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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:06,720 --> 00:00:11,270 Our planet is full of astonishing natural wonders. 2 00:00:11,320 --> 00:00:12,590 Look at that! 3 00:00:14,840 --> 00:00:16,110 Oh! 4 00:00:16,160 --> 00:00:19,790 It has immense power. 5 00:00:21,320 --> 00:00:26,190 And yet, that's rarely mentioned in our history books. 6 00:00:28,080 --> 00:00:30,830 I'm here to change that. 7 00:00:34,680 --> 00:00:41,150 I'm looking at four ways that the power of the planet has shaped our history. 8 00:00:46,240 --> 00:00:48,910 The power of fire, 9 00:00:48,960 --> 00:00:53,190 the source of great technological breakthroughs. 10 00:00:56,040 --> 00:00:57,110 Water... 11 00:00:58,240 --> 00:01:01,550 Oh, my gosh! You're getting all wet there. 12 00:01:01,600 --> 00:01:06,230 ...our struggle to control it has directed human progress. 13 00:01:08,960 --> 00:01:11,550 The deep Earth... 14 00:01:11,600 --> 00:01:13,190 Blooming heck! That really is deep. 15 00:01:13,240 --> 00:01:18,270 ...that provided the raw materials for our conquest of the planet. 16 00:01:20,600 --> 00:01:24,150 But this time I'm looking at the power of the wind. 17 00:01:25,200 --> 00:01:27,230 For thousands of years, 18 00:01:27,280 --> 00:01:31,350 the wind has shaped the destiny of peoples across the globe. 19 00:01:31,400 --> 00:01:34,710 It has built fortunes and brought ruin. 20 00:01:34,760 --> 00:01:37,870 Even today, we're still at the mercy of the wind. 21 00:02:08,240 --> 00:02:11,070 People have exploited the wind for thousands of years, 22 00:02:11,120 --> 00:02:14,190 on land and, most of all, at sea. 23 00:02:19,280 --> 00:02:24,630 And to really experience its awesome force, this boat is the place to be. 24 00:02:32,240 --> 00:02:35,270 This is one of the fastest sailing boats ever built. 25 00:02:35,320 --> 00:02:38,150 It's capable of up to 50 miles an hour. 26 00:02:38,200 --> 00:02:39,990 And when you're down close to the water, 27 00:02:40,040 --> 00:02:42,670 you can really feel that phenomenal speed. 28 00:02:44,000 --> 00:02:47,950 But what makes this thing really special is when it starts to fly. 29 00:03:06,840 --> 00:03:08,190 Whoo! 30 00:03:11,520 --> 00:03:16,070 But the real key to this craft's phenomenal breakneck pace is up there. 31 00:03:16,120 --> 00:03:21,350 The sail. There's enough of it to actually cover a tennis court, 32 00:03:21,400 --> 00:03:24,270 every inch of it grabbing every bit of energy from the wind 33 00:03:24,320 --> 00:03:27,230 and converting it to pure power. 34 00:03:31,080 --> 00:03:35,030 This is the power of the wind, the atmosphere in motion, 35 00:03:35,080 --> 00:03:38,470 one of the most powerful and least understood forces on Earth. 36 00:03:44,480 --> 00:03:49,070 We tend to think of the wind as chaotic and difficult to predict. 37 00:03:49,120 --> 00:03:51,110 But when you look on a much bigger scale, 38 00:03:51,160 --> 00:03:53,470 at the global picture over time, 39 00:03:53,520 --> 00:03:55,990 a very different view emerges. 40 00:03:56,040 --> 00:03:58,230 Weather systems, and with them the winds, 41 00:03:58,280 --> 00:04:01,670 follow the same routes around the planet again and again. 42 00:04:03,840 --> 00:04:05,590 The discovery of these patterns, 43 00:04:05,640 --> 00:04:08,190 and sometimes the failure to understand them, 44 00:04:08,240 --> 00:04:12,990 lie at the heart of some of the greatest adventures in human history. 45 00:04:28,480 --> 00:04:32,590 To see a remarkable example of how powerful the wind can be 46 00:04:32,640 --> 00:04:35,470 in changing people's lives, 47 00:04:35,520 --> 00:04:40,830 I've come to a small town in the middle of the Sahara Desert called Chinguetti. 48 00:04:54,560 --> 00:04:58,750 Today, it's almost lost in a sea of shifting sand dunes, 49 00:04:58,800 --> 00:05:02,510 but once it was so much more. 50 00:05:22,120 --> 00:05:23,870 There's a timelessness about this. 51 00:05:23,920 --> 00:05:26,550 Some of the buildings are over 700 years old. 52 00:05:28,000 --> 00:05:30,070 There's only a few thousand people live here now, 53 00:05:30,120 --> 00:05:35,670 but in its heyday, this place heaved with 20,000 people. 54 00:05:35,720 --> 00:05:38,150 And twice as many camels! 55 00:05:45,240 --> 00:05:49,070 Hidden away down the back streets of this crumbling town, 56 00:05:49,120 --> 00:05:52,830 there's a reminder of Chinguetti's glorious past. 57 00:05:58,840 --> 00:06:01,790 - Bonjour. - Ah, bonjour. 58 00:06:01,840 --> 00:06:04,030 - Ça va très bien? - Ça va, ça va. 59 00:06:04,080 --> 00:06:06,750 The Al Ahmad Mahmoud Library 60 00:06:06,800 --> 00:06:10,710 has been run by the same family for over 300 years 61 00:06:10,760 --> 00:06:15,350 and contains hundreds of ancient manuscripts. 62 00:06:15,400 --> 00:06:18,750 What is the oldest...? Plus ancien livre? 63 00:06:18,800 --> 00:06:21,310 Ah. Le plus ancien livre chez moi... 64 00:06:21,360 --> 00:06:23,990 - It's in a shoebox! - Ah. 65 00:06:24,040 --> 00:06:26,030 It's not hermetically sealed. 66 00:06:26,080 --> 00:06:28,470 Oh, wow. 67 00:06:28,520 --> 00:06:29,990 Look at that. 68 00:06:34,320 --> 00:06:36,510 Ah. What is this? 69 00:06:36,560 --> 00:06:41,510 Ça, c'est le plus vieux Coran en Afrique de l'Ouest. 70 00:06:41,560 --> 00:06:43,750 It's the oldest Koran in West Africa? 71 00:06:43,800 --> 00:06:46,150 Dixième siècle. 72 00:06:46,200 --> 00:06:49,070 It dates back to the 10th century. 73 00:06:50,560 --> 00:06:53,310 Oh, look, the writing's tiny. 74 00:06:53,360 --> 00:06:58,310 This priceless book is one of thousands stored in dozens of libraries 75 00:06:58,360 --> 00:07:00,630 throughout Chinguetti. 76 00:07:02,880 --> 00:07:04,350 Ça, c'est les arabesques. 77 00:07:04,400 --> 00:07:07,270 Arabesque, yeah, yeah. The colour is beautiful. 78 00:07:09,320 --> 00:07:13,790 Chinguetti's glory days were over 500 years ago, 79 00:07:13,840 --> 00:07:18,190 and it owed its existence as a thriving town to the wind. 80 00:07:21,200 --> 00:07:24,550 Chinguetti is in the heart of the Sahara. 81 00:07:29,040 --> 00:07:32,310 It's a barren, inhospitable wilderness. 82 00:07:34,880 --> 00:07:37,670 The largest desert on the planet. 83 00:07:44,640 --> 00:07:46,430 Ah. 84 00:07:46,480 --> 00:07:47,950 Look at that. 85 00:07:49,960 --> 00:07:51,950 It just goes on and on. 86 00:08:05,800 --> 00:08:10,950 The Sahara is so hostile that crossing it is dangerous and difficult. 87 00:08:11,000 --> 00:08:16,070 Searing heat, no water, immense distances. 88 00:08:18,600 --> 00:08:21,670 It's effectively a climate barrier. 89 00:08:31,680 --> 00:08:36,550 Well, there's another reason why deserts and dunes are so hard to cross, 90 00:08:36,600 --> 00:08:39,190 and that is, they simply don't stand still. 