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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,851 --> 00:00:09,606 Human Universe 2 00:00:12,240 --> 00:00:16,160 It's been 200,000 years since humans first emerged 3 00:00:16,161 --> 00:00:19,599 in the Rift Valley of East Africa. 4 00:00:19,600 --> 00:00:22,779 Since then, we've learnt to think, 5 00:00:22,780 --> 00:00:25,750 to dream, to work together. 6 00:00:30,220 --> 00:00:34,959 And today our human civilisation spans the globe... 7 00:00:34,960 --> 00:00:35,973 and beyond. 8 00:00:40,810 --> 00:00:48,943 But our planet is a tiny fragile speck of life in a vast, uncaring universe. 9 00:00:50,530 --> 00:00:53,932 So what next for the apes who went to space? 10 00:01:02,658 --> 00:01:07,655 Human Universe 11 00:01:08,066 --> 00:01:12,405 Edited By Sirwaan N 12 00:01:13,163 --> 00:01:19,575 Part 5 What is our future? 13 00:01:21,827 --> 00:01:25,150 El Castillo Cantabria, Spain 14 00:01:29,810 --> 00:01:35,462 This cave mouth in northern Spain has been inhabited for 150,000 years. 15 00:01:40,450 --> 00:01:43,750 There's basic shelter here and safety. 16 00:01:46,690 --> 00:01:49,099 But from time to time, 17 00:01:49,100 --> 00:01:54,243 they left the light behind and headed into the dark. 18 00:02:25,780 --> 00:02:29,659 In these caves you see the transition from just surviving 19 00:02:29,660 --> 00:02:36,866 to living, to observing the world, to enjoying it. 20 00:02:49,020 --> 00:02:54,529 There were gatherings here, people coming together to make art 21 00:02:54,530 --> 00:02:59,209 and not just any old art, but specific representations 22 00:02:59,210 --> 00:03:03,019 of particular animals and particular symbols. 23 00:03:03,020 --> 00:03:07,759 So in these caves we see the beginnings of superstition, 24 00:03:07,760 --> 00:03:11,776 the beginnings of an appreciation that there's not just a present 25 00:03:11,777 --> 00:03:15,185 but there's a past and there's a future. 26 00:03:22,810 --> 00:03:27,134 These early artists were leaving messages to future generations. 27 00:03:30,400 --> 00:03:35,418 And the one that speaks loudest lies far deeper into the darkness. 28 00:03:51,051 --> 00:03:56,729 This handprint was made by a child at least 35,000 years ago 29 00:03:56,730 --> 00:03:59,381 and it's thought it was made by a little girl. 30 00:03:59,382 --> 00:04:07,391 She'd have done the painting by taking paint and blowing it through her hand... onto the wall of the cave. 31 00:04:10,181 --> 00:04:14,339 Now, she would have had a basic understanding of her future, 32 00:04:14,340 --> 00:04:16,746 she'd have known that the seasons pass 33 00:04:16,747 --> 00:04:20,597 and maybe she even looked forward to coming back to this cave one day. 34 00:04:24,250 --> 00:04:28,459 Leaving her mark upon the wall suggests she had started down 35 00:04:28,460 --> 00:04:33,632 the road of understanding time and how it stretched out into the future. 36 00:04:41,460 --> 00:04:45,409 In 40,000 years, we've learned to see further ahead than 37 00:04:45,410 --> 00:04:47,242 she could possibly have imagined. 38 00:04:51,690 --> 00:04:54,579 We've walked out into a wider world 39 00:04:54,580 --> 00:04:56,196 and made it our own. 40 00:05:02,230 --> 00:05:05,329 And right now we are at a crossroads. 41 00:05:05,330 --> 00:05:10,878 Our civilisation holds the power to shape the future of the whole planet. 42 00:05:15,730 --> 00:05:18,961 I think we pay far too little attention to the future 43 00:05:18,962 --> 00:05:23,821 and the ability to illuminate it, to predict it is unique to us 44 00:05:23,821 --> 00:05:31,489 and our prosperity, and our very survival depend very much on what we glimpse out there in the dark. 45 00:05:31,490 --> 00:05:36,449 Science and reason are the flames and in this film I want to convince 46 00:05:36,450 --> 00:05:39,761 you that we must use them to make the darkness visible. 47 00:05:52,042 --> 00:05:56,042 Longyearbyen Svalbard 48 00:06:02,051 --> 00:06:04,553 In late June, Earth's most northerly community 49 00:06:04,553 --> 00:06:08,321 are preparing to celebrate an important turning point of their year. 50 00:06:16,126 --> 00:06:18,188 Summer is the best time 51 00:06:18,342 --> 00:06:19,891 I love the long summer's day 52 00:06:20,220 --> 00:06:22,382 It's great when the dark months are over 53 00:06:22,382 --> 00:06:25,347 and the sun shines all the time 54 00:06:29,450 --> 00:06:33,369 It's midsummer in the Arctic, and the people of Svalbard 55 00:06:33,370 --> 00:06:37,398 are approaching the moment when the sun rides highest in the sky, 56 00:06:37,399 --> 00:06:38,984 the summer solstice. 57 00:06:40,250 --> 00:06:43,668 If I were in Manchester I'd say this was the longest day, 58 00:06:43,669 --> 00:06:47,780 but that kind of language doesn't make sense here, 78 degrees north 59 00:06:47,781 --> 00:06:51,400 and midway between northern Norway and the Arctic Circle 60 00:06:51,401 --> 00:06:56,180 cos this day, summer's day, began on April the 20th 61 00:06:56,181 --> 00:06:58,991 and it will end on August the 23rd. 62 00:07:02,580 --> 00:07:06,904 We can predict exactly the moment that the solstice arrives. 63 00:07:07,551 --> 00:07:10,024 21st June 10:50 GMT 64 00:07:10,024 --> 00:07:15,686 So as strange as this long day feels, there is no mystery as to why it takes place. 65 00:07:31,970 --> 00:07:36,619 The reason for that long polar night and the months of midnight sun 66 00:07:36,620 --> 00:07:39,129 is the geometry of the solar system. 67 00:07:39,130 --> 00:07:43,769 Svalbard is quite literally on top of the world and you feel it 68 00:07:43,770 --> 00:07:45,477 when you're here, it's obvious. 69 00:07:45,478 --> 00:07:49,739 The sun doesn't set, it's somewhere over there at the moment 70 00:07:49,740 --> 00:07:57,471 and throughout the course of the day it just moves along the horizon right round,360 degrees 71 00:07:57,471 --> 00:08:03,459 as the Earth rotates with the North Pole pointing directly towards the sun. 72 00:08:03,460 --> 00:08:07,559 And when this place was discovered back in the 1590s, 73 00:08:07,560 --> 00:08:10,568 people didn't know that, or at least it wasn't agreed upon, 74 00:08:10,569 --> 00:08:14,387 it was still possible and indeed argued, back down there towards 75 00:08:14,388 --> 00:08:19,096 the equator in Italy, that the Earth was at the centre of the universe. 76 00:08:19,097 --> 00:08:21,400 It's obvious that it isn't when you come up here. 77 00:08:21,401 --> 00:08:26,099 I wonder what would have happened if Galileo and Copernicus and Bruno 78 00:08:26,100 --> 00:08:28,004 and others had visited Svalbard. 79 00:08:28,004 --> 00:08:31,116 I think that everything would have got worked out much earlier. 