germans win such an improbable victory against a far superior ship? 365 00:21:35,620 --> 00:21:40,724 What compels the mystery, is that there were no Australian survivors to ask. 366 00:21:40,827 --> 00:21:46,413 Of the 645 crew on board the Sydney, not one person survived. 367 00:21:46,517 --> 00:21:47,758 What happened? 368 00:21:50,068 --> 00:21:53,586 November 19th, 1941, 369 00:21:53,689 --> 00:21:57,275 state of the art Australian warship, HMAS Sydney, 370 00:21:57,379 --> 00:22:00,344 is traveling south off the coast of Western Australia, 371 00:22:00,448 --> 00:22:05,172 when she spots what appears to be a small merchant ship. 372 00:22:05,275 --> 00:22:07,793 The Sydney signals it using one of its signal lamps, 373 00:22:07,896 --> 00:22:11,103 to try and get it to identify itself. 374 00:22:11,206 --> 00:22:14,827 The ship responds by hoisting the call sign of a Dutch freighter. 375 00:22:17,103 --> 00:22:19,482 The Sydney replies with a secret signal, 376 00:22:19,586 --> 00:22:23,068 that the apparent merchant ship should know. 377 00:22:23,172 --> 00:22:27,517 But when the unidentified ship realized that it can't answer correctly, 378 00:22:27,620 --> 00:22:30,482 it opens fire on the Sydney. 379 00:22:30,586 --> 00:22:36,793 The merchant ship, is in fact, the German surface raider, HSK Kormoran. 380 00:22:42,655 --> 00:22:48,448 After just half an hour of battle, both ships are crippled and sinking. 381 00:22:48,551 --> 00:22:52,068 While a fifth of Kormoran's crew lose their lives, 382 00:22:52,172 --> 00:22:54,827 there are no survivors from the Sydney. 383 00:22:54,931 --> 00:22:59,586 645 Australian souls are lost. 384 00:22:59,689 --> 00:23:03,172 This is the greatest naval tragedy in Australia's history. 385 00:23:05,275 --> 00:23:07,931 How could the Kormoran possibly sink, 386 00:23:08,034 --> 00:23:11,241 such a superior Australian warship? 387 00:23:11,344 --> 00:23:13,827 This is one of the leading warship in Australian navy, 388 00:23:13,931 --> 00:23:16,172 if not the leading warship. 389 00:23:16,275 --> 00:23:20,689 HMAS Sydney has eight 6 inch guns, eight torpedoes, 390 00:23:20,793 --> 00:23:23,620 and a plethora of smaller weapons. 391 00:23:24,689 --> 00:23:26,793 Weighs over 7000 tons. 392 00:23:26,896 --> 00:23:31,931 So she's a very capable ship, for taking the Kormoran. 393 00:23:32,034 --> 00:23:36,620 So what caused the Sydney to lose every single on its crew? 394 00:23:36,724 --> 00:23:39,931 This is incredibly rare and almost impossible to replicate. 395 00:23:50,827 --> 00:23:53,931 Australia is desperate to solve the mystery of what happened 396 00:23:54,034 --> 00:23:56,793 in the last moments of its finest warship. 397 00:23:56,896 --> 00:24:01,724 However, the only surviving witness... is the enemy. 398 00:24:01,827 --> 00:24:05,620 318 of the nearly 400 Nazi sailors, 399 00:24:05,724 --> 00:24:09,655 are picked up by allied ships and brought to Australia. 400 00:24:09,758 --> 00:24:12,655 Will they yield under the pressure and reveal, 401 00:24:12,758 --> 00:24:16,482 how they pulled off the impossible. 402 00:24:16,586 --> 00:24:19,931 The German captain of the Kormoran, 403 00:24:20,034 --> 00:24:25,655 indicated that, in ship, was approximately 2000 yards away from the Sydney, 404 00:24:25,758 --> 00:24:27,344 when they engaged. 405 00:24:28,413 --> 00:24:30,931 Which is very very unusual. 406 00:24:31,034 --> 00:24:33,413 Why does the Sydney come so close, 407 00:24:33,517 --> 00:24:36,413 when it has superior long range guns? 408 00:24:36,517 --> 00:24:39,931 One theory, suggest that the Kormoran, 409 00:24:40,034 --> 00:24:43,034 was very close, and raised its white flag 410 00:24:43,137 --> 00:24:45,068 indicating that it was surrendering, 411 00:24:45,172 --> 00:24:47,482 when in actual fact, it wasn't. 412 00:24:48,517 --> 00:24:50,620 By luring in the bigger warship, 413 00:24:50,724 --> 00:24:54,344 Hitler's Kormoran can unleash it's weapons, at the last minute. 