91 00:08:39,240 --> 00:08:42,390 They are constantly on the move. 92 00:08:42,440 --> 00:08:47,670 In fact, these are some of the most dynamic and rapidly changing landscapes 93 00:08:47,720 --> 00:08:49,190 on Earth. 94 00:08:58,960 --> 00:09:01,710 There are few reliable landmarks, 95 00:09:01,760 --> 00:09:06,110 so following a route across the desert is incredibly hard. 96 00:09:09,240 --> 00:09:13,670 But it's not only the shifting sand that's controlled by the wind. 97 00:09:16,920 --> 00:09:22,270 The entire Sahara Desert itself was created by large-scale wind movements. 98 00:09:33,840 --> 00:09:36,350 These winds begin at the equator. 99 00:09:36,400 --> 00:09:41,870 This is where the sun is at its hottest, so the air is continually rising. 100 00:09:41,920 --> 00:09:45,230 As it spreads away from the equator, it cools, 101 00:09:45,280 --> 00:09:48,550 until between about 20 and 30 degrees latitude, 102 00:09:48,600 --> 00:09:53,430 the air sinks back to Earth, heating up again in the process. 103 00:09:54,960 --> 00:10:01,190 This pattern of winds creates a band of hot, dry deserts around the world 104 00:10:01,240 --> 00:10:03,510 on either side of the equator, 105 00:10:03,560 --> 00:10:06,750 including the Sahara and Arabian deserts. 106 00:10:08,840 --> 00:10:12,590 In an era when travelling was done by foot, 107 00:10:12,640 --> 00:10:15,390 the desert was a formidable barrier. 108 00:10:18,720 --> 00:10:20,750 For most of human history, 109 00:10:20,800 --> 00:10:25,190 different corners of the world have evolved as if in parallel universes, 110 00:10:25,240 --> 00:10:27,590 hemmed in not just by mountains and oceans, 111 00:10:27,640 --> 00:10:30,950 but by the desert that made climate a barrier too. 112 00:10:35,000 --> 00:10:40,110 But about 1,000 years ago, nomads were forging routes through the Sahara. 113 00:10:55,560 --> 00:10:59,710 Chinguetti was an oasis town along one of these routes. 114 00:10:59,760 --> 00:11:03,150 To the south was gold and ivory. 115 00:11:03,200 --> 00:11:06,150 To the north, the markets of Europe. 116 00:11:08,440 --> 00:11:10,470 Chinguetti's fortune was made 117 00:11:10,520 --> 00:11:13,590 because it was a gateway connecting two worlds 118 00:11:13,640 --> 00:11:17,110 that were separated by the power of the wind. 119 00:11:24,640 --> 00:11:27,190 But this city's great days didn't last. 120 00:11:27,240 --> 00:11:31,710 The winds that created the desert barrier had brought it riches. 121 00:11:31,760 --> 00:11:35,790 But ironically, its decline was also due to the wind. 122 00:11:43,040 --> 00:11:46,870 In one short period, about 500 years ago, 123 00:11:46,920 --> 00:11:49,750 the world was entirely remade, 124 00:11:49,800 --> 00:11:53,350 transforming the fate of people around the globe. 125 00:11:53,400 --> 00:11:58,750 And it was all down to a pivotal discovery about how the winds work. 126 00:12:13,560 --> 00:12:18,390 This is the Gold Coast in Ghana, on the west coast of Africa. 127 00:12:19,920 --> 00:12:24,310 Today, it's dominated by bustling fishing ports. 128 00:12:24,360 --> 00:12:26,710 Everyone's got piles of fish! 129 00:12:29,800 --> 00:12:34,510 But in the 15th century, it was an important centre for the gold trade. 130 00:12:34,560 --> 00:12:39,190 Europeans began to trade with the rich empires of West Africa, 131 00:12:39,240 --> 00:12:42,590 and the Portuguese built this fort, Elmina, 132 00:12:42,640 --> 00:12:45,310 to protect their commercial interests. 133 00:12:50,480 --> 00:12:55,150 And you could say it was here that the remaking of the world began. 134 00:12:57,600 --> 00:13:01,030 You know, if you'd been looking out from this spot in 1482, 135 00:13:01,080 --> 00:13:03,670 you'd have seen a Portuguese ship hove into view 136 00:13:03,720 --> 00:13:06,830 carrying materials to build this fort. 137 00:13:06,880 --> 00:13:10,750 On board was a man who would end up inadvertently changing the destiny 138 00:13:10,800 --> 00:13:12,270 of this whole region. 139 00:13:12,320 --> 00:13:14,550 And he did that not with swords and with cannons, 140 00:13:14,600 --> 00:13:18,190 but with a discovery about how the Earth's atmosphere worked. 141 00:13:18,240 --> 00:13:20,750 He also happened to discover a new continent. 142 00:13:20,800 --> 00:13:24,910 His name? Cristoforo Colombo. 143 00:13:32,520 --> 00:13:35,550 Christopher Columbus visited these shores 144 00:13:35,600 --> 00:13:38,830 at an important moment in European history. 145 00:13:38,880 --> 00:13:41,590 In the 15th century, 146 00:13:41,640 --> 00:13:45,310 the nations of Europe were competing to find quicker, easier routes 147 00:13:45,360 --> 00:13:46,870 to the riches of Asia. 148 00:13:49,400 --> 00:13:52,190 Christopher Columbus was a man with a plan, 149 00:13:52,240 --> 00:13:56,190 because he reckoned he knew a shortcut route to the Far East. 150 00:13:56,240 --> 00:13:58,790 As he'd been sailing up and down this coast, 151 00:13:58,840 --> 00:14:01,390 he'd been keeping a close eye on the winds. 152 00:14:01,440 --> 00:14:04,190 Now, the West African coast juts out into the Atlantic, 153 00:14:04,240 --> 00:14:07,990 so sailors here were sometimes forced into the open ocean. 154 00:14:08,040 --> 00:14:11,590 Columbus realised that out there, among the rolling waves, 155 00:14:11,640 --> 00:14:15,110 the winds seemed to be always blowing in the same direction - 156 00:14:15,160 --> 00:14:17,110 away from Africa. 157 00:14:17,160 --> 00:14:22,070 Columbus reckoned he could use that wind to blow him all the way round the world. 158 00:14:27,360 --> 00:14:29,270 Columbus had no way of knowing 159 00:14:29,320 --> 00:14:33,910 whether the wind he'd encountered along the West African coast would carry on 160 00:14:33,960 --> 00:14:38,070 or peter out, leaving him stranded in the middle of the ocean. 161 00:14:44,120 --> 00:14:51,390 But in 1492, he headed west into the apparently endless ocean 162 00:14:51,440 --> 00:14:53,870 in search of his new route to the Far East. 163 00:14:59,680 --> 00:15:01,350 It's hard to appreciate today 164 00:15:01,400 --> 00:15:05,870 just what an epic leap into the unknown this voyage was. 165 00:15:07,000 --> 00:15:09,270 It took five tough weeks, 166 00:15:09,320 --> 00:15:11,750 but as we all know, Columbus's hunch was right - 167 00:15:11,800 --> 00:15:15,310 there was a wind that blew right across the Atlantic. 168 00:15:15,360 --> 00:15:20,430 The thing is, his grasp of sailing was much better than his grasp of geography. 169 00:15:20,480 --> 00:15:25,350 It wasn't the Far East he'd landed in. It was the Bahamas. 170 00:15:31,960 --> 00:15:37,310 As far as Europeans were concerned, he'd discovered a new continent, 171 00:15:37,360 --> 00:15:41,470 and for that, his name is known throughout the world. 172 00:15:44,880 --> 00:15:49,710 Yet for me, America wasn't his greatest discovery. 