80 00:08:34,780 --> 00:08:37,192 After thousands of years of observation, 81 00:08:37,193 --> 00:08:41,118 our inquisitive minds began to develop models of the universe. 82 00:08:45,210 --> 00:08:48,309 The full explanation for the clockwork of the solar system 83 00:08:48,310 --> 00:08:51,783 came in the 1680s, with Isaac Newton and his universal law 84 00:08:51,784 --> 00:08:56,849 of gravitation, which is the first modern law of nature. 85 00:08:56,850 --> 00:09:03,601 What Newton's laws allow you to do is to predict the future given a knowledge of the present. 86 00:09:09,020 --> 00:09:11,717 Newton's laws describe a clockwork universe. 87 00:09:14,311 --> 00:09:17,099 Planets orbiting stars, 88 00:09:17,100 --> 00:09:19,849 stars orbiting galaxies. 89 00:09:19,850 --> 00:09:23,639 And galaxies falling through a possibly infinite space. 90 00:09:29,410 --> 00:09:33,329 One day, in our own sky, we'll see the galaxy Andromeda 91 00:09:33,330 --> 00:09:34,582 heading our way. 92 00:09:40,620 --> 00:09:45,069 In four billion years' time, it will collide with The Milky Way. 93 00:09:53,780 --> 00:09:58,354 For a billion years, our sky will be filled with cosmic choreography. 94 00:10:11,490 --> 00:10:14,505 And we know that because we can predict the future. 95 00:10:19,780 --> 00:10:24,289 So the laws of physics, in that sense, are little time machines. 96 00:10:24,290 --> 00:10:29,470 They allow you to predict with precision what will happen in the distant future 97 00:10:29,470 --> 00:10:31,758 given a knowledge of the present. 98 00:10:38,390 --> 00:10:43,539 We even see the sun ends its days as it swells into a red giant, 99 00:10:43,540 --> 00:10:46,077 some five billion years from now. 100 00:10:56,490 --> 00:11:01,459 So we can be sure that we, along with all other life on Earth, 101 00:11:01,460 --> 00:11:04,361 will not survive into the far future. 102 00:11:10,570 --> 00:11:15,180 Extinction is a necessary part of the evolution of life on Earth. 103 00:11:15,181 --> 00:11:19,969 99. 9% of species that have ever existed have become extinct 104 00:11:19,970 --> 00:11:21,216 and that's a good thing, 105 00:11:21,217 --> 00:11:25,751 because when a species goes, there's a niche available in the ecosystem 106 00:11:25,752 --> 00:11:29,589 for other species to colonise - that's how evolution works. 107 00:11:29,590 --> 00:11:32,200 You know, if the dinosaurs hadn't become extinct, 108 00:11:32,201 --> 00:11:34,717 it's very likely that we wouldn't exist. 109 00:11:49,181 --> 00:11:53,249 So when considering the ultimate destiny of our species 110 00:11:53,250 --> 00:11:57,517 the answer seems obvious - extinction. 111 00:12:01,220 --> 00:12:04,440 But I'd argue this doesn't have to be the case. 112 00:12:09,860 --> 00:12:14,081 We are different to the other species on this planet because we're 113 00:12:14,082 --> 00:12:19,180 intelligent. Intelligence matters and it's extremely rare, in fact 114 00:12:19,181 --> 00:12:24,619 you can argue that intelligence may be extremely rare in the universe. 115 00:12:24,620 --> 00:12:29,000 It is possible that we're the only intelligent species in the Milky Way 116 00:12:29,001 --> 00:12:34,209 galaxy amongst 400 billion suns and countless billions of worlds. 117 00:12:34,210 --> 00:12:39,114 And that makes us extremely valuable and worth protecting. 118 00:12:47,650 --> 00:12:53,672 I think the way to keep this light alive is for humans to continue to venture out. 119 00:12:57,181 --> 00:12:58,717 And explore. 120 00:13:04,980 --> 00:13:10,204 To this end, we've built a ship large enough for six astronauts to train in. 121 00:13:35,830 --> 00:13:41,019 This is Aquarius, which is used by NASA as Nemo, 122 00:13:41,020 --> 00:13:43,842 the Nemo missions. And the reason this place is extreme, 123 00:13:43,843 --> 00:13:45,369 if you look here... 124 00:13:45,370 --> 00:13:47,629 is because... 125 00:13:47,630 --> 00:13:48,995 we're below the ocean. 126 00:13:50,830 --> 00:13:55,271 The pressure in here is two and half to three times atmospheric pressure, 127 00:13:55,271 --> 00:13:57,920 which is why I sound like a Munchkin. 128 00:13:59,620 --> 00:14:06,230 50 metres below the surface, Aquarius offers a unique training facility for deep space exploration. 129 00:14:08,780 --> 00:14:12,639 This is, er, this is brilliant cos you can play at being an astronaut, 130 00:14:12,640 --> 00:14:15,600 I mean, you'd have six astronauts in here. The reason that 131 00:14:15,601 --> 00:14:18,739 they use this as a mission simulator 132 00:14:18,740 --> 00:14:22,340 is because the environment is as close as you can get to space on Earth, 133 00:14:22,340 --> 00:14:24,121 you have to live here for weeks. 134 00:14:24,122 --> 00:14:26,218 And if you stay here for more than one hour - 135 00:14:26,219 --> 00:14:29,718 so we've got one hour - you have to stay here for a further 17 hours 136 00:14:29,719 --> 00:14:31,706 to decompress, so you can't just run away 137 00:14:31,707 --> 00:14:34,516 if you, you know, psychologically feel a bit claustrophobic 138 00:14:34,517 --> 00:14:36,836 and you think "I don't like it, " you can't just leave, 139 00:14:36,837 --> 00:14:40,357 it's one of the few places on Earth where that would be the case. 140 00:14:48,660 --> 00:14:54,081 In recent months, Nemo has been tasked with a very specific type of deep space exploration. 141 00:14:58,900 --> 00:15:02,869 They're developing methods to space walk onto asteroids, 142 00:15:02,870 --> 00:15:06,522 where gravity will be a fraction of that experienced on the moon. 143 00:15:08,830 --> 00:15:11,959 Whilst at times dreaming of an asteroid encounter is 144 00:15:11,960 --> 00:15:16,492 a lot of fun, the motive behind the mission is deadly serious. 145 00:15:20,662 --> 00:15:25,614 Chelyabinsk February 2013 146 00:15:31,290 --> 00:15:35,839 In 2013, on a wintry morning in Russia, 147 00:15:35,840 --> 00:15:38,629 a massive fireball cut the sky. 148 00:15:43,470 --> 00:15:52,139 Seconds later, it exploded, with 20 to 30 times more energy than the atomic bomb detonated at Hiroshima. 149 00:16:00,580 --> 00:16:04,744 Earth had been hit by the largest asteroid in more than a century. 150 00:16:07,270 --> 00:16:09,193 And no-one had seen it coming. 151 00:16:11,020 --> 00:16:13,989 It seems our powers of prediction failed us 152 00:16:13,990 --> 00:16:17,244 and that's because, in reality, nature can be chaotic. 153 00:16:19,300 --> 00:16:22,159 I can demonstrate that with a simple experiment. 154 00:16:22,160 --> 00:16:26,644 These are magnets, so let's say that this is an asteroid, then watch 155 00:16:26,645 --> 00:16:32,149 what happens when I set the pendulum off, let's say from this point here. 156 00:16:32,150 --> 00:16:34,748 So I'm going to release it, I've got a laser there. 