414 00:24:54,448 --> 00:24:57,896 Hidden from view behind steel plates. 415 00:24:58,000 --> 00:25:02,413 These can be retracted to reveal behind it a deck gun, 416 00:25:02,517 --> 00:25:07,103 and in some cases, even a torpedo tube that had been mounted on the main deck. 417 00:25:09,137 --> 00:25:13,310 Another theory is that the captain of the nearly 8000 ton Sydney, 418 00:25:13,413 --> 00:25:15,724 moves in close, deliberately. 419 00:25:15,827 --> 00:25:20,344 The captain of HMAS Sydney, knew exactly what he was likely to be facing. 420 00:25:20,448 --> 00:25:24,862 Kormoran is a nice sized merchant ship. She's a valuable prize. 421 00:25:27,758 --> 00:25:31,379 Finding the Sydney will surely help solve the mystery. 422 00:25:31,482 --> 00:25:33,137 But where is it? 423 00:25:33,241 --> 00:25:35,413 Seventy of the German prisoners of war, 424 00:25:35,517 --> 00:25:38,827 give accounts of where the ship went down. 425 00:25:38,931 --> 00:25:40,517 They're are all different. 426 00:25:40,620 --> 00:25:42,586 This was quite typical because, 427 00:25:42,689 --> 00:25:46,206 they viewed the sinking location of an enemy ship, 428 00:25:46,310 --> 00:25:49,724 as sensitive strategic military information. 429 00:25:51,241 --> 00:25:55,482 The ocean around the battle site is scoured for clues. 430 00:25:55,586 --> 00:25:59,413 But it's not until three months later, in February 1942, 431 00:25:59,517 --> 00:26:02,689 that a potential piece of evidence turns up in the area. 432 00:26:05,413 --> 00:26:07,172 Floating off Christmas Island, 433 00:26:07,275 --> 00:26:09,172 is a decomposing corpse, 434 00:26:09,275 --> 00:26:12,758 in an Australian navy life raft. 435 00:26:12,862 --> 00:26:16,724 The corpse was very difficult to try and examine, 436 00:26:16,827 --> 00:26:20,896 much of it had been torn off by sea birds. 437 00:26:21,000 --> 00:26:24,793 It's found to have no dog tags whatsoever, so there's no means at all, 438 00:26:24,896 --> 00:26:26,827 of identifying who this person is. 439 00:26:28,137 --> 00:26:30,275 The corpse is wearing a boiler suit, 440 00:26:30,379 --> 00:26:32,206 bleached by the sun. 441 00:26:32,310 --> 00:26:37,137 And eyewitnesses report the raft is damaged from bullet or shrapnel. 442 00:26:37,241 --> 00:26:40,517 The evidence indicates that this body belonged to a sailor. 443 00:26:40,620 --> 00:26:43,379 The life raft itself show signs of damage, 444 00:26:43,482 --> 00:26:46,068 that could have happened during a battle. 445 00:26:46,172 --> 00:26:49,758 This is the only body to be recovered from the tragedy. 446 00:26:51,103 --> 00:26:53,965 Could it's identification hold a vital clue, 447 00:26:54,068 --> 00:26:57,724 to what happened in the final moments of the battle. 448 00:26:57,827 --> 00:27:01,206 In 1942, because the body has not been identified, 449 00:27:01,310 --> 00:27:03,379 it's buried in an unmarked grave. 450 00:27:07,068 --> 00:27:09,482 It's not until 2008, 451 00:27:09,586 --> 00:27:11,206 66 years later, 452 00:27:11,310 --> 00:27:12,931 that there's finally a breakthrough. 453 00:27:14,344 --> 00:27:17,655 A 100 miles off Australia's most westerly point, 454 00:27:17,758 --> 00:27:20,206 8000 feet below the surface, 455 00:27:20,310 --> 00:27:21,689 is the Kormoran. 456 00:27:21,793 --> 00:27:23,241 and nearby, 457 00:27:23,344 --> 00:27:24,448 the Sydney. 458 00:27:27,344 --> 00:27:29,551 But it's still another seven years, 459 00:27:29,655 --> 00:27:31,896 before advances in technology, 460 00:27:32,000 --> 00:27:35,758 Finally give scientists another shot at solving the mystery 461 00:27:35,862 --> 00:27:38,448 of how this bizarre defeat happened. 