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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,667 --> 00:00:04,167 [Jeremy] Could an invisible underwater force 2 00:00:04,200 --> 00:00:07,600 have changed the course of world history? 3 00:00:07,633 --> 00:00:11,800 [Simon] How could this fleet of enormous warships remain stationary? 4 00:00:11,833 --> 00:00:14,233 This is a huge puzzle. 5 00:00:14,267 --> 00:00:19,767 [Jeremy] How does a modern-day pirate ship evade capture for ten years? 6 00:00:19,800 --> 00:00:23,567 Just as it seems like it's going to get caught, it's gone. 7 00:00:24,733 --> 00:00:27,200 [Jeremy] Can a treasure trove of gold coins 8 00:00:27,233 --> 00:00:29,333 found in the waters off the Holy Land 9 00:00:29,367 --> 00:00:33,833 shed new light on the mysterious disappearance of an ancient city? 10 00:00:33,867 --> 00:00:38,333 To say that these coins are virtually priceless is no exaggeration. 11 00:00:38,367 --> 00:00:41,100 And there's hundreds of them littering the seafloor. 12 00:00:44,333 --> 00:00:48,833 [Jeremy] The underwater realm is another dimension. 13 00:00:48,867 --> 00:00:51,867 It's a physically hostile place, 14 00:00:51,900 --> 00:00:56,933 where dreams of promise can sink into darkness. 15 00:00:59,000 --> 00:01:00,633 I'm Jeremy Wade, 16 00:01:00,667 --> 00:01:04,067 and I'm searching the world to bring you the most iconic 17 00:01:04,100 --> 00:01:09,133 and baffling underwater mysteries known to science. 18 00:01:09,167 --> 00:01:12,400 The vast majority of our ocean is unobserved, 19 00:01:12,433 --> 00:01:14,900 unmapped, and unexplored. 20 00:01:14,933 --> 00:01:20,200 [Jeremy] It's a dangerous frontier that swallows evidence. 21 00:01:20,233 --> 00:01:22,900 You have nowhere to run. 22 00:01:22,933 --> 00:01:26,067 [Jeremy] Where unknown is normal 23 00:01:26,100 --> 00:01:29,133 and understanding is rare. 24 00:01:40,367 --> 00:01:42,333 The Battle of Actium, 25 00:01:42,367 --> 00:01:47,567 the decisive naval conflict in the last war of the Roman Republic. 26 00:01:49,367 --> 00:01:52,367 The defeat of history's most famous couple, 27 00:01:52,400 --> 00:01:55,200 Antony and Cleopatra, shaped the world, 28 00:01:55,233 --> 00:01:57,133 but no one knows exactly 29 00:01:57,167 --> 00:02:01,533 what caused their unexpected downfall. 30 00:02:01,567 --> 00:02:06,367 Now, scientists might be one step closer to solving 31 00:02:06,400 --> 00:02:08,933 this 2,000-year-old mystery, 32 00:02:08,967 --> 00:02:13,900 and the answer might be hiding just beneath the surface. 33 00:02:19,467 --> 00:02:23,167 [Jeremy] September 2nd, 31 BC, 34 00:02:23,200 --> 00:02:28,300 an epic naval battle is about to take place off the coast of Greece. 35 00:02:28,333 --> 00:02:31,867 The Battle of Actium is one of the most famous naval engagements 36 00:02:31,900 --> 00:02:33,067 in ancient history. 37 00:02:34,567 --> 00:02:38,133 [Jeremy] On one side, Mark Antony and Cleopatra, 38 00:02:38,167 --> 00:02:40,167 Queen of Egypt, 39 00:02:40,200 --> 00:02:43,733 with an impressive fleet of 500 ships. 40 00:02:46,067 --> 00:02:49,367 They're pitted against the leader of the Roman Republic, 41 00:02:49,400 --> 00:02:51,367 Octavian Augustus. 42 00:02:53,067 --> 00:02:56,633 A 13-year rivalry will end here 43 00:02:56,667 --> 00:02:59,500 in a battle that will shape the world. 44 00:02:59,533 --> 00:03:02,467 The stakes of this battle are high. 45 00:03:02,500 --> 00:03:05,667 Whoever wins rules the Roman world 46 00:03:05,700 --> 00:03:08,900 and the Roman world is the world. 47 00:03:08,933 --> 00:03:12,933 [Jeremy] Antony and Cleopatra's ships advance towards the enemy. 48 00:03:14,233 --> 00:03:15,933 Then something bizarre 49 00:03:15,967 --> 00:03:19,267 starts to happen in the waters of Actium. 50 00:03:19,300 --> 00:03:21,667 [Simon] The fleet behaves very sluggishly. 51 00:03:21,700 --> 00:03:24,567 The boats are moving very slowly in the water. 52 00:03:24,600 --> 00:03:28,367 [Rob] So the question is why were these ships not able to maneuver 53 00:03:28,400 --> 00:03:30,700 like they should have been able to maneuver? 54 00:03:30,733 --> 00:03:32,900 [Jeremy] What causes the Egyptian ships 55 00:03:32,933 --> 00:03:35,900 to almost stop dead in their tracks? 56 00:03:35,933 --> 00:03:39,167 It's one of the most baffling military mysteries. 57 00:03:40,500 --> 00:03:44,700 Octavian's ships swoop in and destroy the fleet. 58 00:03:45,433 --> 00:03:46,400 [crashing] 59 00:03:51,467 --> 00:03:53,367 It's a shocking defeat. 60 00:03:55,167 --> 00:03:58,767 [Michael] When you look at the numbers in the battle, 61 00:03:58,800 --> 00:04:00,233 you say, "My God, 62 00:04:00,267 --> 00:04:03,967 why didn't Mark Antony win?" He has more boats. 63 00:04:04,067 --> 00:04:05,533 He has bigger boats. 64 00:04:05,567 --> 00:04:08,867 He has the backing of Cleopatra. 65 00:04:08,900 --> 00:04:11,933 [Jeremy] In just one extraordinary day in history, 66 00:04:11,967 --> 00:04:14,600 the Battle of Actium is over. 67 00:04:14,633 --> 00:04:17,433 Antony and Cleopatra's cataclysmic defeat 68 00:04:17,467 --> 00:04:19,933 brings an end to the Roman Republic 69 00:04:19,967 --> 00:04:23,433 and ushers in a new chapter in world history. 70 00:04:23,467 --> 00:04:27,233 This marks the beginning of the Roman Empire. 71 00:04:27,267 --> 00:04:30,767 [Jeremy] So what causes Antony and Cleopatra's ships 72 00:04:30,800 --> 00:04:33,567 to slow down? The crucial factor 73 00:04:33,600 --> 00:04:36,733 that gives rise to history's greatest empire? 74 00:04:36,767 --> 00:04:41,633 That question has been puzzling historians and mariners for centuries. 75 00:04:42,967 --> 00:04:45,733 [Jeremy] In 2020, a major investigation 76 00:04:45,767 --> 00:04:48,567 into a strange ship-stopping phenomenon 77 00:04:48,600 --> 00:04:52,167 may finally provide some answers. 78 00:04:52,200 --> 00:04:57,200 Researchers begin to piece together clues hidden in ancient texts. 79 00:04:59,667 --> 00:05:03,267 Many ancient writers have discussed 80 00:05:03,300 --> 00:05:07,067 what happened at the Battle of Actium, 81 00:05:07,100 --> 00:05:10,667 and one of them, Pliny the Elder, 82 00:05:10,700 --> 00:05:14,600 says that the ships were held back by the remora. 83 00:05:15,867 --> 00:05:17,867 [Lisa] Remoras are flat-headed fish 84 00:05:17,900 --> 00:05:22,767 that sucker onto other boats and other larger fish in the seafloor. 85 00:05:22,800 --> 00:05:25,333 [Jeremy] They use high-powered suction discs 86 00:05:25,367 --> 00:05:28,066 to attach to anything that's moving. 87 00:05:28,067 --> 00:05:30,667 They are the hitchhikers of the ocean. 