157 00:16:34,749 --> 00:16:37,653 From exactly that point, I'm just going to let it go. 158 00:16:40,300 --> 00:16:44,709 We see the laser tracing out the path on this photo paper, 159 00:16:44,710 --> 00:16:49,549 this is asteroid orbiting the solar system, gravitationally interacting 160 00:16:49,550 --> 00:16:51,598 with the Earth, the sun of course, 161 00:16:51,599 --> 00:16:54,459 let's say a massive planet like Jupiter. 162 00:16:54,460 --> 00:16:56,989 There you go, it's collided with the yellow one, the sun. 163 00:16:56,990 --> 00:16:59,563 I can do it again and what I'm going to try 164 00:16:59,564 --> 00:17:03,989 and do is line it up in exactly the same way and let it go. 165 00:17:03,990 --> 00:17:08,149 In this case it's radically different, that's because 166 00:17:08,150 --> 00:17:10,918 this is what is known as a chaotic system, there you go, 167 00:17:10,919 --> 00:17:15,549 and it's hit the Earth, so that will be the end of civilisation as we know it. 168 00:17:15,550 --> 00:17:20,629 The point is that the orbit is critically dependent on what 169 00:17:20,630 --> 00:17:23,839 we call, what physicists call, the initial conditions. 170 00:17:23,840 --> 00:17:28,940 That's how precisely did I line this up, how precisely did I release it, 171 00:17:28,941 --> 00:17:34,018 what precisely happens as it sets off on its path through the solar system? 172 00:17:34,019 --> 00:17:36,841 In here are the little air currents that deflect it a little bit, 173 00:17:36,841 --> 00:17:41,070 all those infinitesimally small changes 174 00:17:41,071 --> 00:17:44,644 can be amplified in a complicated system such as this. 175 00:17:44,645 --> 00:17:50,771 And that's why it's not good enough to just discover the asteroids that come near to the Earth, 176 00:17:50,771 --> 00:17:52,158 it's not good enough 177 00:17:52,159 --> 00:17:55,472 because one of those tiny nudges could take something that you 178 00:17:55,473 --> 00:17:59,549 might think was safe, just using Newton's laws very naively, 179 00:17:59,550 --> 00:18:03,168 and in fact nudging it onto a collision course with the Earth. 180 00:18:08,380 --> 00:18:11,942 This fundamental feature of nature means that we may get little 181 00:18:11,943 --> 00:18:14,286 warning when the next one comes our way. 182 00:18:18,230 --> 00:18:22,098 So we must continue to track threatening asteroids... 183 00:18:26,740 --> 00:18:31,166 and develop technologies that will get us out to them at short notice. 184 00:18:44,630 --> 00:18:49,499 In January 2014, the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft 185 00:18:49,500 --> 00:18:53,152 awoke from a 31-month period of hibernation. 186 00:18:56,100 --> 00:18:59,730 It had travelled four billion miles to intercept a comet. 187 00:19:02,941 --> 00:19:05,509 Throughout August and September, 188 00:19:05,510 --> 00:19:08,241 the tiny spaceship made a careful approach, 189 00:19:08,242 --> 00:19:10,928 scanning the comet for a place to land. 190 00:19:17,300 --> 00:19:22,517 And next week, it will deploy a probe to attach itself to the surface. 191 00:19:26,450 --> 00:19:31,560 Rosetta will greatly increase our understanding of comets and the early solar system. 192 00:19:33,270 --> 00:19:39,989 It also tests our ability to mount a manned mission to an asteroid if the need arises. 193 00:19:39,990 --> 00:19:44,040 The problem is that even with a sophisticated rocket system, 194 00:19:44,041 --> 00:19:47,672 it took Rosetta ten years to reach its target. 195 00:20:00,030 --> 00:20:04,519 To send astronauts that deep into space will require 196 00:20:04,520 --> 00:20:08,892 a great leap in our technical ability and our ambition. 197 00:20:15,380 --> 00:20:17,190 I had an ambition to be an astronaut 198 00:20:17,191 --> 00:20:19,524 from, you know, as early as I can remember. 199 00:20:21,510 --> 00:20:24,036 I can't remember thinking anything else. 200 00:20:31,380 --> 00:20:35,283 The excitement of, you know, just going way away from Earth. 201 00:20:40,529 --> 00:20:43,939 David Mackay Test Pilot 202 00:20:44,941 --> 00:20:47,429 For the first time in a generation, 203 00:20:47,430 --> 00:20:51,196 new designs of manned spacecraft are being tested. 204 00:20:58,110 --> 00:21:01,886 Commercial companies are now developing crafts to get us into space. 205 00:21:06,590 --> 00:21:09,173 The endeavour is never without risk. 206 00:21:11,350 --> 00:21:15,028 It's not an easy thing to do, to escape the Earth's gravity 207 00:21:15,029 --> 00:21:18,046 even for a few minutes takes a lot of energy. 208 00:21:19,990 --> 00:21:22,830 Three, two, one. 209 00:21:22,831 --> 00:21:25,749 Release, release. Quick release. 210 00:21:40,230 --> 00:21:44,613 The future of human space exploration faces enormous challenges 211 00:21:44,613 --> 00:21:47,629 and depends on the bravery of test pilots like 212 00:21:47,630 --> 00:21:52,319 David Mackay, Peter Siebold and their colleague, Mike Alsbury, 213 00:21:52,320 --> 00:21:55,324 who lost his life last week in the pursuit of a dream. 214 00:22:02,160 --> 00:22:06,484 A dream that many of us grew up with as children and never lost. 215 00:22:10,900 --> 00:22:15,246 When I was growing up in the 1970s, this was one of my favourite books. 216 00:22:15,247 --> 00:22:22,189 I got it, I think it was 1979, it was about the same time as my first ABBA album. 217 00:22:22,190 --> 00:22:26,359 And I just read it for years and years and years. 218 00:22:26,360 --> 00:22:33,309 It's a sort of fictional history of spacecraft, 2000 to 2100 AD. 219 00:22:33,310 --> 00:22:37,669 It's got things like, "2005 - work starts on the lunar station. " 220 00:22:37,670 --> 00:22:43,806 Then this is one of my favourite spacecraft, I used to try and build these out of Lego 221 00:22:43,806 --> 00:22:45,611 , it's called the Martian Queen and it says, 222 00:22:45,611 --> 00:22:50,200 ""Early in 2015, fare-paying passengers stepped aboard 223 00:22:50,201 --> 00:22:54,070 "the first purpose-built interplanetary spaceliner. " 224 00:22:54,071 --> 00:22:59,189 So they imagined that by 2015, by next year, we'd have spaceliners 225 00:22:59,190 --> 00:23:02,389 taking people to the Martian colonies. 226 00:23:02,390 --> 00:23:05,837 And what's interesting is my little boy loves the book as well, 227 00:23:05,838 --> 00:23:11,359 he's got it now, and some of this stuff is in his past. 228 00:23:11,360 --> 00:23:15,187 This is a list of things that didn't happen, whereas for me, 229 00:23:15,188 --> 00:23:19,640 back in the '70s, it was a list of things that I thought would happen. 