462 00:27:40,000 --> 00:27:44,068 In 2016, an expedition is led by Curtin University, 463 00:27:44,172 --> 00:27:47,862 Western Australian Museum, and DOF Subsea. 464 00:27:47,965 --> 00:27:50,172 This included the most complex 465 00:27:50,275 --> 00:27:53,241 lighting and imaging systems 466 00:27:53,344 --> 00:27:54,862 ever used underwater 467 00:27:54,965 --> 00:27:57,620 in Australian history. 468 00:27:57,724 --> 00:27:59,448 One and a half miles down, 469 00:27:59,551 --> 00:28:02,310 the powerful lights of the underwater vehicles 470 00:28:02,413 --> 00:28:07,655 turn the bowels of the ocean from night to day. 471 00:28:07,758 --> 00:28:10,724 ROV's mounted with special cameras 472 00:28:10,827 --> 00:28:14,000 record images every five seconds. 473 00:28:15,655 --> 00:28:19,206 Photogrammetry is an incredibly important technique 474 00:28:19,310 --> 00:28:21,172 in underwater archaeology. 475 00:28:21,275 --> 00:28:22,827 And, through computer programs 476 00:28:22,931 --> 00:28:24,655 we're able to stitch together 477 00:28:24,758 --> 00:28:27,034 these thousands of still images 478 00:28:27,137 --> 00:28:30,482 to create a three dimensional model of the sea floor, 479 00:28:30,586 --> 00:28:32,724 and what we discover on it. 480 00:28:32,827 --> 00:28:34,965 What will they uncover on this wreck 481 00:28:35,068 --> 00:28:38,241 that's been hidden from view for more than 80 years. 482 00:28:38,344 --> 00:28:43,862 Will the truth of how this rare defeat happened, finally, be revealed? 483 00:28:52,827 --> 00:28:58,586 The wreck of HMAS Sydney has been surveyed using ground breaking technology. 484 00:28:58,689 --> 00:29:04,758 8000 feet underwater, 100 miles off Australia's most western point, 485 00:29:04,862 --> 00:29:08,448 at long last, the ship is about to surrender the secret 486 00:29:08,551 --> 00:29:13,724 of how it succumbed to such a crushing defeat. 487 00:29:15,206 --> 00:29:19,724 The ROV's powerful lights reveal the answer. 488 00:29:19,827 --> 00:29:22,034 The results of the underwater footage 489 00:29:22,137 --> 00:29:25,965 shows a hole in the bridge of the ship. 490 00:29:26,068 --> 00:29:28,758 The Kormoran had struck a decisive blow 491 00:29:28,862 --> 00:29:32,241 at the heart of the Sydney's control systems. 492 00:29:32,344 --> 00:29:36,517 A lucky shot or first class tactics from the Kormoran, 493 00:29:36,620 --> 00:29:38,413 the result is the same. 494 00:29:38,517 --> 00:29:43,482 Annihilation of, not only, crucial technology but key personnel. 495 00:29:43,586 --> 00:29:47,310 If you take out the senior officers on the bridge 496 00:29:47,413 --> 00:29:52,310 you, literally, take out the nervous system, the brain of the ship. 497 00:29:53,551 --> 00:29:56,620 We now know what caused the Sydney to sink, 498 00:29:56,724 --> 00:30:00,689 but, the lack of any survivors is unusual. 499 00:30:00,793 --> 00:30:05,827 One suggestion involves a gruesome end for the Australian sailors. 500 00:30:05,931 --> 00:30:09,034 One of the theories is that the Germans, actually, before the Kormoran sunk, 501 00:30:09,137 --> 00:30:11,724 opened fire with machine guns on the Australian sailors in the water. 502 00:30:15,689 --> 00:30:20,275 Did the Nazi's fire on the surviving sailors? 503 00:30:20,379 --> 00:30:24,172 Eye witness accounts of the Christmas Island body in 1942 504 00:30:24,275 --> 00:30:29,034 report the damage to the raft as being wither from bullets or shrapnel. 505 00:30:29,137 --> 00:30:31,068 It's inconclusive. 506 00:30:31,965 --> 00:30:33,620 64 years later, 507 00:30:33,724 --> 00:30:35,655 does the body of the mysterious sailor 508 00:30:35,758 --> 00:30:37,827 show signs of foul play? 509 00:30:39,655 --> 00:30:42,000 The body was exhumed and was examined in detail. 