All language subtitles for Drain the Oceans Series 2 11of12 Secrets of Loch Ness 1080p

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English Download
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish Download
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,873 --> 00:00:08,741 Narrator: A land of ancient ruins, 2 00:00:08,843 --> 00:00:13,245 Windswept mountains and deep foreboding lakes. 3 00:00:14,315 --> 00:00:20,335 Scotland is a nation steeped in myth, legend and mystery. 4 00:00:21,272 --> 00:00:24,773 And no mystery is more enduring than that of 5 00:00:24,875 --> 00:00:28,143 The loch ness monster. 6 00:00:29,814 --> 00:00:32,981 Imagine if we could empty the oceans, 7 00:00:33,084 --> 00:00:36,335 Letting the world's water drain away 8 00:00:38,372 --> 00:00:42,741 To reveal the secrets of sea floors and lake beds. 9 00:00:44,211 --> 00:00:46,478 Now we can. 10 00:00:46,580 --> 00:00:50,015 Using accurate data and astonishing technology to 11 00:00:50,117 --> 00:00:54,269 Bring light once again to a lost world. 12 00:00:56,707 --> 00:01:00,309 Can a killing field on the shores of a siberian lake 13 00:01:00,478 --> 00:01:04,413 Shed light on the world's most famous monster? 14 00:01:04,515 --> 00:01:07,132 Olga: This is the pelvic bone, these are the shoulder blades 15 00:01:07,234 --> 00:01:08,967 And vertebrae. 16 00:01:09,070 --> 00:01:12,037 Narrator: Can a marine robot finally uncover the loch's 17 00:01:12,139 --> 00:01:15,007 Strangest secret of all? 18 00:01:17,078 --> 00:01:20,479 And could a long-lost shipwreck really be a boat 19 00:01:20,581 --> 00:01:23,465 Destroyed by nessie herself? 20 00:01:24,435 --> 00:01:27,402 Adrian: When people said that john cobb's crash was caused 21 00:01:27,505 --> 00:01:30,939 By the loch ness monster, in a sense they were right. 22 00:01:31,542 --> 00:01:37,780 (theme music plays). 23 00:01:43,804 --> 00:01:47,773 Narrator: 23 miles long and over 700 feet deep, 24 00:01:47,875 --> 00:01:52,411 Loch ness is the biggest body of fresh water in the british isles. 25 00:01:54,081 --> 00:01:58,333 100 miles north of the scottish capital, edinburgh, 26 00:01:58,435 --> 00:02:01,870 It slices the highlands in two. 27 00:02:03,507 --> 00:02:06,809 Many people are convinced that its deep, 28 00:02:06,911 --> 00:02:10,946 Dark waters harbor a secretive creature. 29 00:02:11,916 --> 00:02:15,501 Now, a new expedition hopes to solve the mystery of the 30 00:02:15,603 --> 00:02:19,371 Loch ness monster once and for all. 31 00:02:19,473 --> 00:02:23,609 And discover whether it's myth or reality. 32 00:02:24,445 --> 00:02:25,677 Craig: In terms of the mission plan now, 33 00:02:25,779 --> 00:02:27,112 You can see we've dived. 34 00:02:27,214 --> 00:02:28,914 We're already down at 200 meters of water. 35 00:02:29,016 --> 00:02:30,532 I don't think we've been to this altitude 36 00:02:30,634 --> 00:02:32,201 In loch ness before anyway. 37 00:02:32,303 --> 00:02:33,602 Adrian: Before. 38 00:02:33,704 --> 00:02:34,736 Craig: So this will be the best resolution achieved 39 00:02:34,839 --> 00:02:36,939 In the loch to date. 40 00:02:37,041 --> 00:02:40,876 Narrator: Scotland's stunning natural landscape includes 41 00:02:40,978 --> 00:02:45,948 Over 30,000 lochs, the local word for lakes. 42 00:02:47,468 --> 00:02:51,904 And for most of its history, loch ness is just one of them. 43 00:02:53,440 --> 00:02:57,342 But all that changes in the early 1930s, 44 00:02:58,279 --> 00:03:01,747 When a new road brings new visitors 45 00:03:01,849 --> 00:03:06,034 And a series of strange sightings begins, 46 00:03:08,072 --> 00:03:12,007 Which culminate in an image captured by a visiting english surgeon. 47 00:03:13,410 --> 00:03:17,212 One of the most iconic photographs ever taken. 48 00:03:18,315 --> 00:03:19,848 Adrian: The surgeon's picture, of course, 49 00:03:19,950 --> 00:03:24,736 Is a picture which everybody in the western world will know. 50 00:03:25,773 --> 00:03:30,075 Narrator: Loch ness has been drawing fascinated visitors ever since. 51 00:03:32,513 --> 00:03:36,648 Eight decades later, over a million tourists are still drawn 52 00:03:36,750 --> 00:03:41,503 To the shores of the loch every year, in search of nessie. 53 00:03:43,874 --> 00:03:45,440 Woman: My aunt, you saw it, didn't you? 54 00:03:45,542 --> 00:03:47,075 Woman: Yeah, oh, distinctly. 55 00:03:47,177 --> 00:03:48,877 I don't doubt there's a monster. 56 00:03:48,979 --> 00:03:50,846 Man: I saw this hump. 57 00:03:50,948 --> 00:03:53,799 Man: We saw the head and the four humps. 58 00:03:53,901 --> 00:03:56,768 It was the very same color as an elephant. 59 00:03:57,771 --> 00:04:00,005 Narrator: No fewer than 1,000 people 60 00:04:00,174 --> 00:04:02,207 Have claimed to see the monster. 61 00:04:02,309 --> 00:04:04,509 Man: It was the size of a yacht hull. 62 00:04:04,612 --> 00:04:06,178 Man: It looked like a submarine coming closer and 63 00:04:06,280 --> 00:04:09,214 Closer and you could see the long neck. 64 00:04:09,316 --> 00:04:12,067 Narrator: And there's been a recent surge in sightings. 65 00:04:12,169 --> 00:04:14,403 Man: So, I saw a dark shape in the water. 66 00:04:14,505 --> 00:04:16,805 I was out further, towards the other end of the castle. 67 00:04:16,907 --> 00:04:19,241 Something's moving, between the trees. 68 00:04:19,343 --> 00:04:22,411 Woman: Oh my god, it's moving! 69 00:04:28,769 --> 00:04:32,804 Narrator: For many, nessie is a sincerely held belief. 70 00:04:33,540 --> 00:04:38,277 Steve feltham saw something unusual in 1991. 71 00:04:39,280 --> 00:04:43,015 Steve: I saw one thing in the first year of being here. 72 00:04:43,117 --> 00:04:46,735 Something just shot across the bay in front of me and 73 00:04:47,438 --> 00:04:49,071 You couldn't tell what it was. 74 00:04:49,173 --> 00:04:51,673 You could only see a spray of water coming off of something, 75 00:04:51,775 --> 00:04:53,942 Like a torpedo. 76 00:04:54,878 --> 00:04:56,812 Narrator: Steve was so fascinated, 77 00:04:56,914 --> 00:04:59,281 He set up a full-time vigil. 78 00:05:01,168 --> 00:05:04,069 Steve: To be honest I thought all I need to do now is be 79 00:05:04,171 --> 00:05:06,538 Ready for the next time with the camera, 80 00:05:06,640 --> 00:05:10,008 To take that all-important photograph. 81 00:05:12,413 --> 00:05:16,748 Narrator: 28 years later, he's still waiting. 82 00:05:19,336 --> 00:05:22,204 Man (over film): Loch ness, on which the eyes of the world are focused. 