230 00:23:25,180 --> 00:23:30,179 Breaking free from Earth's bonds is so difficult that there are only 231 00:23:30,180 --> 00:23:34,640 eight people alive that know what it's like to walk on another world. 232 00:23:36,490 --> 00:23:38,322 Hi. Charlie. 233 00:23:42,600 --> 00:23:44,288 What's your name? Charlie. 234 00:23:44,288 --> 00:23:47,549 Believe it or not, I'm the other half of Judy. 235 00:23:47,550 --> 00:23:50,249 Hello, Charlie. How you doing? Nice to meet you. 236 00:23:50,250 --> 00:23:52,316 Wonderful to meet you. Pleasure to meet you. 237 00:23:52,317 --> 00:23:54,369 Good to be here with you. Have a seat. 238 00:24:02,510 --> 00:24:06,559 Charlie Duke was Lunar Module pilot for Apollo 16 239 00:24:06,560 --> 00:24:09,960 and the youngest person ever to walk on the moon. 240 00:24:09,961 --> 00:24:13,568 How about an extension, you guys? We're feeling good. 241 00:24:17,230 --> 00:24:22,109 Mission objective - to bring back samples from the lunar highlands 242 00:24:22,110 --> 00:24:24,693 and test drive new technologies. 243 00:24:28,440 --> 00:24:33,899 And here we go. We are really going up a hill, I'll tell you. 244 00:24:33,900 --> 00:24:38,509 When I was just becoming aware of Apollo, I thought that 245 00:24:38,510 --> 00:24:42,208 I would be able to go into... at least into Earth orbit myself. 246 00:24:42,209 --> 00:24:46,679 Yeah, really, my dad was born in 1907 and so he was just 247 00:24:46,680 --> 00:24:53,113 right after the Wright brothers and, er, and he could barely believe that his son went to the moon. 248 00:24:53,114 --> 00:24:58,189 And yet at the time my five-year-old, Tom, he didn't think it was any big deal! 249 00:24:58,190 --> 00:25:02,909 You know, that everybody in the neighbourhood was going to the moon. 250 00:25:02,910 --> 00:25:05,396 Neil Armstrong was a next door neighbour, 251 00:25:05,397 --> 00:25:08,121 Tom Stafford was in the neighbourhood, Frank Borman 252 00:25:08,122 --> 00:25:11,916 was in the neighbourhood, the whole neighbourhood was either NASA engineers 253 00:25:11,917 --> 00:25:14,327 or astronauts, so everybody's... it's natural, 254 00:25:14,328 --> 00:25:16,971 "Let's go to the moon, Dad, when you going to do it?" 255 00:25:18,150 --> 00:25:21,973 Hey, John, this is perfect, with the LM, and the rover, and you, 256 00:25:21,974 --> 00:25:26,029 and Stone Mountain, and the old flag. 257 00:25:26,030 --> 00:25:28,442 Come on out here and give me a salute. 258 00:25:28,443 --> 00:25:30,229 Big Navy salute. 259 00:25:30,230 --> 00:25:32,050 Off the ground a bit more. 260 00:25:33,380 --> 00:25:34,719 There we go. 261 00:25:34,720 --> 00:25:40,398 You're most famous probably for the most famous photograph involving you, it's not you, 262 00:25:40,399 --> 00:25:43,169 it's the photograph of your family that you left on the moon. 263 00:25:43,170 --> 00:25:45,678 I asked the boys, they were five and seven, 264 00:25:45,679 --> 00:25:48,401 I said, "Would you guys like to be with your dad on the moon?" 265 00:25:48,402 --> 00:25:50,770 They said "Oh, yeah, that'd be great, Dad. " 266 00:25:50,771 --> 00:25:53,166 So on the back of that picture we had written, 267 00:25:53,167 --> 00:25:55,868 "This is the family of astronaut Charlie Duke, 268 00:25:55,869 --> 00:26:01,629 "from planet Earth who landed on the moon in April 1972" 269 00:26:01,630 --> 00:26:06,349 and we all signed it and then I dropped the picture on the moon. 270 00:26:06,350 --> 00:26:10,207 It sort of shows the human side of space flight and, you know, 271 00:26:10,208 --> 00:26:13,629 we were family men, we were dads, husbands, 272 00:26:13,630 --> 00:26:16,213 and so wanted my family to be a part of it. 273 00:26:16,214 --> 00:26:21,539 They'll sit there for millions of years, won't they, they won't go anywhere. 274 00:26:21,540 --> 00:26:26,263 And if you look back to those days, so less than a year from the first test flight, 275 00:26:26,263 --> 00:26:28,895 first manned test flight to landing on the moon. Yeah. 276 00:26:28,896 --> 00:26:31,333 Would that be possible now? No. 277 00:26:31,333 --> 00:26:31,876 Why? 278 00:26:31,876 --> 00:26:35,269 We don't have the, er, the schedule, 279 00:26:35,270 --> 00:26:38,194 the money to build spacecraft that quickly. 280 00:26:38,195 --> 00:26:43,229 We don't have the, er, the manpower to do it. 281 00:26:43,230 --> 00:26:48,199 I mean, 400,000 people and unlimited budget, you can do a lot, you know. 282 00:26:48,200 --> 00:26:49,439 Yeah. 283 00:26:49,440 --> 00:26:52,421 Yeah! And that's what we had. 284 00:27:13,030 --> 00:27:17,950 After Charlie left, only two men have ever gone back 285 00:27:17,951 --> 00:27:19,817 and there's good reason for that. 286 00:27:19,818 --> 00:27:25,159 The energy required to break free from Earth's gravitational embrace 287 00:27:25,160 --> 00:27:27,411 is staggering. 288 00:27:32,680 --> 00:27:35,996 This is the spacecraft that took John Young, Ken Mattingly 289 00:27:35,997 --> 00:27:37,917 and Charlie Duke to the moon. 290 00:27:37,918 --> 00:27:40,327 There's the Service Module and the Command Module, 291 00:27:40,328 --> 00:27:43,540 that's the engine that fired to bring them back from the moon to the Earth, 292 00:27:43,540 --> 00:27:47,389 the Lunar Lander sat inside there 293 00:27:47,390 --> 00:27:50,837 and this piece is essentially a single rocket motor 294 00:27:50,838 --> 00:27:54,979 that fired to take them from Earth orbit to the moon. 295 00:27:54,980 --> 00:28:00,159 So this is the 120 tonne moon spacecraft, if you like. 296 00:28:00,160 --> 00:28:04,493 But from a physics perspective, the difficulty is getting that into orbit, 297 00:28:04,493 --> 00:28:09,029 and on Saturn V that was done in two bits 298 00:28:09,030 --> 00:28:15,069 and this is stage two and that is the stage two fuel tank. 299 00:28:15,070 --> 00:28:19,840 Inside there are 450 tonnes of rocket fuel. 300 00:28:19,841 --> 00:28:24,389 And this burnt through those 450 tonnes in about 6 minutes, 301 00:28:24,390 --> 00:28:28,519 taking the spacecraft from an altitude of 200,000 feet, 302 00:28:28,520 --> 00:28:35,259 about 38 miles, up to 114 and a half miles, that's virtually in orbit. 303 00:28:35,260 --> 00:28:39,993 And it did that by burning the fuel in five engines. 304 00:28:48,350 --> 00:28:53,067 Now, at the time, that was one of the most powerful rockets ever built, 305 00:28:53,067 --> 00:28:57,279 but not the most powerful - that was this, 306 00:28:57,280 --> 00:28:59,533 Stage One of the Saturn V. 307 00:29:06,160 --> 00:29:10,669 There are 2, 200 tons of fuel in here, 308 00:29:10,670 --> 00:29:16,519 and stage one burnt through that in about two and a half minutes. 