173 00:15:49,760 --> 00:15:54,270 Columbus's real genius was his instinctive understanding 174 00:15:54,320 --> 00:15:57,270 of the way the winds blow across the Atlantic. 175 00:16:00,120 --> 00:16:03,430 He had discovered what we now call the trade winds - 176 00:16:03,480 --> 00:16:07,510 winds that blow steadily in a south-westerly direction. 177 00:16:07,560 --> 00:16:11,710 It was the trade winds that took him all the way from the African coast 178 00:16:11,760 --> 00:16:13,270 to the Bahamas. 179 00:16:17,960 --> 00:16:20,750 Getting across the Atlantic was all well and good, 180 00:16:20,800 --> 00:16:23,590 but now Columbus had to find his way back home. 181 00:16:23,640 --> 00:16:25,350 And that was going to be tricky, 182 00:16:25,400 --> 00:16:28,230 because if he just tried to retrace his steps east, 183 00:16:28,280 --> 00:16:30,750 then that would carry him straight into the wind 184 00:16:30,800 --> 00:16:32,790 that brought him here in the first place. 185 00:16:36,200 --> 00:16:39,870 Instead, Columbus headed north, along the American coast, 186 00:16:39,920 --> 00:16:41,950 and here he picked up another wind 187 00:16:42,000 --> 00:16:46,470 that blew consistently in the opposite direction, from west to east - 188 00:16:46,520 --> 00:16:50,230 what's known as a westerly. 189 00:16:52,080 --> 00:16:57,070 At the time, it must have seemed he was just outrageously lucky with the winds. 190 00:16:57,120 --> 00:16:59,990 But luck had nothing to do with it. 191 00:17:00,040 --> 00:17:05,230 To prove the point, Columbus sailed back to America three more times. 192 00:17:05,280 --> 00:17:07,790 Each time, he found the same winds. 193 00:17:07,840 --> 00:17:12,990 Between 20 and 30 degrees latitude, the wind blew east to west. 194 00:17:13,040 --> 00:17:18,750 Between 40 and 50 degrees, it blew in the opposite direction. 195 00:17:18,800 --> 00:17:23,270 You know, Columbus was wrong about the continent he'd discovered, 196 00:17:23,320 --> 00:17:26,150 but he was right about something far more important - 197 00:17:26,200 --> 00:17:29,430 how to repeatedly use the circulation of the atmosphere 198 00:17:29,480 --> 00:17:33,230 to cross the Atlantic Ocean and get safely home. 199 00:17:37,400 --> 00:17:41,870 Today, we know that the trade winds and westerlies that Columbus exploited 200 00:17:41,920 --> 00:17:44,230 are part of one system, 201 00:17:44,280 --> 00:17:50,510 the same atmospheric circulation that creates deserts over continents. 202 00:17:50,560 --> 00:17:55,510 At the surface, the descending air flows back towards the equator. 203 00:17:55,560 --> 00:17:58,510 These are the trade winds. 204 00:17:58,560 --> 00:18:04,070 They close the loop and form what's known as an atmospheric cell. 205 00:18:04,120 --> 00:18:07,190 It's the spin of the Earth that deflects these surface winds 206 00:18:07,240 --> 00:18:09,470 so that they move towards the Americas. 207 00:18:11,760 --> 00:18:16,030 Each hemisphere has three giant atmospheric cells 208 00:18:16,080 --> 00:18:20,670 which define the prevailing surface winds around the entire Earth. 209 00:18:26,520 --> 00:18:30,230 Once people knew about the prevailing wind patterns, 210 00:18:30,280 --> 00:18:34,310 it spurred them on to set sail for other new lands. 211 00:18:36,400 --> 00:18:42,670 The fate of nations now depended on where they lay in relation to the winds. 212 00:18:44,480 --> 00:18:47,470 The Dutch connected with the westerlies in the Southern Hemisphere 213 00:18:47,520 --> 00:18:48,990 to reach the Far East 214 00:18:49,040 --> 00:18:51,670 and ended up in control of the Dutch East Indies, 215 00:18:51,720 --> 00:18:54,190 or Indonesia, as it's now known. 216 00:18:54,240 --> 00:18:57,070 The trade winds took them home. 217 00:18:59,400 --> 00:19:00,870 In the Atlantic, 218 00:19:00,920 --> 00:19:04,950 Columbus's voyage formed the basis for a triangular trade route, 219 00:19:05,000 --> 00:19:09,350 connecting Europe, Africa and the Americas for the first time. 220 00:19:11,320 --> 00:19:14,670 The Spanish crossed the Pacific using the easterly trade winds, 221 00:19:14,720 --> 00:19:17,630 so their ships made landfall at the Philippines, 222 00:19:17,680 --> 00:19:20,430 which became a Spanish colony. 223 00:19:20,480 --> 00:19:23,710 To get home, the Spanish picked up the westerlies, 224 00:19:23,760 --> 00:19:28,190 bypassing Japan, which preserved its isolation, 225 00:19:28,240 --> 00:19:31,070 and landed in California. 226 00:19:34,840 --> 00:19:38,390 Now, you can still see the legacy of that distant Spanish influence 227 00:19:38,440 --> 00:19:41,310 in the names that are so familiar to us today. 228 00:19:44,400 --> 00:19:45,790 San Diego, 229 00:19:45,840 --> 00:19:48,030 Los Angeles 230 00:19:48,080 --> 00:19:49,710 and San Francisco. 231 00:19:52,480 --> 00:19:56,150 Within 150 years of Columbus's voyage, 232 00:19:56,200 --> 00:20:00,230 a network of trade routes had spread out across the world. 233 00:20:00,280 --> 00:20:03,790 It was the start of globalisation. 234 00:20:08,240 --> 00:20:14,150 For Europeans, the conquest of the winds and waves was a triumph. 235 00:20:14,200 --> 00:20:16,270 But there was a terrible price. 236 00:20:16,320 --> 00:20:21,430 Many other civilisations were devastated by European contact. 237 00:20:23,640 --> 00:20:28,390 Perhaps the biggest impact was here, back in Ghana. 238 00:20:28,440 --> 00:20:31,190 And you can trace those changing fortunes 239 00:20:31,240 --> 00:20:33,390 in the story of the Elmina fort. 240 00:20:38,280 --> 00:20:43,670 By the early 1500s, the function of this trading fort had changed dramatically. 241 00:20:43,720 --> 00:20:46,870 Gone was the bartering for ivory and gold, 242 00:20:46,920 --> 00:20:49,150 and instead the storerooms here 243 00:20:49,200 --> 00:20:52,590 were swollen with a very different kind of commodity. 244 00:20:57,800 --> 00:21:02,150 These dark cellars had once contained the stock for the gold trade. 245 00:21:08,520 --> 00:21:14,790 Now the fort of Elmina had become a staging post for the slave trade. 246 00:21:17,440 --> 00:21:19,870 You know, it's really ugly to think of this place 247 00:21:19,920 --> 00:21:22,510 as a storeroom for gold and ivory and all these beautiful riches 248 00:21:22,560 --> 00:21:28,430 and then, just within a few years, changed into a prison. 249 00:21:35,160 --> 00:21:36,950 While Europe boomed, 250 00:21:37,000 --> 00:21:40,750 Africa's place in the world had been changed for ever. 251 00:21:49,520 --> 00:21:52,790 It looks like a way out, and in a perverse kind of way, it was. 252 00:21:52,840 --> 00:21:55,750 Because after spending a couple of months locked up in the cells, 253 00:21:55,800 --> 00:21:59,350 you'd be taken down this long, low passageway to this - 254 00:21:59,400 --> 00:22:03,230 a gate barely one person wide. 255 00:22:03,280 --> 00:22:06,510 This was the door of no return, 256 00:22:06,560 --> 00:22:11,390 because when you left here, blinking into that sharp African light, 257 00:22:11,440 --> 00:22:14,550 probably completely unaware of what your fate was, 258 00:22:14,600 --> 00:22:19,990 you'd go onto a gangplank and you'd be shipped to the Americas as slaves. 