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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,930 --> 00:00:07,730 NARRATOR: What do we really know about the planet we live on? 2 00:00:09,670 --> 00:00:12,700 This giant spinning ball of rock. 3 00:00:14,740 --> 00:00:16,010 The truth is, 4 00:00:16,110 --> 00:00:21,680 something extraordinary is going on deep inside the Earth. 5 00:00:21,780 --> 00:00:25,120 Powerful forces, mysterious processes 6 00:00:25,220 --> 00:00:28,680 are happening thousands of miles beneath our feet. 7 00:00:28,790 --> 00:00:34,420 And without them, life on our planet would be impossible. 8 00:00:43,040 --> 00:00:46,980 The secret to life on Earth lies inside. 9 00:00:47,080 --> 00:00:48,040 [Rumbling] 10 00:00:58,350 --> 00:01:02,720 To discover how and why, we need to crack the Earth open... 11 00:01:04,290 --> 00:01:07,590 ...and travel all the way to the core. 12 00:01:24,950 --> 00:01:26,350 A century ago, 13 00:01:26,450 --> 00:01:29,510 Jules Verne's book "Journey to the Center of the Earth" 14 00:01:29,620 --> 00:01:32,050 captured the world's imagination. 15 00:01:33,560 --> 00:01:37,250 Of course, in reality, it's an impossible journey. 16 00:01:38,430 --> 00:01:39,590 In the center of the Earth, 17 00:01:39,700 --> 00:01:42,930 there are titanic pressures and extreme temperatures. 18 00:01:43,030 --> 00:01:45,730 They make 99% of the planet beneath us 19 00:01:45,840 --> 00:01:48,000 inaccessible to humans. 20 00:01:48,100 --> 00:01:51,800 It is easier to design something to descend into the sun 21 00:01:51,910 --> 00:01:53,740 than it is to design something 22 00:01:53,840 --> 00:01:55,540 to go to the center of the Earth, 23 00:01:55,640 --> 00:01:58,610 because the temperatures are as high or higher 24 00:01:58,710 --> 00:02:00,480 than the surface of the sun, 25 00:02:00,580 --> 00:02:04,040 but the pressures are unimaginably large. 26 00:02:05,350 --> 00:02:07,480 NARRATOR: Because scientists can't travel to the core 27 00:02:07,590 --> 00:02:08,990 and see for themselves, 28 00:02:09,090 --> 00:02:11,990 they have to work out other ways to understand it. 29 00:02:13,030 --> 00:02:14,460 It's not easy studying something 30 00:02:14,560 --> 00:02:17,830 you'll never be able to see or touch. 31 00:02:17,930 --> 00:02:19,920 LATHROP: We can see hurricanes coming. 32 00:02:20,040 --> 00:02:23,490 We can see fronts coming that will have violent thunderstorms. 33 00:02:23,610 --> 00:02:25,160 All of that predictive power 34 00:02:25,270 --> 00:02:28,510 comes because we can observe the atmosphere. 35 00:02:28,610 --> 00:02:31,670 We don't have anything like that in the interior of the Earth 36 00:02:31,780 --> 00:02:33,940 because we don't have any detailed measurements 37 00:02:34,050 --> 00:02:35,640 of what's happening in the core. 38 00:02:35,750 --> 00:02:38,620 We don't really know any of the motions in the core. 39 00:02:38,720 --> 00:02:40,750 We don't know how the temperatures are varying. 40 00:02:40,860 --> 00:02:43,760 We don't know what storms are brewing down there. 41 00:02:43,860 --> 00:02:46,950 NARRATOR: But Lathrop is determined to find out, 42 00:02:47,060 --> 00:02:50,360 so he's building his very own planet Earth 43 00:02:50,470 --> 00:02:52,530 at the University of Maryland. 44 00:02:52,640 --> 00:02:57,400 So we've been seven years in construction of this experiment. 45 00:02:58,410 --> 00:03:01,640 Built to try to match as many parameters as possible 46 00:03:01,740 --> 00:03:03,210 with the Earth's core. 47 00:03:08,450 --> 00:03:12,610 It's a model of both the outer and inner cores of the Earth. 48 00:03:12,720 --> 00:03:15,690 NARRATOR: It might look like a crazy experiment, 49 00:03:15,790 --> 00:03:18,230 but investigating the Earth's interior 50 00:03:18,330 --> 00:03:21,390 is more than just scientific curiosity. 51 00:03:21,500 --> 00:03:24,130 Life on Earth's surface, where we live, 52 00:03:24,230 --> 00:03:27,200 actually depends on processes taking place 53 00:03:27,300 --> 00:03:29,200 deep inside our planet. 54 00:03:29,310 --> 00:03:30,860 If we can figure them out, 55 00:03:30,970 --> 00:03:32,700 then we'll be closer to understanding 56 00:03:32,810 --> 00:03:37,610 how and why life exists and what its future could be. 57 00:03:37,710 --> 00:03:38,770 LATHROP: And the hope is, 58 00:03:38,880 --> 00:03:42,150 by building a laboratory model of a planetary core, 59 00:03:42,250 --> 00:03:43,340 or the Earth's core, 60 00:03:43,450 --> 00:03:46,850 that we can probe in detail what's happening 61 00:03:46,960 --> 00:03:49,420 and work toward getting a predictive science, 62 00:03:49,530 --> 00:03:52,050 being able to predict what's going to happen 63 00:03:52,160 --> 00:03:54,290 toward the future for the Earth's core. 64 00:03:55,160 --> 00:03:56,930 NARRATOR: Lathrop is not alone. 65 00:03:58,170 --> 00:04:00,730 Around the world, scientists are probing the planet 66 00:04:00,840 --> 00:04:02,240 in every way possible 67 00:04:02,340 --> 00:04:04,740 to solve the mysteries of the deep Earth. 68 00:04:04,840 --> 00:04:07,140 They're studying volcanoes... 69 00:04:08,340 --> 00:04:11,210 ...measuring vibrations from earthquakes 70 00:04:11,310 --> 00:04:13,210 to perform seismic X-rays of the planet... 71 00:04:15,920 --> 00:04:18,050 ...building complex laboratory models... 72 00:04:20,460 --> 00:04:23,120 ...and discovering that the world beneath our feet 73 00:04:23,230 --> 00:04:28,630 is stranger and more fantastic than they could ever imagine. 74 00:04:28,730 --> 00:04:31,000 It's full of incredible riches, 75 00:04:31,100 --> 00:04:34,970 monumental structures, and bizarre creatures. 76 00:04:35,070 --> 00:04:38,270 They've found there's actually more life beneath the surface 77 00:04:38,370 --> 00:04:39,400 than above it... 78 00:04:41,040 --> 00:04:44,170 ...and more water than in all of the oceans. 79 00:04:46,180 --> 00:04:49,080 Down here, there are even raging storms 80 00:04:49,180 --> 00:04:52,020 more violent than the planet's worst hurricanes. 81 00:04:53,060 --> 00:04:57,080 And somehow this mysterious world deep inside the planet 82 00:04:57,190 --> 00:04:59,290 shapes our own. 83 00:04:59,400 --> 00:05:03,350 But to discover how is a huge challenge. 84 00:05:03,470 --> 00:05:06,870 LATHROP: Almost any basic quantity that you imagine 85 00:05:06,970 --> 00:05:09,060 might be changing down there. 86 00:05:09,170 --> 00:05:11,000 There's a whole host of interesting questions 87 00:05:11,110 --> 00:05:13,670 that you'd like to know about the core 88 00:05:13,780 --> 00:05:17,010 but that you can't unless you go there. 89 00:05:17,110 --> 00:05:19,910 NARRATOR: There are many mysteries in the deep core 90 00:05:20,020 --> 00:05:23,450 but perhaps none so powerful as gravity. 91 00:05:25,120 --> 00:05:28,350 Gravity keeps the moon and thousands of man-made satellites 92 00:05:28,460 --> 00:05:29,520 in their orbits. 93 00:05:29,630 --> 00:05:31,020 And even out here 94 00:05:31,130 --> 00:05:35,290 it prevents molecules of gas from floating off into space. 95 00:05:37,030 --> 00:05:38,190 This immense force 96 00:05:38,300 --> 00:05:42,100 comes from the massive dense interior of our planet. 97 00:05:44,310 --> 00:05:47,710 The closer we get to Earth, the stronger this force becomes. 98 00:05:49,780 --> 00:05:53,510 By 62 miles up, gravity has collected enough gas 99 00:05:53,620 --> 00:05:55,880 to form a cocoon around the Earth. 100 00:05:55,980 --> 00:05:58,610 This is the Earth's atmosphere. 101 00:06:00,820 --> 00:06:04,380 It protects us from meteorites, absorbs lethal radiation, 102 00:06:04,490 --> 00:06:08,830 and insulates the Earth from the freezing temperatures of space. 103 00:06:12,900 --> 00:06:14,230 And what's most important... 104 00:06:14,340 --> 00:06:17,170 It gives us the air that we breathe. 105 00:06:18,870 --> 00:06:22,780 It's simple. No gravity... no atmosphere. 106 00:06:22,880 --> 00:06:25,870 No atmosphere... no life. 107 00:06:28,920 --> 00:06:31,550 There's another force of nature inside Earth 108 00:06:31,650 --> 00:06:34,320 that's just as vital to life. 109 00:06:34,420 --> 00:06:37,950 We take it for granted that life gets its energy from the sun. 110 00:06:39,230 --> 00:06:42,820 True, its nuclear furnace does warm our atmosphere, 111 00:06:42,930 --> 00:06:46,160 drive our weather, and make our food grow. 112 00:06:46,270 --> 00:06:50,330 Without the sun, life on Earth would quickly disappear. 113 00:06:50,440 --> 00:06:53,430 But forces from deep inside the Earth 114 00:06:53,540 --> 00:06:58,140 played a vital role in creating life in the first place. 115 00:06:58,250 --> 00:07:00,840 Life survives today because of a careful balance 116 00:07:00,950 --> 00:07:03,650 between the energy of the sun on the outside 117 00:07:03,750 --> 00:07:07,780 and the energy coming from inside Earth's core. 118 00:07:10,930 --> 00:07:12,480 The most visible sign 119 00:07:12,590 --> 00:07:16,500 of the seething energy inside our planet are volcanoes. 120 00:07:20,100 --> 00:07:22,630 They erupt through cracks in the crust, 121 00:07:22,740 --> 00:07:26,300 the planet's fragile outer shell. 122 00:07:26,410 --> 00:07:30,170 This layer is only 30 miles thick. 123 00:07:31,650 --> 00:07:33,510 All of the Earth's volcanoes 124 00:07:33,620 --> 00:07:35,520 release just a tiny fraction of the energy 125 00:07:35,620 --> 00:07:37,550 locked beneath the surface. 126 00:07:40,960 --> 00:07:43,520 The Earth's inner energy is so powerful, 127 00:07:43,630 --> 00:07:46,320 it can thrust rock layers high in the air, 128 00:07:46,430 --> 00:07:48,560 creating whole mountain ranges 129 00:07:48,660 --> 00:07:51,960 such as the Guadalupe Mountains in New Mexico. 130 00:07:53,140 --> 00:07:56,130 These layers were once a flat seabed 131 00:07:56,240 --> 00:08:01,110 until the Earth's heat pushed them 8, 000 feet into the sky. 132 00:08:01,210 --> 00:08:03,770 In this churning, heaving action, 133 00:08:03,880 --> 00:08:06,400 cracks and fissures let in water, 134 00:08:06,520 --> 00:08:08,640 which dissolves the soft limestone rocks 135 00:08:08,750 --> 00:08:10,550 below the surface. 136 00:08:12,720 --> 00:08:18,020 Here in New Mexico are the magnificent Carlsbad Caverns. 137 00:08:21,400 --> 00:08:23,490 One chamber is so large, 138 00:08:23,600 --> 00:08:26,860 it could comfortably accommodate a jumbo jet. 139 00:08:28,670 --> 00:08:30,470 For Peter Scholle, 140 00:08:30,570 --> 00:08:33,970 these caverns are a geological treasure trove. 141 00:08:36,980 --> 00:08:39,970 We're 850 feet below the surface of the Earth here 142 00:08:40,080 --> 00:08:43,210 in the lower cave of Carlsbad Caverns. 143 00:08:43,320 --> 00:08:45,250 We are amongst a bunch 144 00:08:45,350 --> 00:08:48,650 of limestone stalactites and stalagmites. 145 00:08:48,760 --> 00:08:52,090 This cave has probably a couple of miles of passage. 146 00:08:52,190 --> 00:08:53,390 There are other caves 147 00:08:53,500 --> 00:08:56,120 that have literally hundreds of miles of passage. 148 00:08:56,230 --> 00:08:58,130 In many cases, there are actually rivers 149 00:08:58,230 --> 00:09:02,000 that flow through them for tens or even hundreds of miles. 150 00:09:08,310 --> 00:09:11,040 NARRATOR: The eerie stalactites growing downward 151 00:09:11,150 --> 00:09:13,440 and the stalagmites growing upward 152 00:09:13,550 --> 00:09:16,880 were deposited by the water over thousands of years. 153 00:09:23,690 --> 00:09:24,660 [Rumbling] 154 00:09:26,430 --> 00:09:28,490 Our journey from the surface to the core 155 00:09:28,600 --> 00:09:31,070 reveals more spectacular surprises 156 00:09:31,170 --> 00:09:33,460 as we head further downward. 157 00:09:33,570 --> 00:09:38,170 Just below the surface, it's cold, dark, seemingly dead. 158 00:09:38,270 --> 00:09:41,730 Then, very quickly, everything changes. 159 00:09:44,250 --> 00:09:48,910 As we go even deeper, it gets warmer, then hot. 160 00:09:50,990 --> 00:09:52,720 The next stop on our journey... 161 00:09:52,820 --> 00:09:57,190 a mysterious cave below the Mexican desert. 162 00:09:57,290 --> 00:10:00,230 This is what the Earth's inner energy can do. 163 00:10:02,300 --> 00:10:04,560 At nearly 40 feet long, 164 00:10:04,670 --> 00:10:08,190 these are the largest known crystals in the world. 165 00:10:08,300 --> 00:10:10,670 They're what's left of an underground lake 166 00:10:10,770 --> 00:10:13,000 rich in minerals. 167 00:10:13,110 --> 00:10:15,540 The lake was turned into a boiling cauldron 168 00:10:15,640 --> 00:10:18,200 by red-hot magma erupting from below. 169 00:10:19,250 --> 00:10:21,580 As the hot water percolated through the crust, 170 00:10:21,680 --> 00:10:23,080 these giant crystals 171 00:10:23,190 --> 00:10:26,150 grew from the minerals dissolved in the water. 172 00:10:28,220 --> 00:10:32,420 Today, the chamber is still a scorching 120 degrees... 173 00:10:32,530 --> 00:10:36,330 so hot, scientists can only work 30 minutes at a time, 174 00:10:36,430 --> 00:10:38,590 even in their climate-controlled suits. 175 00:10:41,600 --> 00:10:45,370 LATHROP: But the deep interior is quite unsuitable for people. 176 00:10:45,470 --> 00:10:47,810 Pressures are high, temperatures are high. 177 00:10:47,910 --> 00:10:50,140 And early on, people going to mines 178 00:10:50,250 --> 00:10:52,480 realize it gets hotter as you go deeper. 179 00:10:52,580 --> 00:10:54,950 And so there's this fascination then 180 00:10:55,050 --> 00:10:57,310 with this inhospitable interior 181 00:10:57,420 --> 00:11:00,180 to what is otherwise a pleasant surface we live on. 182 00:11:01,120 --> 00:11:02,990 NARRATOR: But the energy inside the Earth 183 00:11:03,090 --> 00:11:06,120 can do more than make mountains and hollow out caves. 184 00:11:06,230 --> 00:11:07,560 In the 1960s, 185 00:11:07,660 --> 00:11:11,690 scientists discovered it can move entire continents. 186 00:11:11,800 --> 00:11:13,930 The Earth's crust is formed 187 00:11:14,040 --> 00:11:17,470 from seven massive sections called plates. 