309 00:29:16,520 --> 00:29:23,365 To do that they add fuel pumps that were more powerful than a 747 at lift off 310 00:29:23,365 --> 00:29:28,982 to pump 15 tonnes of fuel a second into these... 311 00:29:31,040 --> 00:29:33,338 the F1 engines. 312 00:29:49,340 --> 00:29:52,609 Every statistic about these engines is ridiculous. 313 00:29:52,610 --> 00:29:56,129 In those two and half minutes when this spacecraft was lifting off 314 00:29:56,130 --> 00:30:04,211 the power generated was more than the peak electrical power generation capacity of the United Kingdom. 315 00:30:33,680 --> 00:30:38,794 Building a vehicle powerful enough to accelerate three men to escape velocity 316 00:30:38,795 --> 00:30:41,363 was a triumph of human ingenuity. 317 00:30:43,990 --> 00:30:49,559 But the technology at the heart of any rocket is essentially ancient technology, 318 00:30:49,560 --> 00:30:52,086 the release of energy by combustion. 319 00:31:02,480 --> 00:31:07,655 We used fire to release energy from the Sun stored in the wood from trees. 320 00:31:17,200 --> 00:31:20,679 Then we discovered better things to burn. 321 00:31:20,680 --> 00:31:24,961 Energy-packed ancient sunlight buried underground. 322 00:31:24,961 --> 00:31:27,809 Burning that has set us free. 323 00:31:38,200 --> 00:31:42,057 But fire has surely taken us as far as it can. 324 00:31:53,240 --> 00:31:58,559 The reason we aren't flying to other planets is the same reason 325 00:31:58,560 --> 00:32:03,243 we're endangering this one. 326 00:32:13,510 --> 00:32:19,349 Every day we burn the equivalent of all the plants growing on this planet over a year 327 00:32:19,350 --> 00:32:20,806 to meet our energy needs. 328 00:32:24,831 --> 00:32:30,989 But that's not to say that energy use is of itself necessarily a bad thing. 329 00:32:30,990 --> 00:32:35,257 Indeed by many measures it's an extremely good thing indeed. 330 00:32:39,800 --> 00:32:46,265 In every country where the per capita energy use is greater than about half the European average 331 00:32:46,266 --> 00:32:50,519 then adult life expectancy is greater than 70 years, 332 00:32:50,520 --> 00:32:53,279 literacy rates are greater than 90%, 333 00:32:53,280 --> 00:32:55,989 infant mortality rates are low 334 00:32:55,990 --> 00:33:00,960 and more than one in five of the population are in higher education. 335 00:33:00,961 --> 00:33:05,149 So the story of energy use is a complicated one. 336 00:33:05,150 --> 00:33:10,549 On the one hand, obviously, energy use is important and to be valued, 337 00:33:10,550 --> 00:33:13,729 it's the foundation of our modern civilisation, 338 00:33:13,730 --> 00:33:15,046 and on the other hand, 339 00:33:15,047 --> 00:33:18,207 if we generate our energy mainly by burning fossil fuels 340 00:33:18,208 --> 00:33:19,895 then it can be a bad thing. 341 00:33:22,990 --> 00:33:26,629 Now in the short-term of course... 342 00:33:26,630 --> 00:33:30,294 we can increase the efficiency of our energy usage. 343 00:33:34,150 --> 00:33:36,279 But in the long-term, 344 00:33:36,280 --> 00:33:39,960 if we aspire to continue to advance as a civilisation, 345 00:33:39,961 --> 00:33:43,864 if we want to give every citizen of the world a quality of life 346 00:33:43,865 --> 00:33:47,189 that is as good as or even better than mine, 347 00:33:47,190 --> 00:33:51,279 and if ultimately we want to build a space-faring generation 348 00:33:51,280 --> 00:33:55,251 and journey to the stars then we have to find a better way. 349 00:33:59,120 --> 00:34:03,199 In the short-term, we can move to cleaner electric motors, 350 00:34:03,200 --> 00:34:06,420 but because we burn fossil fuels in power stations, 351 00:34:06,421 --> 00:34:09,909 that simply moves the problem upstream. 352 00:34:09,910 --> 00:34:13,679 So what we face is not an energy crisis 353 00:34:13,680 --> 00:34:15,694 but an energy conversion crisis. 354 00:34:17,841 --> 00:34:20,917 Renewable energy might be part of the solution, 355 00:34:20,918 --> 00:34:24,699 but I believe there's a far more promising long-term alternative. 356 00:34:34,716 --> 00:34:36,465 If you could do one thing, 357 00:34:36,466 --> 00:34:40,362 if you could wave a magic wand and do one thing, what would you do? 358 00:34:41,726 --> 00:34:45,959 If you could produce abundant clean energy, it would solve many problems. 359 00:34:47,677 --> 00:34:49,764 It's a grand challenge of our time, 360 00:34:49,765 --> 00:34:52,293 and I truly am committed and proud to be part of it. 361 00:34:54,516 --> 00:34:57,599 Can we for the first time bring a star to Earth? 362 00:35:06,006 --> 00:35:09,253 Here at the National Ignition Facility in California 363 00:35:09,254 --> 00:35:11,817 they're trying to create man-made stars. 364 00:35:13,516 --> 00:35:15,105 It's a big laser. 365 00:35:15,106 --> 00:35:17,564 It's the biggest in the world by probably a factor of 50, 366 00:35:17,565 --> 00:35:20,715 or maybe even 100, so in size and in energy. 367 00:35:20,716 --> 00:35:22,196 How much power's in there? 368 00:35:22,197 --> 00:35:25,364 If you look at all the electricity that's produced in the United States, 369 00:35:25,365 --> 00:35:28,439 this is about a thousand times more power than that. 370 00:35:30,366 --> 00:35:32,602 But of course only for a fraction of a second, 371 00:35:32,603 --> 00:35:34,132 a few billionths of a second. 372 00:35:42,677 --> 00:35:49,170 In a star, fusion begins when the gas cloud that forms the star collapses under its own gravity, 373 00:35:49,171 --> 00:35:52,330 heating the core to many millions of degrees. 374 00:35:55,797 --> 00:36:00,945 Here at NIF, it's coaxed into life in the laser's target chamber 375 00:36:00,946 --> 00:36:03,806 encased in two metre thick walls 376 00:36:03,807 --> 00:36:06,925 and 47 of the biggest glass doors I've ever seen. 377 00:36:08,316 --> 00:36:10,765 So this is the sharp end of the whole system, if you like, 378 00:36:10,766 --> 00:36:12,604 this is where the lasers come down 379 00:36:12,605 --> 00:36:15,168 and start to get focused into the chamber. 380 00:36:15,169 --> 00:36:20,808 And each one of them has to be synchronised to a few trillionths of a second to arrive at exactly the same time 381 00:36:20,809 --> 00:36:23,522 and of course in exactly the right spot. 382 00:36:23,523 --> 00:36:27,242 It's worth sort of stepping back and realising what's happening here 383 00:36:27,243 --> 00:36:31,095 cos you said 192 of these laser beams, which are not small. Indeed. 384 00:36:31,096 --> 00:36:33,897 In the middle of that which is definitely not small. Absolutely. 385 00:36:33,898 --> 00:36:35,617 What's the target? It's about that big. 386 00:36:35,618 --> 00:36:37,443 It's about a millimetre wide. 387 00:36:37,444 --> 00:36:41,328 But it's the level of precision and power that you're able to achieve. 