259 00:22:30,160 --> 00:22:33,870 In the 400 years after Columbus made his epic voyage, 260 00:22:33,920 --> 00:22:38,190 nearly 12 million slaves were shipped across the Atlantic. 261 00:22:43,360 --> 00:22:48,550 The impact of new ocean trade routes even reached as far as Chinguetti, 262 00:22:48,600 --> 00:22:50,590 in the Sahara. 263 00:22:50,640 --> 00:22:54,870 Sailing ships now bypassed the old desert trade routes, 264 00:22:54,920 --> 00:22:56,950 so the town was eclipsed 265 00:22:57,000 --> 00:23:02,350 by human exploitation of the very winds that had made it great. 266 00:23:14,120 --> 00:23:18,510 The atmospheric cells are the framework for winds around the planet. 267 00:23:18,560 --> 00:23:22,190 But there's another global wind that influences the climate, 268 00:23:22,240 --> 00:23:25,630 and with it, the course of human history. 269 00:23:25,680 --> 00:23:29,350 High in the atmosphere are giant conductors 270 00:23:29,400 --> 00:23:33,150 that orchestrate weather patterns around the world. 271 00:23:33,200 --> 00:23:35,430 They're called jet streams. 272 00:23:38,120 --> 00:23:41,470 Jet streams are powerful currents of fast-moving wind 273 00:23:41,520 --> 00:23:44,390 that whip along the boundary between two cells. 274 00:23:46,160 --> 00:23:51,030 They're several hundred kilometres wide but only a few kilometres thick. 275 00:23:54,280 --> 00:23:57,470 They snake around the globe in wavy loops, 276 00:23:57,520 --> 00:24:00,630 directing the course of weather systems below. 277 00:24:04,760 --> 00:24:07,070 We're only really aware of their significance 278 00:24:07,120 --> 00:24:09,630 when they stray from their normal path. 279 00:24:11,240 --> 00:24:14,110 If the jet stream strays southward, 280 00:24:14,160 --> 00:24:17,510 it can send deadly tornadoes across Florida, 281 00:24:17,560 --> 00:24:19,550 far from their usual route to the north. 282 00:24:19,600 --> 00:24:24,190 In 1998, a jet stream wandered off course 283 00:24:24,240 --> 00:24:29,230 and sent a devastating ice storm across north-eastern America, 284 00:24:29,280 --> 00:24:34,950 leaving 45 people dead and forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes. 285 00:24:39,360 --> 00:24:44,630 But perhaps the most catastrophic example of the power of the jet stream 286 00:24:44,680 --> 00:24:49,630 was on the High Plains of the United States in the 1930s. 287 00:24:50,720 --> 00:24:54,750 Today, towns like Capa in South Dakota 288 00:24:54,800 --> 00:24:56,510 lie empty and abandoned. 289 00:25:01,160 --> 00:25:05,270 But in the early part of the century, 290 00:25:05,320 --> 00:25:07,390 farmers were rushing here to claim new land. 291 00:25:10,040 --> 00:25:13,990 Then, in the 1930s, disaster struck. 292 00:25:21,040 --> 00:25:24,110 Powerful winds, intense drought 293 00:25:24,160 --> 00:25:27,270 and dense, choking dust storms. 294 00:25:27,320 --> 00:25:31,870 It became known as the Dust Bowl. 295 00:25:40,000 --> 00:25:43,510 Millions of acres of farmland turned to wasteland. 296 00:25:44,960 --> 00:25:48,310 Half a million people were uprooted from their homes. 297 00:25:50,360 --> 00:25:52,750 Most never returned. 298 00:25:54,240 --> 00:25:57,390 At the time, it seemed like a freak accident, 299 00:25:57,440 --> 00:26:00,470 but we now know that the jet stream was the trigger. 300 00:26:00,520 --> 00:26:03,670 For several years, it had drifted hundreds of kilometres south 301 00:26:03,720 --> 00:26:05,510 from its normal course, 302 00:26:05,560 --> 00:26:07,350 taking the rains with it. 303 00:26:19,640 --> 00:26:23,550 The jet stream controls the short-term patterns of wind and weather 304 00:26:23,600 --> 00:26:25,870 across the world. 305 00:26:35,480 --> 00:26:38,950 But perhaps the most significant way that the wind has affected history 306 00:26:39,000 --> 00:26:42,790 is by defining the climate and character of entire continents 307 00:26:42,840 --> 00:26:45,110 over thousands of years, 308 00:26:45,160 --> 00:26:48,510 imposing limitations for people in some parts of the world, 309 00:26:48,560 --> 00:26:52,030 and for others, offering huge opportunities. 310 00:26:54,280 --> 00:26:55,750 Take China. 311 00:27:08,720 --> 00:27:11,790 Today, China has become a world superpower. 312 00:27:15,520 --> 00:27:19,990 But China's civilisation is one of the oldest in the world, 313 00:27:20,040 --> 00:27:24,390 and its success was built on something delivered by the wind. 314 00:27:30,320 --> 00:27:32,550 This is central China. 315 00:27:32,600 --> 00:27:35,870 It's known as the cradle of Chinese civilisation, 316 00:27:35,920 --> 00:27:37,990 because this is where 317 00:27:38,040 --> 00:27:40,470 the wealth and power of China's ancient dynasties began. 318 00:27:45,720 --> 00:27:50,510 High above the Yellow River is what made it all possible. 319 00:27:59,160 --> 00:28:03,390 A resource that was the key to China's earliest beginnings. 320 00:28:11,080 --> 00:28:15,550 This plateau was the foundation stone for China's ancient agriculture. 321 00:28:15,600 --> 00:28:18,430 But what made it that wasn't a stone at all. 322 00:28:18,480 --> 00:28:20,030 It's what's under my feet. 323 00:28:20,080 --> 00:28:23,870 It's soft and crumbly. 324 00:28:23,920 --> 00:28:25,950 When you crunch it, it just turns to dust, 325 00:28:26,000 --> 00:28:30,670 which is exactly what it is, except it's called loess. 326 00:28:33,520 --> 00:28:35,750 This dust is rich in minerals 327 00:28:35,800 --> 00:28:40,590 and combines with rotten plant matter to form a light, fertile soil. 328 00:28:44,040 --> 00:28:47,550 Chinese farmers settled here more than 10,000 years ago, 329 00:28:47,600 --> 00:28:51,750 and it was the first sites of rice cultivation in the world. 330 00:28:54,920 --> 00:28:59,630 And the reason all this loess is here is because of the winds. 331 00:29:03,480 --> 00:29:08,870 50 million years ago, India collided with Asia, 332 00:29:08,920 --> 00:29:12,350 and that pushed up the Himalayas. 333 00:29:12,400 --> 00:29:17,830 These mountains created a completely new pattern of winds. 334 00:29:17,880 --> 00:29:23,870 The Himalayas are so high that air is forced up, forming clouds and rain. 335 00:29:23,920 --> 00:29:27,030 But when the wind reaches the far side of the Himalayas, 336 00:29:27,080 --> 00:29:28,590 it's bone dry. 337 00:29:32,760 --> 00:29:35,750 It's called a rain shadow, 338 00:29:35,800 --> 00:29:39,910 and it forms some of the driest and dustiest places on Earth - 339 00:29:39,960 --> 00:29:43,230 the Taklamakan and the Gobi deserts. 