510 00:30:42,103 --> 00:30:45,793 And, in the autopsy they found that the individual had died 511 00:30:45,896 --> 00:30:48,172 from a shrapnel fragment to the brain, 512 00:30:48,275 --> 00:30:50,586 not a machine gun bullet. 513 00:30:50,689 --> 00:30:54,586 We now know this man was not killed by Nazi gunfire. 514 00:30:54,689 --> 00:30:57,862 What happened to the rest of the crew we may never know. 515 00:30:59,310 --> 00:31:02,103 Yet, could breakthroughs in DNA analysis, 516 00:31:02,206 --> 00:31:06,551 at last, reveal the identity of this lone sailor? 517 00:31:06,655 --> 00:31:09,793 DNA technology is rapidly developing. 518 00:31:09,896 --> 00:31:12,689 We can now take a sample from a deceased individual 519 00:31:12,793 --> 00:31:14,379 and determine their ancestry, 520 00:31:14,482 --> 00:31:17,172 their eye color, their hair color, 521 00:31:17,275 --> 00:31:19,862 and a variety of other things. 522 00:31:19,965 --> 00:31:23,379 Experts determine he has European ancestry. 523 00:31:23,482 --> 00:31:27,965 Red hair, blue eyes, and, pale skin. 524 00:31:28,068 --> 00:31:31,241 Then, strontium isotope testing on the sailor's teeth 525 00:31:31,344 --> 00:31:34,172 pinpoint where he is from. 526 00:31:34,275 --> 00:31:35,586 Strontium is an element 527 00:31:35,689 --> 00:31:38,586 that exists in mineral deposits all over the world. 528 00:31:39,827 --> 00:31:42,068 As ground water runs over sediment 529 00:31:42,172 --> 00:31:44,517 it picks up tiny amounts of strontium 530 00:31:44,620 --> 00:31:47,448 which is, then, present in drinking water. 531 00:31:47,551 --> 00:31:50,689 When humans or animals drink local water 532 00:31:50,793 --> 00:31:54,482 they put into their bones a local strontium signal. 533 00:31:54,586 --> 00:31:57,344 so, when these scientists examined the human remains 534 00:31:57,448 --> 00:31:59,724 that were found after this tragedy 535 00:31:59,827 --> 00:32:04,379 they established that this individual grew up on the east coast of Australia. 536 00:32:04,482 --> 00:32:07,344 And what the sailor was wearing when found 537 00:32:07,448 --> 00:32:09,965 holds another vital clue. 538 00:32:10,068 --> 00:32:13,551 Samples of the fabric from the uniform were tested. 539 00:32:13,655 --> 00:32:17,793 Blue boiler suits were worn by those working in the engine room. 540 00:32:17,896 --> 00:32:20,965 And, in 2019, investigators finally believe 541 00:32:21,068 --> 00:32:24,655 they have found who this one belonged to. 542 00:32:25,551 --> 00:32:29,172 A man named Norman Foster. 543 00:32:29,275 --> 00:32:30,862 Could the search for the identity 544 00:32:30,965 --> 00:32:34,551 of the mysterious sailor, at last, be over? 545 00:32:34,655 --> 00:32:37,655 They tested a relative and it wasn't Norman. 546 00:32:37,758 --> 00:32:40,827 So, the question is, who could it be? 547 00:32:40,931 --> 00:32:44,206 Deeply disappointed but determined to uncover the truth, 548 00:32:44,310 --> 00:32:47,758 investigators are continuing their quest. 549 00:32:47,862 --> 00:32:52,448 And they have narrowed the search down to about 50 sailors. 550 00:32:52,551 --> 00:32:55,655 There's hope that the newest developments in DNA testing 551 00:32:55,758 --> 00:32:59,689 will allow them to trace the unknown sailor through the male side of the family 552 00:32:59,793 --> 00:33:02,103 improving chances of a match. 553 00:33:04,448 --> 00:33:07,517 All they need to find is that vital relative 554 00:33:07,620 --> 00:33:11,000 for this piece of the puzzle to finally be solved. 555 00:33:20,275 --> 00:33:23,862 Lightening is one of the strongest forces of nature. 556 00:33:23,965 --> 00:33:27,517 Little can be done to predict where it will strike. 557 00:33:27,620 --> 00:33:30,551 But, when it does, it can be catastrophic. 