388 00:36:41,329 --> 00:36:44,741 And if you can do it uniformly then you can create a little star. 389 00:36:57,756 --> 00:37:01,913 It reminds me a little bit of Apollo in a sense cos you just think, 390 00:37:01,914 --> 00:37:05,176 you know, look what we can do if we try. 391 00:37:15,226 --> 00:37:17,888 So you see there, there's a gold cylinder 392 00:37:17,889 --> 00:37:23,085 and in the middle a little red ball, that's the fusion fuel. 393 00:37:23,086 --> 00:37:25,035 One of those pellets, 394 00:37:25,036 --> 00:37:28,035 when all of the fusion happens just right, 395 00:37:28,036 --> 00:37:31,015 could power my house for a day. 396 00:37:31,016 --> 00:37:33,523 So you imagine having a little bag of those pellets, 397 00:37:33,524 --> 00:37:35,773 let's say you three or four hundred of them, 398 00:37:35,774 --> 00:37:37,689 you could fit them in your pocket, 399 00:37:37,690 --> 00:37:40,738 then that would power your life for a year. 400 00:37:41,836 --> 00:37:44,021 Thousands of these little pellets 401 00:37:44,022 --> 00:37:46,875 could power a spacecraft to the Moon. 402 00:37:46,876 --> 00:37:51,196 Hundreds of thousands could power a spacecraft out to the edge of the solar system 403 00:37:51,196 --> 00:37:53,042 or perhaps outward to the stars. 404 00:37:53,043 --> 00:37:56,449 And one of the interesting things about fusion technology is 405 00:37:56,450 --> 00:37:58,875 that there's no waste, right? 406 00:37:58,876 --> 00:38:02,528 What happens when you release all the energy in that pellet of fuel 407 00:38:02,529 --> 00:38:06,965 is you produce helium, so you get your electricity 408 00:38:06,966 --> 00:38:09,970 and you get your party balloons, and that's pretty much it. 409 00:38:09,971 --> 00:38:16,715 So it's an inherently clean, safe and extremely efficient technology. 410 00:38:19,516 --> 00:38:21,752 May I have your attention. 411 00:38:21,753 --> 00:38:25,979 Preparations for shot operations in laser bay two are under way. 412 00:38:25,980 --> 00:38:29,245 Leave laser bay two now. 413 00:38:29,246 --> 00:38:32,295 I repeat. Leave laser bay two now. 414 00:38:37,036 --> 00:38:41,406 This is the NIF control room, this is the heart of all operations, 415 00:38:41,407 --> 00:38:43,254 and the reason I have to be quiet is 416 00:38:43,255 --> 00:38:44,998 because they're getting ready for a shot. 417 00:38:46,236 --> 00:38:50,002 Main laser operation will begin in approximately one minute. 418 00:38:58,516 --> 00:39:01,635 It's a bit like charging a flash gun. 419 00:39:01,636 --> 00:39:06,525 Banks and the capacitors store electric charge, 420 00:39:06,526 --> 00:39:10,796 getting ready to discharge all this energy into the lasers. 421 00:39:10,797 --> 00:39:12,484 Amplify, amplify, amplify, bang. 422 00:39:12,485 --> 00:39:14,606 It looks like it just turned green. 423 00:39:14,607 --> 00:39:17,045 Are you comfortable with us going forward? 424 00:39:17,046 --> 00:39:18,452 I don't see a problem. 425 00:39:18,453 --> 00:39:21,188 OK. We're ready to proceed if you're OK with it. 426 00:39:24,996 --> 00:39:26,556 There's the countdown. 427 00:39:26,557 --> 00:39:30,992 Start sequence on my mark. 428 00:39:34,486 --> 00:39:36,115 255 seconds. 429 00:39:36,116 --> 00:39:38,465 In 255 seconds time, 430 00:39:38,466 --> 00:39:44,075 a thousand times the power generating capacity of the United States of America 431 00:39:44,076 --> 00:39:50,155 is going to be fired down into something a few millimetres across. 432 00:39:50,156 --> 00:39:51,464 It's cool. 433 00:39:52,876 --> 00:39:55,607 Brilliant that we can do this, isn't it? 434 00:39:55,608 --> 00:39:56,813 By "we" I mean them. 435 00:40:00,276 --> 00:40:02,745 Yeah, "we", it's our civilisation. 436 00:40:29,246 --> 00:40:34,650 Five, four, three, two, one, shot. 437 00:40:46,396 --> 00:40:47,978 That's a bang... 438 00:40:50,567 --> 00:40:52,057 and that's the future. 439 00:41:01,166 --> 00:41:04,648 Commercial fusion power stations are still a long way off, 440 00:41:04,649 --> 00:41:08,425 but NIF has proved that it can be done in principle. 441 00:41:11,716 --> 00:41:14,995 If fusion can be made economically viable, 442 00:41:14,996 --> 00:41:18,595 it would end the days of fire 443 00:41:18,596 --> 00:41:22,100 and it would do much more than power our cars and cities, 444 00:41:22,101 --> 00:41:25,915 it would provide a new foundation for our civilisation, 445 00:41:25,916 --> 00:41:28,226 it would even open up the road to the stars. 446 00:41:32,126 --> 00:41:35,475 I think we expect, in fact, we demand that 447 00:41:35,476 --> 00:41:38,287 the future is going to be better than the past, 448 00:41:38,288 --> 00:41:41,985 but it seems to me that we're not prepared to pay for it. 449 00:41:41,986 --> 00:41:44,065 So how might things change? 450 00:41:44,066 --> 00:41:47,175 Well, we're fortunate enough to live in democracies, 451 00:41:47,176 --> 00:41:49,237 and in democracies things change 452 00:41:49,238 --> 00:41:51,777 when people have access to knowledge, 453 00:41:51,778 --> 00:41:53,806 when they understand facts 454 00:41:53,807 --> 00:41:57,045 and when they can make informed decisions. 455 00:41:57,046 --> 00:41:58,730 Did you know, for example, 456 00:41:58,731 --> 00:42:06,556 that Americans spend ten times more money each year on pet grooming than they do on nuclear fusion? 457 00:42:06,557 --> 00:42:09,676 Now I think that if you said to someone, 458 00:42:09,677 --> 00:42:12,333 "Well, actually, why don't you brush your own cat, 459 00:42:12,334 --> 00:42:16,047 "and take the money you were going to spend having somebody else brush it 460 00:42:16,048 --> 00:42:18,778 "and give it to those people who are trying to find a way 461 00:42:18,779 --> 00:42:23,005 "of generating unlimited access to clean energy?" 462 00:42:23,006 --> 00:42:26,885 Then people would say, "Well, yeah, that's a good deal. " 463 00:42:26,886 --> 00:42:37,081 See, in democracies things change when people like you and me want them to change. 464 00:42:44,359 --> 00:42:48,910 I see a future the oceans are full 465 00:42:49,475 --> 00:42:52,106 and man is gone 466 00:42:57,766 --> 00:42:59,915 I'm optimistic about the future. 467 00:42:59,916 --> 00:43:02,613 No matter how deep we keep digging our hole right now, 468 00:43:02,614 --> 00:43:05,065 I feel like there is hope. 469 00:43:07,544 --> 00:43:11,354 I'm going to space 470 00:43:16,409 --> 00:43:20,943 I might be gone some time 471 00:43:26,060 --> 00:43:30,418 They say that history repeats itself 472 00:43:32,293 --> 00:43:35,971 I think that is not a good idea anymore 473 00:43:40,966 --> 00:43:43,926 You know, I look at my life and I think, "it's almost over, " 474 00:43:43,927 --> 00:43:47,216 when in fact with the advances in healthcare and such 475 00:43:47,217 --> 00:43:48,368 it may not be. 476 00:43:58,249 --> 00:44:05,119 I hope the world will open its eyes 477 00:44:11,326 --> 00:44:14,182 Fundamentally, I think we all want the same thing, 478 00:44:14,183 --> 00:44:18,342 we want our children and their children to have a future. 