340 00:29:49,640 --> 00:29:53,950 So China is surrounded by giant reserves of dust, 341 00:29:54,000 --> 00:29:57,910 and the prevailing winds act like a huge conveyor belt 342 00:29:57,960 --> 00:30:00,630 that blows it all the way to central China. 343 00:30:04,720 --> 00:30:07,150 Because the plateau is so vast, 344 00:30:07,200 --> 00:30:10,830 farming could develop here on an enormous scale. 345 00:30:10,880 --> 00:30:13,230 That meant surplus food, 346 00:30:13,280 --> 00:30:17,390 and surplus food is the first and most important prerequisite 347 00:30:17,440 --> 00:30:19,670 for any self-respecting empire. 348 00:30:22,360 --> 00:30:24,430 Over 3,000 years ago, 349 00:30:24,480 --> 00:30:28,310 the first of China's famous dynastic empires was formed. 350 00:30:30,640 --> 00:30:33,950 It was based in the centre of the loess plateau. 351 00:30:35,280 --> 00:30:40,310 The Great Wall of China was built across the northern edge of the plateau 352 00:30:40,360 --> 00:30:42,550 to safeguard the empire's heartland. 353 00:31:04,600 --> 00:31:07,350 The importance of the loess plateau 354 00:31:07,400 --> 00:31:10,590 has also shaped China's cultural heritage. 355 00:31:17,040 --> 00:31:22,670 In the 5th century, they built these - the Buddhist temples at Yungang. 356 00:31:22,720 --> 00:31:25,710 Carved into solid rock beneath the layer of loess 357 00:31:25,760 --> 00:31:30,110 is a honeycomb of 250 man-made caves, 358 00:31:30,160 --> 00:31:35,230 the walls covered with over 50,000 Buddhist statues. 359 00:31:43,200 --> 00:31:47,670 But the crowning glory of the loess plateau is this. 360 00:31:52,880 --> 00:31:56,510 The 8,000-strong Terracotta Army. 361 00:31:59,760 --> 00:32:02,630 Not only are they buried in the loess, 362 00:32:02,680 --> 00:32:05,990 the terracotta from which they were created 363 00:32:06,040 --> 00:32:08,470 is itself made from loess. 364 00:32:15,320 --> 00:32:21,270 So what began with loess led to empires and dynasties, art and religion, 365 00:32:21,320 --> 00:32:24,590 and it was all made possible by the winds. 366 00:32:31,680 --> 00:32:33,430 China was lucky. 367 00:32:33,480 --> 00:32:36,150 It found itself at the end of a wind pattern 368 00:32:36,200 --> 00:32:39,910 that delivered some of the finest-quality soil in the world. 369 00:32:46,280 --> 00:32:48,590 Not everywhere was so fortunate. 370 00:33:00,200 --> 00:33:05,550 Perhaps no continent on Earth has been more limited by the wind than Australia. 371 00:33:12,480 --> 00:33:16,430 Nothing quite prepares you for the sheer scale of the Australian outback. 372 00:33:16,480 --> 00:33:18,910 It's very, very barren. 373 00:33:20,760 --> 00:33:23,070 I wouldn't like to be a farmer out here. 374 00:33:25,200 --> 00:33:27,630 It's also amazingly dusty. I can feel it. 375 00:33:27,680 --> 00:33:30,390 Bitter taste in my mouth. 376 00:33:33,200 --> 00:33:37,830 Australia's Red Centre couldn't be a harsher place to live. 377 00:33:37,880 --> 00:33:39,750 If it wasn't for the odd shrub, 378 00:33:39,800 --> 00:33:42,310 it could be mistaken for the surface of Mars. 379 00:33:43,520 --> 00:33:44,990 But at this watering hole 380 00:33:45,040 --> 00:33:49,070 there are signs that people settled here a very long time ago. 381 00:33:53,480 --> 00:33:57,350 Carvings up to 30,000 years old. 382 00:33:59,240 --> 00:34:02,670 And well-crafted stone tools as well. 383 00:34:06,720 --> 00:34:08,390 Flat, round stones like these 384 00:34:08,440 --> 00:34:11,390 were used for grinding up millet seeds and tubers. 385 00:34:11,440 --> 00:34:15,390 It's a very similar technology as that used by the first farmers 386 00:34:15,440 --> 00:34:17,390 in Asia and the Middle East. 387 00:34:17,440 --> 00:34:21,750 You know, it's fascinating to think why this didn't lead to the type of farming 388 00:34:21,800 --> 00:34:23,670 that emerged elsewhere. 389 00:34:25,400 --> 00:34:27,270 About 10,000 years ago, 390 00:34:27,320 --> 00:34:30,630 the development of agriculture on other continents 391 00:34:30,680 --> 00:34:34,630 led to complex, large-scale societies. 392 00:34:34,680 --> 00:34:38,950 But here, farming never really took off. 393 00:34:39,000 --> 00:34:41,950 You might think that's because it's parched and dry. 394 00:34:43,360 --> 00:34:46,590 But it's just as much to do with the wind. 395 00:34:53,640 --> 00:34:57,270 Here you can see the effects of the wind down at ground level. 396 00:34:57,320 --> 00:34:59,150 Now, what you'd normally expect to find 397 00:34:59,200 --> 00:35:01,430 is a kind of mixture of sand, gravel and clay, 398 00:35:01,480 --> 00:35:04,910 all jumbled up with plant debris to give us soil. 399 00:35:04,960 --> 00:35:08,910 Instead, here you get something that looks rather bizarre. 400 00:35:08,960 --> 00:35:13,630 You can see a kind of mosaic of larger fragments, 401 00:35:13,680 --> 00:35:16,030 where the finer stuff's just been blown away by the wind. 402 00:35:16,080 --> 00:35:19,910 And what it produces is an armoured cap to the land surface - 403 00:35:19,960 --> 00:35:23,070 what we call a desert pavement. 404 00:35:25,800 --> 00:35:29,310 This crust makes it very difficult for plants to grow. 405 00:35:31,480 --> 00:35:34,510 It isn't just a localised problem. 406 00:35:34,560 --> 00:35:39,830 The winds strip dust and soil away across much of the continent. 407 00:35:39,880 --> 00:35:42,550 So, what causes this stripping action? 408 00:35:44,280 --> 00:35:50,110 To understand the answer, you need to be in the centre of the continent 409 00:35:50,160 --> 00:35:51,830 and you need to get up high. 410 00:36:02,200 --> 00:36:08,270 This tabletop mountain is called Attila, also known as Mount Conner. 411 00:36:08,320 --> 00:36:12,750 It's a huge natural monument right in the centre of Australia. 412 00:36:30,360 --> 00:36:32,470 Oh, that makes it all worth it. 413 00:36:32,520 --> 00:36:34,350 Look at that. 414 00:36:34,400 --> 00:36:36,550 That's a hell of a view. 415 00:36:36,600 --> 00:36:38,070 Whoo! 416 00:36:39,840 --> 00:36:42,670 You know, when you're down there, it's just so flat. 417 00:36:42,720 --> 00:36:47,390 You don't get a sense of the sheer scale of this landscape. 418 00:36:47,440 --> 00:36:52,150 It's only being up high that you can just see how...how big it is. 419 00:36:54,760 --> 00:36:56,430 You also appreciate from here 420 00:36:56,480 --> 00:37:00,310 that for the people that had this landscape, being so precious to them, 421 00:37:00,360 --> 00:37:02,230 that being able to get up here, 422 00:37:02,280 --> 00:37:05,670 and seeing the land laid out almost like a map, 423 00:37:05,720 --> 00:37:09,390 must have made these high places just so special. 424 00:37:16,960 --> 00:37:21,950 Mount Conner sits at the geographical and spiritual heart of Australia. 