188 00:11:17,570 --> 00:11:19,770 What researchers realized 189 00:11:19,880 --> 00:11:22,470 is that these plates were all shifting. 190 00:11:23,350 --> 00:11:25,750 In some places, they're pulling apart, 191 00:11:25,850 --> 00:11:28,440 in others, smashing together. 192 00:11:29,520 --> 00:11:32,580 Mountains are the crumple zones of these collisions, 193 00:11:32,690 --> 00:11:35,990 and some are truly spectacular. 194 00:11:39,630 --> 00:11:41,290 These are the Swiss Alps, 195 00:11:41,400 --> 00:11:43,860 where two continents crashed together. 196 00:11:46,670 --> 00:11:48,400 High peaks, like the Matterhorn, 197 00:11:48,500 --> 00:11:52,300 testify to the immense scale of the forces unleashed. 198 00:11:54,080 --> 00:11:58,710 It's literally a piece of Africa sitting on top of Europe. 199 00:12:02,720 --> 00:12:06,480 Every year, these mountains grow by a quarter inch. 200 00:13:02,330 --> 00:13:05,090 The Earth is always in motion. 201 00:13:06,130 --> 00:13:09,830 Our mountains and continents slide around the Earth's surface 202 00:13:09,930 --> 00:13:13,130 driven by energy from deep inside the planet. 203 00:13:14,440 --> 00:13:17,430 But as this driving force reshapes the surface, 204 00:13:17,540 --> 00:13:19,570 it reshapes life as well. 205 00:13:20,640 --> 00:13:24,480 It can change and transform the course of life. 206 00:13:25,520 --> 00:13:27,140 The evidence is here... 207 00:13:27,250 --> 00:13:31,410 1.5 miles down inside a vast coal seam. 208 00:13:33,960 --> 00:13:37,690 700 miles long and 120 miles wide. 209 00:13:39,630 --> 00:13:42,960 212 million tons of coal. 210 00:13:44,700 --> 00:13:46,000 All the coal on Earth 211 00:13:46,100 --> 00:13:49,090 is the fossilized remains of a superforest 212 00:13:49,210 --> 00:13:52,170 that once dominated the surface of our planet. 213 00:13:57,450 --> 00:14:01,750 360 million years ago, there was an explosion of life on Earth. 214 00:14:01,850 --> 00:14:03,010 It was more diverse, 215 00:14:03,120 --> 00:14:06,320 more abundant than it's ever been since. 216 00:14:06,420 --> 00:14:07,860 And it was all because of the way 217 00:14:07,960 --> 00:14:12,120 that forces inside planet Earth had shaped the surface. 218 00:14:14,030 --> 00:14:15,400 Go back in time. 219 00:14:15,500 --> 00:14:18,060 That driving energy at the heart of the planet 220 00:14:18,170 --> 00:14:19,690 had pushed the continents together 221 00:14:19,800 --> 00:14:24,430 into a single giant landmass wrapped around the equator. 222 00:14:26,810 --> 00:14:29,710 On this supercontinent, known as Pangaea, 223 00:14:29,810 --> 00:14:33,510 there were vast lowland swamps and tropical rainforests. 224 00:14:33,620 --> 00:14:35,240 It was a massive hothouse 225 00:14:35,350 --> 00:14:40,310 and led to the creation of millions of new species. 226 00:14:43,130 --> 00:14:47,390 This period of time is known as the Carboniferous era. 227 00:14:47,500 --> 00:14:49,120 The closest scientists can get 228 00:14:49,230 --> 00:14:52,830 to those conditions on Earth millions of years ago is here... 229 00:14:52,940 --> 00:14:56,240 the Okefenokee nature reserve in southern Georgia. 230 00:14:56,340 --> 00:14:59,800 Dr. Fred Rich is exploring how the inner Earth and life 231 00:14:59,910 --> 00:15:01,470 are interconnected. 232 00:15:04,580 --> 00:15:08,140 DR. RICH: There were large landmasses at the equator. 233 00:15:08,250 --> 00:15:13,190 So you have to imagine this flat landscape just above sea level, 234 00:15:13,290 --> 00:15:16,090 very well-watered, in the tropics. 235 00:15:16,190 --> 00:15:21,260 And that paleogeography and the weather conditions, 236 00:15:21,360 --> 00:15:24,130 the meteorology that followed from that, 237 00:15:24,230 --> 00:15:28,000 led to the appearance of forests 238 00:15:28,100 --> 00:15:31,100 that were unlike anything that had ever existed on the planet. 239 00:15:35,510 --> 00:15:38,780 NARRATOR: It wasn't just that the forests were big. 240 00:15:38,880 --> 00:15:41,410 The trees were monsters, too. 241 00:15:43,690 --> 00:15:45,950 DR. RICH: Huge plants... 242 00:15:46,060 --> 00:15:49,860 Some of these are reckoned to have been 70 to 100 feet high 243 00:15:49,960 --> 00:15:53,360 and perhaps as much as 5, 6 feet in diameter... 244 00:15:54,560 --> 00:15:59,760 ...lived across this immense moist landscape. 245 00:15:59,870 --> 00:16:03,200 And plants grew until they got so big or so old 246 00:16:03,310 --> 00:16:04,740 that they simply fell over. 247 00:16:07,640 --> 00:16:10,200 NARRATOR: These huge trees and dense forests 248 00:16:10,310 --> 00:16:12,870 had a profound effect on the atmosphere. 249 00:16:14,150 --> 00:16:18,310 They sucked up carbon dioxide and pumped out oxygen. 250 00:16:19,420 --> 00:16:21,320 DR. RICH: High humidity. 251 00:16:21,420 --> 00:16:24,190 Tremendous amount of oxygen exchange. 252 00:16:24,290 --> 00:16:26,230 I mean, these plants were photosynthesizing. 253 00:16:26,330 --> 00:16:28,760 So, understandably, these were oxygen pumps. 254 00:16:28,870 --> 00:16:31,460 And they were similarly pulling huge amounts of CO2 255 00:16:31,570 --> 00:16:32,800 out of the air. 256 00:16:35,040 --> 00:16:37,230 NARRATOR: 360 million years ago, 257 00:16:37,340 --> 00:16:39,570 the proportion of oxygen in the air 258 00:16:39,680 --> 00:16:42,910 was 60% greater than it is today. 259 00:16:44,580 --> 00:16:46,450 The high levels of oxygen 260 00:16:46,550 --> 00:16:50,950 led to another dramatic effect on the Earth's creatures. 261 00:16:52,090 --> 00:16:54,320 It supersized them. 262 00:16:56,130 --> 00:17:00,290 There were poisonous centipedes 6 feet long. 263 00:17:00,400 --> 00:17:01,830 2-foot cockroaches. 264 00:17:02,830 --> 00:17:05,600 Even dragonflies the size of sea gulls. 265 00:17:06,570 --> 00:17:09,160 DR. RICH: Dragonflies that we find in this swamp are large, 266 00:17:09,270 --> 00:17:10,570 and they're certainly numerous. 267 00:17:10,670 --> 00:17:12,230 But the dragonflies of the Carboniferous 268 00:17:12,340 --> 00:17:13,470 would have been much bigger. 269 00:17:13,580 --> 00:17:15,440 Easily three, four times the size, 270 00:17:15,550 --> 00:17:17,950 based on what we have for fossil evidence. 271 00:17:20,480 --> 00:17:22,110 NARRATOR: Instead of alligators, 272 00:17:22,220 --> 00:17:25,550 the dominant predators were giant toads. 273 00:17:26,620 --> 00:17:30,650 Alligators would have been replaced by large amphibians... 274 00:17:30,760 --> 00:17:33,520 amphibians probably as large as the alligators 275 00:17:33,630 --> 00:17:35,260 that we have in these modern swamps 276 00:17:35,370 --> 00:17:37,530 but looking differently, perhaps. 277 00:17:39,040 --> 00:17:42,030 NARRATOR: New species that changed the evolution of life, 278 00:17:42,140 --> 00:17:45,940 all because the energy inside our planet reshaped its surface. 279 00:17:48,750 --> 00:17:52,770 This strange lost world existed long before humans, 280 00:17:52,880 --> 00:17:57,320 but its story was sealed into the Earth's rocks in coal. 281 00:17:59,590 --> 00:18:01,960 The forest first became peat. 282 00:18:02,060 --> 00:18:04,750 This was then squeezed under tons of rock, 283 00:18:04,860 --> 00:18:06,920 where it started to dry out. 284 00:18:10,500 --> 00:18:14,530 Now, in the process of this brown messy sediment 285 00:18:14,640 --> 00:18:16,260 becoming coal, 286 00:18:16,370 --> 00:18:19,710 the first thing we would need to do is get rid of the water. 287 00:18:19,810 --> 00:18:22,970 Earthly processes do that simply by loading the sediment. 288 00:18:23,080 --> 00:18:25,640 So the longer the sediment is in the ground, 289 00:18:25,750 --> 00:18:29,010 the longer it has been buried, subjected to geothermal heat 290 00:18:29,120 --> 00:18:31,420 that's coming from the interior of the Earth, 291 00:18:31,520 --> 00:18:33,890 the more the sediment is compacted, 292 00:18:33,990 --> 00:18:35,510 and the more the water is driven out. 293 00:18:39,500 --> 00:18:41,120 NARRATOR: So the Earth's internal energy 294 00:18:41,230 --> 00:18:43,790 had reshaped the landmass to make life possible, 295 00:18:43,900 --> 00:18:48,360 then broke it apart and buried the remains deeper and deeper 296 00:18:48,470 --> 00:18:49,870 until the heat and pressure 297 00:18:49,970 --> 00:18:53,100 transformed the ancient forests into coal... 298 00:18:53,210 --> 00:18:55,840 fossilized remains of a lost era. 299 00:19:02,220 --> 00:19:04,280 As we go deeper on our journey, 300 00:19:04,390 --> 00:19:07,220 there are other riches for humans to exploit. 301 00:19:09,060 --> 00:19:10,790 2.5 miles down, 302 00:19:10,890 --> 00:19:14,520 we pass a glittering seam of gold being formed. 303 00:19:16,030 --> 00:19:18,900 Boiling fluids full of dissolved gold 304 00:19:19,000 --> 00:19:21,470 bubble up through the cracks in the rock. 305 00:19:23,510 --> 00:19:26,170 The higher it rises, the cooler it gets, 306 00:19:26,280 --> 00:19:29,510 until the dissolved gold finally settles into seams. 307 00:20:02,220 --> 00:20:04,410 Earth's thin crust... 308 00:20:04,520 --> 00:20:08,780 home to life in all its complex, colorful, infinite variety. 309 00:20:10,320 --> 00:20:14,160 Below it is an inhospitable, lifeless world. 310 00:20:15,290 --> 00:20:16,960 Or so it seemed. 311 00:20:18,160 --> 00:20:22,230 Scientists are now finding life deep inside Earth. 312 00:20:23,700 --> 00:20:28,940 It's a remarkable discovery made in the world's deepest mines. 313 00:20:30,810 --> 00:20:34,370 This is the Witwatersrand region of South Africa. 314 00:20:34,480 --> 00:20:40,150 The mines here reach 2.5 miles inside Earth's crust. 315 00:20:40,250 --> 00:20:44,020 It seems like they stretch a long way down. 316 00:20:45,160 --> 00:20:48,890 But in reality, they barely scratch the surface. 317 00:20:54,930 --> 00:20:57,600 This is a hostile environment for a human being. 318 00:20:59,810 --> 00:21:03,710 It's 130 degrees Fahrenheit, 100% humidity, 319 00:21:03,810 --> 00:21:05,900 and extremely cramped. 320 00:21:08,210 --> 00:21:10,010 The mines are so deep, 321 00:21:10,120 --> 00:21:13,550 the miners have to descend in two stages. 322 00:21:15,320 --> 00:21:18,380 A single elevator cable stretching 2.5 miles 323 00:21:18,490 --> 00:21:20,550 would snap under the strain. 324 00:21:22,830 --> 00:21:26,160 It's so far down, the journey can take two hours. 325 00:21:31,500 --> 00:21:32,530 Like the miners, 326 00:21:32,640 --> 00:21:35,540 these biologists from Bloemfontein University 327 00:21:35,640 --> 00:21:39,270 risk heatstroke as they descend into one of the mines. 328 00:21:41,910 --> 00:21:43,810 But they're not interested in gold. 329 00:21:45,920 --> 00:21:48,790 They're looking for life... 330 00:21:48,890 --> 00:21:51,080 colonies of extraordinary creatures 331 00:21:51,190 --> 00:21:53,750 that thrive in these extreme conditions... 332 00:21:55,430 --> 00:21:58,160 ...bacteria they believe may be direct descendants 333 00:21:58,260 --> 00:22:01,260 of the very first life-forms on Earth. 334 00:22:03,140 --> 00:22:06,260 Leading the team is Professor Derek Litthauer. 335 00:22:06,370 --> 00:22:09,640 You've got communities of bacteria. 336 00:22:09,740 --> 00:22:12,610 And possibly even fungi. 337 00:22:12,710 --> 00:22:13,740 We don't know yet. 338 00:22:13,850 --> 00:22:17,250 But probably mostly bacteria living in there. 339 00:22:17,350 --> 00:22:19,320 And the kind of populations you get in there 340 00:22:19,420 --> 00:22:20,350 are usually determined 341 00:22:20,450 --> 00:22:22,650 by the chemical composition of the water. 342 00:22:22,760 --> 00:22:24,590 But our past experience 343 00:22:24,690 --> 00:22:29,090 has been that there's some unique stuff in there. 344 00:22:33,730 --> 00:22:36,630 NARRATOR: The scientists tap into ancient underground water 345 00:22:36,740 --> 00:22:39,970 released during the mining process. 346 00:22:41,510 --> 00:22:43,700 The water and the bacteria inside it 347 00:22:43,810 --> 00:22:48,710 have remained undisturbed for billions of years. 348 00:22:49,850 --> 00:22:52,880 These bacteria are tough. 349 00:22:52,990 --> 00:22:58,450 All they need to survive is rock, water, and scorching heat. 350 00:23:00,660 --> 00:23:03,490 LITTHAUER: There's an amazing diversity of life underground, 351 00:23:03,600 --> 00:23:05,390 even in the deep subsurface. 352 00:23:05,500 --> 00:23:07,860 In some areas, we can expect life 353 00:23:07,970 --> 00:23:10,870 possibly even down to 10 kilometers below surface. 354 00:23:11,870 --> 00:23:15,000 And they are extremely sophisticated, 355 00:23:15,110 --> 00:23:18,010 very highly specialized for the environment in which they live 356 00:23:18,110 --> 00:23:20,310 off the nutrients that they can get in the rocks. 357 00:23:20,410 --> 00:23:22,570 NARRATOR: It's an extraordinary discovery 358 00:23:22,680 --> 00:23:25,010 that has transformed biologists' understanding 359 00:23:25,120 --> 00:23:27,020 of the origins of life. 360 00:23:27,120 --> 00:23:29,520 The bacteria are the latest additions 361 00:23:29,620 --> 00:23:31,210 to a strange group of creatures 362 00:23:31,320 --> 00:23:33,420 that thrive in extreme conditions 363 00:23:33,530 --> 00:23:35,720 called extremophiles. 364 00:23:35,830 --> 00:23:37,690 [Bubbling] 365 00:23:38,930 --> 00:23:40,460 In the 1960s, 366 00:23:40,570 --> 00:23:43,030 astonished scientists found bacteria 367 00:23:43,140 --> 00:23:46,200 living in Yellowstone's boiling acid pools. 368 00:23:47,610 --> 00:23:49,340 Then in the 1970s, 369 00:23:49,440 --> 00:23:53,240 biologists discovered life 1.5 miles down in the oceans 370 00:23:53,350 --> 00:23:56,940 close to vents in the seafloor called black smokers. 371 00:23:58,120 --> 00:24:00,550 These life-forms thrive on nothing more 372 00:24:00,650 --> 00:24:02,780 than volcanic gases. 373 00:24:04,220 --> 00:24:07,390 If life exists in such hostile conditions... 