479 00:44:20,056 --> 00:44:22,900 And that requires us to plan for that future. 480 00:44:23,493 --> 00:44:25,354 I think it is fantastic 481 00:44:25,816 --> 00:44:29,005 I'd heard about the vault before 482 00:44:29,236 --> 00:44:34,009 and I've looked after the building for two years 483 00:44:36,150 --> 00:44:41,931 I feel proud to be part of this 484 00:44:42,256 --> 00:44:45,339 Hello. Nice to meet you. Hello. 485 00:44:55,846 --> 00:45:01,237 This place addresses a fundamental human need that we're going to face in the future, 486 00:45:01,237 --> 00:45:04,141 which is how are we going to feed ourselves? 487 00:45:10,437 --> 00:45:16,703 The tunnel itself runs about 130 metres downwards on this gentle gradient, 488 00:45:16,703 --> 00:45:19,696 and by the time we get to the vaults at the end, 489 00:45:19,697 --> 00:45:24,851 it's going to be 160 metres of solid rock up to the surface. 490 00:45:27,437 --> 00:45:31,125 Buried down here is a priceless treasure, 491 00:45:31,126 --> 00:45:34,346 and everything about this building is designed to keep it safe. 492 00:45:36,486 --> 00:45:41,125 This arc that you see, this curve here, is deliberate, 493 00:45:41,126 --> 00:45:43,255 it's in case there's a blast, 494 00:45:43,256 --> 00:45:45,782 some kind of explosion up at the surface. 495 00:45:45,783 --> 00:45:49,075 And this is designed to reflect the blast back. 496 00:45:49,076 --> 00:45:52,467 An extremely precious place... 497 00:45:53,976 --> 00:45:54,976 covered in ice. 498 00:45:57,006 --> 00:45:59,350 Then we have to go through this airlock... 499 00:46:07,716 --> 00:46:08,911 and into the vault. 500 00:46:11,616 --> 00:46:16,475 The treasure in here is not currency, not gold, not rare jewels 501 00:46:16,476 --> 00:46:21,107 but something important, it's the future of our food. 502 00:46:22,156 --> 00:46:28,915 Here are the seeds, the food crops of virtually every country in the world. 503 00:46:28,916 --> 00:46:31,499 These are from Mexico. 504 00:46:33,336 --> 00:46:34,428 There are India. 505 00:46:35,606 --> 00:46:40,988 There are Nigerian seeds next to Germany, Australia. 506 00:46:43,766 --> 00:46:49,255 There are over 800,000 different populations of seeds 507 00:46:49,256 --> 00:46:54,325 collected here from virtually every country in the world. 508 00:46:54,326 --> 00:46:56,795 These here are from Syria. 509 00:46:56,796 --> 00:47:00,097 These were taken out just before recent troubles, 510 00:47:00,098 --> 00:47:06,165 so they're out there, they're protected there in case the Syrian seed vaults are lost. 511 00:47:06,166 --> 00:47:09,296 And then there are some strangest of all countries you wouldn't 512 00:47:09,297 --> 00:47:12,347 believe would cooperate in such an international endeavour. 513 00:47:12,348 --> 00:47:17,245 Look at this here - box number 5DPR of Korea, 514 00:47:17,246 --> 00:47:19,625 these are North Korean seeds. 515 00:47:19,626 --> 00:47:24,885 And just over there are the South Korean seeds next to them. 516 00:47:24,886 --> 00:47:26,566 Canada. 517 00:47:26,567 --> 00:47:27,819 Philippines. 518 00:47:33,926 --> 00:47:38,645 This represents, as a library of life, 519 00:47:38,646 --> 00:47:41,485 just the whole of civilisation 520 00:47:41,486 --> 00:47:45,298 rests with the genetic codes contained in these boxes. 521 00:47:53,567 --> 00:47:56,104 Our future might just rest on these seeds 522 00:47:56,105 --> 00:48:01,662 squirreled away in the Global Seed Vault, drilled into the top of the world. 523 00:48:05,126 --> 00:48:09,063 The driving force behind its construction was agriculturist, 524 00:48:09,064 --> 00:48:11,436 Dr Cary Fowler. 525 00:48:11,437 --> 00:48:13,951 So why did you decide to take this project on? 526 00:48:13,952 --> 00:48:19,725 Well, I've spent all of my life working on trying to conserve crop diversity, 527 00:48:19,726 --> 00:48:24,645 and those of us in my field, we live in a world of wounds. 528 00:48:24,646 --> 00:48:30,205 We see the injuries, we see the loss of diversity, the extinction. 529 00:48:30,206 --> 00:48:33,017 And at a certain point, you know, enough is enough, 530 00:48:33,018 --> 00:48:34,886 and you, you try to figure out, 531 00:48:34,887 --> 00:48:37,293 well, what can we do that's not just stopgap? 532 00:48:37,294 --> 00:48:40,859 Cos we know we're going to need this crop diversity in the future, 533 00:48:40,860 --> 00:48:44,075 it's the biological foundation of agriculture. 534 00:48:44,076 --> 00:48:46,696 We're going to need it as long as we need agriculture. 535 00:48:46,697 --> 00:48:48,944 Which is as long as civilisation exists, I suppose? 536 00:48:48,945 --> 00:48:52,019 Exactly, after that we're not worried about it, are we? 537 00:48:59,096 --> 00:49:04,341 Some of the seeds in this vault will still be viable in 20,000 years. 538 00:49:10,646 --> 00:49:15,005 When you look at this achievement, how do you see it? 539 00:49:15,006 --> 00:49:18,057 When I walk in here, I see a history of agriculture, 540 00:49:18,058 --> 00:49:20,293 all the way back to Neolithic days. 541 00:49:20,294 --> 00:49:28,045 So our ancestors, yours and mine, have been saving these seeds in a successful, unbroken line until today. 542 00:49:28,046 --> 00:49:30,403 They're every option that we're going to have for the future, 543 00:49:30,403 --> 00:49:35,309 so any and everything we want and need - rice and wheat to be in the future 544 00:49:35,310 --> 00:49:39,055 is represented, is made possible by this diversity. 545 00:49:39,056 --> 00:49:41,303 Some people call this The Doomsday Vault. Yeah. 546 00:49:41,304 --> 00:49:45,608 Seems to me to be a rather, er I don't know, grim... Apocalyptic? 547 00:49:45,609 --> 00:49:48,817 Yeah. Yes. Is that a, a reasonable description? 548 00:49:48,818 --> 00:49:54,335 For me, when I walk down here I get this immense feeling of happiness 549 00:49:54,336 --> 00:49:57,215 and frankly, hope that, 550 00:49:57,216 --> 00:50:02,075 OK, here are 800,000 crop varieties 551 00:50:02,076 --> 00:50:05,235 that are not going to become extinct. 552 00:50:05,236 --> 00:50:08,975 So to me, this represents a problem that didn't happen. 553 00:50:08,976 --> 00:50:12,346 Also seems to me, it's an example of genuine long-term thinking, 554 00:50:12,347 --> 00:50:16,068 this transcends political cycles, it transcends lifetimes. 