425 00:37:23,360 --> 00:37:27,910 But it also lies at the centre of an amazing wind system. 426 00:37:33,000 --> 00:37:36,830 The incredible thing about the atmosphere above central Australia 427 00:37:36,880 --> 00:37:39,790 is that there's a giant circular wind pattern 428 00:37:39,840 --> 00:37:42,550 thousands of feet above my head. 429 00:38:01,720 --> 00:38:05,510 The prevailing winds swirl in a great anticlockwise spiral 430 00:38:05,560 --> 00:38:07,310 around the continent. 431 00:38:11,760 --> 00:38:14,070 They've been stripping the fertility from the soil 432 00:38:14,120 --> 00:38:16,870 for hundreds of thousands of years. 433 00:38:22,440 --> 00:38:25,950 In China, fertility was carried in by the wind. 434 00:38:26,000 --> 00:38:31,590 But here in Australia, fertile dust and nutrients were simply blown away, 435 00:38:31,640 --> 00:38:34,190 leaving sand and stones behind. 436 00:38:36,960 --> 00:38:40,670 The sand has been shaped into vast fields of dunes, 437 00:38:40,720 --> 00:38:46,070 which circle the centre of Australia, lined up with the path of the winds. 438 00:38:51,600 --> 00:38:54,790 It's a process that continues to this day. 439 00:38:56,320 --> 00:39:00,030 Giant dust storms regularly engulf eastern Australia. 440 00:39:04,040 --> 00:39:10,950 In 2002, the largest ever recorded was more than 2,000 kilometres long. 441 00:39:14,360 --> 00:39:20,510 Nearly 5 million tons of dust were removed in just this one storm. 442 00:39:22,280 --> 00:39:27,710 Most of it ends up in the ocean, where its nutrients create huge algal blooms, 443 00:39:27,760 --> 00:39:30,670 an essential part of the marine food chain. 444 00:39:38,360 --> 00:39:40,830 So the climate and the winds dealt a tough hand 445 00:39:40,880 --> 00:39:43,150 to the ancient Aboriginal peoples. 446 00:39:46,520 --> 00:39:50,070 With large areas of the continent bare and arid, 447 00:39:50,120 --> 00:39:54,590 continuing with the hunter-gatherer lifestyle made more sense 448 00:39:54,640 --> 00:39:56,830 than taking up farming. 449 00:40:00,640 --> 00:40:04,910 You know, you realise that the people here were ingenious and adaptable. 450 00:40:04,960 --> 00:40:09,630 For a start, rather than relying on one or two intensive crops, 451 00:40:09,680 --> 00:40:14,510 they instead diversified into a wide range of wild food sources. 452 00:40:14,560 --> 00:40:18,790 And also, instead of living in permanent, settled communities, 453 00:40:18,840 --> 00:40:21,590 they lived instead in small, mobile groups, 454 00:40:21,640 --> 00:40:25,150 always able to move in search of food. 455 00:40:29,920 --> 00:40:32,870 The differing fate of Australia and China 456 00:40:32,920 --> 00:40:36,430 is down to large-scale wind patterns over continents 457 00:40:36,480 --> 00:40:39,150 that are stable over thousands of years. 458 00:40:42,480 --> 00:40:47,030 But the wind has had some of its most dramatic effects on human history 459 00:40:47,080 --> 00:40:50,790 when it interacts with the energy of the oceans. 460 00:40:53,320 --> 00:40:58,590 It's an interaction that can have major long-term consequences, 461 00:40:58,640 --> 00:41:02,310 but it can also bring short-term disaster. 462 00:41:02,360 --> 00:41:06,270 The sea acts as an immense store of the sun's heat. 463 00:41:06,320 --> 00:41:10,070 There's more energy in the top 3 metres of the ocean 464 00:41:10,120 --> 00:41:14,830 than the whole of the atmosphere - enough to power America for 50 years. 465 00:41:19,200 --> 00:41:22,230 By pumping this energy into the air, 466 00:41:22,280 --> 00:41:25,590 the ocean is constantly influencing the wind... 467 00:41:27,560 --> 00:41:32,110 ...a principle that is graphically demonstrated each year. 468 00:41:44,400 --> 00:41:47,310 Hurricanes are the most extreme storms on Earth, 469 00:41:47,360 --> 00:41:50,830 the ultimate example of the violent partnership 470 00:41:50,880 --> 00:41:53,510 between the atmosphere and the ocean. 471 00:41:53,560 --> 00:41:57,510 The hotter the ocean, the faster the air above rises, 472 00:41:57,560 --> 00:42:00,830 drawing the wind inwards in a vicious spiral. 473 00:42:00,880 --> 00:42:03,470 Each 1 degree rise in sea temperature 474 00:42:03,520 --> 00:42:08,830 increases wind speeds by more than 20 kilometres per hour. 475 00:42:08,880 --> 00:42:11,670 Around the eye of the hurricane, 476 00:42:11,720 --> 00:42:14,510 the clouds build up like the inside of a stadium, 477 00:42:14,560 --> 00:42:19,030 leaving a calm centre around which the winds rotate. 478 00:42:27,200 --> 00:42:32,150 It's the spin of the Earth that gives a hurricane its distinctive spiral shape. 479 00:42:38,040 --> 00:42:41,230 And as they move across the surface of the globe, 480 00:42:41,280 --> 00:42:44,910 hurricanes are caught up in the same atmospheric circulation 481 00:42:44,960 --> 00:42:47,790 that drives the trade winds and westerlies. 482 00:42:47,840 --> 00:42:50,910 Their tracks cluster in bands of destruction 483 00:42:50,960 --> 00:42:53,270 on either side of the equator. 484 00:42:58,920 --> 00:43:00,950 Devastating as hurricanes are, 485 00:43:01,000 --> 00:43:05,710 on a planetary scale, their effects are relatively minor and short-lived. 486 00:43:08,560 --> 00:43:11,030 But it turns out that the ocean affects winds 487 00:43:11,080 --> 00:43:14,550 over much larger areas and longer timescales, 488 00:43:14,600 --> 00:43:17,950 and that discovery has answered a great puzzle 489 00:43:18,000 --> 00:43:21,430 in the story of the human conquest of the globe. 490 00:43:25,640 --> 00:43:29,310 The Pacific is the largest ocean on Earth. 491 00:43:29,360 --> 00:43:32,790 The only land is a scattering of tiny islands, 492 00:43:32,840 --> 00:43:35,870 some of the most inaccessible places on the planet. 493 00:43:40,160 --> 00:43:44,870 Ever since modern humans left Africa several tens of thousands of years ago, 494 00:43:44,920 --> 00:43:48,590 our distant ancestors have spread across the continents. 495 00:43:50,960 --> 00:43:56,270 But there's always been a bit of a gap - the Pacific Ocean. 496 00:43:58,760 --> 00:44:02,670 Long after the rest of the planet was colonised by humans, 497 00:44:02,720 --> 00:44:05,310 the Pacific lay empty. 498 00:44:07,760 --> 00:44:10,190 With its scattering of tiny islands, 499 00:44:10,240 --> 00:44:14,590 it's little wonder that the Pacific remained unexplored for so long. 500 00:44:14,640 --> 00:44:18,310 If you were a would-be explorer heading out into the unknown, 501 00:44:18,360 --> 00:44:21,230 the chances are you'd run out of food or water 502 00:44:21,280 --> 00:44:25,590 long before you reached the next tropical paradise. 503 00:44:33,960 --> 00:44:38,630 Then, just over 3,000 years ago, sailors set off from Asia 504 00:44:38,680 --> 00:44:42,510 and began to spread to nearly every island in this vast ocean, 505 00:44:42,560 --> 00:44:45,270 ending up in the distant, far-flung islands 506 00:44:45,320 --> 00:44:49,470 of Hawaii, New Zealand and Easter Island. 