83 00:05:22,306 --> 00:05:25,907 Narrator: Scientists too have been drawn to the loch, 84 00:05:26,010 --> 00:05:30,579 And their experiences have been just as mixed as steve's. 85 00:05:31,415 --> 00:05:34,299 Man (over film): The hunt is well and truly on. 86 00:05:37,037 --> 00:05:39,504 Narrator: All through the 1970s and 80s, 87 00:05:39,606 --> 00:05:43,175 Major investigations traversed the loch in the hope of making 88 00:05:43,277 --> 00:05:46,578 A genuine zoological discovery. 89 00:05:46,680 --> 00:05:50,432 Most come back empty handed, but not all. 90 00:05:51,101 --> 00:05:53,168 Reporter (over tv): The team of scientists sweeping the 91 00:05:53,270 --> 00:05:55,737 Depths of loch ness said tonight they've made sonar 92 00:05:55,839 --> 00:05:59,141 Contact with a large unidentified object. 93 00:05:59,243 --> 00:06:01,877 They described it as an unusual... 94 00:06:02,246 --> 00:06:05,280 Narrator: No sighting has ever been properly confirmed. 95 00:06:07,634 --> 00:06:13,171 But expeditions like these inspire naturalist adrian shine. 96 00:06:14,875 --> 00:06:18,543 He's been researching loch ness for more than 40 years. 97 00:06:19,346 --> 00:06:21,580 Adrian: Much of the work that we with the loch ness project 98 00:06:21,682 --> 00:06:24,066 Have been doing is biological. 99 00:06:24,168 --> 00:06:27,903 Counting fish, counting plankton, that sort of thing. 100 00:06:28,005 --> 00:06:30,906 And that's why I built a submarine. 101 00:06:31,008 --> 00:06:34,076 I recruited students and that's why we collaborate 102 00:06:34,178 --> 00:06:36,745 With so many universities. 103 00:06:36,847 --> 00:06:41,500 But inevitably we've become also intrigued by other 104 00:06:41,602 --> 00:06:43,568 Aspects of loch ness. 105 00:06:44,271 --> 00:06:47,839 Narrator: And no other aspect intrigues adrian more, 106 00:06:47,941 --> 00:06:50,976 Than the biggest question of all. 107 00:06:51,078 --> 00:06:53,695 Now, he's teamed up with craig wallace, 108 00:06:53,781 --> 00:06:56,882 An expert in deep water exploration. 109 00:06:58,102 --> 00:07:01,953 They're on board the research boat deep scan, 110 00:07:02,039 --> 00:07:04,739 Hoping to reveal what's inside loch ness in 111 00:07:04,842 --> 00:07:07,809 Greater detail than ever before. 112 00:07:07,911 --> 00:07:10,445 And even if they don't find the monster, 113 00:07:10,547 --> 00:07:14,566 Adrian believes that 21st century technology can explain 114 00:07:14,668 --> 00:07:17,602 What it is that people have been seeing. 115 00:07:17,704 --> 00:07:19,971 Craig: We've got a vertical range of 14 meters. 116 00:07:20,073 --> 00:07:21,840 Adrian: So you've got a very high resolution. 117 00:07:21,942 --> 00:07:23,942 Craig: Very high resolution. 118 00:07:24,044 --> 00:07:26,144 We're actually gonna drop down further to eight meters so we're gonna double it again. 119 00:07:26,246 --> 00:07:27,746 Adrian: Okay. Okay. 120 00:07:27,848 --> 00:07:30,966 Narrator: To find a monster, perhaps you need a monster. 121 00:07:31,835 --> 00:07:34,702 At the heart of this expedition is this robotic 122 00:07:34,771 --> 00:07:38,640 Underwater vehicle, armed with the latest sonar, 123 00:07:38,759 --> 00:07:43,044 It can even adjust its own course to avoid obstacles. 124 00:07:43,147 --> 00:07:45,814 It's called munin. 125 00:07:46,383 --> 00:07:47,899 Craig: It's only now that technology's getting up to 126 00:07:48,001 --> 00:07:50,902 That level where we can put vehicles in autonomously, 127 00:07:51,004 --> 00:07:53,171 Where they're making decisions on their own, 128 00:07:53,273 --> 00:07:55,841 Which allows you high accuracy navigation. 129 00:07:59,112 --> 00:08:02,447 Narrator: The first thing adrian and craig want munin to do 130 00:08:02,549 --> 00:08:06,101 Is to take a really close look at the bottom of the loch. 131 00:08:14,344 --> 00:08:15,443 Captain: Clear. 132 00:08:15,546 --> 00:08:17,846 Prop, we're testing the prop. 133 00:08:20,968 --> 00:08:23,168 Narrator: As it travels through the water, 134 00:08:23,270 --> 00:08:27,072 Munin sends signals that reach 700 feet down. 135 00:08:28,408 --> 00:08:31,409 Some believe there might be a huge cave there, 136 00:08:31,512 --> 00:08:35,447 The perfect spot for a large creature to hide inside. 137 00:08:36,884 --> 00:08:40,735 If there is a cave, it will show up as the signals bounce 138 00:08:40,837 --> 00:08:44,322 Back to munin and the receiving systems on the research vessel. 139 00:08:47,611 --> 00:08:52,414 And if munin was to detect not just a cave, but a monster, 140 00:08:52,516 --> 00:08:54,966 What would it be like? 141 00:08:56,587 --> 00:08:59,638 The photograph that created the most popular image 142 00:08:59,740 --> 00:09:02,173 Looks like a dinosaur. 143 00:09:03,644 --> 00:09:07,779 But could a dinosaur really exist in the scottish highlands? 144 00:09:10,350 --> 00:09:13,802 The country's dramatic landscape is made up of some 145 00:09:13,904 --> 00:09:16,938 Of the oldest rock layers in the world. 146 00:09:17,057 --> 00:09:20,875 And embedded in them are thousands of extraordinary 147 00:09:20,978 --> 00:09:24,713 Dinosaur fossils, which have long drawn scientists to the 148 00:09:24,815 --> 00:09:29,417 Country, including dr. Steve brusatte. 149 00:09:30,103 --> 00:09:32,203 Stephen: In the lagoons and long the rivers and the lakes, 150 00:09:32,306 --> 00:09:34,272 You would have had dinosaurs. 151 00:09:34,374 --> 00:09:37,742 These kind of animals did indeed live in scotland. 152 00:09:37,844 --> 00:09:40,412 There were sea monsters here. 153 00:09:40,514 --> 00:09:44,666 Narrator: But the question is, are there any sea monsters now? 154 00:09:46,036 --> 00:09:49,604 The last known large dinosaurs in scotland went extinct with 155 00:09:49,706 --> 00:09:53,341 The rest of their relatives 66 million years ago. 156 00:09:55,045 --> 00:09:59,914 And extinct animals don't just suddenly reappear, or do they? 157 00:10:02,669 --> 00:10:06,571 In 1938, a fish caught off the coast of south africa 158 00:10:06,673 --> 00:10:09,641 Shakes the scientific world. 159 00:10:10,711 --> 00:10:14,779 The coelacanth has long been thought to be extinct. 160 00:10:14,881 --> 00:10:18,433 It had previously only ever been seen in fossils over 161 00:10:18,535 --> 00:10:21,236 70 million years old. 162 00:10:21,338 --> 00:10:23,772 But the coelacanth, it turns out, 163 00:10:23,874 --> 00:10:27,075 Has been hiding in plain sight. 