374 00:24:08,430 --> 00:24:10,690 ...it suggests a teeming mass of life 375 00:24:10,800 --> 00:24:13,770 could exist beneath our feet. 376 00:24:14,800 --> 00:24:17,960 It's been estimated that all the bacteria inside Earth 377 00:24:18,070 --> 00:24:21,900 could weigh more than all the life aboveground put together. 378 00:24:23,080 --> 00:24:26,040 It also raises an intriguing possibility... 379 00:24:26,150 --> 00:24:29,210 that life may have started not on the surface 380 00:24:29,320 --> 00:24:31,480 but deep within the Earth. 381 00:24:34,250 --> 00:24:38,350 There's more diversity and more life in the deep subsurface 382 00:24:38,460 --> 00:24:39,890 than we have above surface. 383 00:24:39,990 --> 00:24:41,960 The implications for this, 384 00:24:42,060 --> 00:24:44,530 in terms of the evolution of life in the universe, 385 00:24:44,630 --> 00:24:45,530 are quite astounding, 386 00:24:45,630 --> 00:24:49,970 because the old concept that life could have started 387 00:24:50,070 --> 00:24:54,200 in very calm, serene, warm pools on the surface of the Earth... 388 00:24:54,310 --> 00:24:55,670 That may be completely wrong. 389 00:24:55,780 --> 00:24:57,770 Life may have started in the subsurface. 390 00:25:00,350 --> 00:25:02,280 NARRATOR: If life began underground, 391 00:25:02,380 --> 00:25:05,110 then somehow at some time in Earth's history, 392 00:25:05,220 --> 00:25:07,650 it found a route to the surface. 393 00:25:09,020 --> 00:25:11,010 Perhaps the Earth's inner energy, 394 00:25:11,120 --> 00:25:12,560 as it pushed through the crust, 395 00:25:12,660 --> 00:25:15,250 took the extremophiles to the top. 396 00:25:16,600 --> 00:25:19,090 Or maybe it hitched a ride on a black smoker... 397 00:25:19,200 --> 00:25:22,600 a kind of extremophile elevator to ground level. 398 00:25:22,700 --> 00:25:25,400 Or floated up in thermal hot springs, 399 00:25:25,500 --> 00:25:27,370 boiling up from deep in the Earth. 400 00:25:29,540 --> 00:25:33,600 How far down primitive life could survive is uncertain. 401 00:25:33,710 --> 00:25:36,510 But to explore what lies beyond the deepest mine 402 00:25:36,620 --> 00:25:39,180 pushes technology to its limits. 403 00:25:40,920 --> 00:25:44,050 The only way down this far is to drill. 404 00:25:48,060 --> 00:25:50,090 But pressure and heat put a limit 405 00:25:50,200 --> 00:25:53,720 on even our most sophisticated drill bits. 406 00:25:53,830 --> 00:25:57,360 The deepest hole ever drilled bored just 7.5 miles 407 00:25:57,470 --> 00:26:00,370 into the Earth's 30-mile crust. 408 00:26:00,470 --> 00:26:03,410 In the 1970s, the Soviets race 409 00:26:03,510 --> 00:26:06,380 to drill the world's deepest borehole in Russia. 410 00:26:07,810 --> 00:26:09,080 The drill bit was so long, 411 00:26:09,180 --> 00:26:12,810 it bent and stretched like a piece of elastic. 412 00:26:12,920 --> 00:26:14,550 But even at this depth, 413 00:26:14,650 --> 00:26:17,380 we are less than halfway through the Earth's surface layer, 414 00:26:17,490 --> 00:26:19,390 the crust. 415 00:26:19,490 --> 00:26:23,220 It's only 1/500th of our journey to the core. 416 00:26:23,330 --> 00:26:27,060 7.5 miles is like traveling from downtown Chicago 417 00:26:27,170 --> 00:26:28,960 into the suburbs. 418 00:26:31,000 --> 00:26:35,410 But it's another 4, 000 miles to the center of the Earth. 419 00:26:35,510 --> 00:26:38,710 That's like commuting from Chicago to London. 420 00:26:40,480 --> 00:26:42,070 Scientists may be restricted 421 00:26:42,180 --> 00:26:45,050 to exploring the thin top layer of the Earth's crust, 422 00:26:45,150 --> 00:26:48,140 but their journey of discovery isn't over. 423 00:26:48,250 --> 00:26:52,160 They've found other ingenious ways of exploring inside Earth, 424 00:26:52,260 --> 00:26:54,230 and in the process 425 00:26:54,330 --> 00:26:56,560 discovered more surprising connections 426 00:26:56,660 --> 00:26:58,720 with the evolution of life itself. 427 00:27:14,000 --> 00:27:17,910 Life on Earth might have started deep in the Earth's crust, 428 00:27:18,010 --> 00:27:20,770 but violent upheavals even further down 429 00:27:20,880 --> 00:27:23,040 played a crucial role in pushing life 430 00:27:23,150 --> 00:27:25,880 on to the next stage of evolution... 431 00:27:25,980 --> 00:27:29,310 one that would lead to all life as we know it. 432 00:27:29,420 --> 00:27:32,850 Remarkably, we know this from the ancient rocks 433 00:27:32,960 --> 00:27:34,480 of the crust itself. 434 00:27:47,600 --> 00:27:48,590 These mountains 435 00:27:48,700 --> 00:27:51,300 in Western Australia's Karijini National Park 436 00:27:51,410 --> 00:27:55,840 are made from rock that's 3.5 billion years old. 437 00:27:55,950 --> 00:27:59,540 They used to be the bed of an ancient sea. 438 00:27:59,650 --> 00:28:02,580 Their red color comes from iron ore 439 00:28:02,690 --> 00:28:04,740 imbedded right in the rock. 440 00:28:06,060 --> 00:28:09,250 But the iron is evidence of something remarkable... 441 00:28:11,060 --> 00:28:12,430 ...because they were formed 442 00:28:12,530 --> 00:28:14,090 during one of the most important events 443 00:28:14,200 --> 00:28:16,860 in the story of life on Earth. 444 00:28:22,400 --> 00:28:26,430 The bands of red iron ore were once layers of sediments, 445 00:28:26,540 --> 00:28:30,100 and they contain evidence of very primitive life-forms. 446 00:28:31,310 --> 00:28:34,010 Martin Van Kranendonk is a geologist 447 00:28:34,120 --> 00:28:37,810 who's spent a lifetime studying these rocks. 448 00:28:37,920 --> 00:28:39,480 Each one of these little bands 449 00:28:39,590 --> 00:28:41,750 is only about the length of a thumbnail, 450 00:28:41,860 --> 00:28:43,690 and it was maybe deposited in a year. 451 00:28:43,790 --> 00:28:44,820 So you can see here, 452 00:28:44,930 --> 00:28:47,860 you've got hundreds of feet of deposited sediments. 453 00:28:47,960 --> 00:28:50,230 It represents hundreds of thousands of years 454 00:28:50,330 --> 00:28:51,990 of geological time. 455 00:28:54,370 --> 00:28:56,770 NARRATOR: These were no ordinary sediments. 456 00:28:56,870 --> 00:29:01,240 They contain fossils of rock structures called stromatolites, 457 00:29:01,340 --> 00:29:04,070 created by some of the earliest living things... 458 00:29:04,180 --> 00:29:06,480 simple bacteria. 459 00:29:08,450 --> 00:29:09,470 It's hard to imagine, 460 00:29:09,590 --> 00:29:12,520 but this immense volume of iron-rich rocks 461 00:29:12,620 --> 00:29:15,920 was actually formed by tiny microscopic organisms 462 00:29:16,030 --> 00:29:18,860 that formed structures such as preserved here 463 00:29:18,960 --> 00:29:20,950 in this very old rock. 464 00:29:21,060 --> 00:29:23,090 This is an example of a stromatolite 465 00:29:23,200 --> 00:29:26,660 that's built by single-celled organisms in this rock, 466 00:29:26,770 --> 00:29:29,900 which is 3.45 billion years old. 467 00:29:30,010 --> 00:29:32,910 This is the oldest fossil on the planet. 468 00:29:37,880 --> 00:29:39,810 NARRATOR: Incredibly, these bacteria 469 00:29:39,920 --> 00:29:42,710 are still making these distinctive rock formations 470 00:29:42,820 --> 00:29:45,480 just 400 miles to the west. 471 00:29:47,160 --> 00:29:50,350 These strange-looking mounds are giant stromatolites 472 00:29:50,460 --> 00:29:52,620 built by the bacteria. 473 00:29:57,830 --> 00:29:59,730 VAN KRANENDONK: Well, stromatolites are rocks, 474 00:29:59,840 --> 00:30:03,290 but they're rocks that are made by living microorganisms 475 00:30:03,410 --> 00:30:05,370 or, as we call them, microbes. 476 00:30:07,580 --> 00:30:09,980 And so these stromatolites actually grow 477 00:30:10,080 --> 00:30:11,980 by precipitating rock. 478 00:30:12,080 --> 00:30:16,380 So they build up layer by layer, but only very slowly. 479 00:30:17,420 --> 00:30:20,480 NARRATOR: The bacteria also produced something else, 480 00:30:20,590 --> 00:30:24,650 something which kick-started a biological revolution... 481 00:30:24,760 --> 00:30:26,320 oxygen. 482 00:30:27,700 --> 00:30:29,690 If life did start underground, 483 00:30:29,800 --> 00:30:33,560 maybe it eventually found its way to the surface, 484 00:30:33,670 --> 00:30:37,370 propelled upward by those forces within Earth. 485 00:30:37,470 --> 00:30:39,810 And once they'd reached the surface, 486 00:30:39,910 --> 00:30:43,210 those bacteria found a new way to harness energy, 487 00:30:43,310 --> 00:30:46,800 not from the rocks and the heat of the deep Earth, 488 00:30:46,920 --> 00:30:50,680 but from sunlight... the process we call photosynthesis. 489 00:30:50,790 --> 00:30:54,520 And one of the most important by-products of photosynthesis 490 00:30:54,620 --> 00:30:56,390 is oxygen. 491 00:30:56,490 --> 00:30:59,620 These stromatolites are incredibly important for us. 492 00:30:59,730 --> 00:31:00,960 They're really the precursors 493 00:31:01,060 --> 00:31:04,520 to allow life to evolve from the oceans on to land 494 00:31:04,630 --> 00:31:06,360 and to breathe air. 495 00:31:06,470 --> 00:31:08,270 NARRATOR: Without oxygen, 496 00:31:08,370 --> 00:31:12,240 complex life as we know it simply wouldn't exist. 497 00:31:12,340 --> 00:31:16,000 But oxygen also changed the composition of the planet, 498 00:31:16,110 --> 00:31:19,080 creating the iron ore in the crust. 499 00:31:19,180 --> 00:31:22,150 At the time, most of the iron on the surface 500 00:31:22,250 --> 00:31:25,710 was dissolved in the oceans, making them appear bright green. 501 00:31:27,290 --> 00:31:30,690 But the newly released oxygen bonded with all the iron 502 00:31:30,790 --> 00:31:32,850 to make iron oxide, or rust. 503 00:31:34,200 --> 00:31:36,690 The iron oxide fell to the seafloor, 504 00:31:36,800 --> 00:31:39,670 and the seas turned blue. 505 00:31:39,770 --> 00:31:42,530 Eventually, the iron oxide formed the deposits 506 00:31:42,640 --> 00:31:45,110 we see in the Karijini mountains. 507 00:31:46,210 --> 00:31:49,870 Layer upon layer of iron oxide exists in the Earth's crust 508 00:31:49,980 --> 00:31:52,380 thanks to primitive bacteria. 509 00:31:53,720 --> 00:31:55,620 It's the ore from which we extract 510 00:31:55,720 --> 00:31:58,780 1.7 billion tons of iron each year, 511 00:31:58,890 --> 00:32:01,860 and it's also rich in oxygen. 512 00:32:03,630 --> 00:32:06,360 In fact, there's 20 times more oxygen 513 00:32:06,460 --> 00:32:08,220 locked up in the bands of iron ore 514 00:32:08,330 --> 00:32:11,030 than there is floating in the atmosphere. 515 00:32:12,430 --> 00:32:14,960 It's another example of how the world we know 516 00:32:15,070 --> 00:32:17,230 has been shaped by the incredible forces 517 00:32:17,340 --> 00:32:19,070 deep inside the planet. 518 00:32:20,380 --> 00:32:23,240 But where do these forces come from? 519 00:32:23,350 --> 00:32:25,400 We now enter the part of the Earth 520 00:32:25,510 --> 00:32:28,350 that holds the answer... the mantle. 521 00:32:28,450 --> 00:32:30,920 It's a dynamic mass of churning rock 522 00:32:31,020 --> 00:32:33,510 kept moving by energy from the core... 523 00:32:33,620 --> 00:32:36,460 the powerhouse of the planet. 524 00:32:45,030 --> 00:32:47,430 Below the 30 miles of surface crust, 525 00:32:47,530 --> 00:32:51,430 we now move deeper, further than any human has ventured, 526 00:32:51,530 --> 00:32:53,430 into the Earth's mantle. 527 00:32:53,540 --> 00:32:55,600 The mantle is the real key 528 00:32:55,710 --> 00:32:58,140 to understanding how our world works. 529 00:32:58,240 --> 00:33:00,330 When you see flowing lava, 530 00:33:00,440 --> 00:33:03,040 it's easy to think that the mantle is liquid. 531 00:33:03,150 --> 00:33:06,910 In fact, it's nearly 2, 000 miles straight down 532 00:33:07,020 --> 00:33:08,810 of hot but solid rock. 533 00:33:08,920 --> 00:33:12,650 It makes up 80% of the Earth's volume. 534 00:33:12,760 --> 00:33:14,380 Nothing can live here. 535 00:33:14,490 --> 00:33:18,820 But what happens at these depths is vital to life on Earth. 536 00:33:18,930 --> 00:33:21,400 The mantle may be beyond our reach, 537 00:33:21,500 --> 00:33:23,900 but sometimes it reaches us. 538 00:33:26,740 --> 00:33:28,230 The solid rock liquefies 539 00:33:28,340 --> 00:33:31,570 when the massive pressure on the mantle is suddenly released 540 00:33:31,670 --> 00:33:33,570 through fissures and cracks in the crust. 541 00:33:34,780 --> 00:33:39,870 The radical change in pressure transforms the rock into lava. 542 00:33:41,050 --> 00:33:43,780 The rock of the mantle beneath the Earth's crust 543 00:33:43,890 --> 00:33:44,940 is inaccessible. 544 00:33:45,050 --> 00:33:46,280 But against the odds, 545 00:33:46,390 --> 00:33:48,380 there are some places where mantlerock 546 00:33:48,490 --> 00:33:50,550 has been forced to the surface. 547 00:33:51,690 --> 00:33:54,060 One of them is on the Lizard Peninsula 548 00:33:54,160 --> 00:33:56,500 on the southernmost tip of England. 549 00:34:07,480 --> 00:34:09,100 On this peaceful beach 550 00:34:09,210 --> 00:34:12,180 is evidence of something violent and powerful... 551 00:34:12,280 --> 00:34:14,410 a piece of mantlerock that broke away 552 00:34:14,520 --> 00:34:17,250 and was forced upward 30 miles 553 00:34:17,350 --> 00:34:19,950 by the churning movements of the crust. 554 00:34:20,060 --> 00:34:22,420 For geologists like Robin Shail, 555 00:34:22,530 --> 00:34:25,150 it's the perfect place to study mantlerocks, 556 00:34:25,260 --> 00:34:28,060 which are normally way beyond his reach. 557 00:34:29,430 --> 00:34:32,530 How do they compare with other rocks on the surface? 558 00:34:34,240 --> 00:34:37,830 What do they tell us about what's inside planet Earth? 559 00:34:43,180 --> 00:34:46,410 DR. SHAIL: The rocks here look completely different. 560 00:34:46,520 --> 00:34:49,010 They have colors which vary from greens 561 00:34:49,120 --> 00:34:50,950 through to oranges and yellows. 562 00:34:51,050 --> 00:34:52,950 This is typical of mantlerocks 563 00:34:53,060 --> 00:34:56,250 wherever they're exposed at the Earth's surface. 