88 00:05:30,700 --> 00:05:34,267 [Jeremy] Is it really plausible that these moderate-sized fish 89 00:05:34,300 --> 00:05:37,467 could have slowed down the Egyptian fleet? 90 00:05:37,500 --> 00:05:40,567 Scientists today believe the remora's reputation 91 00:05:40,600 --> 00:05:45,133 for incapacitating ships is an ancient mariner's myth. 92 00:05:45,167 --> 00:05:47,200 When remoras hitch a ride on a vessel, 93 00:05:47,233 --> 00:05:52,233 they do create drag, but not enough to bring a ship to a halt. 94 00:05:52,267 --> 00:05:56,500 [Lisa] It seems highly unlikely that remoras had anything to do 95 00:05:56,533 --> 00:05:59,067 with the outcome of the Battle of Actium. 96 00:06:00,467 --> 00:06:02,367 [Jeremy] If remoras aren't to blame 97 00:06:02,400 --> 00:06:05,467 for stopping the Egyptian fleet from advancing, 98 00:06:05,500 --> 00:06:08,067 something else must have been at play. 99 00:06:11,067 --> 00:06:14,433 Recent archeological work near the naval battleground 100 00:06:14,467 --> 00:06:19,533 is unraveling another clue to Antony and Cleopatra's mysterious defeat. 101 00:06:20,967 --> 00:06:22,967 Following his triumph at Actium, 102 00:06:23,067 --> 00:06:26,933 Octavian builds a great victory monument. 103 00:06:26,967 --> 00:06:29,167 [Simon] Octavian is a warlord effectively, 104 00:06:29,200 --> 00:06:32,133 so monumentalizing his victory is very important to him. 105 00:06:35,267 --> 00:06:37,233 [Jeremy] In niches, in front of the monument, 106 00:06:37,267 --> 00:06:42,567 he displays 35 great bronze rams taken as war trophies 107 00:06:42,600 --> 00:06:47,600 from some of Antony and Cleopatra's most important warships. 108 00:06:47,633 --> 00:06:50,500 Archeologists discover something surprising. 109 00:06:50,533 --> 00:06:53,300 [Peter] These stone niches are still there today, 110 00:06:53,333 --> 00:06:55,333 and by 3D scanning these niches, 111 00:06:55,367 --> 00:06:58,167 it's possible to calculate the size of the ships. 112 00:07:00,067 --> 00:07:02,567 [Jeremy] Historical texts have always described 113 00:07:02,600 --> 00:07:07,167 Cleopatra's Egyptian warships as large galleys, 114 00:07:07,200 --> 00:07:09,066 but new technology is revealing 115 00:07:09,067 --> 00:07:13,633 that the size of the ships was truly exceptional. 116 00:07:13,667 --> 00:07:17,100 The ships were huge even by their day. 117 00:07:17,133 --> 00:07:22,233 They were as long as a Boeing 767 and twice as wide, 118 00:07:22,267 --> 00:07:26,066 and they would have been rowed by 600 men. 119 00:07:26,067 --> 00:07:30,066 [Jeremy] Can the extreme and unconventional dimensions of the warships 120 00:07:30,067 --> 00:07:33,567 explain their mysterious slow behavior? 121 00:07:33,600 --> 00:07:37,533 [Helen] What we have is these big armored ships. 122 00:07:37,567 --> 00:07:40,833 But on the opposing side, you've got a smaller, 123 00:07:40,867 --> 00:07:43,633 lighter kind of galley. Much quicker. 124 00:07:45,500 --> 00:07:47,767 [Jeremy] Smaller, more nimble ships 125 00:07:47,800 --> 00:07:50,833 may have given Octavian the upper hand. 126 00:07:50,867 --> 00:07:52,700 [Michael] Having a smaller ship, you might think 127 00:07:52,733 --> 00:07:57,533 is a disadvantage, however, it takes less energy to get them up to speed. 128 00:07:57,567 --> 00:08:00,600 [Helen] The bigger, heavier ships can't ram them, 129 00:08:00,633 --> 00:08:02,400 because they can maneuver 130 00:08:02,433 --> 00:08:04,067 and then get out of the way quickly. 131 00:08:05,767 --> 00:08:09,967 [Jeremy] But is there more to this mystery than just flawed ship design? 132 00:08:11,167 --> 00:08:13,433 A groundbreaking scientific discovery 133 00:08:13,467 --> 00:08:16,967 is finally unraveling what really happened that day. 134 00:08:17,067 --> 00:08:20,600 And the answer lies beneath the surface. 135 00:08:29,900 --> 00:08:33,833 How Antony and Cleopatra lost the Battle of Actium 136 00:08:33,867 --> 00:08:38,333 has puzzled historians and scientists for centuries, 137 00:08:38,367 --> 00:08:41,733 but a new study of a powerful underwater phenomenon 138 00:08:41,767 --> 00:08:46,133 could finally solve this ancient naval mystery. 139 00:08:51,467 --> 00:08:54,333 [Jeremy] In 2020, scientists are researching 140 00:08:54,367 --> 00:08:58,200 a strange nautical anomaly called dead water. 141 00:09:00,467 --> 00:09:04,066 Could this have held back Antony and Cleopatra's ships 142 00:09:04,067 --> 00:09:06,800 and caused their devastating defeat? 143 00:09:08,067 --> 00:09:10,333 [Lisa] Dead water can slow down ships 144 00:09:10,367 --> 00:09:13,967 and, in some instances, can even stop them. 145 00:09:14,067 --> 00:09:16,233 [Helen] The first person to really observe it 146 00:09:16,267 --> 00:09:19,133 was a famous Arctic explorer called Fridtjof Nansen, 147 00:09:19,167 --> 00:09:21,767 and what he saw was that when he was in the fjords in Norway, 148 00:09:21,800 --> 00:09:24,167 however much he tried to push his ship through the water, 149 00:09:24,200 --> 00:09:26,133 it just didn't go anywhere. 150 00:09:26,167 --> 00:09:29,767 [Jeremy] When Nansen encounters dead water in 1893, 151 00:09:29,800 --> 00:09:33,233 he has no idea what's causing his ship to slow down. 152 00:09:34,667 --> 00:09:38,100 But we now know much more about this phenomenon. 153 00:09:38,133 --> 00:09:41,933 It occurs where there are different levels of temperature or salinity, 154 00:09:41,967 --> 00:09:43,733 such as in fjords. 155 00:09:45,500 --> 00:09:47,067 [Helen] In the fjords, you have cold, 156 00:09:47,100 --> 00:09:49,300 fresh glacial water that is sitting 157 00:09:49,333 --> 00:09:51,367 on top of ocean water that's more dense. 158 00:09:52,833 --> 00:09:54,600 [Jeremy] Antony and Cleopatra's fleet 159 00:09:54,633 --> 00:09:59,633 is positioned in what's known today as the Ambracian Gulf. 160 00:09:59,667 --> 00:10:05,567 So, do the waters here have the right features for the dead water effect? 161 00:10:05,600 --> 00:10:11,000 The Ambracian Gulf has fresh water flowing in from two rivers, 162 00:10:11,033 --> 00:10:13,400 creating two different layers of water, 163 00:10:13,433 --> 00:10:16,733 similar to the waters where Nansen was sailing. 164 00:10:16,767 --> 00:10:21,167 And, therefore, a possible location for dead water to occur. 165 00:10:23,400 --> 00:10:28,467 But could this phenomenon really have slowed down the Egyptian fleet? 166 00:10:28,500 --> 00:10:32,600 French researchers set out to solve this puzzle. 167 00:10:32,633 --> 00:10:35,667 [Germain speaking] 168 00:10:49,633 --> 00:10:51,500 [Jeremy] When a ship travels through water 169 00:10:51,533 --> 00:10:53,067 with two different densities, 170 00:10:53,100 --> 00:10:57,800 it creates an internal wave, where the two layers meet, 171 00:10:57,833 --> 00:11:00,967 and the water tank reveals that how a ship is affected 172 00:11:01,067 --> 00:11:04,367 by an internal wave depends on its speed. 