164 00:10:28,211 --> 00:10:31,846 Could something similar have happened in loch ness? 165 00:10:31,948 --> 00:10:36,234 A supposedly extinct prehistoric beast, lurking, 166 00:10:36,336 --> 00:10:39,738 Hidden from view, in his peaty waters. 167 00:10:40,841 --> 00:10:44,476 For this to be even possible, the loch ness we know today 168 00:10:44,578 --> 00:10:47,245 Would have to be a very ancient lake. 169 00:10:47,347 --> 00:10:50,315 A lake from the time of the dinosaurs. 170 00:10:51,601 --> 00:10:54,502 So is it? 171 00:10:54,604 --> 00:10:58,940 To find out, we'd need to peer into the deepest recesses of 172 00:10:59,042 --> 00:11:02,644 The loch and examine its very bedrock. 173 00:11:03,747 --> 00:11:05,914 But over 700 feet down, 174 00:11:06,016 --> 00:11:09,167 Loch ness is too deep for most divers. 175 00:11:10,037 --> 00:11:14,873 Instead, we have munin, which has now completed its scans, 176 00:11:14,975 --> 00:11:20,278 Giving us the data we need to drain the waters from the loch. 177 00:11:26,136 --> 00:11:30,238 Slowly, the loch's true scale is revealed. 178 00:11:35,912 --> 00:11:40,715 With steep side walls plunging down, at its base, 179 00:11:40,801 --> 00:11:44,102 There are no signs of any caves. 180 00:11:44,204 --> 00:11:48,339 Instead, just a barren plain of soft, deep sediment. 181 00:11:52,145 --> 00:11:56,281 But with our new data we can peel the sediment back too, 182 00:11:56,383 --> 00:11:58,733 To reveal in the depths of the loch, 183 00:11:58,835 --> 00:12:02,270 A glistening layer of glacial clay. 184 00:12:03,173 --> 00:12:06,007 Clay that can give us a more detailed understanding of the 185 00:12:06,109 --> 00:12:09,160 Loch's history and whether it could hold 186 00:12:09,246 --> 00:12:11,980 A prehistoric monster. 187 00:12:16,336 --> 00:12:19,104 For decades, scientists are intrigued by these 188 00:12:19,206 --> 00:12:22,140 Ancient layers at the bottom of the loch, 189 00:12:22,242 --> 00:12:26,911 And drill into the lake bed to extract core samples. 190 00:12:28,949 --> 00:12:32,901 Adrian: That is a time capsule of events within the loch. 191 00:12:34,971 --> 00:12:37,772 Narrator: They study the core samples. 192 00:12:38,775 --> 00:12:41,609 And calculate that the layer of clay marks the 193 00:12:41,711 --> 00:12:44,979 End of the last ice age. 194 00:12:45,081 --> 00:12:47,832 Adrian: So we've got a problem, 195 00:12:47,934 --> 00:12:52,237 Loch ness was one big ice cube until 10,000 years ago. 196 00:12:55,175 --> 00:12:58,576 Narrator: The dinosaurs went extinct long before then. 197 00:13:00,413 --> 00:13:04,966 And even if some had somehow managed to survive in scotland, 198 00:13:05,068 --> 00:13:08,903 They could never have lived inside an ice cube. 199 00:13:09,005 --> 00:13:13,508 Stephen: There's just no way that any of these 170 million year old 200 00:13:13,610 --> 00:13:17,946 Jurassic animals could have ever lived in that lake. 201 00:13:19,749 --> 00:13:23,334 Narrator: So if a monster does inhabit the loch, 202 00:13:23,436 --> 00:13:26,304 It's not a dinosaur. 203 00:13:26,406 --> 00:13:29,574 So what could it be? 204 00:13:30,811 --> 00:13:34,379 Perhaps there's a clue in another famous sighting. 205 00:13:37,667 --> 00:13:42,337 In the spring of 1933, hotel manager aldi mackay and her 206 00:13:42,439 --> 00:13:47,609 Husband john are driving along the shore of loch ness when 207 00:13:47,711 --> 00:13:51,746 Suddenly they see something moving through the water. 208 00:13:52,983 --> 00:13:55,667 The couple watch amazed for a full minute, 209 00:13:55,769 --> 00:13:59,103 As what seems to be a creature rolls around in the center of 210 00:13:59,206 --> 00:14:03,441 The loch and churns up the water around it. 211 00:14:05,312 --> 00:14:10,281 Later, aldi tells a reporter than the creature looked like a whale. 212 00:14:12,669 --> 00:14:16,704 Her story becomes front page news all around the world. 213 00:14:18,275 --> 00:14:22,744 Aldi took no photographs, but in subsequent decades, 214 00:14:22,846 --> 00:14:26,848 Other sightings seem to match this whale like description. 215 00:14:29,803 --> 00:14:34,839 So could the monster really be a huge marine mammal? 216 00:14:36,076 --> 00:14:40,178 The problem is there is no swimmable route from the sea 217 00:14:40,280 --> 00:14:43,815 To loch ness. 218 00:14:45,302 --> 00:14:47,702 And even if a whale like creature could get into the 219 00:14:47,804 --> 00:14:51,272 Loch, there's a bigger obstacle. 220 00:14:52,742 --> 00:14:58,079 Any saltwater beast would surely die in a freshwater lake. 221 00:14:58,715 --> 00:15:01,065 Or would it? 222 00:15:02,402 --> 00:15:06,104 The answer to this question may lie somewhere else, 223 00:15:06,206 --> 00:15:10,308 In the deepest and oldest lake in the world. 224 00:15:19,235 --> 00:15:25,239 Narrator: At almost 400 miles long, up to 49 miles wide, 225 00:15:26,042 --> 00:15:29,644 And in places a full mile deep, 226 00:15:31,348 --> 00:15:36,634 Lake baikal is at least 25 million years old. 227 00:15:38,505 --> 00:15:42,507 4,000 miles away from scotland, 228 00:15:42,609 --> 00:15:45,443 This mega lake is so colossal, 229 00:15:45,545 --> 00:15:49,914 It can hold 3,000 times more water than loch ness. 230 00:15:53,269 --> 00:15:57,205 And still have room for a few monsters. 231 00:15:59,175 --> 00:16:02,543 Local folklore claims that a dragon like creature 232 00:16:02,646 --> 00:16:05,880 Inhabits these icy waters. 233 00:16:07,083 --> 00:16:11,436 But it's not dragons that local scientists have been studying... 234 00:16:13,907 --> 00:16:17,542 Instead they've made a series of startling discoveries that 235 00:16:17,644 --> 00:16:21,779 Might help solve the mystery of how a sea mammal could 236 00:16:21,881 --> 00:16:24,966 Thrive back in loch ness. 237 00:16:26,403 --> 00:16:29,671 In the winter months, if local people want to cross baikal, 238 00:16:29,773 --> 00:16:33,574 They don't go around the lake, they just drive over it. 239 00:16:35,845 --> 00:16:39,881 On ice that's up to five feet thick. 240 00:16:45,238 --> 00:16:48,973 Olga goriunova is part of a joint russian canadian team 241 00:16:49,075 --> 00:16:52,360 That's been excavating on the western shore. 242 00:16:54,581 --> 00:16:58,366 Olga: Usually when you deal with research along the shore of lake baikal, 243 00:16:58,468 --> 00:17:02,437 People tend to focus on the ecology aspect only. 244 00:17:04,441 --> 00:17:06,007 The landscape. 