564 00:34:59,530 --> 00:35:01,430 NARRATOR: Like no other rocks we know, 565 00:35:01,530 --> 00:35:04,590 mantlerock is very hard and very heavy, 566 00:35:04,700 --> 00:35:07,330 nearly twice the weight of granite. 567 00:35:12,240 --> 00:35:16,140 It's a dense mass of minerals rich in heavy elements 568 00:35:16,250 --> 00:35:19,610 such as iron and magnesium. 569 00:35:19,720 --> 00:35:21,950 And it's the source of gemstones 570 00:35:22,050 --> 00:35:25,350 such as the distinctive green peridot. 571 00:35:27,760 --> 00:35:29,920 Close up, structures are revealed 572 00:35:30,030 --> 00:35:31,930 that could only have been formed 573 00:35:32,030 --> 00:35:34,660 under extreme temperature and pressure. 574 00:35:42,410 --> 00:35:46,670 Here on the Earth's surface, this rock seems solid enough. 575 00:35:48,640 --> 00:35:52,080 Deep underground, however, it becomes very different, 576 00:35:52,180 --> 00:35:55,210 something that behaves more like fudge. 577 00:35:55,320 --> 00:36:00,150 When we look at this mantle peridotite, it appears solid. 578 00:36:00,260 --> 00:36:04,350 In contrast, when mantlerocks... or fudge... are warmer, 579 00:36:04,460 --> 00:36:07,860 you can actually stretch and make it flow. 580 00:36:07,960 --> 00:36:09,860 And the significance for this 581 00:36:09,970 --> 00:36:13,130 is that these weak layers within the mantle 582 00:36:13,240 --> 00:36:16,760 allow the overlying plates to move slowly across. 583 00:36:16,870 --> 00:36:20,000 NARRATOR: A solid that flows may seem strange, 584 00:36:20,110 --> 00:36:23,910 but the mobility of the mantle is vital to life on Earth. 585 00:36:24,010 --> 00:36:26,040 Because currents of heat circulate upwards 586 00:36:26,150 --> 00:36:28,310 from the core through the mantle, 587 00:36:28,420 --> 00:36:31,750 the plates of the crust can move around on the surface. 588 00:36:31,850 --> 00:36:34,650 Without this shifting geology, there'd be no continents, 589 00:36:34,760 --> 00:36:38,020 and the conditions for life would never have existed. 590 00:36:38,130 --> 00:36:39,820 DR. SHAIL: Without these zones in the mantle 591 00:36:39,930 --> 00:36:42,960 that allow the plates to move across the Earth's surface, 592 00:36:43,070 --> 00:36:46,360 we would basically have a geologically dead planet. 593 00:36:46,470 --> 00:36:47,940 We would have no plate movement. 594 00:36:48,040 --> 00:36:49,900 We would have no mountain ranges. 595 00:36:50,010 --> 00:36:52,470 We would have no major ocean basins. 596 00:36:52,580 --> 00:36:55,570 So the mantle is absolutely critical. 597 00:36:57,880 --> 00:36:59,750 NARRATOR: These are the deepest rocks visible 598 00:36:59,850 --> 00:37:01,250 on the Earth's surface. 599 00:37:01,350 --> 00:37:03,080 To look further into the mantle, 600 00:37:03,190 --> 00:37:05,810 scientists must find another way. 601 00:37:42,890 --> 00:37:44,590 Inside the Earth's mantle, 602 00:37:44,700 --> 00:37:48,150 crushed beneath 100 miles of rock, 603 00:37:48,270 --> 00:37:51,030 the pressure is 50, 000 times more 604 00:37:51,140 --> 00:37:53,430 than we feel at the surface, 605 00:37:53,540 --> 00:37:57,060 like carrying 20 Titanics on your shoulders. 606 00:37:59,440 --> 00:38:01,140 It's in this hostile environment 607 00:38:01,250 --> 00:38:04,610 that some of the Earth's greatest treasures are forged. 608 00:38:06,520 --> 00:38:08,950 The pressure creates diamonds. 609 00:38:09,920 --> 00:38:12,390 It crushes carbon into the hardest mineral 610 00:38:12,490 --> 00:38:15,390 known to science. 611 00:38:15,490 --> 00:38:19,220 But we don't have to dig 100 miles to find them. 612 00:38:19,330 --> 00:38:23,460 Diamonds exist just a few hundred feet below the surface. 613 00:38:25,840 --> 00:38:27,330 They were forced up through the crust 614 00:38:27,440 --> 00:38:29,740 by violent prehistoric eruptions 615 00:38:29,840 --> 00:38:32,240 triggered by the Earth's internal heat. 616 00:38:34,080 --> 00:38:37,540 Today, miners excavate these extinct volcanic vents 617 00:38:37,650 --> 00:38:40,640 in search of diamonds. 618 00:38:41,790 --> 00:38:43,080 The Letseng diamond mine 619 00:38:43,190 --> 00:38:45,880 is located in the mountain kingdom of Lesotho... 620 00:38:47,120 --> 00:38:50,490 ...a small country in the heart of South Africa. 621 00:38:52,630 --> 00:38:56,190 The diamonds are imbedded in rock called kimberlite 622 00:38:56,300 --> 00:38:58,770 inside an old volcanic pipe. 623 00:38:58,870 --> 00:39:00,860 It's the job of company geologists 624 00:39:00,970 --> 00:39:02,840 like Claire Palmer to find them. 625 00:39:03,910 --> 00:39:06,710 DR. PALMER: We're standing within the pipe, 626 00:39:06,810 --> 00:39:09,680 the original eruptive pipe that formed. 627 00:39:09,780 --> 00:39:12,340 And the original earth surface would have been 628 00:39:12,450 --> 00:39:14,540 at least 200 meters above our heads. 629 00:39:14,650 --> 00:39:17,020 And we're actually, in the mining process, 630 00:39:17,120 --> 00:39:19,020 reexcavating that pipe. 631 00:39:20,660 --> 00:39:22,520 NARRATOR: Most of the diamonds on Earth 632 00:39:22,630 --> 00:39:26,460 exploded through the surface during huge volcanic eruptions 633 00:39:26,560 --> 00:39:28,590 one billion years ago. 634 00:39:39,080 --> 00:39:43,670 DR. PALMER: These volcanoes erupted at supersonic speeds. 635 00:39:43,780 --> 00:39:47,410 So you can imagine the power with which it explodes. 636 00:39:49,820 --> 00:39:52,190 Similar to that of Mount St. Helens. 637 00:39:52,290 --> 00:39:53,550 But Mount St. Helens' eruption 638 00:39:53,660 --> 00:39:56,020 moved laterally across the Earth, 639 00:39:56,130 --> 00:39:59,100 whereas these eruptions were actually a lot more vertical 640 00:39:59,200 --> 00:40:01,160 in their expanse. 641 00:40:05,940 --> 00:40:07,670 NARRATOR: These violent eruptions 642 00:40:07,770 --> 00:40:10,500 exploded minerals from 100 miles down 643 00:40:10,610 --> 00:40:13,440 upward to the surface in minutes. 644 00:40:15,880 --> 00:40:19,820 Today, the diamonds are locked inside this volcanic rock. 645 00:40:19,920 --> 00:40:22,440 There's only one way to get them out. 646 00:40:41,540 --> 00:40:44,670 Letseng is a valuable mine. 647 00:40:44,780 --> 00:40:46,680 All these diamonds were recovered 648 00:40:46,780 --> 00:40:49,180 in just over two weeks. 649 00:40:49,280 --> 00:40:52,480 These diamonds are known worldwide 650 00:40:52,580 --> 00:40:54,310 for their very high quality 651 00:40:54,420 --> 00:40:58,550 and yield the highest dollar per carat in the world. 652 00:40:58,660 --> 00:41:00,180 The Letseng diamond mine 653 00:41:00,290 --> 00:41:02,820 is famous for its very large diamonds. 654 00:41:02,930 --> 00:41:06,020 One of our most famous is the Lesotho Promise... 655 00:41:06,130 --> 00:41:09,690 603 carats, which was recovered in August 2006. 656 00:41:09,800 --> 00:41:14,030 And it sold on tender for $12.4 million U.S. 657 00:41:14,140 --> 00:41:16,370 NARRATOR: Not all diamonds are perfect. 658 00:41:16,470 --> 00:41:19,140 Some have microscopic flaws. 659 00:41:19,240 --> 00:41:22,010 A perfect diamond is worth a lot more money. 660 00:41:22,110 --> 00:41:26,070 But for geologists, these flaws are the real treasures. 661 00:41:26,180 --> 00:41:28,950 They're tiny fragments of primitive mantle 662 00:41:29,050 --> 00:41:31,040 trapped inside the diamond, 663 00:41:31,150 --> 00:41:34,590 and they're the deepest samples it's possible to capture. 664 00:41:34,690 --> 00:41:36,450 They tell a remarkable story. 665 00:41:36,560 --> 00:41:37,690 Like time capsules, 666 00:41:37,790 --> 00:41:40,060 they hold the key to unlock secrets 667 00:41:40,160 --> 00:41:42,360 of the Earth's very early history. 668 00:41:42,470 --> 00:41:44,060 From their chemistry, 669 00:41:44,170 --> 00:41:46,800 scientists can deduce that most of these diamonds 670 00:41:46,900 --> 00:41:49,670 are 3.2 billion years old. 671 00:41:49,770 --> 00:41:54,070 They can even figure out they were forged 100 miles down. 672 00:41:55,280 --> 00:41:57,180 Diamond samples from different parts of the world 673 00:41:57,280 --> 00:41:59,980 show large variation in their composition. 674 00:42:00,080 --> 00:42:03,640 That suggests the mantle was a churning dynamic place, 675 00:42:03,750 --> 00:42:06,550 even in the early history of the planet. 676 00:42:08,160 --> 00:42:09,820 From below 100 miles, 677 00:42:09,930 --> 00:42:13,660 very few rock samples reach us on the surface. 678 00:42:13,760 --> 00:42:17,720 But this isn't the end of our journey to the core. 679 00:42:17,830 --> 00:42:20,670 There is another way to see what's down there. 680 00:42:22,440 --> 00:42:25,900 It's like an X-ray image of planet Earth. 681 00:42:44,850 --> 00:42:46,580 Most of the time, 682 00:42:46,680 --> 00:42:50,080 we're unaware of the power locked inside our planet. 683 00:42:50,190 --> 00:42:53,680 But sometimes there are violent reminders. 684 00:42:53,790 --> 00:42:55,260 [Rumbling] 685 00:42:57,660 --> 00:42:59,790 Earthquakes are the result of processes 686 00:42:59,900 --> 00:43:02,590 taking place deep in the interior. 687 00:43:04,430 --> 00:43:07,030 Propelled by the slow movement of the mantle, 688 00:43:07,140 --> 00:43:09,500 the great plates that make up the Earth's crust 689 00:43:09,610 --> 00:43:13,600 constantly grind into, over, and under each other. 690 00:43:15,040 --> 00:43:18,310 Pressure builds until something snaps. 691 00:43:18,410 --> 00:43:22,440 When this happens, the Earth shakes, heaves, and rolls. 692 00:43:22,550 --> 00:43:24,820 The results can be catastrophic, 693 00:43:24,920 --> 00:43:28,550 especially when they happen in populated areas. 694 00:43:28,660 --> 00:43:31,250 This earthquake in China in 2008 695 00:43:31,360 --> 00:43:37,270 killed 70, 000 people and cost $150 billion worth of damage. 696 00:43:38,570 --> 00:43:41,370 Big earthquakes are disasters, 697 00:43:41,470 --> 00:43:46,030 but they're also windows on the deep interior of the planet. 698 00:43:46,140 --> 00:43:50,040 Scientists can make use of the shattering power of earthquakes 699 00:43:50,150 --> 00:43:53,640 to help understand the Earth's most remote depths. 700 00:43:53,750 --> 00:43:57,190 They use a worldwide network of devices called seismometers 701 00:43:57,290 --> 00:43:59,050 to trace earthquake vibrations 702 00:43:59,150 --> 00:44:01,450 as they travel through the planet. 703 00:44:07,330 --> 00:44:10,320 The data produced can help fill in our picture 704 00:44:10,430 --> 00:44:12,830 of the deep Earth. 705 00:44:12,940 --> 00:44:17,800 Professor Ed Garnero uses this technique to study the mantle... 706 00:44:17,910 --> 00:44:20,840 all 1, 800 miles of it. 707 00:44:20,940 --> 00:44:22,600 GARNERO: When an earthquake happens, 708 00:44:22,710 --> 00:44:25,200 the waves travel away from the earthquake 709 00:44:25,310 --> 00:44:27,650 through the planet in the interior and on the surface... 710 00:44:27,750 --> 00:44:29,680 in the same way, when you drop a rock in a pond, 711 00:44:29,790 --> 00:44:32,120 you see the rings getting bigger and bigger and bigger 712 00:44:32,220 --> 00:44:34,280 from the drop zone. 713 00:44:34,390 --> 00:44:36,290 So, what we do in seismology is, 714 00:44:36,390 --> 00:44:38,790 we have these sensitive microphones all over the planet 715 00:44:38,890 --> 00:44:41,330 that record the ground shaking. 716 00:44:41,430 --> 00:44:43,860 And so we keep track of the precise time it gets here. 717 00:44:43,970 --> 00:44:46,230 So when you use a bunch of these instruments in concert, 718 00:44:46,340 --> 00:44:48,500 you can start to say something 719 00:44:48,600 --> 00:44:51,730 about the material the waves travel through. 720 00:44:51,840 --> 00:44:54,240 NARRATOR: Just as doctors use sound waves 721 00:44:54,340 --> 00:44:55,900 to picture a baby in the womb, 722 00:44:56,010 --> 00:44:58,570 the waves from earthquakes can tell scientists 723 00:44:58,680 --> 00:45:02,140 about the world concealed deep beneath the Earth's crust. 724 00:45:03,320 --> 00:45:06,220 The waves travel through and bounce off structures 725 00:45:06,320 --> 00:45:08,120 within the planet. 726 00:45:09,160 --> 00:45:12,460 GARNERO: So if you have enough seismic data, 727 00:45:12,560 --> 00:45:14,590 you can start to characterize the shapes of things 728 00:45:14,700 --> 00:45:18,760 inside the planet that are reflecting the seismic energy. 729 00:45:20,700 --> 00:45:22,170 NARRATOR: And because earthquake waves 730 00:45:22,270 --> 00:45:24,540 travel differently through different materials, 731 00:45:24,640 --> 00:45:27,110 we know our planet is made of many layers, 732 00:45:27,210 --> 00:45:29,470 like an onion. 733 00:45:29,580 --> 00:45:34,040 The waves show the mantle extends downward for 1, 800 miles 734 00:45:34,150 --> 00:45:37,850 and offer the first glimpse of our ultimate destination... 735 00:45:37,950 --> 00:45:39,940 the Earth's core. 736 00:45:41,120 --> 00:45:42,490 Ed Garnero's results 737 00:45:42,590 --> 00:45:45,420 show intense activity within the mantle. 738 00:45:45,530 --> 00:45:48,760 They reveal how convection currents of hot solid rock 739 00:45:48,860 --> 00:45:51,800 constantly circulate through the whole layer. 740 00:45:51,900 --> 00:45:54,230 It's too slow to observe directly. 741 00:45:54,340 --> 00:45:56,600 But speed it up and it's clear... 742 00:45:56,710 --> 00:46:01,170 over millions of years... the mantle is in constant flux. 743 00:46:01,280 --> 00:46:03,010 Resembling mushrooms, 744 00:46:03,110 --> 00:46:05,340 the vertical columns in his animations 745 00:46:05,450 --> 00:46:07,940 show the steady movements of the Earth's interior. 746 00:46:08,050 --> 00:46:10,450 GARNERO: So, what we're looking at here 747 00:46:10,550 --> 00:46:14,420 is a convection calculation depicting things... 748 00:46:14,520 --> 00:46:17,190 When they get to the top, they cool off, and fall back in. 749 00:46:17,290 --> 00:46:18,760 Just like a lava lamp, you know, 750 00:46:18,860 --> 00:46:21,850 the blob goes up and then its heat goes away 751 00:46:21,960 --> 00:46:23,190 and it falls back in. 752 00:46:23,300 --> 00:46:24,730 So that's what's happening here... 753 00:46:24,830 --> 00:46:26,860 the cycling of material in Earth's mantle 754 00:46:26,970 --> 00:46:28,060 over millions of years. 