173 00:11:04,400 --> 00:11:07,066 If you can push yourself fast enough, 174 00:11:07,067 --> 00:11:09,333 you can actually get yourself out of the regime, 175 00:11:09,367 --> 00:11:10,833 in which it happens. 176 00:11:10,867 --> 00:11:11,967 But if you can't, 177 00:11:12,067 --> 00:11:13,433 then you're basically stuck in it, 178 00:11:13,467 --> 00:11:17,433 nothing you can do is going to push your ship along any faster. 179 00:11:20,067 --> 00:11:21,500 [Jeremy] On that day in Actium, 180 00:11:21,533 --> 00:11:24,833 Antony and Cleopatra's huge cumbersome ships 181 00:11:24,867 --> 00:11:29,067 would have struggled to escape the internal waves that they created. 182 00:11:29,100 --> 00:11:31,633 With a scale model of an Egyptian ship, 183 00:11:31,667 --> 00:11:33,700 Germain Rousseaux and his team noticed 184 00:11:33,733 --> 00:11:37,200 something else extraordinary that could help to decode 185 00:11:37,233 --> 00:11:40,100 Pliny the Elder's ancient record of the battle. 186 00:11:41,167 --> 00:11:43,533 [Germain speaking] 187 00:11:46,733 --> 00:11:51,167 [Jeremy] The scale model ship creates a very familiar pattern. 188 00:11:51,200 --> 00:11:53,300 [Germain speaking] 189 00:11:59,833 --> 00:12:01,700 [Jeremy] In an extraordinary twist, 190 00:12:01,733 --> 00:12:03,800 Germain and his team now believe 191 00:12:03,833 --> 00:12:07,233 that Pliny the Elder could have been right all along. 192 00:12:07,267 --> 00:12:12,233 He was referring to the remora patterned wake and not the fish itself. 193 00:12:13,667 --> 00:12:18,233 It's likely then that the combination of huge warships 194 00:12:18,267 --> 00:12:23,233 and dead water created a perfect and devastating storm 195 00:12:23,267 --> 00:12:25,067 for Antony and Cleopatra. 196 00:12:26,067 --> 00:12:28,333 So, after 2,000 years, 197 00:12:28,367 --> 00:12:32,833 this ancient mystery might finally be solved. 198 00:12:41,633 --> 00:12:42,933 In the South Pacific, 199 00:12:42,967 --> 00:12:47,167 a marine biologist sees her life flash before her eyes, 200 00:12:47,200 --> 00:12:53,100 as she's thrown around violently underwater by a humpback whale. 201 00:12:53,133 --> 00:12:55,067 The mystery of this encounter deepens 202 00:12:55,100 --> 00:12:59,767 when another danger is spotted lurking nearby. 203 00:12:59,800 --> 00:13:04,167 Could there be more to this extraordinary event than meets the eye? 204 00:13:06,767 --> 00:13:11,067 [Jeremy] September 14th, 2017. 205 00:13:11,100 --> 00:13:14,633 In the spectacular waters of Rarotonga in the Cook Islands, 206 00:13:14,667 --> 00:13:18,567 an extraordinary confrontation is about to take place. 207 00:13:20,067 --> 00:13:22,333 Marine biologist, Nan Hauser, 208 00:13:22,367 --> 00:13:26,067 is snorkeling in crystal clear water, 209 00:13:26,100 --> 00:13:30,367 when she spots a 25-ton humpback whale. 210 00:13:30,400 --> 00:13:32,967 Thrilled by this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, 211 00:13:33,067 --> 00:13:34,900 she starts filming. 212 00:13:34,933 --> 00:13:39,066 But, her initial excitement turns to fear. 213 00:13:39,067 --> 00:13:42,933 The enormous creature pushes her with its head and mouth. 214 00:13:42,967 --> 00:13:45,867 Then it pulls her under its pectoral fin 215 00:13:45,900 --> 00:13:47,967 and throws her out of the water. 216 00:13:53,100 --> 00:13:56,133 This woman must have been absolutely terrified 217 00:13:56,167 --> 00:14:00,867 to be scooped up by a multi-ton wild animal in the ocean. 218 00:14:00,900 --> 00:14:05,700 [Jeremy] The seemingly aggressive ordeal lasts ten minutes. 219 00:14:05,733 --> 00:14:10,200 At first, she thinks that the humpback whale is trying to attack her. 220 00:14:11,533 --> 00:14:13,867 [Jeremy] But as the marine biologist recovers, 221 00:14:13,900 --> 00:14:16,833 she notices something more dangerous in the water. 222 00:14:19,600 --> 00:14:21,133 [Michael] When she gets close to the boat 223 00:14:21,167 --> 00:14:23,733 and all her colleagues are telling her... 224 00:14:23,767 --> 00:14:25,767 [man speaking] 225 00:14:25,800 --> 00:14:31,300 It kind of changes the context in what that battering or that movement meant. 226 00:14:32,967 --> 00:14:37,100 [Jeremy] Has the whale just saved Nan Hauser from a shark attack? 227 00:14:39,133 --> 00:14:42,800 If so, could this be the first instance ever recorded 228 00:14:42,833 --> 00:14:46,133 of a humpback whale protecting a human? 229 00:14:55,567 --> 00:14:57,667 [Jeremy] This remarkable footage shows 230 00:14:57,700 --> 00:15:00,767 the heart-stopping moment when a marine biologist 231 00:15:00,800 --> 00:15:04,433 comes face to face with a humpback whale. 232 00:15:05,833 --> 00:15:07,867 I guess the most outrageous day 233 00:15:07,900 --> 00:15:12,533 I've ever had and it was quite frightening. 234 00:15:12,567 --> 00:15:14,066 I mean, he's huge and your... 235 00:15:14,067 --> 00:15:17,333 your organs will rupture, your bones will break, 236 00:15:17,367 --> 00:15:18,567 but they see something. 237 00:15:18,600 --> 00:15:21,067 And I looked and I went... [gasps] 238 00:15:21,100 --> 00:15:25,167 "That's the most... huge, 239 00:15:25,200 --> 00:15:28,500 incredible tiger shark I've ever seen." 240 00:15:28,533 --> 00:15:33,066 And just at that moment, the whale was protecting me from the shark. 241 00:15:33,067 --> 00:15:35,967 You've been studying humpback whales for three decades. 242 00:15:36,067 --> 00:15:41,367 Have you ever heard stories of humpbacks protecting humans like this? 243 00:15:41,400 --> 00:15:45,833 I work with a lot of people that study humpback whales underwater, 244 00:15:45,867 --> 00:15:47,833 and this has never happened before 245 00:15:47,867 --> 00:15:50,800 or nor has it been reported to us. 246 00:15:50,833 --> 00:15:54,500 [Jeremy] This humpback's behavior is baffling scientists. 247 00:15:54,533 --> 00:15:58,900 Is this whale really trying to protect Nan Hauser? 248 00:15:58,933 --> 00:16:01,700 Can other marine mammal encounters help 249 00:16:01,733 --> 00:16:03,767 explain this rare event? 250 00:16:05,267 --> 00:16:08,833 Dolphins have been known to surround swimmers 251 00:16:08,867 --> 00:16:13,100 or surfers who have gone astray and protect them from sharks. 252 00:16:14,333 --> 00:16:16,567 [Jeremy] And it seems it's not only dolphins 253 00:16:16,600 --> 00:16:19,700 who have donned their heroic capes. 254 00:16:19,733 --> 00:16:25,333 This incredible photo shows another whale species coming to the aid of free diver, 255 00:16:25,367 --> 00:16:26,933 Yang Yun. 256 00:16:26,967 --> 00:16:28,633 [Lisa] Her legs become paralyzed 257 00:16:28,667 --> 00:16:30,600 and she cannot reach the surface. 