245 00:17:06,109 --> 00:17:09,811 The wildlife and so on, and all the surroundings. 246 00:17:12,615 --> 00:17:15,633 Narrator: Olga has made a special study of an ancient community 247 00:17:15,735 --> 00:17:20,138 That created stone age art here over 4,000 years ago. 248 00:17:21,941 --> 00:17:25,643 Some of the creatures they drew look familiar, 249 00:17:25,745 --> 00:17:30,948 But they're not loch ness monsters or even dragons. 250 00:17:32,235 --> 00:17:35,570 Olga has a less fanciful explanation. 251 00:17:37,006 --> 00:17:39,874 Olga: Here we have swans. 252 00:17:39,976 --> 00:17:43,244 This is a more ancient drawing. 253 00:17:44,180 --> 00:17:47,865 And here we can see groups of swans. 254 00:17:50,236 --> 00:17:53,104 Narrator: Along the lake's shore is a site that plays a 255 00:17:53,206 --> 00:17:56,474 Crucial role in the lives of these people. 256 00:17:57,894 --> 00:18:03,848 Olga: The oldest layer of this site is more than 9,000 years old. 257 00:18:05,568 --> 00:18:08,069 Here, we have a stack of dark layers dating back to the 258 00:18:08,171 --> 00:18:11,873 Neolithic period, or the new stone age. 259 00:18:14,978 --> 00:18:17,311 Narrator: Olga believes that the ancient community here 260 00:18:17,413 --> 00:18:20,448 Used this place as a stone age slaughterhouse. 261 00:18:24,304 --> 00:18:26,637 Olga: This is very interesting. 262 00:18:26,739 --> 00:18:30,541 Here, the wall collapsed, revealing bones. 263 00:18:31,978 --> 00:18:36,681 Look, this is the pelvic bone. 264 00:18:36,783 --> 00:18:41,369 These are the shoulder blades and here is a vertebrae. 265 00:18:43,206 --> 00:18:44,906 Narrator: So what's all this got to do with 266 00:18:45,008 --> 00:18:47,575 The loch ness monster? 267 00:18:49,245 --> 00:18:52,180 The connection is a creature that these ancient humans were 268 00:18:52,282 --> 00:18:56,267 Butchering on the shores of the fresh water lake. 269 00:18:59,706 --> 00:19:04,542 To find it, we must first drain lake baikal. 270 00:19:05,845 --> 00:19:08,479 As the ice cracks and melts, 271 00:19:08,581 --> 00:19:11,999 Trillions of gallons of freshwater flood out. 272 00:19:13,069 --> 00:19:16,637 And an unseen landscape emerges, 273 00:19:16,739 --> 00:19:19,974 With vast quantities of sediment piled high on the 274 00:19:20,076 --> 00:19:22,577 Immense lake bed. 275 00:19:23,513 --> 00:19:26,814 But if this sediment is also pulled back, 276 00:19:26,916 --> 00:19:31,536 It reveals of evidence of thousands of years of hunting. 277 00:19:33,039 --> 00:19:37,275 Bones everywhere with all their meat hacked off. 278 00:19:38,411 --> 00:19:43,080 It quickly becomes obvious that one animal above all predominates. 279 00:19:44,184 --> 00:19:48,452 A sea creature that's familiar to anyone in scotland. 280 00:19:50,006 --> 00:19:52,006 Seals. 281 00:19:53,843 --> 00:19:56,143 In every other place on the planet, 282 00:19:56,246 --> 00:19:58,980 Seals are a saltwater creature. 283 00:20:00,583 --> 00:20:04,135 But the bones here belong to the nerpa, 284 00:20:04,237 --> 00:20:07,438 A remarkable species of seal that uniquely evolved 285 00:20:07,540 --> 00:20:10,741 To live in fresh water. 286 00:20:12,645 --> 00:20:16,047 But how did they first get here, over 1,000 miles 287 00:20:16,149 --> 00:20:18,266 From the saltwater of the sea? 288 00:20:19,569 --> 00:20:24,171 One possible explanation is that 300,000 years ago, 289 00:20:24,274 --> 00:20:27,742 Baikal may have been connected to the arctic ocean, 290 00:20:27,844 --> 00:20:31,245 But when the connection was broken, the seals were trapped 291 00:20:31,347 --> 00:20:34,048 And so had to adapt. 292 00:20:36,803 --> 00:20:40,538 Could something similar have happened in loch ness? 293 00:20:40,640 --> 00:20:44,375 Large sea creatures finding their way to an inland lake 294 00:20:44,477 --> 00:20:48,045 And then evolving to live there? 295 00:20:50,149 --> 00:20:54,402 Glacial geologist jeremy everest uses the latest technology 296 00:20:54,504 --> 00:20:58,472 To study landscapes and the way they can change over time. 297 00:21:01,444 --> 00:21:03,744 With an array of computing power, 298 00:21:03,846 --> 00:21:07,014 Geologists can now model the area of scotland around the 299 00:21:07,116 --> 00:21:10,201 Northern end of the loch in fine detail. 300 00:21:12,205 --> 00:21:15,439 Jeremy also uses an interactive 3d model that 301 00:21:15,541 --> 00:21:20,411 Works like a hologram where he can play scientific moses with 302 00:21:20,513 --> 00:21:22,580 A wave of his hand. 303 00:21:23,683 --> 00:21:26,033 Jeremy: I can hold my hand over the model and it'll rain, 304 00:21:26,135 --> 00:21:29,003 So I'm filling the, filling the ocean and raising the 305 00:21:29,105 --> 00:21:31,405 Local sea level. 306 00:21:33,009 --> 00:21:36,510 Narrator: So what happens if the water continues to rise? 307 00:21:36,612 --> 00:21:39,613 For example, at the end of an ice age. 308 00:21:41,401 --> 00:21:43,768 Jeremy: Sea levels rise because all the ice is melting 309 00:21:43,870 --> 00:21:45,936 And draining the waters back into the oceans, 310 00:21:46,039 --> 00:21:50,975 Allowing water to cross this area of land and enter loch ness. 311 00:21:52,812 --> 00:21:55,713 There we have a marine incursion with sea water 312 00:21:55,815 --> 00:21:58,532 Draining into the loch. 313 00:21:59,552 --> 00:22:02,203 Narrator: And if the land barrier disappears, 314 00:22:02,305 --> 00:22:06,407 Could a creature like a whale swim between the two? 315 00:22:07,176 --> 00:22:10,945 Lake baikal proves that salt water animals can adapt to 316 00:22:11,047 --> 00:22:13,014 Live in fresh water. 317 00:22:13,983 --> 00:22:17,001 So a whale like creature entering the loch at this time 318 00:22:17,103 --> 00:22:20,638 Might not be an impossibility. 319 00:22:21,341 --> 00:22:26,043 Although many geologists, including jeremy, are highly skeptical, 320 00:22:26,145 --> 00:22:29,580 And finally there's another problem. 321 00:22:29,682 --> 00:22:34,001 Whales and seals are mammals and breath air. 322 00:22:34,771 --> 00:22:38,606 If one was in the loch today, every time it came up for air 323 00:22:38,708 --> 00:22:41,175 It would be spotted. 324 00:22:42,211 --> 00:22:46,514 So large sea mammals cannot be the explanation for 325 00:22:46,616 --> 00:22:49,166 The loch ness monster. 