507 00:44:49,520 --> 00:44:53,670 It was a journey that took them a quarter of the way around the world. 508 00:44:59,920 --> 00:45:04,070 You know, it's not just the distances that people travelled that amazes me, 509 00:45:04,120 --> 00:45:05,950 it's also the direction. 510 00:45:06,000 --> 00:45:11,030 This is my crummy map of the Pacific. Here's Asia over here, with Japan. 511 00:45:11,080 --> 00:45:14,790 This is supposed to be the Americas here. Australia down here. 512 00:45:14,840 --> 00:45:18,870 It's thought that this whole area was peopled by going from west to east, 513 00:45:18,920 --> 00:45:21,790 but the thing is, in this region, the winds blow in the opposite direction - 514 00:45:21,840 --> 00:45:23,950 from east to west. 515 00:45:24,000 --> 00:45:27,030 Trying to sail into the wind from such long distances 516 00:45:27,080 --> 00:45:29,510 would have taken a lifetime. 517 00:45:29,560 --> 00:45:32,990 So quite how they did this has always been a big mystery. 518 00:45:35,880 --> 00:45:41,110 The answer lies in that turbulent link between the atmosphere and the ocean, 519 00:45:41,160 --> 00:45:45,470 and the best place to see it in action is in the middle of the Pacific. 520 00:45:49,280 --> 00:45:51,590 An island like Yap. 521 00:45:52,720 --> 00:45:55,430 A tiny dot of dense rainforest 522 00:45:55,480 --> 00:45:58,750 over 1,000 kilometres from the nearest continent. 523 00:46:01,960 --> 00:46:07,430 The question is, how did people get to islands like Yap 524 00:46:07,480 --> 00:46:10,070 and then move on to the other islands of the Pacific 525 00:46:10,120 --> 00:46:13,230 when they were heading into the prevailing winds 526 00:46:13,280 --> 00:46:18,750 and all they had were these - wooden outrigger canoes? 527 00:46:41,680 --> 00:46:44,510 These boats have barely changed 528 00:46:44,560 --> 00:46:48,230 since the first sailors set off across the Pacific. 529 00:46:53,560 --> 00:46:58,150 So how did they sail across the entire ocean against the wind? 530 00:47:01,840 --> 00:47:05,630 Normally, sailing into the wind would involve taking a zigzag route 531 00:47:05,680 --> 00:47:07,950 called tacking. 532 00:47:10,800 --> 00:47:13,230 The problem with sailing into the wind is this - 533 00:47:13,280 --> 00:47:15,470 you keep needing to tack all the time, 534 00:47:15,520 --> 00:47:17,950 which means you need to move the sail from the front to the back 535 00:47:18,000 --> 00:47:20,670 by swinging the mast and the boom round, 536 00:47:20,720 --> 00:47:23,190 so that the front of the boat becomes the back. 537 00:47:23,240 --> 00:47:27,630 And then... It's actually quite tricky and quite dangerous. 538 00:47:32,560 --> 00:47:36,750 By moving this sail from the front of the boat to the back, 539 00:47:36,800 --> 00:47:42,350 these canoes can indeed tack back and forth across the wind, 540 00:47:42,400 --> 00:47:44,150 gradually moving forward. 541 00:47:45,840 --> 00:47:48,710 But it's a slow and difficult process. 542 00:47:50,960 --> 00:47:53,190 It's good? Yeah? 543 00:47:53,240 --> 00:47:54,910 I always get slightly nervous. 544 00:47:54,960 --> 00:47:58,990 For you, thousands of times. For me, this looks dangerous. 545 00:47:59,040 --> 00:48:02,350 Ali Haleyalur is the chief navigator. 546 00:48:04,440 --> 00:48:09,590 So in the past, when your predecessors made lots of long journeys, 547 00:48:09,640 --> 00:48:11,630 how did they do that against the wind? 548 00:48:12,680 --> 00:48:14,950 If it's really far, it's not safe to go east, 549 00:48:15,000 --> 00:48:20,310 because within that four or five days that you tack in it, 550 00:48:20,360 --> 00:48:22,350 you still cannot arrive, 551 00:48:22,400 --> 00:48:24,670 and then another storm hits you there. 552 00:48:24,720 --> 00:48:28,350 So it's better you have to wait when the westerly wind comes. 553 00:48:30,160 --> 00:48:33,470 There are always short periods when the wind blows from the west 554 00:48:33,520 --> 00:48:35,110 due to seasonal changes, 555 00:48:35,160 --> 00:48:39,110 but not long enough to undertake long voyages. 556 00:48:39,160 --> 00:48:42,110 But the ancient navigators realised 557 00:48:42,160 --> 00:48:45,510 that there are certain times when the winds change direction 558 00:48:45,560 --> 00:48:49,550 and blow consistently for long periods from west to east. 559 00:48:51,440 --> 00:48:54,070 The secret of this change lies in the relationship 560 00:48:54,120 --> 00:48:56,950 between the Pacific Ocean and the winds. 561 00:49:01,640 --> 00:49:05,510 Every few years, warm water from the west Pacific 562 00:49:05,560 --> 00:49:08,390 surges into the cooler waters of the east. 563 00:49:08,440 --> 00:49:12,750 This warm water heats the air above, changing air pressure 564 00:49:12,800 --> 00:49:16,950 and making the trade winds weaken or swap directions completely. 565 00:49:20,840 --> 00:49:25,110 Today we know this phenomenon as El Niño. 566 00:49:26,600 --> 00:49:31,750 These changes over the Pacific have a huge impact on the weather... 567 00:49:33,920 --> 00:49:38,230 ...causing flash floods on the American continent. 568 00:49:40,760 --> 00:49:45,310 Meanwhile, in places as far apart as Australia and Africa, 569 00:49:45,360 --> 00:49:49,230 temperatures soar, causing wildfires. 570 00:49:56,200 --> 00:50:01,350 But for the ancient Pacific colonisers, it would have transformed their options. 571 00:50:01,400 --> 00:50:05,070 With the wind blowing consistently from west to east, 572 00:50:05,120 --> 00:50:08,310 the exploration of the Pacific would have been much easier. 573 00:50:09,760 --> 00:50:12,270 So what happens to the winds during El Niño years? 574 00:50:12,320 --> 00:50:17,270 I realised that during the El Niño years, 575 00:50:17,320 --> 00:50:21,710 the wind is extended very long and very strong. 576 00:50:21,760 --> 00:50:27,710 It remains coming from the west. That's what I see during that time. 577 00:50:27,760 --> 00:50:30,190 So the westerlies stay for longer. 578 00:50:30,240 --> 00:50:32,710 - Yeah, kind of stay for a longer time. - Right. 579 00:50:36,600 --> 00:50:41,790 And this may be the key to the mystery of how the Pacific was colonised. 580 00:50:41,840 --> 00:50:45,590 El Niños tend to come in phases. 581 00:50:45,640 --> 00:50:47,470 It now seems that in the past, 582 00:50:47,520 --> 00:50:52,870 each El Niño phase coincided with a wave of colonisation across the Pacific. 583 00:50:55,600 --> 00:50:59,270 And so the most epic journeys in history, 584 00:50:59,320 --> 00:51:03,590 journeys that took people to the most far-flung corners of the world, 585 00:51:03,640 --> 00:51:08,030 were at least partly the result of how the ocean affects the winds. 