258 00:16:30,633 --> 00:16:33,167 Just then, a beluga whale swims up 259 00:16:33,200 --> 00:16:37,300 and uses her mouth to gently guide the free diver to the surface. 260 00:16:37,333 --> 00:16:39,267 In essence, saving her life. 261 00:16:41,633 --> 00:16:44,567 [Jeremy] But, an incident in Australia in 2020 262 00:16:44,600 --> 00:16:46,767 gives a very different perspective 263 00:16:46,800 --> 00:16:51,900 into the behavior of the humpback that Nan Hauser encountered. 264 00:16:51,933 --> 00:16:55,667 Two women appear to have been attacked by a humpback. 265 00:16:57,667 --> 00:17:01,900 Both snorkelers were injured by a whale's tail. 266 00:17:01,933 --> 00:17:05,067 [newsreader] Fracturing a rib and causing internal bleeding. 267 00:17:06,200 --> 00:17:07,667 [Dijanna] The humpback whale 268 00:17:07,700 --> 00:17:10,967 is much, much larger than these small human beings in the water, 269 00:17:11,067 --> 00:17:13,867 and you could potentially get injured. 270 00:17:13,900 --> 00:17:16,667 [Jeremy] One snorkeler is left in a serious condition 271 00:17:16,700 --> 00:17:19,900 after being hit by a humpback's fin. 272 00:17:19,933 --> 00:17:22,367 The aggression is shocking. 273 00:17:22,400 --> 00:17:25,500 But, this case does offer a critical clue to help 274 00:17:25,533 --> 00:17:29,067 understand such threatening behavior. 275 00:17:29,100 --> 00:17:33,300 [Dijanna] In terms of trying to explain why these women 276 00:17:33,333 --> 00:17:35,300 might have been injured by this whale, 277 00:17:35,333 --> 00:17:37,267 the whale was with a calf. 278 00:17:38,833 --> 00:17:39,933 [Rob] In that case, 279 00:17:39,967 --> 00:17:42,400 it looks very much like the mother humpback whale 280 00:17:42,433 --> 00:17:46,333 was protecting her young from the snorkelers. 281 00:17:48,167 --> 00:17:49,900 [Jeremy] This shows that humpbacks 282 00:17:49,933 --> 00:17:52,867 are at least capable of protecting their own. 283 00:17:54,067 --> 00:17:55,733 So, is Nan Hauser, 284 00:17:55,767 --> 00:17:57,633 like the snorkelers in Australia, 285 00:17:57,667 --> 00:18:00,200 a victim of a vicious attack? 286 00:18:01,700 --> 00:18:04,267 Was this the activity of a mother whale 287 00:18:04,300 --> 00:18:06,600 trying to protect its calf? 288 00:18:06,633 --> 00:18:11,967 There was another whale that was tail slapping and swishing the shark. 289 00:18:12,067 --> 00:18:14,833 And was this second whale a calf? 290 00:18:14,867 --> 00:18:16,066 This was not the case. 291 00:18:16,067 --> 00:18:17,467 There was not a calf anywhere around. 292 00:18:17,500 --> 00:18:20,200 There were two grown adults. 293 00:18:20,233 --> 00:18:23,433 [Dijanna] Turns out that these particular whales were not female. 294 00:18:23,467 --> 00:18:26,367 That kind of rules out that idea. 295 00:18:26,400 --> 00:18:30,400 So, what other information do we have that will help us 296 00:18:30,433 --> 00:18:32,700 better understand what happened? 297 00:18:34,367 --> 00:18:38,300 [Jeremy] Humpbacks are highly protective of their offspring. 298 00:18:38,333 --> 00:18:40,167 But is it possible their caring 299 00:18:40,200 --> 00:18:43,533 capabilities reach beyond their calves? 300 00:18:44,600 --> 00:18:46,100 Over five decades, 301 00:18:46,133 --> 00:18:49,867 scientists in the US have recorded more than 100 cases 302 00:18:49,900 --> 00:18:52,133 of humpbacks disrupting attacks 303 00:18:52,167 --> 00:18:57,167 carried out by their number one enemy, orcas. 304 00:18:58,800 --> 00:19:01,433 [Rob] Orcas are known as killer whales, 305 00:19:01,467 --> 00:19:03,467 and there's a reason for that. 306 00:19:03,500 --> 00:19:05,633 They are the top of their food chain, 307 00:19:05,667 --> 00:19:08,433 which includes humpback calves. 308 00:19:08,467 --> 00:19:11,700 [Jeremy] It's natural for humpbacks to go into protection mode 309 00:19:11,733 --> 00:19:14,300 when an orca gets close to their young. 310 00:19:16,333 --> 00:19:22,333 But, scientists recording orca hunting behavior make a bombshell discovery. 311 00:19:22,367 --> 00:19:25,167 This extraordinary photograph shows humpbacks 312 00:19:25,200 --> 00:19:27,233 coming to the rescue of a sea lion 313 00:19:27,267 --> 00:19:29,967 about to be attacked by orcas. 314 00:19:30,067 --> 00:19:33,067 It defies popular and scientific belief. 315 00:19:34,300 --> 00:19:36,067 [Dijanna] I'm kind of surprised about it, 316 00:19:36,100 --> 00:19:39,200 'cause you would think, naturally, 317 00:19:39,233 --> 00:19:41,733 the whale must be protecting its own interest. 318 00:19:41,767 --> 00:19:43,267 But in this case, 319 00:19:43,300 --> 00:19:49,100 the whale is may be protecting individuals outside of their own species. 320 00:19:49,133 --> 00:19:51,533 [Jeremy] To witness one animal saving another 321 00:19:51,567 --> 00:19:54,533 from a different species is incredibly rare. 322 00:19:55,567 --> 00:19:57,433 And this could be the crucial evidence 323 00:19:57,467 --> 00:19:59,633 that supports Nan Hauser's claim 324 00:19:59,667 --> 00:20:01,767 that she was saved by a humpback. 325 00:20:02,967 --> 00:20:06,233 It shows that humpback whales could be compassionate, 326 00:20:06,267 --> 00:20:08,867 altruistic creatures. 327 00:20:08,900 --> 00:20:10,767 [Rob] Altruism is when somebody 328 00:20:10,800 --> 00:20:14,167 does something selfless for somebody else, 329 00:20:14,200 --> 00:20:16,200 not expecting anything in return. 330 00:20:17,500 --> 00:20:19,600 [Lisa] So, now we see humpback whales 331 00:20:19,633 --> 00:20:23,933 putting themselves at risk to protect creatures that are more vulnerable, 332 00:20:23,967 --> 00:20:25,367 just as a human might do. 333 00:20:27,000 --> 00:20:30,100 [Jeremy] Nan Hauser's unprecedented humpback incident 334 00:20:30,133 --> 00:20:33,400 has left scientists stumped, 335 00:20:33,433 --> 00:20:37,800 but, she will never forget that remarkable day in Rarotonga. 336 00:20:39,633 --> 00:20:43,400 What was so amazing about the encounter is that 337 00:20:44,867 --> 00:20:46,233 if someone had told me this story, 338 00:20:46,267 --> 00:20:47,967 I never would have believed it. 339 00:20:48,000 --> 00:20:49,033 I'm serious. 340 00:20:49,067 --> 00:20:52,067 I had to sort of doubt myself, 341 00:20:52,100 --> 00:20:56,300 but this was something that you could never expect, 342 00:20:56,333 --> 00:20:57,700 ever, ever expect. 