755 00:46:28,170 --> 00:46:30,570 And this is a process that's happening today. 756 00:46:32,140 --> 00:46:34,510 NARRATOR: These convection currents through the mantle 757 00:46:34,610 --> 00:46:38,310 transfer heat from the core to the crust... 758 00:46:38,410 --> 00:46:41,310 heat that drives and pushes the continental plates 759 00:46:41,420 --> 00:46:43,320 on Earth's surface. 760 00:46:43,420 --> 00:46:44,750 In this way, 761 00:46:44,850 --> 00:46:49,310 the roaring energy of the core shapes the world we live in. 762 00:46:49,420 --> 00:46:52,150 The crust consists of two kinds of plates... 763 00:46:52,260 --> 00:46:56,430 oceanic plates and continental plates. 764 00:46:56,530 --> 00:46:59,330 Ocean plates are heavier, so when the two collide, 765 00:46:59,430 --> 00:47:02,030 the oceanic plate plunges downwards 766 00:47:02,140 --> 00:47:04,800 under the lighter continental plate. 767 00:47:04,910 --> 00:47:06,900 Whole sheets of crustal plate 768 00:47:07,010 --> 00:47:09,880 extend right down to the edge of the core. 769 00:47:11,510 --> 00:47:12,980 GARNERO: As that plate descends 770 00:47:13,080 --> 00:47:15,170 and drags some of the water down with it 771 00:47:15,280 --> 00:47:17,340 and the water... some of the crust sediments 772 00:47:17,450 --> 00:47:20,650 are still saturated... they make their way down. 773 00:47:20,760 --> 00:47:24,160 That water can actually be stored in the mantlerock. 774 00:47:25,560 --> 00:47:28,660 NARRATOR: Over millions of years, descending ocean plates 775 00:47:28,760 --> 00:47:30,960 have dragged so much water into the mantle 776 00:47:31,070 --> 00:47:33,470 that scientists estimate there's now more water 777 00:47:33,570 --> 00:47:36,800 below the Earth's surface than above it. 778 00:47:37,870 --> 00:47:39,240 GARNERO: Take all the water 779 00:47:39,340 --> 00:47:41,780 from the oceans and lakes and glaciers... 780 00:47:41,880 --> 00:47:44,040 everything on the surface of the Earth... 781 00:47:44,150 --> 00:47:50,140 and anywhere between 2 and 10 or 12 amounts of that 782 00:47:50,250 --> 00:47:52,850 can actually be stored in the Earth. 783 00:47:52,960 --> 00:47:56,020 NARRATOR: If all this water rose to the surface, 784 00:47:56,120 --> 00:47:59,120 there would be flooding on a biblical scale. 785 00:48:00,600 --> 00:48:03,590 No land could survive. 786 00:48:03,700 --> 00:48:05,500 Eventually, sea levels would rise 787 00:48:05,600 --> 00:48:09,830 21/2 miles above the peak of Mount Everest. 788 00:48:09,940 --> 00:48:13,170 Luckily for us, it will never happen. 789 00:48:13,280 --> 00:48:15,510 But some of this underground water 790 00:48:15,610 --> 00:48:18,510 does make its way back to the surface. 791 00:48:18,610 --> 00:48:22,020 The water carried down by ocean plates into the mantle 792 00:48:22,120 --> 00:48:26,140 become superheated and drives back toward the surface. 793 00:48:26,260 --> 00:48:29,320 A change in pressure liquefies the hot mantlerock. 794 00:48:29,420 --> 00:48:31,320 Mixed with expanding water, 795 00:48:31,430 --> 00:48:34,360 the lava punches up through the crust, 796 00:48:34,460 --> 00:48:38,300 where it erupts with spectacular force. 797 00:48:47,040 --> 00:48:50,600 Mount St. Helens is the most famous American volcano 798 00:48:50,710 --> 00:48:53,010 created at a plate boundary. 799 00:48:53,120 --> 00:48:56,480 The pulverized rock and steam that billowed out of the volcano 800 00:48:56,590 --> 00:48:58,420 following its 1980 eruption 801 00:48:58,520 --> 00:49:02,420 was once part of the plate beneath the Pacific Ocean. 802 00:49:07,060 --> 00:49:10,790 There's a ring of explosive volcanoes like Mount St. Helens 803 00:49:10,900 --> 00:49:13,130 circling the Pacific Ocean. 804 00:49:13,240 --> 00:49:15,600 It's called the Ring of Fire. 805 00:49:16,910 --> 00:49:18,630 Each one marks the spot 806 00:49:18,740 --> 00:49:23,940 where the Pacific plate dives into the mantle below. 807 00:49:24,050 --> 00:49:26,670 We're now entering the lower mantle, 808 00:49:26,780 --> 00:49:30,180 a region at the edge of scientific understanding. 809 00:49:30,290 --> 00:49:32,410 Nobody knows what it looks like, 810 00:49:32,520 --> 00:49:35,420 but scientists speculate the hostile conditions here 811 00:49:35,520 --> 00:49:39,520 may create bizarre chemical effects. 812 00:49:39,630 --> 00:49:42,860 GARNERO: If you were to be able to go into the mantle, 813 00:49:42,960 --> 00:49:45,760 you would see exotic things, 814 00:49:45,870 --> 00:49:47,960 chemical things that we're not quite 815 00:49:48,070 --> 00:49:51,060 we fully understand right now, but there's evidence for it. 816 00:49:51,170 --> 00:49:54,010 And you'd see a lot of different kinds of layering. 817 00:49:54,110 --> 00:49:56,480 Just like when you're driving in your car 818 00:49:56,580 --> 00:49:59,880 and you see a roadcut, you can see the layered rock. 819 00:50:01,580 --> 00:50:05,880 NARRATOR: But in a few places, something disturbs these layers. 820 00:50:07,920 --> 00:50:12,720 Plumes of hot mantlerock rise up from the core to the crust. 821 00:50:15,400 --> 00:50:18,300 If you happen to live above one of these plumes, 822 00:50:18,400 --> 00:50:22,890 the result can be both creative and destructive. 823 00:50:23,000 --> 00:50:26,130 So you would see little isolated conduits... 824 00:50:26,240 --> 00:50:28,640 the details of which we're not fully clear on, 825 00:50:28,740 --> 00:50:32,650 but we think they could be 100 miles in diameter... 826 00:50:32,750 --> 00:50:35,680 very hot material that works its way to the surface 827 00:50:35,780 --> 00:50:40,740 and gives rise to these things that we call hot spot volcanoes. 828 00:50:40,860 --> 00:50:41,880 You can see in this image, 829 00:50:41,990 --> 00:50:45,890 you have hot plumes of material coming up to the surface. 830 00:50:45,990 --> 00:50:49,400 And the stuff that comes out is what we see coming out 831 00:50:49,500 --> 00:50:52,230 of places like Hawaii and Easter Island 832 00:50:52,330 --> 00:50:54,360 and Kerguelen Islands and such. 833 00:50:54,470 --> 00:50:58,030 And this animation was made with things called tracers... 834 00:50:58,140 --> 00:50:59,510 these little black dots. 835 00:50:59,610 --> 00:51:02,980 So you can get an appreciation for how slowly the material 836 00:51:03,080 --> 00:51:05,310 moves across the core-mantle boundary 837 00:51:05,410 --> 00:51:08,870 until it finds its little plume upwelling and then... foom... 838 00:51:08,980 --> 00:51:11,110 they shoot up quite rapidly. 839 00:51:19,690 --> 00:51:21,690 NARRATOR: Some of the world's largest volcanoes... 840 00:51:21,800 --> 00:51:23,260 Yellowstone... 841 00:51:23,370 --> 00:51:25,230 Iceland... 842 00:51:25,330 --> 00:51:26,460 Hawaii... 843 00:51:26,570 --> 00:51:31,100 sit right above these gigantic mantle plumes. 844 00:51:31,210 --> 00:51:35,340 Hawaii's Big Island is evidence of their creative power. 845 00:51:35,440 --> 00:51:37,540 Measured from the ocean floor, 846 00:51:37,650 --> 00:51:40,110 this is the world's tallest single mountain... 847 00:51:40,220 --> 00:51:43,780 4, 000 feet higher than Mount Everest. 848 00:51:43,890 --> 00:51:46,320 And every foot of it is made from lava 849 00:51:46,420 --> 00:51:50,220 spewed out from the top of a mantle plume. 850 00:51:50,330 --> 00:51:52,890 The surface plate is constantly moving, 851 00:51:52,990 --> 00:51:54,930 while the mantle plume stays still, 852 00:51:55,030 --> 00:51:57,430 so the magma keeps punching through the crust 853 00:51:57,530 --> 00:51:58,730 in different places 854 00:51:58,830 --> 00:52:03,200 and leaves a chain of extinct volcanic islands in its wake. 855 00:52:07,940 --> 00:52:09,840 But while mantle plumes have the power 856 00:52:09,950 --> 00:52:12,710 to create entire island chains, 857 00:52:12,810 --> 00:52:16,750 they also have the power to destroy vast amounts of land. 858 00:52:19,990 --> 00:52:23,520 Yellowstone's geysers and mud pools may delight tourists, 859 00:52:23,630 --> 00:52:26,460 but they are signs that the park sits on top 860 00:52:26,560 --> 00:52:29,260 of a vast mantle plume. 861 00:52:31,230 --> 00:52:35,170 With a crater 45 miles long and 35 miles wide, 862 00:52:35,270 --> 00:52:39,670 this is one of the world's largest supervolcanoes. 863 00:52:41,680 --> 00:52:45,610 Geologist Hank Heasler wants to understand its behavior. 864 00:52:47,220 --> 00:52:51,480 DR. HEASLER: There's been many destructive volcanic episodes 865 00:52:51,590 --> 00:52:54,750 in Yellowstone... three massive eruptions... 866 00:52:54,860 --> 00:52:56,950 one at 2. 1 million years ago, 867 00:52:57,060 --> 00:53:00,290 which is one of the largest that we as geologists can define 868 00:53:00,400 --> 00:53:01,760 on the face of the Earth, 869 00:53:01,860 --> 00:53:06,770 one at 1.3 million years ago, and one at 640, 000 years ago. 870 00:53:07,740 --> 00:53:10,470 NARRATOR: Yellowstone may not look much like a volcano. 871 00:53:10,570 --> 00:53:12,670 It's more of a wide depression. 872 00:53:12,770 --> 00:53:16,940 But that's just because of its sheer size. 873 00:53:17,050 --> 00:53:20,210 DR. HEASLER: Yellowstone is such a big volcano 874 00:53:20,320 --> 00:53:24,080 that so much material has been erupted... 875 00:53:24,190 --> 00:53:27,420 hundreds to thousands of cubic kilometers of magma 876 00:53:27,520 --> 00:53:30,320 have been forcefully ejected into the air. 877 00:53:30,430 --> 00:53:32,420 When all that magma is erupting, 878 00:53:32,530 --> 00:53:36,430 the ground actually subsides into the void 879 00:53:36,530 --> 00:53:38,620 created by the erupting magma. 880 00:53:38,730 --> 00:53:42,030 NARRATOR: It's been 640, 000 years 881 00:53:42,140 --> 00:53:44,540 since Yellowstone last erupted. 882 00:53:44,640 --> 00:53:47,160 Heat emissions from the park could be a sign 883 00:53:47,280 --> 00:53:49,900 that the next eruption is overdue. 884 00:53:50,010 --> 00:53:53,000 If the Yellowstone volcano does erupt, 885 00:53:53,110 --> 00:53:55,980 it will unleash billions of tons of ash and gas 886 00:53:56,080 --> 00:53:57,810 into our atmosphere. 887 00:53:57,920 --> 00:54:00,750 It would block out the sun and plunge the world 888 00:54:00,860 --> 00:54:03,650 into a devastating volcanic winter. 889 00:54:08,660 --> 00:54:10,260 Mantle plumes are a key part 890 00:54:10,370 --> 00:54:13,060 of the Earth's interior cooling system. 891 00:54:14,940 --> 00:54:16,160 They have the power to create 892 00:54:16,270 --> 00:54:17,860 some of the world's most beautiful 893 00:54:17,970 --> 00:54:20,370 and dangerous landscapes. 894 00:54:22,580 --> 00:54:26,140 The question is, what creates mantle plumes? 895 00:54:26,250 --> 00:54:28,180 Nobody knows for sure. 896 00:54:28,280 --> 00:54:30,580 But one thing is certain... 897 00:54:30,690 --> 00:54:34,880 The answer lies somewhere in the boiling furnace 898 00:54:34,990 --> 00:54:36,960 of the Earth's core. 899 00:54:47,800 --> 00:54:50,530 1, 800 miles down into the Earth, 900 00:54:50,630 --> 00:54:52,930 just below us, is the core. 901 00:54:57,870 --> 00:55:01,310 The Earth's outer core is a huge ball of liquid metal 902 00:55:01,410 --> 00:55:04,070 bigger than the moon. 903 00:55:04,180 --> 00:55:05,980 LATHROP: The conditions of the outer core 904 00:55:06,080 --> 00:55:07,950 are really quite hostile. 905 00:55:08,050 --> 00:55:11,990 Temperatures more than 3, 000 degrees. 906 00:55:12,090 --> 00:55:14,820 The pressure is just mind-boggling. 907 00:55:14,920 --> 00:55:17,720 More than a million atmospheres of pressure. 908 00:55:18,760 --> 00:55:20,130 If you could strip away the mantle 909 00:55:20,230 --> 00:55:21,820 and just have the raw core, 910 00:55:21,930 --> 00:55:24,590 it's quite hot and would be glowing intensely, 911 00:55:24,700 --> 00:55:26,790 very much like the surface of the sun is glowing. 912 00:55:26,900 --> 00:55:28,530 It's that hot. 913 00:55:29,510 --> 00:55:31,200 NARRATOR: If we could open up a space 914 00:55:31,310 --> 00:55:35,970 between the mantle and the core, this is what it might look like. 915 00:55:40,980 --> 00:55:42,640 LATHROP: Just inside the mantle, 916 00:55:42,750 --> 00:55:44,550 liquid metal meets the mantle. 917 00:55:44,650 --> 00:55:47,350 There's probably, you know, a bit of a mushy zone, 918 00:55:47,460 --> 00:55:49,290 where there's liquid metal mixing in 919 00:55:49,390 --> 00:55:51,690 with the last bits of mantle material. 920 00:55:51,790 --> 00:55:53,130 And then inside of that 921 00:55:53,230 --> 00:55:57,030 is just this vast, deep ocean of liquid metal, 922 00:55:57,130 --> 00:56:00,860 which is red-hot, flowing, 923 00:56:00,970 --> 00:56:03,400 there's all this churning motion, 924 00:56:03,510 --> 00:56:06,070 and probably things that are analogous to clouds, 925 00:56:06,180 --> 00:56:08,870 in the sense of bits that are more dense and less dense 926 00:56:08,980 --> 00:56:12,110 mixing about as the core convects. 927 00:56:15,620 --> 00:56:19,140 NARRATOR: Seismologists can see what the outer core looks like 928 00:56:19,250 --> 00:56:23,550 because seismic waves bounce off its liquid surface. 929 00:56:26,860 --> 00:56:28,890 And scientists like Dan Lathrop 930 00:56:29,000 --> 00:56:32,060 are discovering what's going on inside the core 931 00:56:32,170 --> 00:56:35,100 by measuring the powerful electromagnetic energy 932 00:56:35,200 --> 00:56:39,370 it produces... the Earth's magnetic field. 933 00:56:40,480 --> 00:56:42,710 LATHROP: If you look at the pattern of magnetic field 934 00:56:42,810 --> 00:56:44,140 on the outside of the Earth, 935 00:56:44,250 --> 00:56:47,650 it's quite clear that that pattern is slowly moving 936 00:56:47,750 --> 00:56:51,780 and slowing changing in a way that would be easily described 937 00:56:51,890 --> 00:56:54,220 by it rising from a liquid metal 938 00:56:54,320 --> 00:56:56,760 that's also slowly moving and slowly convecting. 