555 00:50:16,069 --> 00:50:21,281 Yeah, when I look at this place, I see about the only structure in the world 556 00:50:21,281 --> 00:50:25,198 that I know of that's built essentially for eternity, 557 00:50:25,199 --> 00:50:29,845 for as long as we can imagine, involving all the countries of the 558 00:50:29,846 --> 00:50:34,415 world in something that's long-term and positive. 559 00:50:34,416 --> 00:50:35,599 That's hopeful, to me. 560 00:50:50,496 --> 00:50:54,595 I came here to tell a story of an uncertain future, 561 00:50:54,596 --> 00:50:58,925 but I found something else under the permafrost of Svalbard... 562 00:50:58,926 --> 00:51:00,303 optimism. 563 00:51:10,136 --> 00:51:13,894 We have the privilege to live in a very special and unique time, 564 00:51:13,895 --> 00:51:17,743 because for the first time in the history of life on Earth, 565 00:51:17,744 --> 00:51:23,515 there's a species that at least in part is masters of its own destiny - 566 00:51:23,516 --> 00:51:26,144 has its survival in its own hands. 567 00:51:28,447 --> 00:51:31,066 It's true to say that because there's an unbroken 568 00:51:31,067 --> 00:51:36,870 line of life stretching back from me to the origin of life on earth 3. 8 billion years ago, 569 00:51:36,870 --> 00:51:40,045 that at any point in that long history, 570 00:51:40,046 --> 00:51:42,219 something could have happened to wipe us out, 571 00:51:42,220 --> 00:51:46,055 and something could happen tomorrow to wipe us out, 572 00:51:46,056 --> 00:51:49,955 but increasingly, we can see those threats coming. 573 00:51:49,956 --> 00:51:53,925 So, we have a chance, the possibility, 574 00:51:53,926 --> 00:51:58,456 of prolonging our existence into the indefinite future, 575 00:51:58,457 --> 00:52:03,179 if we can just find a way of taking that responsibility seriously. 576 00:52:13,166 --> 00:52:16,818 Today, we are writing our chapter in the human story. 577 00:52:18,086 --> 00:52:20,005 But as we do so, 578 00:52:20,006 --> 00:52:23,954 we must keep in mind the future and learn lessons from the past. 579 00:52:29,736 --> 00:52:32,512 Back in the darkness of the El Castillo caves, 580 00:52:32,513 --> 00:52:37,388 there may be a stark reminder of life's perilous existence. 581 00:52:39,246 --> 00:52:43,015 More accurate dating of the paintings suggests that the 582 00:52:43,016 --> 00:52:47,431 story of our young artist might have a sting in its tail. 583 00:52:53,006 --> 00:52:57,815 If this art is not just around 40,000 years old, 584 00:52:57,816 --> 00:53:01,685 but over 43,000 years old, not much of a difference, 585 00:53:01,686 --> 00:53:05,245 then this is not human. 586 00:53:05,246 --> 00:53:10,095 Because there were no humans in this area of Europe 43,000 years ago. 587 00:53:10,096 --> 00:53:14,365 If that's the case, this art was created by Neanderthals, 588 00:53:14,366 --> 00:53:17,245 a completely different species. 589 00:53:17,246 --> 00:53:18,691 Just think about that. 590 00:53:18,692 --> 00:53:23,655 Neanderthals were pretty much as capable, mentally, as we are. 591 00:53:23,656 --> 00:53:26,895 So if they'd been given enough time, 592 00:53:26,896 --> 00:53:30,336 given the pressures that we humans felt, 593 00:53:30,337 --> 00:53:35,295 then there's no reason why they couldn't have developed a civilisation. 594 00:53:35,296 --> 00:53:36,798 But they didn't have time. 595 00:53:36,799 --> 00:53:41,245 Instead they disappeared, they became extinct, 596 00:53:41,246 --> 00:53:48,220 leaving perhaps, these signs of the beginnings of their culture on the roof of a cave. 597 00:53:56,546 --> 00:54:00,495 But our species didn't die out - 598 00:54:00,496 --> 00:54:05,285 we worked together, held on and then flourished. 599 00:54:05,286 --> 00:54:08,165 Should we send these up to Grandad? 600 00:54:08,166 --> 00:54:10,180 Yeah, let's send them up to Grandad. 601 00:54:13,846 --> 00:54:16,055 In the face of adversity, 602 00:54:16,056 --> 00:54:21,028 we adapted and used our brains to develop technologies. 603 00:54:30,886 --> 00:54:34,245 In time, we built mighty civilizations 604 00:54:34,246 --> 00:54:37,794 with science as their foundation. 605 00:54:42,136 --> 00:54:46,045 And then, within the blink of a cosmic eye, 606 00:54:46,046 --> 00:54:48,060 we journeyed to other worlds... 607 00:54:52,506 --> 00:54:56,386 and we glimpsed the very nature of reality itself. 608 00:55:05,166 --> 00:55:07,456 Right, let's send these to Grandad. 609 00:55:07,457 --> 00:55:09,541 Going to put them in the envelope. 610 00:55:18,936 --> 00:55:25,941 We even have an outpost of our civilisation living beyond Earth. 611 00:55:26,886 --> 00:55:29,105 Science is unreasonably effective, 612 00:55:29,106 --> 00:55:33,015 it's generated knowledge beyond all expectation. 613 00:55:33,016 --> 00:55:35,098 It's also delivered perspective. 614 00:55:35,099 --> 00:55:39,665 Yes, we are an insignificant speck in an infinite universe, 615 00:55:39,666 --> 00:55:42,085 but we're also rare. 616 00:55:42,086 --> 00:55:45,605 And because we're rare, we're valuable. 617 00:55:45,606 --> 00:55:48,455 So what are we to do to secure our future? 618 00:55:48,456 --> 00:55:51,747 Well, we must learn to value the acquisition of knowledge 619 00:55:51,748 --> 00:55:55,229 for its own sake, and not just because it grows our economy 620 00:55:55,230 --> 00:55:57,765 or allows us to build better bombs. 621 00:55:57,766 --> 00:56:00,885 We must also learn to value the human race 622 00:56:00,886 --> 00:56:03,665 and take responsibility for our own survival. 623 00:56:03,666 --> 00:56:06,102 Why? Because there's nobody else out there 624 00:56:06,103 --> 00:56:09,285 to value us or to look after us. 625 00:56:09,286 --> 00:56:13,145 And finally, most important of all, 626 00:56:13,146 --> 00:56:17,230 we must educate the next generation in the great discoveries of science 627 00:56:17,230 --> 00:56:22,787 and we must teach them to use the light of reason to banish the darkness of superstition, 628 00:56:22,788 --> 00:56:31,290 cos if we do that, then at least there's a chance that this universe will remain a human one. 629 00:56:51,406 --> 00:56:53,505 There's a card in here. 630 00:56:53,506 --> 00:56:56,245 It's got "Grandad" written on it. 631 00:56:56,246 --> 00:56:57,897 Are you a grandad? I'm not a grandad. 632 00:56:57,898 --> 00:56:59,335 Hey, Alex, you a grandad? 633 00:56:59,401 --> 00:57:02,399 No, not that I know of. I guess it's me. 634 00:57:23,611 --> 00:57:28,383 END 635 00:57:35,767 --> 00:57:42,138 In the memory of Test Pilot Michael Alsbury 1975-2014 57262

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