343 00:20:57,733 --> 00:21:03,200 So, today, I still think about it and I just start to get... 344 00:21:03,233 --> 00:21:05,633 tears in my eyes. 345 00:21:17,833 --> 00:21:19,800 Billions of dollars worth of treasure 346 00:21:19,833 --> 00:21:25,133 from Biblical times to only yesterday is buried deep in the ocean, 347 00:21:25,167 --> 00:21:27,300 but the vastness of the seafloor means 348 00:21:27,333 --> 00:21:31,667 the chances of finding any are slim to none. 349 00:21:31,700 --> 00:21:35,267 So a group of divers in Israel can't believe their luck 350 00:21:35,300 --> 00:21:37,733 when they stumble across gold that the sea 351 00:21:37,767 --> 00:21:40,300 has been hiding for centuries. 352 00:21:40,333 --> 00:21:42,933 Not only is it ancient and priceless, 353 00:21:42,967 --> 00:21:46,367 it's also one of the biggest treasure troves ever discovered 354 00:21:46,400 --> 00:21:48,633 in the Mediterranean Sea. 355 00:21:48,667 --> 00:21:51,067 How did it survive for so long? 356 00:21:54,067 --> 00:21:58,800 [Jeremy] 2015, diver Zvika Fayer, 357 00:21:58,833 --> 00:22:01,700 and his friends are swimming among the sunken remains 358 00:22:01,733 --> 00:22:06,167 of an ancient harbor off the coast of Caesarea in Israel, 359 00:22:06,200 --> 00:22:09,600 when they see something glinting on the seabed. 360 00:22:09,633 --> 00:22:13,800 At first, they think it's some sort of fake coin. 361 00:22:13,833 --> 00:22:18,233 You can imagine the first thought is that it can't be real, 362 00:22:18,267 --> 00:22:22,767 it must be some sort of toy. 363 00:22:22,800 --> 00:22:25,633 [Jeremy] But they couldn't be more wrong. 364 00:22:25,667 --> 00:22:28,066 As the divers sweep the sand away 365 00:22:28,067 --> 00:22:30,700 and pick up the tiny pieces of glinting metal, 366 00:22:30,733 --> 00:22:32,333 they are astonished to discover 367 00:22:32,367 --> 00:22:34,833 that this is no fake coin. 368 00:22:35,567 --> 00:22:37,700 This is real gold. 369 00:22:39,133 --> 00:22:41,467 What they discovered was absolutely incredible. 370 00:22:42,600 --> 00:22:45,533 [Jeremy] The divers don't just find a single coin, 371 00:22:45,567 --> 00:22:47,767 there are more of them. 372 00:22:47,800 --> 00:22:51,667 They have a treasure trove in the palm of their hands. 373 00:22:52,633 --> 00:22:55,700 They have literally struck gold. 374 00:22:55,733 --> 00:22:59,667 And they immediately alert the Israel Antiquities Authority. 375 00:22:59,700 --> 00:23:03,467 The divers do absolutely the right thing. 376 00:23:03,500 --> 00:23:04,767 It doesn't belong to them. 377 00:23:04,800 --> 00:23:05,767 They can't keep it. 378 00:23:07,100 --> 00:23:08,667 [Jeremy] Armed with metal detectors, 379 00:23:08,700 --> 00:23:11,800 the divers lead the archeologists to the site, 380 00:23:11,833 --> 00:23:13,700 a thousand feet from the shore. 381 00:23:15,433 --> 00:23:18,333 What they discover next is mind-blowing. 382 00:23:20,667 --> 00:23:25,400 Around 2,650 gold coins were discovered here. 383 00:23:25,433 --> 00:23:27,667 [Rob] There was no silver. There was no bronze. 384 00:23:27,700 --> 00:23:30,867 It's more than 16 pounds of gold. 385 00:23:32,133 --> 00:23:34,833 [Lisa] Making it the largest sum of gold coins 386 00:23:34,867 --> 00:23:37,800 ever discovered in Israeli coastal waters 387 00:23:37,833 --> 00:23:39,500 and perhaps the greatest treasure 388 00:23:39,533 --> 00:23:42,733 ever discovered in the Mediterranean. 389 00:23:42,767 --> 00:23:44,067 [Rob] The mystery is, 390 00:23:44,100 --> 00:23:47,300 how did such a large amount of gold coins 391 00:23:47,333 --> 00:23:50,300 end up in one spot on the seafloor? 392 00:23:51,100 --> 00:23:52,467 Where are they from? 393 00:23:52,500 --> 00:23:53,767 What their purpose was? 394 00:23:53,800 --> 00:23:55,167 How much they're worth? 395 00:23:55,200 --> 00:23:57,400 [Jeremy] Archeologists pull out all the stops 396 00:23:57,433 --> 00:24:01,066 in their attempt to solve the mystery of this massive treasure, 397 00:24:01,067 --> 00:24:03,500 and new clues are about to bring to light 398 00:24:03,533 --> 00:24:07,500 a shocking revelation about Caesarea's past. 399 00:24:17,133 --> 00:24:19,967 [Jeremy] Forensic investigators face a mammoth task 400 00:24:20,067 --> 00:24:26,667 identifying over 2,600 gold coins found off the coast of Israel. 401 00:24:26,700 --> 00:24:29,900 Fortunately, the ocean has immaculately preserved them, 402 00:24:29,933 --> 00:24:34,267 and they are as pristine as the day they landed on the seafloor. 403 00:24:34,300 --> 00:24:40,200 But can details imprinted on the coins give up the treasure's secrets? 404 00:24:40,233 --> 00:24:43,700 Clues to a coin's origin can often be found in images, 405 00:24:43,733 --> 00:24:47,400 but there are no illustrations on this currency. 406 00:24:47,433 --> 00:24:50,633 These are Arabic coins. They have just Arabic writing. 407 00:24:50,667 --> 00:24:53,900 So, the representation of human beings and rulers, 408 00:24:53,933 --> 00:24:55,067 you just don't have those, 409 00:24:55,100 --> 00:24:57,067 'cause that's part of that religion. 410 00:24:58,533 --> 00:24:59,900 [Jeremy] They do, however, 411 00:25:00,067 --> 00:25:04,800 feature names of Islamic rulers and words from the Quran. 412 00:25:04,833 --> 00:25:07,533 [Lisa] Fortunately, we can study the Arabic writing, 413 00:25:07,567 --> 00:25:10,867 and that can give us an indication of the date of the coins. 414 00:25:12,667 --> 00:25:16,066 [Jeremy] The text reveals the coins are gold dinars, 415 00:25:16,067 --> 00:25:20,433 an Islamic currency used in medieval times. 416 00:25:20,467 --> 00:25:27,100 And the dates on the coins span a very specific period of 220 years. 417 00:25:27,133 --> 00:25:29,333 Scientists were able to pinpoint these coins 418 00:25:29,367 --> 00:25:32,100 from the 9th to the 11th century AD. 419 00:25:33,233 --> 00:25:36,066 [Jeremy] Can events in Caesarea in this period 420 00:25:36,067 --> 00:25:39,067 provide a clue to the origin of these coins? 421 00:25:40,933 --> 00:25:47,066 One theory as to why these coins maybe there is that in 1033, 422 00:25:47,067 --> 00:25:51,367 there was an earthquake and a subsequent tsunami. 423 00:25:51,400 --> 00:25:56,567 [Jeremy] The gold coins could have been washed out to sea by a massive wave. 424 00:25:58,967 --> 00:26:01,333 A great tsunami with such strength 425 00:26:01,367 --> 00:26:05,633 that it pulls the massive stone blocks into the seafloor. 426 00:26:05,667 --> 00:26:07,400 If you dive on Caesarea today, 427 00:26:07,433 --> 00:26:12,066 you can still see the remains strewn out all over the seafloor. 428 00:26:12,067 --> 00:26:17,200 And that tells us that actually things could be moved around. 429 00:26:17,233 --> 00:26:18,300 So, potentially, 430 00:26:18,333 --> 00:26:21,067 this is what has happened to the gold coins. 431 00:26:22,967 --> 00:26:26,900 [Jeremy] But analysis of all the coins casts doubt on this theory. 