939 00:56:56,860 --> 00:56:58,590 NARRATOR: The Earth's magnetism 940 00:56:58,690 --> 00:57:01,630 has been known about for more than 1, 000 years. 941 00:57:01,730 --> 00:57:04,130 And for centuries, explorers and sailors 942 00:57:04,230 --> 00:57:08,760 have kept detailed records of our moving magnetic North Pole. 943 00:57:08,870 --> 00:57:11,840 We now know that birds and animals use it to navigate 944 00:57:11,940 --> 00:57:16,640 on their epic migrations across continents and oceans. 945 00:57:16,750 --> 00:57:17,940 By the 1950s, 946 00:57:18,050 --> 00:57:20,710 scientists understood that something made of metal 947 00:57:20,820 --> 00:57:23,840 was responsible for the magnetic field. 948 00:57:23,950 --> 00:57:25,610 It was the Earth's core. 949 00:57:27,490 --> 00:57:31,480 Dan Lathrop wants to know how the field could be generated, 950 00:57:31,590 --> 00:57:33,490 so he's built a model of the core, 951 00:57:33,600 --> 00:57:37,190 a sphere filled with liquid metal. 952 00:57:38,870 --> 00:57:41,930 Not iron, but sodium. 953 00:57:45,440 --> 00:57:49,570 Iron would be too heavy and dangerously hot. 954 00:57:52,110 --> 00:57:55,020 But sodium isn't perfect either. 955 00:57:57,720 --> 00:58:00,750 Well, sodium has its pros and cons, without a doubt. 956 00:58:00,860 --> 00:58:02,410 It's a very good electrical conductor... 957 00:58:02,520 --> 00:58:03,920 an excellent electrical conductor... 958 00:58:04,030 --> 00:58:06,490 so it gets us closer to being like a planet 959 00:58:06,600 --> 00:58:07,960 in the laboratory experiments. 960 00:58:08,060 --> 00:58:10,830 The cons are, it's a reactive liquid. 961 00:58:10,930 --> 00:58:14,430 It is flammable, burns readily in air, 962 00:58:14,540 --> 00:58:16,870 and also reacts violently with water. 963 00:58:19,540 --> 00:58:23,340 NARRATOR: With the 13 tons of sodium safely sealed inside, 964 00:58:23,450 --> 00:58:25,640 the 10-foot sphere starts to spin 965 00:58:25,750 --> 00:58:27,580 to re-create the Earth's rotation. 966 00:58:29,350 --> 00:58:32,180 Heaters keep the sodium molten. 967 00:58:36,460 --> 00:58:37,720 Minutes later, 968 00:58:37,830 --> 00:58:42,260 magnetic fields spill from the sphere in all directions. 969 00:58:44,400 --> 00:58:46,060 Lathrop's experiment confirms 970 00:58:46,170 --> 00:58:48,900 the way the Earth's magnetic field is generated. 971 00:58:49,000 --> 00:58:50,340 Driven by the heat, 972 00:58:50,440 --> 00:58:52,430 the convection currents in the core 973 00:58:52,540 --> 00:58:53,940 combine with the Earth's rotation 974 00:58:54,040 --> 00:58:57,710 to create a giant dynamo. 975 00:58:57,810 --> 00:58:59,840 LATHROP: The dynamo is like an electrical generator, 976 00:58:59,950 --> 00:59:02,280 but it's being driven by the motions 977 00:59:02,380 --> 00:59:04,750 of the liquid outer core. 978 00:59:04,850 --> 00:59:06,120 And that churning motion, 979 00:59:06,220 --> 00:59:08,380 sort of turbulent convection in the core, 980 00:59:08,490 --> 00:59:10,120 couples with the magnetic field 981 00:59:10,230 --> 00:59:12,250 to continuously regenerate the magnetic field. 982 00:59:12,360 --> 00:59:14,760 It's like the turning motion of the generator, 983 00:59:14,860 --> 00:59:18,090 in this case then, is the churning of the convection. 984 00:59:19,370 --> 00:59:20,800 NARRATOR: The magnetic field 985 00:59:20,900 --> 00:59:23,630 is much more than a geological curiosity. 986 00:59:23,740 --> 00:59:27,070 It's vital to life on Earth. 987 00:59:27,180 --> 00:59:30,940 The field protects us from our closest, deadliest enemy... 988 00:59:31,050 --> 00:59:32,010 the sun. 989 00:59:33,520 --> 00:59:35,510 A giant nuclear reactor, 990 00:59:35,620 --> 00:59:38,750 enormous storms rage on its surface. 991 00:59:40,660 --> 00:59:44,060 These storms fling lethal radioactive particles 992 00:59:44,160 --> 00:59:45,490 into space. 993 00:59:45,590 --> 00:59:51,290 This is the solar wind, and Earth lies right in its path. 994 00:59:51,400 --> 00:59:53,460 But like a stone in a stream, 995 00:59:53,570 --> 00:59:57,560 the Earth's magnetic field parts the flow of radiation, 996 00:59:57,670 --> 00:59:59,940 diverting it around the planet. 997 01:00:04,180 --> 01:00:07,080 We sit in a protective pocket of magnetism... 998 01:00:07,180 --> 01:00:08,620 the mystery of life 999 01:00:08,720 --> 01:00:13,180 made possible by the mysterious core of the planet it inhabits. 1000 01:00:16,330 --> 01:00:18,990 The Earth's magnetic field is absolutely critical 1001 01:00:19,090 --> 01:00:20,960 for Earth to be a habitable planet, 1002 01:00:21,060 --> 01:00:24,860 in the sense that the quite violent radiation 1003 01:00:24,970 --> 01:00:29,400 coming from the sun stream around the outsides of a bubble 1004 01:00:29,500 --> 01:00:31,630 formed around the Earth by the magnetic field. 1005 01:00:31,740 --> 01:00:34,210 So the magnetic field extends a sort of shield, 1006 01:00:34,310 --> 01:00:39,210 the magnetosphere, which protects us and the atmosphere 1007 01:00:39,310 --> 01:00:40,580 from most of the radiation. 1008 01:00:40,680 --> 01:00:42,740 If that weren't there, the solar radiation 1009 01:00:42,850 --> 01:00:45,320 would be constantly bombarding the atmosphere, 1010 01:00:45,420 --> 01:00:47,450 actually eating away at the atmosphere, 1011 01:00:47,560 --> 01:00:50,420 and some of it then directly making it down to ground level. 1012 01:00:52,190 --> 01:00:54,990 NARRATOR: About 40, 000 miles above the poles, 1013 01:00:55,100 --> 01:00:56,890 the charged solar particles 1014 01:00:57,000 --> 01:01:00,090 meet the outer reaches of the magnetic field. 1015 01:01:01,070 --> 01:01:03,090 Here, some are diverted down 1016 01:01:03,210 --> 01:01:05,200 toward the Earth's magnetic poles, 1017 01:01:05,310 --> 01:01:09,540 where they create spectacular auroras that glow in the sky. 1018 01:01:09,640 --> 01:01:11,640 These dazzling displays happen 1019 01:01:11,750 --> 01:01:14,110 when the particles slam into gas molecules 1020 01:01:14,220 --> 01:01:16,340 in the Earth's upper atmosphere. 1021 01:01:18,190 --> 01:01:19,350 Although beautiful, 1022 01:01:19,450 --> 01:01:21,650 these are a sign of a ferocious battle 1023 01:01:21,760 --> 01:01:23,220 between the Earth's core 1024 01:01:23,330 --> 01:01:26,490 and an invading stream of solar radiation. 1025 01:01:28,500 --> 01:01:31,300 Our magnetic field protects us from other dangers, 1026 01:01:31,400 --> 01:01:33,660 not just from the sun. 1027 01:01:33,770 --> 01:01:36,900 Lethal cosmic rays made of radioactive particles 1028 01:01:37,010 --> 01:01:39,940 permeate deep space. 1029 01:01:40,040 --> 01:01:42,410 Down on Earth, we're unaware of them. 1030 01:01:42,510 --> 01:01:45,450 But up in space, it's a different story. 1031 01:01:45,550 --> 01:01:48,810 On July 20, 1969, 1032 01:01:48,920 --> 01:01:53,910 Neil Armstrong was the first man to set foot on the moon. 1033 01:01:55,620 --> 01:01:59,530 It was one of humankind's greatest achievements. 1034 01:02:02,900 --> 01:02:04,920 But on their way to the moon, 1035 01:02:05,030 --> 01:02:07,330 Armstrong and co-pilot Buzz Aldrin 1036 01:02:07,440 --> 01:02:11,340 saw flashes of light inside the darkened Apollo 11 module. 1037 01:02:14,710 --> 01:02:18,910 Bizarrely, they even saw the flashes with their eyes shut. 1038 01:02:21,350 --> 01:02:24,880 When they returned to Earth, they reported what they saw. 1039 01:02:24,990 --> 01:02:27,480 NASA scientists were mystified. 1040 01:02:30,490 --> 01:02:33,890 Six years later, they came to believe these light flashes 1041 01:02:34,000 --> 01:02:36,620 were the result of high-energy cosmic rays 1042 01:02:36,730 --> 01:02:40,630 penetrating the spacecraft and the crew members' eyes. 1043 01:02:43,000 --> 01:02:45,840 Armstrong and Aldrin were exposed to these rays 1044 01:02:45,940 --> 01:02:47,500 because the Apollo craft 1045 01:02:47,610 --> 01:02:49,510 was near the edge of the safety shield 1046 01:02:49,610 --> 01:02:52,340 of the Earth's magnetic field. 1047 01:02:52,450 --> 01:02:54,640 MAN: 3, 2, 1. 1048 01:02:54,750 --> 01:02:57,410 And liftoff of Discovery. 1049 01:02:58,450 --> 01:02:59,920 NARRATOR: In the years since, 1050 01:03:00,020 --> 01:03:01,680 at least 39 astronauts 1051 01:03:01,790 --> 01:03:03,850 have developed some kind of eye cataract 1052 01:03:03,960 --> 01:03:07,660 a few years after exposure to this dangerous radiation. 1053 01:03:11,530 --> 01:03:13,630 Without the Earth's magnetic field, 1054 01:03:13,740 --> 01:03:17,030 we would all be exposed to these dangers. 1055 01:03:17,140 --> 01:03:20,670 And it's the core that is our great protector. 1056 01:03:22,340 --> 01:03:25,510 We know the magnetism comes from the rotation of the core 1057 01:03:25,610 --> 01:03:28,980 and the turbulence of the molten metal within it. 1058 01:03:29,080 --> 01:03:33,350 But how can we work out exactly what's going on inside the core? 1059 01:03:33,460 --> 01:03:37,120 Peter Olson is one scientist who's devised an experiment 1060 01:03:37,230 --> 01:03:38,990 that could offer an explanation. 1061 01:03:39,090 --> 01:03:40,430 Well, what we have here 1062 01:03:40,530 --> 01:03:44,090 is nothing more than a large tank of water on a turntable. 1063 01:03:44,200 --> 01:03:47,600 And what it's intending to simulate 1064 01:03:47,700 --> 01:03:50,100 is the Earth's outer core. 1065 01:03:50,210 --> 01:03:53,470 And we're going to inject some heavy dye 1066 01:03:53,580 --> 01:03:56,480 into this big tank of water, 1067 01:03:56,580 --> 01:04:00,140 and we're going to see the effects of the rotation 1068 01:04:00,250 --> 01:04:01,440 on the turbulence. 1069 01:04:03,520 --> 01:04:05,250 There's a turbulent plume 1070 01:04:05,350 --> 01:04:07,790 trying to sink to the bottom of the tank. 1071 01:04:07,890 --> 01:04:10,720 But it starts to feel the effect of the rotation, 1072 01:04:10,830 --> 01:04:15,560 and you can see it gets twisted up into kind of a helix. 1073 01:04:15,660 --> 01:04:20,000 And it's this helical type of flow in the Earth's core 1074 01:04:20,100 --> 01:04:22,000 that we think is so critical 1075 01:04:22,100 --> 01:04:25,230 for generating the Earth's magnetic field. 1076 01:04:25,340 --> 01:04:27,170 Ordinary turbulent motions 1077 01:04:27,280 --> 01:04:30,270 don't have this kind of helical structure to them. 1078 01:04:30,380 --> 01:04:33,510 But by virtue of the effect of the Earth's rotation, 1079 01:04:33,620 --> 01:04:36,280 the turbulence in the core is made helical. 1080 01:04:38,150 --> 01:04:39,750 NARRATOR: These helical columns 1081 01:04:39,850 --> 01:04:42,620 might explain the Earth's magnetic field. 1082 01:04:43,560 --> 01:04:45,860 They represent liquid-iron columns, 1083 01:04:45,960 --> 01:04:49,990 which could work like the wire coils inside an electromagnet. 1084 01:04:51,330 --> 01:04:55,700 As they move with the Earth's rotation, they create magnetism. 1085 01:05:00,280 --> 01:05:03,340 2, 500 miles below the Earth's surface... 1086 01:05:03,450 --> 01:05:06,470 could there really be molten columns of liquid iron 1087 01:05:06,580 --> 01:05:08,110 hundreds of miles high? 1088 01:05:08,220 --> 01:05:11,380 OLSON: As a consequence of this turbulent motion 1089 01:05:11,490 --> 01:05:13,080 of the liquid iron, 1090 01:05:13,190 --> 01:05:15,820 electric currents are flowing in the core. 1091 01:05:15,920 --> 01:05:18,320 And the geomagnetic field that we see at the surface 1092 01:05:18,430 --> 01:05:21,020 is actually the result of these electric currents. 1093 01:05:21,130 --> 01:05:24,160 So there is no bar-magnet or permanent-magnet effect 1094 01:05:24,270 --> 01:05:27,170 of any significance inside the core of the Earth. 1095 01:05:27,270 --> 01:05:31,230 The magnetic field there is produced by electric currents. 1096 01:05:33,280 --> 01:05:35,770 NARRATOR: This delicate feedback system 1097 01:05:35,880 --> 01:05:38,310 makes the core seem extremely fragile. 1098 01:05:38,410 --> 01:05:42,370 Without heat or rotation, it wouldn't work. 1099 01:05:46,350 --> 01:05:47,480 To demonstrate, 1100 01:05:47,590 --> 01:05:50,890 Olson simply switches off the tank's rotation. 1101 01:05:50,990 --> 01:05:53,480 The water keeps moving, but as it slows down, 1102 01:05:53,600 --> 01:05:57,900 the convection currents gradually collapse. 1103 01:05:58,000 --> 01:05:59,560 If this happened in the core, 1104 01:05:59,670 --> 01:06:03,370 the Earth's magnetic shield would soon disappear. 1105 01:06:43,640 --> 01:06:45,400 Deep inside the Earth's core, 1106 01:06:45,510 --> 01:06:48,100 something mysterious is happening. 1107 01:06:48,210 --> 01:06:50,680 Swirling currents of molten metal 1108 01:06:50,780 --> 01:06:55,120 are creating a magnetic field that envelops the planet. 1109 01:06:55,220 --> 01:06:56,280 We depend on this field 1110 01:06:56,390 --> 01:07:00,190 to protect us from deadly solar radiation. 1111 01:07:00,290 --> 01:07:01,690 But scientific data 1112 01:07:01,790 --> 01:07:04,960 shows that magnetic field is weakening. 1113 01:07:06,430 --> 01:07:07,660 Over the past century, 1114 01:07:07,770 --> 01:07:09,600 the strength of the planet's magnetic field 1115 01:07:09,700 --> 01:07:15,230 has declined by nearly 10%, and scientists aren't sure why. 1116 01:07:15,340 --> 01:07:17,930 During most of mankind's history, 1117 01:07:18,040 --> 01:07:20,700 the magnetic field has been very strong. 1118 01:07:20,810 --> 01:07:22,710 And now it's weakening. 1119 01:07:22,810 --> 01:07:24,780 LATHROP: The Earth's magnetic field 1120 01:07:24,880 --> 01:07:28,370 has been studied for about 160 years. 1121 01:07:28,490 --> 01:07:30,540 And what people see is that the magnetic field 1122 01:07:30,650 --> 01:07:33,710 has slowly and steadily dropped in its strength. 1123 01:07:34,890 --> 01:07:36,120 NARRATOR: In one region, 1124 01:07:36,230 --> 01:07:38,860 the magnetic field is a third weaker. 