326 00:22:49,268 --> 00:22:54,772 If she isn't a dinosaur and can't be a whale, 327 00:22:55,842 --> 00:22:59,810 What could explain one of the most famous sightings of all? 328 00:23:00,963 --> 00:23:04,999 In 1936, malcolm irvine becomes the first person to 329 00:23:05,101 --> 00:23:10,638 Film a huge indistinct creature swimming against the current. 330 00:23:14,444 --> 00:23:17,845 Many sightings since have described a large animal doing 331 00:23:17,947 --> 00:23:21,215 The same, pushing against the wind and water. 332 00:23:21,968 --> 00:23:26,570 Adrian: You will see a tree trunk or log out on the loch, 333 00:23:26,672 --> 00:23:29,306 But then you realize it isn't, it can't be. 334 00:23:29,409 --> 00:23:30,708 It can't be. It's swimming. 335 00:23:30,810 --> 00:23:33,761 It's swimming against the wind. 336 00:23:33,846 --> 00:23:36,847 Narrator: Surely nothing but nessie could ever move 337 00:23:36,949 --> 00:23:39,767 Through water like this. 338 00:23:49,745 --> 00:23:53,647 Narrator: If you want a sense of just how strange lakes can be, 339 00:23:53,749 --> 00:23:57,334 The biggest lake in the world is a good place to start. 340 00:24:01,774 --> 00:24:05,309 Lake baikal's own resident water dragon tends to get 341 00:24:05,411 --> 00:24:09,280 Blamed whenever anything unusual happens here, 342 00:24:10,249 --> 00:24:15,402 And in 2009, something totally extraordinary happens. 343 00:24:20,309 --> 00:24:23,010 Astronauts aboard the international space station 344 00:24:23,112 --> 00:24:25,579 Observe giant circles, 345 00:24:27,083 --> 00:24:30,334 Huge rings carved into the ice. 346 00:24:32,171 --> 00:24:35,239 They are over two and a half miles in diameter. 347 00:24:37,376 --> 00:24:40,411 And so bizarre that it's not just the water dragon 348 00:24:40,513 --> 00:24:42,446 That gets blamed. 349 00:24:46,235 --> 00:24:50,838 Alexei: People started to speak about flying saucers, 350 00:24:52,008 --> 00:24:55,543 Fairy rings, or underwater civilizations. 351 00:24:55,645 --> 00:24:58,445 So it looks so strange and so unusual. 352 00:25:00,583 --> 00:25:04,301 Narrator: Alexei kouraev is studying the circles scientifically, 353 00:25:04,403 --> 00:25:07,571 Trying to work out what causes them. 354 00:25:09,775 --> 00:25:13,344 Might what he discovers shed light on those strange 355 00:25:13,446 --> 00:25:16,514 Sightings back in loch ness? 356 00:25:17,884 --> 00:25:21,569 The most obvious thing about the rings close up are gas 357 00:25:21,671 --> 00:25:24,538 Bubbles trapped in the ice. 358 00:25:26,409 --> 00:25:29,610 At first, experts wonder if this means the rings are 359 00:25:29,712 --> 00:25:33,480 Connected to giant underwater gas vents that alexei knows 360 00:25:33,583 --> 00:25:35,866 Are on the lake bed. 361 00:25:40,206 --> 00:25:44,108 He sends a remotely operated vehicle, or rov, 362 00:25:44,210 --> 00:25:48,212 Under the ice to see if the bubbles and rings are linked. 363 00:25:49,982 --> 00:25:53,234 But deep in the lake, the water's so dark it's almost 364 00:25:53,336 --> 00:25:56,370 Impossible for him to see anything. 365 00:25:58,708 --> 00:26:01,375 But we can. 366 00:26:02,111 --> 00:26:06,046 Using the data from alexei's rov to drain part of the lake 367 00:26:06,148 --> 00:26:09,500 That's known to contain vents. 368 00:26:12,705 --> 00:26:15,239 As vast volumes of water vanish, 369 00:26:17,843 --> 00:26:21,645 The steep lake sides plummet a mile down. 370 00:26:24,717 --> 00:26:27,735 And now, daylight shines on the massive expanse 371 00:26:27,853 --> 00:26:30,804 Of the lake bed. 372 00:26:31,474 --> 00:26:35,376 Huge rocky cliffs travel along its length, evidence of 373 00:26:35,478 --> 00:26:39,747 The giant seismic rift that first created baikal. 374 00:26:41,584 --> 00:26:44,868 Near the rift, raised areas. 375 00:26:46,339 --> 00:26:49,340 The vents. 376 00:26:50,376 --> 00:26:53,277 These are mini volcanoes. 377 00:26:53,379 --> 00:26:57,247 Holes in the earth's crust that spew out hot gasses 378 00:26:57,350 --> 00:27:00,334 Into the icy waters. 379 00:27:01,771 --> 00:27:04,204 But there's a further mystery, 380 00:27:04,307 --> 00:27:07,841 The sites of the vents bear no relation 381 00:27:07,943 --> 00:27:10,744 To the sites of the giant rings. 382 00:27:12,114 --> 00:27:14,782 So they can't be causing them. 383 00:27:23,242 --> 00:27:26,577 From the air, the surface of this immense lake looks 384 00:27:26,679 --> 00:27:30,080 Utterly still and inert. 385 00:27:31,801 --> 00:27:35,969 But recent research by alexei is showing that under the ice 386 00:27:36,072 --> 00:27:39,073 It's a different story. 387 00:27:41,077 --> 00:27:44,278 Alexei: Baikal is covered for several months by ice. 388 00:27:44,380 --> 00:27:46,947 One may think that it's sleeping, 389 00:27:47,049 --> 00:27:50,167 But actually it's quite the opposite. 390 00:28:01,447 --> 00:28:04,515 So by cutting a hole in the ice, 391 00:28:04,617 --> 00:28:08,936 It gives you a kind of window to this underwater world. 392 00:28:19,582 --> 00:28:22,666 Narrator: Alexei is sending down the rov, 393 00:28:22,768 --> 00:28:26,203 To study how water behaves in baikal. 394 00:28:29,275 --> 00:28:34,611 As it descends, it monitors the density and speed of currents, 395 00:28:34,714 --> 00:28:38,315 To create a three-dimensional image of the water. 396 00:28:40,870 --> 00:28:44,171 His work has deepened our knowledge of how lake baikal 397 00:28:44,273 --> 00:28:48,675 Actually works, revealing that under the ice, 398 00:28:48,778 --> 00:28:51,612 The water is in turmoil. 399 00:28:51,714 --> 00:28:56,834 Alexei: So it's a huge mass of water with several hundreds of 400 00:28:56,936 --> 00:29:01,171 Meter high, which is in constant rotation. 401 00:29:03,642 --> 00:29:06,376 Narrator: As cold winds blow over the lake, 402 00:29:06,479 --> 00:29:09,747 They chill the top layers of water. 403 00:29:10,716 --> 00:29:16,203 These then sink and warmer layers below rise, 404 00:29:16,305 --> 00:29:20,040 Creating immense currents which eventually form 405 00:29:20,142 --> 00:29:23,544 Powerful spiraling eddies. 406 00:29:26,515 --> 00:29:28,215 Alexei: When you know where the eddies, 407 00:29:28,317 --> 00:29:31,335 Most probably the ice rinks will develop. 408 00:29:32,404 --> 00:29:34,972 Narrator: The eddies, with their powerful columns of 409 00:29:35,074 --> 00:29:38,675 Warm water, corkscrew around... 410 00:29:40,246 --> 00:29:44,314 Thinning the ice above them and forming great rings. 