432 00:26:28,133 --> 00:26:31,833 [Rob] Studying the dates imprinted on the coins shows 433 00:26:31,867 --> 00:26:35,300 that at least 12 of them were dated a year 434 00:26:35,333 --> 00:26:37,733 after the tsunami hit the coast. 435 00:26:37,767 --> 00:26:41,367 This disproves the tsunami theory. 436 00:26:41,400 --> 00:26:45,967 [Jeremy] So, the coins were not swept into the sea by a tsunami. 437 00:26:46,067 --> 00:26:51,767 However, the dates give the investigation team another vital clue. 438 00:26:51,800 --> 00:26:58,233 The coins all date to a period when the area was ruled by the Fatimid dynasty, 439 00:26:58,267 --> 00:27:01,600 whose empire dominated North Africa and the Middle East. 440 00:27:03,533 --> 00:27:07,300 This was an extremely wealthy and opulent dynasty, 441 00:27:07,333 --> 00:27:10,867 hinting that these coins could be incredibly valuable. 442 00:27:12,800 --> 00:27:14,400 Following this new lead, 443 00:27:14,433 --> 00:27:18,967 investigators set out to examine the purity of the gold. 444 00:27:19,067 --> 00:27:21,500 [Lisa] One technique of analyzing metal artifacts, 445 00:27:21,533 --> 00:27:24,100 we call X-ray fluorescence. 446 00:27:24,133 --> 00:27:26,500 The machine itself basically looks like a gun, 447 00:27:26,533 --> 00:27:29,067 and it shoots back spectra that tell you 448 00:27:29,100 --> 00:27:32,467 the elemental composition of the metal artifact. 449 00:27:32,500 --> 00:27:38,900 [Jeremy] X-ray fluorescence analysis confirms that these gold coins are 24 karat. 450 00:27:38,933 --> 00:27:41,067 The purest gold possible. 451 00:27:42,333 --> 00:27:45,066 [Lisa] These coins are basically priceless. 452 00:27:45,067 --> 00:27:47,167 We're not talking about day-to-day money 453 00:27:47,200 --> 00:27:49,767 that someone would have had in their pocket. 454 00:27:49,800 --> 00:27:52,700 [Jeremy] As the investigators pieced together the evidence, 455 00:27:52,733 --> 00:27:58,467 another unexpected mystery emerges surrounding the historical port city, 456 00:27:58,500 --> 00:28:00,800 where the coins are found. 457 00:28:00,833 --> 00:28:03,167 [Lisa] Caesarea was a very important port 458 00:28:03,200 --> 00:28:08,900 since its founding in the 1st century BC by King Herod the Great. 459 00:28:08,933 --> 00:28:10,567 [Jeremy] But, in the 7th century, 460 00:28:10,600 --> 00:28:14,567 Roman Caesarea falls to Muslim invaders. 461 00:28:14,600 --> 00:28:16,233 Its importance declines, 462 00:28:16,267 --> 00:28:19,900 and it eventually disappears from the history books. 463 00:28:19,933 --> 00:28:21,600 [Peter] It's believed that Caesarea fades 464 00:28:21,633 --> 00:28:25,333 from glory and becomes a fishing village until the 19th century. 465 00:28:25,367 --> 00:28:28,433 [Jeremy] But, the treasure is so incredibly valuable, 466 00:28:28,467 --> 00:28:30,867 the history books must be missing something. 467 00:28:32,067 --> 00:28:35,900 The 2,668 pure gold coins 468 00:28:35,933 --> 00:28:39,700 suggest that far from being a remote rural backwater, 469 00:28:39,733 --> 00:28:44,867 Caesarea continues to be a major busy port under the new Islamic rule. 470 00:28:46,733 --> 00:28:51,500 And now, investigators believe the hoard was probably lost in an accident 471 00:28:51,533 --> 00:28:55,800 on one of the many ships sailing in or out of the port. 472 00:28:57,233 --> 00:29:02,900 The Arabic text on the coins reveals another exciting clue. 473 00:29:02,933 --> 00:29:06,867 [Rob] The coins showed that they weren't minted locally in Caesarea. 474 00:29:06,900 --> 00:29:12,833 So, chances are very likely that these coins were being imported for some purpose. 475 00:29:12,867 --> 00:29:14,367 The question is, 476 00:29:14,400 --> 00:29:16,567 why were these coins being brought there? 477 00:29:17,967 --> 00:29:20,300 [Jeremy] It's likely the coins were transported 478 00:29:20,333 --> 00:29:25,233 into Caesarea from the Fatimid Empire's capital in Cairo, Egypt. 479 00:29:26,733 --> 00:29:28,233 As for the reason, 480 00:29:28,267 --> 00:29:30,067 the coins could have played a part 481 00:29:30,100 --> 00:29:33,967 in one of the bloodiest conflicts of medieval times. 482 00:29:44,300 --> 00:29:46,467 [Jeremy] A devastating religious war 483 00:29:46,500 --> 00:29:50,067 that shakes Caesarea to its foundations could tell us 484 00:29:50,100 --> 00:29:52,633 how a hoard of priceless gold coins 485 00:29:52,667 --> 00:29:55,367 ended up on the Mediterranean seafloor. 486 00:29:57,100 --> 00:30:00,267 [Peter] The First Crusade was launched by Pope Urban II 487 00:30:00,300 --> 00:30:03,200 as a military campaign to recapture the Holy Land 488 00:30:03,233 --> 00:30:06,167 for Christendom from Muslim forces. 489 00:30:06,200 --> 00:30:09,700 It was an incredibly bloody and violent conflict. 490 00:30:09,733 --> 00:30:13,533 A strong military garrison was based in Caesarea to protect it 491 00:30:13,567 --> 00:30:16,267 and the area around it. 492 00:30:16,300 --> 00:30:22,100 Another theory is that this treasure of coins was meant to pay their salaries. 493 00:30:22,133 --> 00:30:25,500 [Jeremy] But does the timing of this violent uprising fit 494 00:30:25,533 --> 00:30:27,533 the dates written on the treasure? 495 00:30:29,633 --> 00:30:33,767 The city of Caesarea was destroyed in 1101 by the Crusaders, 496 00:30:34,600 --> 00:30:37,767 and this dates quite interestingly 497 00:30:37,800 --> 00:30:44,067 towards the end of the time when that gold collection was put together. 498 00:30:44,100 --> 00:30:45,600 [Jeremy] With matching dates, 499 00:30:45,633 --> 00:30:49,300 experts can now link the coins to this brutal massacre 500 00:30:49,333 --> 00:30:53,133 that kills most of Caesarea's citizens. 501 00:30:53,167 --> 00:30:55,567 [Peter] You could imagine that as the Christians swept through the country, 502 00:30:55,600 --> 00:30:57,667 the people in the city would have been terrified. 503 00:30:59,300 --> 00:31:01,633 [Jeremy] Amidst utter panic and chaos, 504 00:31:01,667 --> 00:31:05,133 could someone have thrown the hoard into the sea to protect it 505 00:31:05,167 --> 00:31:06,967 from the Christian Crusaders? 506 00:31:08,833 --> 00:31:12,100 The gold coins could be a silent witness 507 00:31:12,133 --> 00:31:17,066 to one of Caesarea's most dramatic and grisly events. 508 00:31:17,067 --> 00:31:18,833 We will never know for sure. 509 00:31:20,767 --> 00:31:24,167 The mystery of where this priceless hoard came from 510 00:31:24,200 --> 00:31:27,867 and how it ended up on the seabed may never be solved. 