586 00:51:13,080 --> 00:51:15,870 It would be nice to think that the ocean and winds 587 00:51:15,920 --> 00:51:21,710 always had positive effects on history. But the reality is more complex, 588 00:51:21,760 --> 00:51:26,590 because El Niño is just one phase in a larger climatic system 589 00:51:26,640 --> 00:51:28,510 called the Southern Oscillation. 590 00:51:29,680 --> 00:51:33,630 This oscillation in the Pacific is so powerful 591 00:51:33,680 --> 00:51:39,710 that it's had profound effects on civilisations across much of the planet. 592 00:51:44,840 --> 00:51:49,270 Chaco Canyon in the south-west corner of the USA, 593 00:51:49,320 --> 00:51:53,950 once home to a people who built a sophisticated civilisation. 594 00:52:00,160 --> 00:52:02,230 Oh, wow! Look at that. 595 00:52:02,280 --> 00:52:04,270 She's beautiful. 596 00:52:04,320 --> 00:52:06,190 That is so big! 597 00:52:06,240 --> 00:52:08,870 I mean, that's what really strikes you - this is a big landscape, 598 00:52:08,920 --> 00:52:10,870 and still this jumps out at you. 599 00:52:10,920 --> 00:52:15,790 You can just tell that this place was built to last. 600 00:52:15,840 --> 00:52:20,630 It looks like the people here figured they'd be here for a very long time. 601 00:52:23,120 --> 00:52:25,990 At the heart of the canyon are the remains of a structure 602 00:52:26,040 --> 00:52:27,670 called a "great house". 603 00:52:29,200 --> 00:52:31,070 Pueblo Bonito. 604 00:52:39,160 --> 00:52:44,710 It was built by the Anasazi over 1,000 years ago. 605 00:52:51,240 --> 00:52:53,590 Ooh! 606 00:52:53,640 --> 00:52:56,270 Must have been a wee bit smaller than me! 607 00:52:56,320 --> 00:53:00,310 Pueblo Bonito was the centre of the Anasazi civilisation. 608 00:53:00,360 --> 00:53:06,310 Thousands of people lived nearby in the surrounding farms and villages. 609 00:53:11,160 --> 00:53:13,790 You know, there's a good reason why the people at Chaco Canyon 610 00:53:13,840 --> 00:53:16,550 built their settlements at the base of these massive cliffs, 611 00:53:16,600 --> 00:53:19,470 and that's because the water is from up there. 612 00:53:19,520 --> 00:53:22,150 There's hardly any rainfall around here, 613 00:53:22,200 --> 00:53:26,830 but the rain that does fall lands on the mesa behind here, runs off into ravines 614 00:53:26,880 --> 00:53:30,750 and then comes cascading down into the valley. 615 00:53:43,160 --> 00:53:45,470 Rather than let it drain off into the river, 616 00:53:45,520 --> 00:53:49,230 the Anasazi would build dams and channels to pool the water 617 00:53:49,280 --> 00:53:51,910 or to divert it off to where it was needed. 618 00:53:58,160 --> 00:54:03,190 But by 1300, this whole region had become effectively deserted, 619 00:54:03,240 --> 00:54:06,230 and the big question was why. 620 00:54:13,760 --> 00:54:17,350 The answer lay thousands of kilometres away. 621 00:54:17,400 --> 00:54:21,550 Unknown to them, they were at the mercy of the Southern Oscillation 622 00:54:21,600 --> 00:54:23,190 in the distant Pacific Ocean. 623 00:54:30,160 --> 00:54:34,270 When unusually warm water moves to the west of the Pacific, 624 00:54:34,320 --> 00:54:36,030 it changes the winds, 625 00:54:36,080 --> 00:54:39,750 taking rain and storms away from the Americas 626 00:54:39,800 --> 00:54:42,630 and leaving communities inland parched. 627 00:54:56,040 --> 00:54:59,470 Normally, this isn't enough to have a lasting impact, 628 00:54:59,520 --> 00:55:04,870 but around 1300 AD, the climate got stuck in this phase, 629 00:55:04,920 --> 00:55:08,830 leading to a series of mega droughts lasting decades. 630 00:55:13,360 --> 00:55:17,390 It wasn't just the Anasazi civilisation that was affected. 631 00:55:17,440 --> 00:55:20,750 Each time the Southern Oscillation got stuck in this position, 632 00:55:20,800 --> 00:55:24,710 the result was a similarly devastating mega drought. 633 00:55:28,560 --> 00:55:32,270 The Fremont, Mogollon and Hohokam cultures 634 00:55:32,320 --> 00:55:36,310 all declined at the same time as the Anasazi. 635 00:55:37,920 --> 00:55:42,390 In South America, the Tiwanaku and the Sican, 636 00:55:42,440 --> 00:55:45,790 and in Central America, the Toltecs and the Zapotecs 637 00:55:45,840 --> 00:55:47,470 were all weakened or collapsed 638 00:55:47,520 --> 00:55:50,430 because of changes in the Southern Oscillation. 639 00:55:51,880 --> 00:55:53,990 And droughts caused by the Southern Oscillation 640 00:55:54,040 --> 00:55:59,590 also brought to a close the first era of the mighty Mayan empire. 641 00:56:03,480 --> 00:56:06,110 Severe droughts weren't the only factor 642 00:56:06,160 --> 00:56:08,910 behind the collapse of these civilisations. 643 00:56:11,840 --> 00:56:17,670 At Chaco Canyon, the people were living close to the limits of their resources, 644 00:56:17,720 --> 00:56:21,550 so they were highly vulnerable to climatic changes. 645 00:56:25,280 --> 00:56:29,550 For me, that's a message that still resonates today. 646 00:56:37,800 --> 00:56:42,790 The impact of the winds on human history has been subtle and often unseen, 647 00:56:42,840 --> 00:56:45,470 but extraordinarily powerful. 648 00:56:46,960 --> 00:56:50,390 They define climate zones that, for thousands of years, 649 00:56:50,440 --> 00:56:55,230 set the limits for human development over much of the world. 650 00:57:02,120 --> 00:57:08,310 Then, paradoxically, the winds set us free from these limits. 651 00:57:10,680 --> 00:57:14,670 Now, as our climate is changing, 652 00:57:14,720 --> 00:57:18,310 we can expect significant changes in wind patterns, 653 00:57:18,360 --> 00:57:23,230 altering the distribution of heat and moisture around the world. 654 00:57:24,480 --> 00:57:29,390 How we cope will depend on how close we are to our own limits. 655 00:57:35,320 --> 00:57:37,670 Whether it's on land or at sea, 656 00:57:37,720 --> 00:57:42,910 we've gained so much by exploiting and adapting to the rhythms of the wind. 657 00:57:42,960 --> 00:57:45,310 But we've never really mastered it. 658 00:57:45,360 --> 00:57:47,990 We can only ever be one step behind. 659 00:57:48,040 --> 00:57:49,510 I mean, even today, 660 00:57:49,560 --> 00:57:53,590 when we can virtually track every twist and turn of the air above our head, 661 00:57:53,640 --> 00:57:56,750 the atmosphere is still mysterious, still erratic 662 00:57:56,800 --> 00:58:00,390 and ultimately still shapes our future. 663 00:58:02,880 --> 00:58:04,670 Next time - fire. 664 00:58:04,720 --> 00:58:05,870 Oh! 665 00:58:05,920 --> 00:58:10,910 It's deadly and yet it's also the power behind human progress. 666 00:58:10,960 --> 00:58:15,670 Our dependence on fire means that events deep in the Earth's past 667 00:58:15,720 --> 00:58:18,190 have changed the course of human history. 668 00:58:18,240 --> 00:58:20,390 Ah... 58566

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