558 00:33:30,655 --> 00:33:33,758 In 2014 a day at the beach turns to disaster 559 00:33:33,862 --> 00:33:37,724 when an immensely bright bolt of lightening strikes the water. 560 00:33:38,586 --> 00:33:41,413 Killing one and injuring 13. 561 00:33:42,655 --> 00:33:46,275 Did it somehow have a deadly attraction to the ocean? 562 00:33:46,379 --> 00:33:47,862 And, if so, how? 563 00:33:47,965 --> 00:33:51,413 And, could an accidental scientific discovery 564 00:33:51,517 --> 00:33:54,931 finally explain what happened on that day? 565 00:33:57,000 --> 00:33:59,517 July 27, 2014, 566 00:33:59,620 --> 00:34:02,172 and Venice beach is full of people, 567 00:34:02,275 --> 00:34:05,275 when something inexplicable happens. 568 00:34:05,379 --> 00:34:06,862 There was a tremendous glare 569 00:34:06,965 --> 00:34:09,758 as if someone had suddenly turned on 570 00:34:09,862 --> 00:34:12,068 all the lights in a very dark room. 571 00:34:12,172 --> 00:34:14,275 Followed by a tremendous boom. 572 00:34:17,310 --> 00:34:20,896 An unusually bright lightning bolt has hit the water 573 00:34:21,000 --> 00:34:24,241 killing a 20 year old man and injuring many more. 574 00:34:24,344 --> 00:34:26,758 This giant bolt up in the sky, 575 00:34:26,862 --> 00:34:28,551 I've never seen anything like that, and I'm from the mid-west, 576 00:34:28,655 --> 00:34:30,344 so, we see lots of lightening. 577 00:34:30,448 --> 00:34:32,931 The loudest clap of thunder I've ever heard in my life. 578 00:34:33,034 --> 00:34:35,551 Thought it was like a bomb, almost. 579 00:34:35,655 --> 00:34:40,482 Then, in 2019, another explosive strike in South Boston 580 00:34:40,586 --> 00:34:42,655 is caught on camera. 581 00:34:42,758 --> 00:34:46,620 The lightening incinerates the boat in a fraction of a second. 582 00:34:48,586 --> 00:34:51,827 Is there some deadly connection in these tragedies 583 00:34:51,931 --> 00:34:56,689 between the lightening and the waters below to create such mayhem? 584 00:35:08,827 --> 00:35:12,206 In 2014, a man dies and 13 are injured 585 00:35:12,310 --> 00:35:17,137 a giant lightning bolt hits the water off Venice beach. 586 00:35:17,241 --> 00:35:20,310 Five years later on the opposite coast 587 00:35:20,413 --> 00:35:25,241 a single explosive bolt destroys a boat floating in Boston Harbor. 588 00:35:27,172 --> 00:35:31,310 Lightning strike at sea is every sailors worst nightmare, 589 00:35:31,413 --> 00:35:33,862 and boats offer no protection. 590 00:35:35,586 --> 00:35:38,965 You can actually see the clouds light up like Christmas trees. 591 00:35:39,068 --> 00:35:42,965 You're stuck on your boat, the waves are hitting you. 592 00:35:43,068 --> 00:35:44,896 The rain's coming down. 593 00:35:45,000 --> 00:35:47,137 It's the lightening that's cracking 594 00:35:47,965 --> 00:35:50,068 You have nowhere to run. 595 00:35:52,931 --> 00:35:56,758 I've witnessed, first hand, lightening over water. 596 00:35:56,862 --> 00:35:59,034 In Suriname, north of Brazil, 597 00:35:59,137 --> 00:36:02,310 it releases its might in the middle of filming. 598 00:36:08,344 --> 00:36:11,103 A member of my crew taking a strike. 599 00:36:11,206 --> 00:36:12,724 Our sound recordist has been hit. 600 00:36:12,827 --> 00:36:15,206 Was actually struck on the head by that bolt of lightning. 601 00:36:15,310 --> 00:36:17,689 Luckily he survives. 602 00:36:17,793 --> 00:36:20,310 Elsewhere, when lightening and water mix 603 00:36:20,413 --> 00:36:23,000 it can be a different story. 604 00:36:23,103 --> 00:36:28,448 To try and understand what can make lightning strikes on the US coast so devastating 605 00:36:28,551 --> 00:36:31,448 we turn to clues from the past. 606 00:36:31,551 --> 00:36:34,793 The 1970's, an American Vela satellite 607 00:36:34,896 --> 00:36:36,931 are patrolling the planet from space 608 00:36:37,034 --> 00:36:40,000 looking for signs of rogue nuclear tests. 