511 00:31:27,900 --> 00:31:30,367 But its discovery is a dramatic reminder 512 00:31:30,400 --> 00:31:34,433 to archeologists of the enduring promise of the sea 513 00:31:34,467 --> 00:31:37,867 as a hiding place for clues to our past. 514 00:31:46,500 --> 00:31:51,100 Modern-day pirates steal millions of tons of fish a year 515 00:31:51,133 --> 00:31:54,066 in a sophisticated and lucrative enterprise 516 00:31:54,067 --> 00:31:58,600 worth an estimated $23 billion. 517 00:31:58,633 --> 00:32:02,233 One illegal fishing vessel with ties to organized crime 518 00:32:02,267 --> 00:32:06,433 is believed to have been secretly plundering our oceans for ten years, 519 00:32:06,467 --> 00:32:10,300 making it one of the most wanted pirate ships in the world. 520 00:32:10,333 --> 00:32:12,967 It's a relentless game of cat and mouse 521 00:32:13,067 --> 00:32:16,067 between ocean authorities around the globe 522 00:32:16,100 --> 00:32:20,067 and this elusive outlaw of the high seas. 523 00:32:26,567 --> 00:32:30,933 [Jeremy] 2018, off the coast of Madagascar, 524 00:32:30,967 --> 00:32:34,900 a dramatic high speed chase is taking place. 525 00:32:34,933 --> 00:32:37,833 A custom-built high-tech pirate-hunter 526 00:32:37,867 --> 00:32:42,867 named the Ocean Warrior is chasing a notorious illegal fishing boat, 527 00:32:42,900 --> 00:32:45,167 the STS-50. 528 00:32:45,200 --> 00:32:47,467 [Peter] This chase has been going on for days. 529 00:32:47,500 --> 00:32:49,967 It's like something you see in a movie. 530 00:32:50,067 --> 00:32:53,900 [Jeremy] But, after a near 1,000-mile chase across the Indian Ocean, 531 00:32:53,933 --> 00:32:56,700 the Ocean Warrior is running low on fuel. 532 00:32:57,967 --> 00:33:02,433 Captain makes an agonizing decision to turn back 533 00:33:02,467 --> 00:33:05,433 and lets the modern-day pirate ship go. 534 00:33:07,933 --> 00:33:10,600 This is not the first time this dangerous, 535 00:33:10,633 --> 00:33:14,400 threatening fugitive has escaped the clutches of the law. 536 00:33:15,733 --> 00:33:20,800 The STS-50 is one of the world's most wanted ships. 537 00:33:20,833 --> 00:33:25,400 The STS-50 has slipped through authority's fingers several times. 538 00:33:26,867 --> 00:33:29,933 Twelve nations and Interpol are trying to catch this vessel. 539 00:33:31,567 --> 00:33:35,067 [Jeremy] How has this elusive ship managed to operate secretly 540 00:33:35,100 --> 00:33:38,833 for a decade and repeatedly escape capture? 541 00:33:40,833 --> 00:33:43,467 Two years earlier, 2016, 542 00:33:44,933 --> 00:33:48,333 at this point, the ship that later became the STS-50 543 00:33:48,367 --> 00:33:50,733 is sailing under a different name, 544 00:33:50,767 --> 00:33:52,267 The Andrey Dolgov. 545 00:33:54,200 --> 00:33:56,767 The vessel docks in a port in Africa. 546 00:33:58,633 --> 00:34:01,767 [Michael] The Andrey Dolgov has its hull filled with fish. 547 00:34:01,800 --> 00:34:05,500 It attempts to offload in Namibia. 548 00:34:05,533 --> 00:34:09,667 [Peter] It's carrying 125 tons of Antarctic toothfish, 549 00:34:09,700 --> 00:34:13,267 worth $3.6 million. 550 00:34:13,300 --> 00:34:16,967 [Jeremy] The toothfish is the fish of choice for many pirates. 551 00:34:19,067 --> 00:34:20,833 [Rob] They're big here in North America. 552 00:34:20,867 --> 00:34:24,300 You go into any grocery store and you can buy Chilean seabass, 553 00:34:24,333 --> 00:34:25,700 which is toothfish. 554 00:34:25,733 --> 00:34:28,100 And it's often referred to as white gold 555 00:34:28,133 --> 00:34:30,500 because it's so valuable. 556 00:34:30,533 --> 00:34:32,433 [Jeremy] But, how do the Andrey Dolgov 557 00:34:32,467 --> 00:34:34,967 and other pirate vessels manage to loot 558 00:34:35,067 --> 00:34:38,400 such a staggering volume of toothfish? 559 00:34:38,433 --> 00:34:42,200 They use a variety of modern technologies to locate fish, 560 00:34:42,233 --> 00:34:44,066 such as sonar, 561 00:34:44,067 --> 00:34:47,067 and they have industrial size machinery 562 00:34:47,100 --> 00:34:49,500 to operate illegal fishing nets. 563 00:34:50,933 --> 00:34:54,500 [Jeremy] The Andrey Dolgov is carrying 600 illegal nets, 564 00:34:54,533 --> 00:34:58,633 stretching out a staggering 18 miles. 565 00:34:58,667 --> 00:35:02,733 These huge nets are known as "Curtains of death." 566 00:35:02,767 --> 00:35:05,800 [Beverly] They destroy all the life on the bottom of the sea, 567 00:35:05,833 --> 00:35:08,633 and they catch anything that's in its way. 568 00:35:10,700 --> 00:35:11,767 [Jeremy] In Namibia, 569 00:35:11,800 --> 00:35:14,233 with a jaw-dropping amount of toothfish, 570 00:35:14,267 --> 00:35:18,933 The Andrey Dolgov is attracting unwanted attention, 571 00:35:18,967 --> 00:35:23,100 and the ship is reported to international authorities. 572 00:35:23,133 --> 00:35:26,700 But, it moves on and continues to pillage the oceans. 573 00:35:29,167 --> 00:35:30,767 Then two months later, 574 00:35:30,800 --> 00:35:34,867 it's caught offloading toothfish in China. 575 00:35:34,900 --> 00:35:38,900 Chinese authorities investigate the vessel's documents. 576 00:35:38,933 --> 00:35:43,233 They discover that the Andrey Dolgov's registration is forged. 577 00:35:47,400 --> 00:35:49,633 [Rob] But before anyone can take further action, 578 00:35:49,667 --> 00:35:51,067 the ship is gone. 579 00:35:52,233 --> 00:35:55,067 Evading capture once again. 580 00:35:55,100 --> 00:35:59,800 [Jeremy] Several countries are now trying to hunt down the Andrey Dolgov, 581 00:35:59,833 --> 00:36:03,233 desperate to crack its mysterious ways of operating. 582 00:36:04,367 --> 00:36:05,767 [Lisa] New methods are constantly 583 00:36:05,800 --> 00:36:09,833 being developed to try to tackle the issue of illegal fishing. 584 00:36:09,867 --> 00:36:12,800 Satellite technology grows every day. 585 00:36:12,833 --> 00:36:15,733 [Jeremy] Commercial vessels over 65 feet long 586 00:36:15,767 --> 00:36:20,066 are legally required to carry AIS tracking transponders, 587 00:36:20,067 --> 00:36:23,500 which beam location data to satellites. 588 00:36:23,533 --> 00:36:25,833 [Michael] Basically, that sends out a signal, 589 00:36:25,867 --> 00:36:30,100 gives your vessel's name, so you can be tracked. 590 00:36:31,167 --> 00:36:32,900 Even with all the technology, 591 00:36:32,933 --> 00:36:37,800 it's still incredibly hard to find single ships in the middle of the ocean. 592 00:36:39,433 --> 00:36:41,133 [Jeremy] Tracking the Andrey Dolgov 593 00:36:41,167 --> 00:36:43,067 becomes even more difficult when, 594 00:36:43,100 --> 00:36:47,567 in 2018, it changes its name to STS-50. 595 00:36:49,567 --> 00:36:53,467 One of its first stops as STS-50 is Mozambique. 596 00:36:55,067 --> 00:36:58,400 A vigilant port inspector immediately recognizes it 597 00:36:58,433 --> 00:37:01,500 as one of the world's most wanted ships. 