1125 01:07:40,200 --> 01:07:42,600 It's here over the Atlantic Ocean, 1126 01:07:42,700 --> 01:07:45,170 just off the coast of Brazil. 1127 01:07:45,270 --> 01:07:48,900 It's known as the South Atlantic Anomaly. 1128 01:07:49,010 --> 01:07:51,370 This disruption in the magnetic field 1129 01:07:51,480 --> 01:07:53,940 stretches a quarter of the way around the globe, 1130 01:07:54,040 --> 01:07:55,770 and it's growing. 1131 01:07:58,050 --> 01:07:59,640 Every day in this area, 1132 01:07:59,750 --> 01:08:03,710 cosmic radiation reaches closer to the Earth's surface. 1133 01:08:05,020 --> 01:08:08,320 This protection that we get from the solar radiation 1134 01:08:08,430 --> 01:08:11,290 from the magnetic field is already weaker in that patch, 1135 01:08:11,400 --> 01:08:13,730 so it already has implications... 1136 01:08:13,830 --> 01:08:18,230 mostly for astronauts and people who run satellites. 1137 01:08:18,340 --> 01:08:20,100 OLSON: It's really come into prominence 1138 01:08:20,200 --> 01:08:23,470 since the advent of long-term orbiting spacecraft. 1139 01:08:23,570 --> 01:08:25,800 For example, the Hubble Space Telescope 1140 01:08:25,910 --> 01:08:28,500 has had enormous problems over the years 1141 01:08:28,610 --> 01:08:31,080 as it passes through the South Atlantic Anomaly. 1142 01:08:31,180 --> 01:08:33,380 NARRATOR: The problem is so bad 1143 01:08:33,480 --> 01:08:35,610 that when the billion-dollar Hubble Space Telescope 1144 01:08:35,720 --> 01:08:36,950 is above the area, 1145 01:08:37,050 --> 01:08:40,150 vital instruments are routinely shut down for protection. 1146 01:08:40,260 --> 01:08:42,620 [Radio chatter] 1147 01:08:46,430 --> 01:08:49,190 And near the core under the South Atlantic, 1148 01:08:49,300 --> 01:08:52,600 something even stranger is happening. 1149 01:08:52,700 --> 01:08:55,930 The magnetic field here hasn't just weakened, 1150 01:08:56,040 --> 01:08:58,340 it has totally reversed. 1151 01:08:59,840 --> 01:09:01,330 LATHROP: If you look at what 1152 01:09:01,450 --> 01:09:03,570 the magnetic field would be at the edge of the core, 1153 01:09:03,680 --> 01:09:05,110 the magnetic field down there 1154 01:09:05,220 --> 01:09:08,550 has already reversed in that patch. 1155 01:09:08,650 --> 01:09:10,380 Now, this could be a sign, 1156 01:09:10,490 --> 01:09:13,010 if this becomes deeper and broader, 1157 01:09:13,120 --> 01:09:14,780 that we're headed toward a reversal. 1158 01:09:15,890 --> 01:09:18,830 NARRATOR: A reversal is a total change in polarity 1159 01:09:18,930 --> 01:09:20,730 of the Earth's magnetic shield. 1160 01:09:20,830 --> 01:09:22,890 The North Pole flips to the south, 1161 01:09:23,000 --> 01:09:25,330 and the South moves north. 1162 01:09:25,440 --> 01:09:26,930 LATHROP: What a reversal is, 1163 01:09:27,040 --> 01:09:30,440 is when those North and South Poles reverse 1164 01:09:30,540 --> 01:09:33,310 so that you have a long, steady period 1165 01:09:33,410 --> 01:09:35,670 where they're in one orientation, 1166 01:09:35,780 --> 01:09:37,180 and then there's a reversal 1167 01:09:37,280 --> 01:09:40,940 and then a long, steady period in opposite reversal. 1168 01:09:42,720 --> 01:09:44,380 NARRATOR: Reversals have happened before. 1169 01:09:44,490 --> 01:09:46,820 We know this because, when lava cools, 1170 01:09:46,920 --> 01:09:50,050 it preserves evidence of the Earth's magnetic field. 1171 01:09:50,160 --> 01:09:55,000 Crystals inside the molten lava line up with the field. 1172 01:09:56,200 --> 01:09:57,530 When it solidifies, 1173 01:09:57,630 --> 01:09:59,630 it creates a record of its strength and direction 1174 01:09:59,740 --> 01:10:01,930 at that exact moment in time. 1175 01:10:02,840 --> 01:10:05,000 Studies of prehistoric lava flows 1176 01:10:05,110 --> 01:10:08,880 indicate that the last reversal happened 700, 000 years ago, 1177 01:10:08,980 --> 01:10:12,110 when our apelike ancestors roamed the Earth. 1178 01:10:13,580 --> 01:10:16,080 You might think that, if the field is so stable 1179 01:10:16,190 --> 01:10:18,620 that it can persist for billions of years, 1180 01:10:18,720 --> 01:10:20,820 why should it suddenly decide to change? 1181 01:10:20,920 --> 01:10:21,820 But it does. 1182 01:10:21,930 --> 01:10:23,520 We know that the Earth's magnetic field 1183 01:10:23,630 --> 01:10:25,530 has reversed many hundreds of times. 1184 01:10:25,630 --> 01:10:28,600 What we don't know is when will it do it next? 1185 01:10:28,700 --> 01:10:31,290 NARRATOR: Neither do we know what will happen when it does. 1186 01:10:31,400 --> 01:10:34,960 The weakening magnetic field and the South Atlantic Anomaly 1187 01:10:35,070 --> 01:10:38,940 are the signs that we're about to experience the next reversal. 1188 01:10:39,040 --> 01:10:42,640 It could happen within the next 1, 500 years. 1189 01:10:42,750 --> 01:10:48,580 OLSON: The rate of decrease is about 6% per century. 1190 01:10:48,690 --> 01:10:51,450 Now, that doesn't sound like very much, perhaps. 1191 01:10:51,560 --> 01:10:55,080 But in geologic terms, that's extremely rapid. 1192 01:10:56,630 --> 01:10:58,860 NARRATOR: No one knows what a reversal will mean 1193 01:10:58,960 --> 01:11:00,450 for life on Earth. 1194 01:11:02,070 --> 01:11:04,160 But while the magnetic field reverses, 1195 01:11:04,270 --> 01:11:07,260 we would lose its protection for several months. 1196 01:11:08,340 --> 01:11:12,100 Solar radiation would penetrate our electrical systems. 1197 01:11:15,110 --> 01:11:18,910 Surges would overload the world's power grids. 1198 01:11:24,660 --> 01:11:26,050 At the same time, 1199 01:11:26,160 --> 01:11:29,390 bats, birds, and whales could become disoriented 1200 01:11:29,490 --> 01:11:33,330 as their internal navigational systems are scrambled. 1201 01:11:35,170 --> 01:11:38,530 There could even be an increased incidence of cancer 1202 01:11:38,640 --> 01:11:41,630 as solar radiation attacks our cells' DNA. 1203 01:11:45,180 --> 01:11:49,740 We might see auroras appearing all over the planet. 1204 01:11:50,880 --> 01:11:53,370 Even over our major cities. 1205 01:11:56,520 --> 01:11:59,920 No one knows exactly when the next reversal will happen, 1206 01:12:00,020 --> 01:12:03,580 but the answer could lie even deeper inside the Earth 1207 01:12:03,690 --> 01:12:06,320 in the inner core. 1208 01:12:06,430 --> 01:12:08,900 It's the least understood, most remote, 1209 01:12:09,000 --> 01:12:11,990 and inaccessible place on the planet. 1210 01:12:12,100 --> 01:12:15,200 And somewhere in this hidden, hostile world 1211 01:12:15,310 --> 01:12:18,240 lies the key to the Earth's future. 1212 01:12:19,340 --> 01:12:22,680 The inner core is a rotating sphere of solid metal 1213 01:12:22,780 --> 01:12:25,770 floating inside the liquid outer core. 1214 01:12:27,180 --> 01:12:31,550 Billions of amps of electricity leap across its surface. 1215 01:12:31,660 --> 01:12:33,090 Hotter than the outer core, 1216 01:12:33,190 --> 01:12:36,490 the inner core's heat is the ultimate driving force 1217 01:12:36,590 --> 01:12:39,150 behind the Earth's magnetic shield. 1218 01:12:41,130 --> 01:12:43,160 OLSON: The pressures are so high 1219 01:12:43,270 --> 01:12:45,100 towards the center of the Earth 1220 01:12:45,200 --> 01:12:48,690 because of the overlying weight of so much material, 1221 01:12:48,810 --> 01:12:50,930 that despite the fact that it's hot, 1222 01:12:51,040 --> 01:12:52,600 the material is still solid. 1223 01:12:53,710 --> 01:12:55,740 NARRATOR: Seismic studies tell us something else 1224 01:12:55,850 --> 01:12:57,140 about the inner core... 1225 01:12:57,250 --> 01:13:00,840 slowly but surely, it's growing. 1226 01:13:00,950 --> 01:13:04,110 Every year, it expands by one millimeter 1227 01:13:04,220 --> 01:13:06,750 as the planet loses heat. 1228 01:13:06,860 --> 01:13:09,690 Nobody has ever seen this process with the naked eye. 1229 01:13:09,790 --> 01:13:12,850 But in the lab, scientists can use their imagination 1230 01:13:12,960 --> 01:13:15,590 to show something similar. 1231 01:13:15,700 --> 01:13:17,390 LATHROP: So as the Earth cools, 1232 01:13:17,500 --> 01:13:22,000 the inner core grows by iron crystallizing onto it. 1233 01:13:22,110 --> 01:13:24,900 We could imagine what that looks like 1234 01:13:25,010 --> 01:13:29,970 by looking at ice crystallizing onto this cool sphere. 1235 01:13:35,120 --> 01:13:37,850 A lot of people who think about the core 1236 01:13:37,960 --> 01:13:40,980 sit around and argue about, what's that surface like? 1237 01:13:41,090 --> 01:13:44,030 Is it rough? Is it smooth? Is it mushy? 1238 01:13:44,130 --> 01:13:45,590 What we know is that, 1239 01:13:45,700 --> 01:13:47,560 from the earthquakes passing through, 1240 01:13:47,660 --> 01:13:49,100 if it is rough, 1241 01:13:49,200 --> 01:13:53,860 the thickness of that is less than a mile or so. 1242 01:13:53,970 --> 01:13:55,940 But that still leaves lots of room 1243 01:13:56,040 --> 01:13:58,770 for mushy zones or cavernous pits 1244 01:13:58,880 --> 01:14:00,470 and little mini mountains. 1245 01:14:00,580 --> 01:14:03,710 We really have no idea what that surface looks like. 1246 01:14:03,810 --> 01:14:06,780 But if you look at any other surface on the Earth, 1247 01:14:06,880 --> 01:14:08,870 on other planets elsewhere in the solar system, 1248 01:14:08,990 --> 01:14:10,890 they're all rough. 1249 01:14:10,990 --> 01:14:12,890 Even the surface of the ocean is rough, 1250 01:14:12,990 --> 01:14:14,510 of course, moving about with the waves. 1251 01:14:14,630 --> 01:14:16,250 And so my expectation is 1252 01:14:16,360 --> 01:14:18,730 that things are quite rough and quite complicated. 1253 01:14:20,360 --> 01:14:22,420 NARRATOR: Exactly how rough and complicated 1254 01:14:22,530 --> 01:14:24,230 is open to debate. 1255 01:14:25,470 --> 01:14:27,840 Dan Lathrop believes the inner core's surface 1256 01:14:27,940 --> 01:14:31,810 is probably covered in a forest of metallic projections. 1257 01:14:33,140 --> 01:14:35,340 They're called dendrites. 1258 01:14:35,450 --> 01:14:38,510 LATHROP: There's most likely a sort of rough surface 1259 01:14:38,620 --> 01:14:41,410 of these iron crystals, perhaps dendrites poking out. 1260 01:14:41,520 --> 01:14:43,950 And the whole core itself 1261 01:14:44,050 --> 01:14:46,280 has a sort of crystalline order to it. 1262 01:14:46,390 --> 01:14:48,360 So while it's roughly spherical, 1263 01:14:48,460 --> 01:14:51,330 it has crystalline bits growing out from it, 1264 01:14:51,430 --> 01:14:53,490 continuously growing larger. 1265 01:14:55,170 --> 01:14:57,760 NARRATOR: As the core cools, the dendrites grow. 1266 01:14:57,870 --> 01:15:00,930 It's a sign that heat is constantly being transferred 1267 01:15:01,040 --> 01:15:03,670 from the inner to the outer core. 1268 01:15:04,880 --> 01:15:08,140 The Earth is slowly cooling, just from its origin. 1269 01:15:08,250 --> 01:15:10,340 And whenever you have something 1270 01:15:10,450 --> 01:15:13,280 which is hotter on the inside and colder on the outside, 1271 01:15:13,380 --> 01:15:15,940 it tends to get flows going, vortices. 1272 01:15:16,050 --> 01:15:17,610 You know, think of them sort of like 1273 01:15:17,720 --> 01:15:19,690 big, tumbling, cloudlike motions, 1274 01:15:19,790 --> 01:15:21,820 but it's in the liquid metal in the core. 1275 01:15:24,090 --> 01:15:27,760 NARRATOR: This heat transfer is fundamental to life on Earth. 1276 01:15:27,860 --> 01:15:31,270 It powers the outer core and the Earth's magnetic shield. 1277 01:15:31,370 --> 01:15:33,860 But it won't last forever. 1278 01:15:35,940 --> 01:15:39,970 With planet Earth losing heat every second, every day, 1279 01:15:40,080 --> 01:15:42,170 one thing is certain... 1280 01:15:42,280 --> 01:15:46,440 the inner core will keep growing and cooling. 1281 01:15:46,550 --> 01:15:48,520 In the distant future, 1282 01:15:48,620 --> 01:15:52,080 the whole core will freeze solid. 1283 01:15:52,190 --> 01:15:53,450 For life on Earth, 1284 01:15:53,560 --> 01:15:56,920 the consequences of that are unthinkable. 1285 01:16:10,800 --> 01:16:14,290 The inner core of planet Earth is a mysterious place, 1286 01:16:14,400 --> 01:16:16,270 hotter than the surface of the sun, 1287 01:16:16,370 --> 01:16:18,630 yet it's solid metal. 1288 01:16:18,740 --> 01:16:21,940 The core radiates incredible heat energy outward. 1289 01:16:22,040 --> 01:16:23,170 At the same time, 1290 01:16:23,280 --> 01:16:25,840 it crushes everything down around it 1291 01:16:25,950 --> 01:16:27,740 with intense gravity. 1292 01:16:27,850 --> 01:16:30,870 There's no way to see it or sample it. 1293 01:16:30,980 --> 01:16:34,510 How did it get there? Where did it come from? 1294 01:16:34,620 --> 01:16:36,650 There are clues. 1295 01:16:37,960 --> 01:16:41,330 The Earth shares its origins with the other rocky planets... 1296 01:16:41,430 --> 01:16:44,690 Mars, Venus, and Mercury. 1297 01:16:44,800 --> 01:16:47,890 In the beginning, just after the sun lit up, 1298 01:16:48,000 --> 01:16:49,870 before the planets existed, 1299 01:16:49,970 --> 01:16:55,370 great clouds of cosmic debris orbited the newly ignited star. 1300 01:16:55,480 --> 01:16:57,070 These early building blocks 1301 01:16:57,180 --> 01:17:00,310 crashed into each other with massive force. 1302 01:17:02,420 --> 01:17:04,320 The bigger the objects became, 1303 01:17:04,420 --> 01:17:06,650 the greater their gravitational pull, 1304 01:17:06,750 --> 01:17:10,480 until eventually whole planets formed. 1305 01:17:10,590 --> 01:17:11,960 LATHROP: When a planet forms, 1306 01:17:12,060 --> 01:17:13,690 it forms from a hodgepodge 1307 01:17:13,790 --> 01:17:15,660 of all sorts of different materials. 1308 01:17:15,760 --> 01:17:18,700 And so the heavier bits would tend to fall under gravity 1309 01:17:18,800 --> 01:17:21,170 and accumulate into the interior of the Earth. 