609 00:36:42,068 --> 00:36:45,724 They had x-ray senses, the later ones had optical senses. 610 00:36:45,827 --> 00:36:48,655 Although they were designed to detect nuclear tests, 611 00:36:48,758 --> 00:36:52,517 they were able to see things as well. 612 00:36:52,620 --> 00:36:57,586 And, in 1977, they start picking up unusual blazes of light. 613 00:36:57,689 --> 00:37:00,103 These are so powerful, they're releasing as much energy 614 00:37:00,206 --> 00:37:02,724 as a small nuclear weapon. 615 00:37:03,965 --> 00:37:05,724 What could these explosions be? 616 00:37:05,827 --> 00:37:07,862 Could they be unregulated nuclear tests? 617 00:37:09,206 --> 00:37:11,448 Further investigation shows that these flashes 618 00:37:11,551 --> 00:37:14,068 are releasing a completely different signature 619 00:37:14,172 --> 00:37:16,241 to that of a nuclear explosion. 620 00:37:17,482 --> 00:37:19,724 Something never seen before. 621 00:37:21,206 --> 00:37:24,689 Lightening reaches temperatures of 30,000 degrees. 622 00:37:24,793 --> 00:37:27,793 Five times hotter than the surface of the sun. 623 00:37:27,896 --> 00:37:30,275 But, these are even more powerful. 624 00:37:32,000 --> 00:37:35,758 The flashes are named Superbolts. 625 00:37:37,793 --> 00:37:42,241 They were named the superbolts because they were much, much more intense. 626 00:37:42,344 --> 00:37:46,103 Something which is ten times the power of an ordinary bolt. 627 00:37:46,206 --> 00:37:49,793 Sometimes a hundred, potentially even a thousand times. 628 00:37:52,655 --> 00:37:57,206 The satellite data then gives another revelation. 629 00:37:57,310 --> 00:38:00,448 You can draw a map just by plotting the lightening on the planet. 630 00:38:00,551 --> 00:38:03,551 It, basically, sticks very nicely to the continent, 631 00:38:03,655 --> 00:38:05,137 and, as soon as you move over the oceans 632 00:38:05,241 --> 00:38:07,862 you've a dramatic decrease in the amount of lighting. 633 00:38:07,965 --> 00:38:10,413 But, when it comes to superbolts 634 00:38:10,517 --> 00:38:13,551 it's the ocean they hit most often. 635 00:38:17,448 --> 00:38:22,482 Is it because out at sea the thunder storms can developed more energy? 636 00:38:22,586 --> 00:38:24,517 It's a mystery to me. 637 00:38:26,620 --> 00:38:30,206 Finding out what's going on when lightning strikes over water 638 00:38:30,310 --> 00:38:35,551 is crucial for the safety of those out at sea and in the shallows. 639 00:38:35,655 --> 00:38:39,551 Since the 1970's thousands more superbolts have been recorded 640 00:38:39,655 --> 00:38:41,827 across the planets oceans. 641 00:38:41,931 --> 00:38:43,655 The better the data gets, the more we see that this 642 00:38:43,758 --> 00:38:44,931 really is a clear signal 643 00:38:45,034 --> 00:38:47,241 that there's more intense lightening 644 00:38:47,344 --> 00:38:50,689 whether you're looking optically, or, whether you're looking with radio waves. 645 00:38:50,793 --> 00:38:55,275 So what causes these massively powerful oceanic superbolts 646 00:38:55,379 --> 00:38:59,413 up to a thousand times brighter than anything seen on land? 647 00:39:00,517 --> 00:39:02,620 Can the answer help our understanding 648 00:39:02,724 --> 00:39:05,586 of those shocking incidents on the US coast? 649 00:39:09,137 --> 00:39:12,379 In 2020, at Tel Aviv University in Israel, 650 00:39:12,482 --> 00:39:18,793 a scientific breakthrough, finally, sheds new light on this mysterious phenomenon. 651 00:39:18,896 --> 00:39:23,551 Initially we were interested in how lightening may impact the chemistry of sea water. 652 00:39:23,655 --> 00:39:27,517 During the experiment, when they changed from tap water to sea water 653 00:39:27,620 --> 00:39:30,931 they notice the flash becomes dramatically brighter. 