598 00:37:01,533 --> 00:37:06,300 Is the net finally closing in on this notorious pirate vessel? 599 00:37:15,067 --> 00:37:20,533 Illegal pirate ship STS-50 has been operating secretly for years, 600 00:37:20,567 --> 00:37:23,233 but will a massive international effort 601 00:37:23,267 --> 00:37:25,833 bring its reign of terror to an end? 602 00:37:29,267 --> 00:37:34,100 The STS-50 is detained by authorities in Mozambique. 603 00:37:34,133 --> 00:37:37,133 Will its secrets at last be revealed? 604 00:37:39,067 --> 00:37:40,833 [Alexander] They seize the crew's passports 605 00:37:40,867 --> 00:37:43,367 and took the first mate ashore for questioning. 606 00:37:43,400 --> 00:37:47,767 He claims that the ship has an oil leak 607 00:37:47,800 --> 00:37:50,800 and so, they are allowed to anchor further out. 608 00:37:50,833 --> 00:37:53,167 The requirements are they have to radio in 609 00:37:53,200 --> 00:37:57,733 every two hours and they have to keep their tracking systems active. 610 00:37:57,767 --> 00:37:59,833 [Jeremy] But the calls stop coming. 611 00:38:01,267 --> 00:38:03,600 The ship turns off its transponder 612 00:38:03,633 --> 00:38:06,633 and leaves Mozambique without a trace. 613 00:38:07,867 --> 00:38:08,900 And can you believe it, 614 00:38:08,933 --> 00:38:11,133 this vessel has managed to escape again. 615 00:38:12,867 --> 00:38:14,467 [Jeremy] It's a shocking move. 616 00:38:16,067 --> 00:38:18,100 Navigating without GPS, 617 00:38:18,133 --> 00:38:21,267 it becomes what's known as a dark vessel, 618 00:38:21,300 --> 00:38:24,400 a common pirate ship MO. 619 00:38:24,433 --> 00:38:27,367 Authorities now need to up their game 620 00:38:27,400 --> 00:38:31,167 if they're going to catch the STS-50. 621 00:38:31,200 --> 00:38:33,600 After it escapes from Mozambique, 622 00:38:33,633 --> 00:38:37,433 a passing satellite spots this elusive outlaw. 623 00:38:37,467 --> 00:38:42,133 Interpol summons specialist patrol vessels to finally take it down. 624 00:38:42,167 --> 00:38:44,100 [Peter] One is the Ocean Warrior. 625 00:38:44,133 --> 00:38:46,067 It manages to capture drone footage. 626 00:38:47,733 --> 00:38:49,433 [Jeremy] The Ocean Warrior circulates 627 00:38:49,467 --> 00:38:51,733 the footage to nearby authorities, 628 00:38:51,767 --> 00:38:55,600 and the STS-50 is back on their radar. 629 00:38:55,633 --> 00:38:57,333 Its days are numbered. 630 00:38:59,233 --> 00:39:03,133 Indonesian authorities finally catch up with it and capture the vessel. 631 00:39:05,067 --> 00:39:10,633 [Jeremy] The ship is seized along with 20 of its Russian and Indonesian crew, 632 00:39:10,667 --> 00:39:13,467 and its secrets are about to be exposed. 633 00:39:15,967 --> 00:39:17,967 A specialized forensics team 634 00:39:18,067 --> 00:39:21,900 pours over a wealth of intelligence found on the ship, 635 00:39:21,933 --> 00:39:25,767 and the evidence they unravel is dark and disturbing. 636 00:39:27,433 --> 00:39:29,967 [Alexander] They found links to organized crime in Europe. 637 00:39:30,067 --> 00:39:32,600 They found corrupt officials. 638 00:39:32,633 --> 00:39:34,867 We're not talking about local fishermen here, 639 00:39:34,900 --> 00:39:39,200 we're talking about a very powerful mafia-like criminal network. 640 00:39:39,233 --> 00:39:40,933 [Lisa] The vast majority of the crew 641 00:39:40,967 --> 00:39:43,400 were undocumented Indonesian fishermen, 642 00:39:43,433 --> 00:39:46,433 who had been forced to work without pay for years. 643 00:39:47,467 --> 00:39:49,467 [Jeremy] During a decade of piracy, 644 00:39:49,500 --> 00:39:55,500 the STS-50 looted an estimated $50 million worth of fish. 645 00:39:55,533 --> 00:39:57,300 How has it managed to get away 646 00:39:57,333 --> 00:40:00,100 with such heinous crimes for so long? 647 00:40:01,267 --> 00:40:04,533 Well, the STS-50 is a master of disguise. 648 00:40:05,800 --> 00:40:08,333 [Jeremy] Investigators discover this pirate ship 649 00:40:08,367 --> 00:40:12,367 has changed its name a total of six times 650 00:40:12,400 --> 00:40:16,367 and flown the flag of eight nations. 651 00:40:16,400 --> 00:40:20,767 Illegal fishing vessels all over the world operate in complete secrecy, 652 00:40:20,800 --> 00:40:22,933 generating billions of dollars. 653 00:40:23,633 --> 00:40:25,433 For the authorities, 654 00:40:25,467 --> 00:40:28,200 it's nearly impossible to keep track of them, 655 00:40:28,233 --> 00:40:33,800 but an iconic seabird could help to bring an end to this dark industry. 656 00:40:33,833 --> 00:40:35,633 [Dijanna] The albatross, 657 00:40:35,667 --> 00:40:40,133 these oceanic birds spend over 90% of their lives at sea. 658 00:40:42,433 --> 00:40:45,767 [Jeremy] Albatrosses tend to gather around fishing vessels. 659 00:40:45,800 --> 00:40:48,533 And in 2019, a team of scientists 660 00:40:48,567 --> 00:40:52,400 sets out to research their flocking patterns. 661 00:40:52,433 --> 00:40:59,033 They tag 170 birds with a specially designed GPS that logs their coordinates. 662 00:40:59,067 --> 00:41:00,633 Officials then cross-check 663 00:41:00,667 --> 00:41:03,667 this with a boat's radar position, 664 00:41:03,700 --> 00:41:06,200 but the data reveals something unexpected. 665 00:41:07,400 --> 00:41:09,200 Twenty-eight percent of the vessels 666 00:41:09,233 --> 00:41:13,167 the albatrosses flock around have their AIS switched off 667 00:41:13,200 --> 00:41:16,900 and are likely engaged in illegal activity. 668 00:41:16,933 --> 00:41:19,967 The albatross researchers get an idea. 669 00:41:20,067 --> 00:41:23,133 [Dijanna] Scientists have identified albatross 670 00:41:23,167 --> 00:41:27,833 as potentially being useful in tracking down illegal fishing. 671 00:41:29,100 --> 00:41:31,066 [Lisa] These giant seabirds implanted 672 00:41:31,067 --> 00:41:32,900 with radar tracking technology, 673 00:41:32,933 --> 00:41:34,800 when they dive into the shallow seas 674 00:41:34,833 --> 00:41:38,333 to get the fish that are being hauled behind these illegal pirate ships. 675 00:41:38,367 --> 00:41:40,933 The radars can show us where they are 676 00:41:40,967 --> 00:41:42,967 and when it happened. 677 00:41:43,067 --> 00:41:45,933 This new technology allows us to use albatrosses 678 00:41:45,967 --> 00:41:50,067 as a flying spy in our attempts to stop illegal fishermen. 679 00:41:53,800 --> 00:41:56,533 For years, these majestic seabirds 680 00:41:56,567 --> 00:42:00,066 have been the victims of pirate fishing nets, 681 00:42:00,067 --> 00:42:02,833 but now it's payback time, 682 00:42:02,867 --> 00:42:06,300 as they take us one step closer to bringing this secretive 683 00:42:06,333 --> 00:42:09,500 and destructive industry to an end. 58813

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