1310 01:17:21,270 --> 01:17:23,740 We know that the bits of material 1311 01:17:23,840 --> 01:17:25,170 that made up all of the inner planets 1312 01:17:25,270 --> 01:17:26,500 had quite a bit of iron in them... 1313 01:17:26,610 --> 01:17:28,370 just raw, metallic iron. 1314 01:17:28,480 --> 01:17:30,500 And that would tend to sink down eventually 1315 01:17:30,610 --> 01:17:34,910 to form this massive core of the Earth. 1316 01:17:35,020 --> 01:17:37,780 NARRATOR: The solar system is now complete and stable, 1317 01:17:37,880 --> 01:17:40,910 but the process of formation, called accretion, 1318 01:17:41,020 --> 01:17:42,680 is not quite over. 1319 01:17:44,160 --> 01:17:45,680 The spare parts left over 1320 01:17:45,790 --> 01:17:47,380 from the creation of the solar system... 1321 01:17:47,490 --> 01:17:49,860 asteroids, comets, meteorites... 1322 01:17:49,960 --> 01:17:53,900 still orbit the sun and still crash into the Earth, 1323 01:17:54,000 --> 01:17:56,230 like the one that created this... 1324 01:17:56,340 --> 01:17:58,670 Meteor Crater in Arizona. 1325 01:18:00,710 --> 01:18:04,510 It was formed by an impact 50, 000 years ago. 1326 01:18:06,880 --> 01:18:09,410 And for cosmochemist Meenakshi Wadhwa, 1327 01:18:09,520 --> 01:18:12,540 it offers a glimpse of the forces and the materials 1328 01:18:12,650 --> 01:18:15,180 that created the Earth's core. 1329 01:18:16,890 --> 01:18:19,380 WADHWA: So Meteor Crater that you see here 1330 01:18:19,490 --> 01:18:22,430 was created by the impact of an object 1331 01:18:22,530 --> 01:18:26,230 probably that was about 300, 400 feet across. 1332 01:18:26,330 --> 01:18:30,960 And this was an event that was a sudden, catastrophic event. 1333 01:18:31,070 --> 01:18:32,540 A lot of energy was released... 1334 01:18:32,640 --> 01:18:35,070 something like 20 megatons or so. 1335 01:18:39,010 --> 01:18:40,780 NARRATOR: Lmagine a planet growing 1336 01:18:40,880 --> 01:18:43,110 from billions of impacts like this one, 1337 01:18:43,220 --> 01:18:45,450 each one delivering iron, nickel, 1338 01:18:45,550 --> 01:18:48,210 and the other elements that make the world around us. 1339 01:18:48,320 --> 01:18:52,550 They also delivered an enormous amount of heat energy. 1340 01:18:54,760 --> 01:18:56,700 WADHWA: You can see that there were large blocks 1341 01:18:56,800 --> 01:18:58,260 that were ejected out from the crater, 1342 01:18:58,370 --> 01:18:59,560 and there were actually material 1343 01:18:59,670 --> 01:19:02,190 probably tossed out to hundreds of miles from the crater 1344 01:19:02,300 --> 01:19:04,240 as a result of the impact. 1345 01:19:06,810 --> 01:19:09,100 NARRATOR: The impact here was so powerful, 1346 01:19:09,210 --> 01:19:11,200 it vaporized the meteorite. 1347 01:19:11,310 --> 01:19:14,040 But a few fragments survived. 1348 01:19:14,150 --> 01:19:16,240 So this particular meteorite is... 1349 01:19:16,350 --> 01:19:18,510 It's called a Canyon Diablo meteorite, 1350 01:19:18,620 --> 01:19:23,060 and it's an iron-rich meteorite which was part of the impactor 1351 01:19:23,160 --> 01:19:25,020 that created Meteor Crater. 1352 01:19:25,130 --> 01:19:26,650 It's very difficult, of course, 1353 01:19:26,760 --> 01:19:29,190 to actually sample a piece of the Earth's core, 1354 01:19:29,300 --> 01:19:32,630 but these meteorites right here provide us a window 1355 01:19:32,730 --> 01:19:35,360 into looking at planetary interiors. 1356 01:19:35,470 --> 01:19:37,100 And you can actually learn something 1357 01:19:37,200 --> 01:19:38,530 about core-formation processes 1358 01:19:38,640 --> 01:19:40,870 by looking at iron-rich meteorites. 1359 01:19:40,970 --> 01:19:42,340 NARRATOR: Close up, 1360 01:19:42,440 --> 01:19:44,880 you can see the crystalline structure of the metal 1361 01:19:44,980 --> 01:19:47,410 that exists right at the heart of our planet, 1362 01:19:47,510 --> 01:19:50,810 a planet that's unique in the solar system. 1363 01:19:50,920 --> 01:19:54,110 But what makes Earth so special? 1364 01:19:54,220 --> 01:19:56,950 If the other rocky planets were made the same way, 1365 01:19:57,060 --> 01:19:59,620 how come they're so different today? 1366 01:20:01,660 --> 01:20:03,060 What happened to them 1367 01:20:03,160 --> 01:20:06,760 might shed light on the future of our own planet. 1368 01:20:08,100 --> 01:20:10,430 Scientists look to them for clues 1369 01:20:10,540 --> 01:20:14,470 that can tell them more about the fate of the Earth's core. 1370 01:20:14,570 --> 01:20:18,770 And the planet that interests them most is Mars. 1371 01:20:19,850 --> 01:20:22,610 It's our nearest neighbor. 1372 01:20:22,720 --> 01:20:25,840 Like Earth, water once flowed on its surface. 1373 01:20:25,950 --> 01:20:27,720 It had a thick atmosphere. 1374 01:20:27,820 --> 01:20:30,980 But that was billions of years ago. 1375 01:20:31,090 --> 01:20:34,930 Today, the planet is a frozen desert. 1376 01:20:35,030 --> 01:20:39,120 Most of its water and atmosphere have vanished. 1377 01:20:39,230 --> 01:20:41,890 And even though Mars has a metal core, 1378 01:20:42,000 --> 01:20:44,490 its magnetic field is tiny. 1379 01:20:45,810 --> 01:20:48,370 Are these conditions a coincidence? 1380 01:20:48,480 --> 01:20:52,340 Or is Mars a vision of Earth's future? 1381 01:21:00,410 --> 01:21:02,440 MAN:in NASA's 1382 01:21:02,550 --> 01:21:07,040 NARRATOR: In 1996, NASA launched the Mars Global Surveyor. 1383 01:21:07,150 --> 01:21:11,280 Its mission... to unlock the secrets of the red planet. 1384 01:21:11,390 --> 01:21:14,230 MAN:as America begins its 1385 01:21:14,330 --> 01:21:15,390 NARRATOR: But in the process, 1386 01:21:15,500 --> 01:21:19,090 it unlocked some of our own planet's secrets, 1387 01:21:19,200 --> 01:21:22,570 shedding new light on the very center of the Earth... 1388 01:21:22,670 --> 01:21:24,930 the inner core. 1389 01:21:25,040 --> 01:21:29,770 The Global Surveyor's data astonished scientists. 1390 01:21:29,880 --> 01:21:33,240 It showed Mars' magnetic field is very weak, 1391 01:21:33,350 --> 01:21:37,370 but Mars' crust is intensely magnetized. 1392 01:21:39,290 --> 01:21:43,090 The implications for our planet are immense. 1393 01:21:45,730 --> 01:21:49,460 Like Earth, Mars once had a powerful magnetic field. 1394 01:21:49,560 --> 01:21:53,430 But at some point, the Martian core cooled and froze, 1395 01:21:53,530 --> 01:21:55,730 and its magnetic field collapsed. 1396 01:21:57,710 --> 01:22:01,400 The question is, could it happen to our planet? 1397 01:22:06,750 --> 01:22:08,720 Mario Acuna was one of the scientists 1398 01:22:08,820 --> 01:22:12,010 who built the magnetic sensors that gathered the Mars data. 1399 01:22:12,120 --> 01:22:16,220 He used it to create a map of Mars' magnetized crust. 1400 01:22:16,320 --> 01:22:20,760 He discovered that in one area, there is no magnetism at all. 1401 01:22:20,860 --> 01:22:24,190 And it corresponds with a particular physical feature. 1402 01:22:24,300 --> 01:22:26,160 One of the things that we observe 1403 01:22:26,270 --> 01:22:30,030 is this very large hole in Mars, 1404 01:22:30,140 --> 01:22:31,260 if we want to call it a hole. 1405 01:22:31,370 --> 01:22:34,810 It's really the remnants of a gigantic impact 1406 01:22:34,910 --> 01:22:37,600 that took place very early in Mars' history. 1407 01:22:39,710 --> 01:22:43,170 NARRATOR: This hole is an enormous meteor crater. 1408 01:22:43,280 --> 01:22:45,180 It was clear that the rocks here, 1409 01:22:45,290 --> 01:22:47,340 unlike those in the rest of Mars' crust, 1410 01:22:47,450 --> 01:22:49,680 hadn't been magnetized. 1411 01:22:49,790 --> 01:22:51,280 So the crater must have formed 1412 01:22:51,390 --> 01:22:54,020 after Mars' core stopped working. 1413 01:22:56,460 --> 01:22:58,730 Scientists think the meteor impact here 1414 01:22:58,830 --> 01:23:00,490 released so much energy, 1415 01:23:00,600 --> 01:23:03,370 it liquefied the planet's crust at the point of impact. 1416 01:23:08,040 --> 01:23:10,030 Crystals in the cooling lava 1417 01:23:10,140 --> 01:23:12,910 would have recorded the surrounding magnetic field, 1418 01:23:13,010 --> 01:23:15,350 just like they do on Earth. 1419 01:23:15,450 --> 01:23:17,710 But in the gigantic crater on Mars, 1420 01:23:17,820 --> 01:23:21,720 the rocks bear no record of being magnetized. 1421 01:23:21,820 --> 01:23:23,310 Scientists theorize 1422 01:23:23,420 --> 01:23:26,150 that's because the magnetic field no longer existed 1423 01:23:26,260 --> 01:23:28,850 when the impact occurred. 1424 01:23:28,960 --> 01:23:33,900 The continent-sized crater was created 4 billion years ago. 1425 01:23:34,000 --> 01:23:36,270 It means the dynamo in Mars' core 1426 01:23:36,370 --> 01:23:41,070 stopped working when the planet was in its infancy. 1427 01:23:41,180 --> 01:23:42,400 DR. ACUNA: For the first time, 1428 01:23:42,510 --> 01:23:45,970 we could time when the dynamo disappeared. 1429 01:23:46,080 --> 01:23:49,670 And since Mars was formed only 41/2 billion years ago, 1430 01:23:49,780 --> 01:23:52,120 that means that the dynamo only lasted 1431 01:23:52,220 --> 01:23:54,240 a few hundred million years. 1432 01:23:57,190 --> 01:23:59,390 NARRATOR: The reason for Mars' premature death 1433 01:23:59,490 --> 01:24:01,860 lies in its size. 1434 01:24:04,060 --> 01:24:06,360 Mars is half the diameter of Earth, 1435 01:24:06,470 --> 01:24:08,930 so it cooled more quickly. 1436 01:24:09,040 --> 01:24:10,560 Its core froze, 1437 01:24:10,670 --> 01:24:13,940 and its magnetic shield collapsed. 1438 01:24:14,040 --> 01:24:17,940 The fate of life on Mars was sealed. 1439 01:24:19,810 --> 01:24:22,580 The planet lay exposed to the solar wind. 1440 01:24:26,250 --> 01:24:29,980 Its atmosphere and water eroded away. 1441 01:24:31,060 --> 01:24:33,080 DR. ACUNA: The fact that the magnetic field disappeared 1442 01:24:33,190 --> 01:24:36,590 had a tremendous effect on the loss of water by Mars. 1443 01:24:36,700 --> 01:24:42,100 We are looking for something like 1, 500 feet of water 1444 01:24:42,200 --> 01:24:47,000 over the entire planet Mars to have disappeared from Mars. 1445 01:24:50,880 --> 01:24:53,310 NARRATOR: Earth is much larger than Mars, 1446 01:24:53,410 --> 01:24:56,640 so its core is still hot, still working. 1447 01:24:56,750 --> 01:24:59,910 But the lesson of Mars is unavoidable. 1448 01:25:00,020 --> 01:25:03,250 Eventually, Earth's own core will cool 1449 01:25:03,360 --> 01:25:07,050 until the convection columns inside the outer core collapse, 1450 01:25:07,160 --> 01:25:11,100 and then our magnetic shield will come down. 1451 01:25:13,430 --> 01:25:16,230 Without it, solar radiation will strip away 1452 01:25:16,340 --> 01:25:20,800 both our atmosphere and liquid water. 1453 01:25:20,910 --> 01:25:25,170 Then Earth will become a dead and desolate place. 1454 01:25:26,280 --> 01:25:29,040 But we don't need to panic just yet. 1455 01:25:31,750 --> 01:25:33,950 The extreme temperatures in the inner core 1456 01:25:34,050 --> 01:25:36,320 suggest we have plenty of time left, 1457 01:25:36,420 --> 01:25:39,320 perhaps even billions of years. 1458 01:25:42,530 --> 01:25:45,290 Nearly 4, 000 miles from the surface, 1459 01:25:45,400 --> 01:25:47,200 we have reached our destination... 1460 01:25:47,300 --> 01:25:49,770 the very center of the Earth. 1461 01:25:49,870 --> 01:25:52,500 This is the hottest part of the planet. 1462 01:25:54,980 --> 01:25:57,880 Temperatures reach 12, 000 degrees, 1463 01:25:57,980 --> 01:26:00,640 hotter than the surface of the sun. 1464 01:26:02,080 --> 01:26:05,850 And with no gravity, it's like nothing else on Earth. 1465 01:26:07,550 --> 01:26:09,150 The very center of the Earth is 1466 01:26:09,260 --> 01:26:12,660 probably the most un-Earthlike place on the planet, 1467 01:26:12,760 --> 01:26:15,850 in the sense that gravity gets weaker as you go down, 1468 01:26:15,960 --> 01:26:18,690 and when you hit the center, there's no gravity left. 1469 01:26:18,800 --> 01:26:21,790 There's no direction which means down. 1470 01:26:21,900 --> 01:26:23,200 Gravity is absent. 1471 01:26:23,300 --> 01:26:25,970 The temperature is the hottest spot on the Earth. 1472 01:26:26,070 --> 01:26:29,070 And so it's this sort of white-hot, gravityless, 1473 01:26:29,180 --> 01:26:31,740 very high-pressure... just crushing pressures 1474 01:26:31,850 --> 01:26:33,940 of all of the weight of the rest of the Earth 1475 01:26:34,050 --> 01:26:35,380 all pushing down on you. 1476 01:26:35,480 --> 01:26:37,610 So it's extremely inhospitable 1477 01:26:37,720 --> 01:26:40,740 and extremely strange at the same time. 1478 01:26:42,820 --> 01:26:44,720 NARRATOR: The world beneath our feet 1479 01:26:44,830 --> 01:26:46,550 may seem like an alien place, 1480 01:26:46,660 --> 01:26:48,320 but our journey has shown 1481 01:26:48,430 --> 01:26:50,690 it's very much part of life aboveground. 1482 01:26:52,970 --> 01:26:55,430 Everything about it is just right. 1483 01:26:56,640 --> 01:26:59,660 The Earth spins at precisely the right speed, 1484 01:26:59,770 --> 01:27:01,740 and it's exactly the right size 1485 01:27:01,840 --> 01:27:06,250 to allow some heat loss from the core, but not too much. 1486 01:27:08,220 --> 01:27:11,310 As a result, we have our magnetic field. 1487 01:27:11,420 --> 01:27:13,750 The mantle is just mobile enough 1488 01:27:13,850 --> 01:27:16,250 to allow currents of heat to move upward 1489 01:27:16,360 --> 01:27:18,620 so we have our continents to live on. 1490 01:27:21,600 --> 01:27:24,090 And our gravity is just the right strength 1491 01:27:24,200 --> 01:27:28,160 to bind our atmosphere and oceans to the surface. 1492 01:27:29,200 --> 01:27:32,100 From the crust to the core, 1493 01:27:32,210 --> 01:27:35,830 every layer, every rock, every piece fits together 1494 01:27:35,940 --> 01:27:39,210 to make life upon the surface possible. 1495 01:27:39,310 --> 01:27:42,280 The secret of all life as we know it 1496 01:27:42,380 --> 01:27:45,250 lies deep inside planet Earth. 120733

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