411 00:29:46,769 --> 00:29:51,472 So huge, they can be seen from space. 412 00:29:57,646 --> 00:30:01,448 Could loch ness contain forces just as strange and surprising 413 00:30:01,550 --> 00:30:04,501 As those in baikal? 414 00:30:05,971 --> 00:30:09,540 And if so, might they account for some of the most common 415 00:30:09,642 --> 00:30:12,042 Monster sightings of all, 416 00:30:12,144 --> 00:30:15,145 The ones that swim against the current. 417 00:30:16,649 --> 00:30:19,566 Woman: Oh my god, it's moving. 418 00:30:22,671 --> 00:30:25,138 Narrator: When the summer sun heats the surface, 419 00:30:25,241 --> 00:30:28,141 It creates a thin layer of warm water on top 420 00:30:28,244 --> 00:30:30,944 Of colder, denser water underneath. 421 00:30:34,083 --> 00:30:37,634 When the wind blows, it pushes that warmer layer 422 00:30:37,736 --> 00:30:40,037 Up the length of the loch. 423 00:30:41,173 --> 00:30:46,310 When it reaches the far end, it bounces back down the loch, 424 00:30:46,412 --> 00:30:49,646 Moving in the opposite direction to the cooler water 425 00:30:49,748 --> 00:30:52,366 Underneath it. 426 00:30:53,769 --> 00:30:57,304 Adrian: Invisible at the surface, huge waves fall. 427 00:30:57,406 --> 00:31:00,073 They are very slow but they are very big. 428 00:31:00,242 --> 00:31:02,743 They are over 100 feet high. 429 00:31:04,947 --> 00:31:09,366 Narrator: With invisible waves rebounding up and down the loch, 430 00:31:10,369 --> 00:31:13,370 Big objects carried by the top layer, 431 00:31:13,472 --> 00:31:16,406 Create the illusion that something is swimming 432 00:31:16,508 --> 00:31:19,443 Against the wind. 433 00:31:25,217 --> 00:31:28,569 Adrian: That is a perfectly rational deduction, 434 00:31:28,671 --> 00:31:33,740 That a piece of material is seen to have a slow motion 435 00:31:33,842 --> 00:31:39,146 Against the wind, and hence thought to be swimming. 436 00:31:41,884 --> 00:31:44,368 Narrator: Scientists are convinced this phenomenon can 437 00:31:44,470 --> 00:31:47,804 Explain malcolm irvine's sighting of a creature 438 00:31:47,907 --> 00:31:51,275 Moving against the current. 439 00:31:54,380 --> 00:31:57,314 But there is still one type of sighting that 440 00:31:57,416 --> 00:32:00,701 Remains unexplained. 441 00:32:01,637 --> 00:32:05,138 One of the most common of all. 442 00:32:08,777 --> 00:32:11,378 Many people have claimed to see something that looks like 443 00:32:11,480 --> 00:32:16,333 A giant multi-humped creature, wriggling across the loch. 444 00:32:22,141 --> 00:32:24,908 The first person to study the monster seriously, 445 00:32:25,010 --> 00:32:28,145 Rupert gould, concluded from these sightings that nessie 446 00:32:28,247 --> 00:32:30,981 Must be a sea serpent. 447 00:32:32,735 --> 00:32:37,070 So, are all the people who claim to see this just deluded? 448 00:32:37,973 --> 00:32:41,108 Or could an extraordinary new discovery by adrian and his 449 00:32:41,210 --> 00:32:46,213 Crew prove that they are seeing something real after all? 450 00:32:54,006 --> 00:32:56,239 Narrator: Adrian and craig are on the second part of their 451 00:32:56,342 --> 00:32:58,675 Mission to scan loch ness. 452 00:32:59,645 --> 00:33:03,213 This time, they're on the hunt for a tragic shipwreck, 453 00:33:03,315 --> 00:33:06,400 Lost for almost 70 years. 454 00:33:11,640 --> 00:33:16,843 In 1952, national hero john cobb is determined to attempt 455 00:33:16,945 --> 00:33:19,846 The world water speed record. 456 00:33:20,783 --> 00:33:22,432 Man (over film): He climbed into the cockpit of a 457 00:33:22,534 --> 00:33:25,602 6,000 horsepower hydroplane, the crusader. 458 00:33:25,704 --> 00:33:28,472 Loch ness in scotland, the habitat of a legendary sea 459 00:33:28,574 --> 00:33:31,508 Serpent, had been chosen as the ideal spot for the planned 460 00:33:31,610 --> 00:33:34,211 Record breaking time trial. 461 00:33:39,968 --> 00:33:42,002 Narrator: But as the jet engine that powers his boat 462 00:33:42,104 --> 00:33:46,306 Pushes it over 200 miles per hour... 463 00:33:46,942 --> 00:33:48,875 Disaster. 464 00:33:55,801 --> 00:34:00,537 The crusader explodes and john cobb is killed instantly. 465 00:34:04,243 --> 00:34:07,611 Only small pieces of debris are ever recovered. 466 00:34:07,713 --> 00:34:10,047 Where is the rest of the boat 467 00:34:10,149 --> 00:34:13,133 And the giant engine that powered it? 468 00:34:14,169 --> 00:34:17,204 And what caused the crash? 469 00:34:20,776 --> 00:34:25,378 Believers have long speculated that the monster could be to blame. 470 00:34:27,483 --> 00:34:30,634 The crash took place on the eastern end of the loch, 471 00:34:30,736 --> 00:34:33,837 And it's here adrian and craig will scan. 472 00:34:36,408 --> 00:34:40,143 It's not the first time adrian's looked for the crusader. 473 00:34:45,150 --> 00:34:48,969 In July 2002, using the remotely operated vehicle, 474 00:34:49,071 --> 00:34:52,539 His team finds what they believe to be a debris field. 475 00:34:55,577 --> 00:35:00,614 But 700 feet down, visibility is so poor there's no way of 476 00:35:00,783 --> 00:35:04,434 Knowing if this really is cobb's boat. 477 00:35:09,441 --> 00:35:11,641 Now they're back. 478 00:35:12,644 --> 00:35:16,213 Using munin's advanced scanning technology, 479 00:35:16,315 --> 00:35:21,268 To find out if this is indeed the last resting place of the crusader. 480 00:35:23,806 --> 00:35:25,872 Craig: So here is the mission we planned, 481 00:35:25,974 --> 00:35:28,508 And you can see that this is really tight line spacing, 482 00:35:28,610 --> 00:35:31,745 Giving us the best possible chance of finding that engine. 483 00:35:31,847 --> 00:35:33,947 Adrian: It really is. 484 00:35:34,349 --> 00:35:36,299 Craig: We've dropped down very close to the sea bed, 485 00:35:36,401 --> 00:35:38,301 So the size scanner is running at 600 kilohertz. 486 00:35:38,403 --> 00:35:40,170 Adrian: 600, that's very high. 487 00:35:40,272 --> 00:35:43,507 Craig: And we're, so it's the best possible solution we can have. 488 00:35:45,644 --> 00:35:47,944 Narrator: Cruising close to the crash site, 489 00:35:48,046 --> 00:35:50,947 The underwater robot passes back and forth, 490 00:35:51,049 --> 00:35:54,034 Constantly scanning whatever is below. 491 00:35:55,137 --> 00:35:57,470 With the data successfully on board, 492 00:35:57,573 --> 00:36:00,273 The team analyzes the results. 493 00:36:00,776 --> 00:36:02,442 Craig: What I'm seeing is something much larger than 494 00:36:02,544 --> 00:36:04,678 We previously thought. 