654 00:39:31,034 --> 00:39:34,103 Everything was the same, only difference was the type of water. 655 00:39:34,206 --> 00:39:36,034 Something about the water 656 00:39:36,137 --> 00:39:38,758 was actually impacting the lightening above the water. 657 00:39:38,862 --> 00:39:42,206 Why should the water actually impact how bright it was? 658 00:39:43,862 --> 00:39:46,482 They then take samples from a fresh water lake, 659 00:39:46,586 --> 00:39:48,724 Lake Tiberias. 660 00:39:48,827 --> 00:39:50,344 And, from the Dead Sea, 661 00:39:50,448 --> 00:39:55,655 whose water is ten times saltier than normal sea water. 662 00:39:55,758 --> 00:39:59,310 Amazingly they discover the discharges over Dead Sea water 663 00:39:59,413 --> 00:40:02,862 are nearly 40 times brighter than over lake water. 664 00:40:02,965 --> 00:40:06,413 When you have salt in water, the salt breaks up into its ions. 665 00:40:06,517 --> 00:40:10,724 And, this results in a change in the conductivity of the water. 666 00:40:10,827 --> 00:40:13,034 As the water becomes more conductive, 667 00:40:13,137 --> 00:40:14,724 the electricity from the lightening 668 00:40:14,827 --> 00:40:18,206 can drain off much quicker into the water. 669 00:40:18,310 --> 00:40:20,172 And this is what heats up the air faster, 670 00:40:20,275 --> 00:40:23,034 and will give us the brighter lightening. 671 00:40:23,137 --> 00:40:25,586 Colin and his team have proved for the first time 672 00:40:25,689 --> 00:40:29,448 the importance of salinity in the brightness of superbolts. 673 00:40:29,551 --> 00:40:32,034 Science has been looking in the wrong direction. 674 00:40:32,137 --> 00:40:35,620 So, it's not what's in the clouds that may hold the answer. 675 00:40:35,724 --> 00:40:38,310 it's what lies in the water. 676 00:40:40,344 --> 00:40:43,206 But, there's a big difference between a lab 677 00:40:43,310 --> 00:40:47,241 and the vast watery expanses of our planet. 678 00:40:47,344 --> 00:40:49,344 There is a very interesting step 679 00:40:49,448 --> 00:40:53,206 to add an extra layer of complexity into the problem, 680 00:40:53,310 --> 00:40:56,965 but, that, by itself, can't explain everything in the patterns we see. 681 00:40:59,310 --> 00:41:05,517 The scientists at Tel Aviv are continuing their investigations. 682 00:41:05,620 --> 00:41:10,551 So, were the lightening strikes at Venice Beach and Boston Harbor... 683 00:41:11,896 --> 00:41:13,068 superbolts? 684 00:41:13,172 --> 00:41:15,482 The more recent distribution of superbolts 685 00:41:15,586 --> 00:41:19,137 show that they're not uniformly distributed over the oceans. 686 00:41:20,758 --> 00:41:22,517 The latest research has discovered 687 00:41:22,620 --> 00:41:25,206 that where superbolts tend to hit the most 688 00:41:25,310 --> 00:41:27,413 is not along the US coastline, 689 00:41:27,517 --> 00:41:31,448 but in the north east Atlantic and Mediterranean. 690 00:41:31,551 --> 00:41:34,344 We may never know for certain whether the lightning strikes 691 00:41:34,448 --> 00:41:36,793 in Venice Beach and Boston Harbor, 692 00:41:36,896 --> 00:41:40,758 although deadly and destructive, were superbolts. 693 00:41:40,862 --> 00:41:44,103 And, why they hit certain areas more than others 694 00:41:44,206 --> 00:41:46,517 is another enigma to crack. 695 00:41:46,620 --> 00:41:48,689 As soon as you discover something, then, again 696 00:41:48,793 --> 00:41:51,793 it gives you another ten, 15 questions to answer. 697 00:41:54,241 --> 00:41:57,137 Science has revealed an intense connection 698 00:41:57,241 --> 00:42:01,758 between the salty oceans and the immense power of the skies, 699 00:42:01,862 --> 00:42:04,551 but, there is still a lot left to understand 700 00:42:04,655 --> 00:42:07,965 about this highly complex relationship. 58890

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