495 00:36:04,780 --> 00:36:06,780 Something here worth investigating. 496 00:36:06,882 --> 00:36:08,648 Adrian: There certainly is. 497 00:36:08,784 --> 00:36:10,000 Craig: Let's process some of the data. 498 00:36:10,102 --> 00:36:12,235 So once it's processed, what you get here, 499 00:36:12,337 --> 00:36:14,905 We can take a look at this in three dimensions. 500 00:36:15,908 --> 00:36:19,442 So the same site gives us this. 501 00:36:20,279 --> 00:36:21,945 Adrian: Oh well. 502 00:36:22,047 --> 00:36:27,200 That looks like crusader, and I am amazed. 503 00:36:29,304 --> 00:36:31,638 Narrator: If they've discovered the crusader, 504 00:36:31,740 --> 00:36:34,140 It could be historically important, 505 00:36:34,243 --> 00:36:37,611 Revealing details of the crash for the first time. 506 00:36:40,282 --> 00:36:44,100 To be sure, we need to remove the dark waters of loch ness 507 00:36:44,203 --> 00:36:47,604 From above the wreck. 508 00:36:50,609 --> 00:36:54,444 As the loch empties, a remarkable sight. 509 00:36:57,316 --> 00:36:59,766 The debris field. 510 00:37:01,236 --> 00:37:06,740 Scattered pieces of aluminum blown apart by explosive power. 511 00:37:09,878 --> 00:37:13,847 As light hits what appears to be the broken aluminum hull, 512 00:37:15,183 --> 00:37:19,536 It's clear half the boat remains intact. 513 00:37:20,806 --> 00:37:24,207 Including one of its stabilizers. 514 00:37:26,111 --> 00:37:31,081 And a huge jet engine runs over a third the length of the boat, 515 00:37:32,301 --> 00:37:36,569 Much bigger than you'd expect on any regular speed boat. 516 00:37:38,974 --> 00:37:41,975 It's the proof they've been looking for. 517 00:37:42,344 --> 00:37:44,611 It's the crusader. 518 00:37:45,981 --> 00:37:51,501 But can they solve the mystery of why it was wrecked? 519 00:37:51,603 --> 00:37:54,571 And why some people believe that nessie 520 00:37:54,673 --> 00:37:57,040 Could have played a role. 521 00:37:58,277 --> 00:38:01,411 Adrian: After the accident, there were speculations that 522 00:38:01,513 --> 00:38:04,581 It was the wake of the loch ness monster. 523 00:38:07,235 --> 00:38:09,903 Narrator: Adrian and craig go back to the original footage 524 00:38:10,005 --> 00:38:13,406 And analyze the crash frame by frame. 525 00:38:19,614 --> 00:38:22,799 And spot something unusual. 526 00:38:24,169 --> 00:38:25,735 Adrian: That's interesting. 527 00:38:25,837 --> 00:38:28,571 I think we should look at the other side, yes. 528 00:38:28,674 --> 00:38:30,440 Right. 529 00:38:30,542 --> 00:38:33,143 Now this is different. 530 00:38:33,245 --> 00:38:35,178 Craig: This is from the other side, looking from the west shore. 531 00:38:35,280 --> 00:38:37,480 Adrian: There is an oscillation taking place. 532 00:38:37,582 --> 00:38:38,782 Craig: Yeah. 533 00:38:38,884 --> 00:38:39,833 Adrian: He's thrown backwards and forwards, 534 00:38:39,935 --> 00:38:41,601 Backwards and forwards. 535 00:38:41,703 --> 00:38:44,604 Craig: So she's still fully in control as she crosses the 536 00:38:44,706 --> 00:38:45,872 Measure mile. 537 00:38:45,974 --> 00:38:49,376 Adrian: She's in control, but she's oscillating. 538 00:38:50,712 --> 00:38:51,845 Craig: He's started to slow down, 539 00:38:51,947 --> 00:38:54,347 The camera's slowly catching there. 540 00:38:54,449 --> 00:38:58,134 Adrian: And down goes the bow and immediately you see this 541 00:38:58,236 --> 00:39:00,437 Plume go out. 542 00:39:00,539 --> 00:39:02,472 Craig: Yeah. 543 00:39:02,574 --> 00:39:05,275 Adrian: And there we go. 544 00:39:08,547 --> 00:39:12,565 Narrator: Analysis of the footage reveals crusader hits waves. 545 00:39:12,667 --> 00:39:14,834 But this is puzzling. 546 00:39:14,936 --> 00:39:18,038 There shouldn't have been any waves. 547 00:39:20,042 --> 00:39:23,643 Cobb and his team know that they can only conduct speed 548 00:39:23,745 --> 00:39:28,248 Trials on those rare days when the loch is absolutely calm. 549 00:39:29,451 --> 00:39:32,702 They delay their record-breaking attempt until the wind 550 00:39:32,804 --> 00:39:36,506 Has dropped and the loch is so calm it's like a mirror. 551 00:39:38,076 --> 00:39:42,112 So where does the mysterious wave come from? 552 00:39:47,769 --> 00:39:49,969 Adrian thinks there's something else on the bottom 553 00:39:50,072 --> 00:39:53,339 Of the loch that could help answer the question of why 554 00:39:53,442 --> 00:39:57,077 Waves big enough to destroy a boat can suddenly appear in 555 00:39:57,179 --> 00:40:00,880 Loch ness, as if from nowhere. 556 00:40:13,111 --> 00:40:16,196 Narrator: People have lived around loch ness for centuries. 557 00:40:17,549 --> 00:40:20,533 But there were hardly any sightings of a monster until 558 00:40:20,635 --> 00:40:24,838 The 1930s, when the numbers explode. 559 00:40:26,141 --> 00:40:28,875 Why the sudden increase? 560 00:40:30,445 --> 00:40:33,613 Adrian believes that another wreck at the bottom of loch ness 561 00:40:33,715 --> 00:40:37,300 May help explain, and shed light on 562 00:40:37,402 --> 00:40:41,004 The tragic fate of john cobb. 563 00:40:45,677 --> 00:40:49,279 The pansy is an ocean-going fishing boat, 564 00:40:49,381 --> 00:40:52,415 Built at the turn of the 20th century. 565 00:40:52,501 --> 00:40:57,737 She has a 60 foot main mast, two feet thick at the base. 566 00:40:58,940 --> 00:41:04,043 But what is an ocean-going vessel doing in loch ness? 567 00:41:07,449 --> 00:41:12,202 In 1803, construction begins on an ambitious project to 568 00:41:12,304 --> 00:41:16,439 Link the lochs of the great glen into a 60 mile passage 569 00:41:16,541 --> 00:41:18,975 From sea to sea. 570 00:41:19,077 --> 00:41:22,278 The caledonian canal. 571 00:41:27,135 --> 00:41:30,303 With this waterway in place, fishing fleets can now cross 572 00:41:30,405 --> 00:41:34,774 Through its canal locks quickly from one side of scotland to the other. 573 00:41:35,277 --> 00:41:38,044 Adrian: Thousands once moved through loch ness from the 574 00:41:38,180 --> 00:41:40,914 East to the west coast fishing grounds. 575 00:41:42,017 --> 00:41:45,468 Narrator: One of those thousands of boats is the pansy. 576 00:41:46,438 --> 00:41:51,140 Perhaps it can now offer up a clue to the surge in monster sightings. 577 00:41:54,312 --> 00:41:56,579 Craig: So, we're gonna pass the munin really close right 578 00:41:56,681 --> 00:41:59,082 Over the top of pansy, so we can get the best possible 579 00:41:59,184 --> 00:42:01,768 Three-dimensional representation of the wreck. 580 00:42:03,371 --> 00:42:05,772 Narrator: The pansy sinks near the center of the loch, 581 00:42:05,874 --> 00:42:08,908 Close to an area called foyers. 582 00:42:09,711 --> 00:42:13,680 It's here where munin is completing its final scan. 583 00:42:16,434 --> 00:42:19,335 Craig: If we zoom in here, wow, look at that. 584 00:42:19,437 --> 00:42:21,137 Now I'm starting to see some extra footage. 585 00:42:21,239 --> 00:42:23,106 Adrian: You have the most classic form. 586 00:42:23,241 --> 00:42:26,409 Look at that deep four foot and that digs into the water 587 00:42:26,511 --> 00:42:29,913 And allows the vessel to tack against the wind. 588 00:42:30,382 --> 00:42:34,234 Look at the rudder there on that sharp stern. 589 00:42:36,238 --> 00:42:39,556 Narrator: Using craig's incredibly precise data, 590 00:42:39,641 --> 00:42:42,709 We can drain the waters around the wreck of pansy, 591 00:42:42,811 --> 00:42:46,813 To show the loch bed here in extraordinary detail. 592 00:42:48,583 --> 00:42:53,202 Revealing the fishing boat for the first time in almost 100 years. 593 00:42:58,543 --> 00:43:03,413 Gently resting on the loch bed, she's remarkably intact. 594 00:43:05,417 --> 00:43:09,469 Including the crutch on which the huge mast once rested. 595 00:43:10,538 --> 00:43:14,540 But the data reveals something unexpected. 596 00:43:14,643 --> 00:43:17,377 A missing piece. 597 00:43:17,912 --> 00:43:19,379 Adrian: Where's the mast? Craig: Yeah. 598 00:43:19,481 --> 00:43:21,914 Adrian: If there's no mast then how did she get about? 599 00:43:22,017 --> 00:43:23,700 Craig: Yep. 600 00:43:24,269 --> 00:43:28,304 Narrator: Returning to the drained wreck site reveals the answer. 601 00:43:29,641 --> 00:43:33,710 Inside her wooden hull, an engine. 602 00:43:34,980 --> 00:43:38,881 Adrian: The boat was built in 1903, but in 1909, 603 00:43:38,984 --> 00:43:42,068 An auxiliary motor was fitted. 604 00:43:42,170 --> 00:43:45,705 A 40... A 48 horsepower thornycroft. 605 00:43:47,375 --> 00:43:50,043 Narrator: Pansy didn't have a mast because she 606 00:43:50,145 --> 00:43:52,745 No longer needed one. 607 00:43:52,847 --> 00:43:55,882 The installing of a thornycroft engine allowed 608 00:43:55,950 --> 00:43:58,334 Her to move between fishing grounds, 609 00:43:58,436 --> 00:44:01,070 Even in dead calm weather. 610 00:44:02,207 --> 00:44:05,642 And this simple advance in technology may help explain 611 00:44:05,744 --> 00:44:09,245 How a wave could suddenly come from nowhere, 612 00:44:09,347 --> 00:44:12,699 As it did so disastrously for john cobb. 613 00:44:15,603 --> 00:44:17,437 Adrian: If the water goes calm, 614 00:44:17,539 --> 00:44:22,041 A sailing vessel goes nowhere, it is becalmed. 615 00:44:23,812 --> 00:44:27,647 Narrator: To be able to sail, a sailing vessel requires wind, 616 00:44:27,749 --> 00:44:31,000 And wind can disturb the water so completely you 617 00:44:31,102 --> 00:44:33,736 Can't see a boat's wake. 618 00:44:33,838 --> 00:44:36,739 But with the advent of motor power, 619 00:44:36,841 --> 00:44:40,043 Boats can travel back and forth across loch ness, 620 00:44:40,145 --> 00:44:42,311 In dead calm, 621 00:44:42,447 --> 00:44:46,399 Leaving an unbroken and visible wake behind them. 622 00:44:48,803 --> 00:44:52,338 It's now that loch ness itself turns these wakes into 623 00:44:52,440 --> 00:44:55,174 Something remarkable. 624 00:44:55,643 --> 00:44:59,946 Its steep sides and unusually straight shape mean that wakes 625 00:45:00,115 --> 00:45:03,032 Created by boats can last for hours, 626 00:45:03,134 --> 00:45:08,371 Moving up and down the loch, miles from any visible boat. 627 00:45:10,375 --> 00:45:12,075 Adrian: If you're looking across the loch, 628 00:45:12,177 --> 00:45:16,345 The vessel having made it will have gone a mile or more 629 00:45:16,448 --> 00:45:19,715 Before that, that wake hits the shore. 630 00:45:21,403 --> 00:45:24,470 Narrator: Despite cobb's precautions, 631 00:45:24,572 --> 00:45:27,974 The likely explanation for his crash is that his lightly 632 00:45:28,076 --> 00:45:32,111 Built speed boat hit a long lasting wake, 633 00:45:32,213 --> 00:45:36,199 Perhaps from one of his own support vessels. 634 00:45:37,535 --> 00:45:40,136 Adrian: They can travel for miles in calm water, 635 00:45:40,238 --> 00:45:42,138 Where they're not broken up. 636 00:45:42,240 --> 00:45:45,942 At 200 miles an hour, any wave is going to damage a 637 00:45:46,044 --> 00:45:48,911 Lightly built vessel like crusader. 638 00:45:50,915 --> 00:45:53,399 Narrator: The unexpectedly strange behavior of water and 639 00:45:53,501 --> 00:45:58,538 Currents in loch ness may also explain that strangest of all 640 00:45:58,640 --> 00:46:02,675 Phenomena in the loch, the monster. 641 00:46:04,362 --> 00:46:08,014 From above, they are simple wakes. 642 00:46:08,116 --> 00:46:12,902 But side on from the shore line, the monster appears. 643 00:46:15,173 --> 00:46:18,174 Adrian: And that wake, observed from a low angle, 644 00:46:18,276 --> 00:46:20,777 Actually looks very solid. 645 00:46:21,412 --> 00:46:23,012 Man: See, look, what's that? 646 00:46:23,114 --> 00:46:25,281 What is that? 647 00:46:25,383 --> 00:46:28,935 Narrator: Just as cobb's vessel was likely hit by a wake, 648 00:46:29,003 --> 00:46:32,171 The many people who think they see a humped serpent 649 00:46:32,273 --> 00:46:33,940 Wriggling in the loch 650 00:46:34,042 --> 00:46:37,376 May in fact be seeing nothing more mysterious 651 00:46:37,479 --> 00:46:42,048 Than the watery signature of a boat that's many miles away. 652 00:46:42,867 --> 00:46:45,802 Adrian: Have we solved the loch ness mystery? 653 00:46:46,704 --> 00:46:52,074 Well, there will be a loch ness monster as long as we want one. 654 00:46:54,946 --> 00:46:58,181 Narrator: Draining loch ness reveals a possible scientific 655 00:46:58,283 --> 00:47:02,034 Explanation of one of the world's greatest mysteries. 656 00:47:04,272 --> 00:47:08,674 But for the excited visitors who still come in search of nessie, 657 00:47:09,644 --> 00:47:13,346 And the hundreds who claim to catch a glimpse of her, 658 00:47:13,448 --> 00:47:17,433 The monster remains alive and well. 659 00:47:18,086 --> 00:47:19,268 Captioned by cotter captioning services. 60848

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.