All language subtitles for Cosmos.A.Spacetime.Odyssey.S01E02.720p.BluRay.x264-intothevoid.en

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese Download
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,588 --> 00:00:10,266 TYSON: This is a story about you and me and your dog. 2 00:00:11,094 --> 00:00:14,268 [ANIMAL HOWLING] 3 00:00:14,431 --> 00:00:19,028 There was a time not long ago, before dogs. 4 00:00:19,186 --> 00:00:21,029 They didn't exist. 5 00:00:21,188 --> 00:00:25,694 Now there are big ones, small ones, smugglers, guardians, hunters. 6 00:00:25,859 --> 00:00:28,783 Every kind of dog you could possibly want. 7 00:00:28,946 --> 00:00:30,914 How did that happen? 8 00:00:31,073 --> 00:00:32,245 It's not just dogs. 9 00:00:32,407 --> 00:00:35,786 Where did all the different kinds of living creatures come from? 10 00:00:36,328 --> 00:00:40,299 The answer is a transforming power that sounds like something... 11 00:00:40,457 --> 00:00:45,304 ...straight out of a fairy tale or myth, but it's no such thing. 12 00:02:13,786 --> 00:02:15,286 "Some of the Things That Molecules Do" 13 00:02:17,387 --> 00:02:22,109 Let's go back across 30,000 years to a time before dogs... 14 00:02:22,851 --> 00:02:26,526 ...when our ancestors lived in the endless winter of the last ice age. 15 00:02:27,397 --> 00:02:31,072 Our ancestors were wanderers living in small bands. 16 00:02:31,234 --> 00:02:33,578 They slept beneath the stars. 17 00:02:33,737 --> 00:02:39,665 The sky was their storybook, calendar, an instruction manual for living. 18 00:02:39,826 --> 00:02:42,204 It told them when the bitter colds would come... 19 00:02:42,371 --> 00:02:44,499 ...when the wild grains would ripen... 20 00:02:44,665 --> 00:02:47,919 ...when the herds of caribou and bison would be on the move. 21 00:02:48,085 --> 00:02:51,931 Their idea of home was Earth itself. 22 00:02:52,506 --> 00:02:55,726 But they lived in fear of other hungry creatures. 23 00:02:55,884 --> 00:02:59,934 The mountain lions and the bears that competed with them for the same prey. 24 00:03:00,097 --> 00:03:03,226 And the wolves that threatened to carry off and devour... 25 00:03:03,392 --> 00:03:05,440 ...the most vulnerable among them. 26 00:03:05,686 --> 00:03:09,862 [WOLF GROWLING] 27 00:03:12,275 --> 00:03:13,902 [SNARLING] 28 00:03:23,662 --> 00:03:25,585 All the wolves want to get at the bone... 29 00:03:25,747 --> 00:03:28,170 ...but most are too frightened to come close enough. 30 00:03:28,959 --> 00:03:33,180 Their fear is due to high levels of stress hormones in their blood. 31 00:03:33,338 --> 00:03:34,760 It's a matter of survival. 32 00:03:34,923 --> 00:03:37,972 Because coming too close to humans can be fatal. 33 00:03:38,135 --> 00:03:40,479 But a few wolves, due to natural variations... 34 00:03:40,637 --> 00:03:42,856 ...have lower levels of those hormones. 35 00:03:43,014 --> 00:03:46,188 This makes them less afraid of humans. 36 00:03:49,730 --> 00:03:52,984 This wolf has discovered what a branch of his ancestors figured out... 37 00:03:53,150 --> 00:03:57,701 ...some 15,000 years ago. An excellent survival strategy. 38 00:03:57,863 --> 00:04:01,037 Domestication, humans. 39 00:04:01,199 --> 00:04:04,578 Let the humans do the hunting, don't threaten them... 40 00:04:04,745 --> 00:04:06,998 ...and they'll let you scavenge their garbage. 41 00:04:07,164 --> 00:04:09,792 You'll eat more regularly, you'll leave more offspring... 42 00:04:09,958 --> 00:04:13,508 ...and those offspring will inherit your disposition. 43 00:04:13,962 --> 00:04:18,138 This selection for tameness would be reinforced with each generation... 44 00:04:18,300 --> 00:04:20,553 ...until that line of wild wolves... 45 00:04:20,719 --> 00:04:25,691 ...evolves into dogs. 46 00:04:25,849 --> 00:04:28,102 You might call this "survival of the friendliest." 47 00:04:29,478 --> 00:04:30,650 [CHUCKLES] 48 00:04:30,812 --> 00:04:32,439 [DOG WHIMPERS] 49 00:04:32,606 --> 00:04:36,031 Then as now, this was a good deal for the humans too. 50 00:04:36,193 --> 00:04:39,037 The scavenging dogs weren't just a sanitation squad. 51 00:04:39,196 --> 00:04:40,914 They worked security. 52 00:04:41,865 --> 00:04:44,038 [DOG BARKING] 53 00:04:46,953 --> 00:04:49,081 [WOLF GROWLING] 54 00:04:51,041 --> 00:04:52,714 [DOG BARKING] 55 00:04:56,880 --> 00:05:00,259 As this interspecies partnership continued over time... 56 00:05:00,425 --> 00:05:02,974 ...the dogs' appearance changed also. 57 00:05:03,136 --> 00:05:05,559 Cuteness became a selective advantage. 58 00:05:05,722 --> 00:05:08,271 The more adorable you were, the better chance you had... 59 00:05:08,433 --> 00:05:11,687 ...to live and pass on your genes to another generation. 60 00:05:11,853 --> 00:05:14,151 What began as an alliance of convenience... 61 00:05:14,314 --> 00:05:18,035 ...became a friendship that deepened over time. 62 00:05:18,193 --> 00:05:19,445 To see what happens next... 63 00:05:19,778 --> 00:05:22,031 ...let's leave our distant ancestors... 64 00:05:22,197 --> 00:05:26,623 ...of some 20,000 years ago to visit the more recent past... 65 00:05:26,785 --> 00:05:29,629 ...during an intermission in the Ice Age. 66 00:05:29,788 --> 00:05:33,258 This break in the climate starts a revolution. 67 00:05:33,416 --> 00:05:36,636 Instead of wandering, people are settling down. 68 00:05:36,795 --> 00:05:40,720 There's something new in the world: villages. 69 00:05:40,882 --> 00:05:46,264 People still hunt and gather, but now they also produce food and clothing. 70 00:05:46,429 --> 00:05:48,431 Agriculture. 71 00:05:53,603 --> 00:05:57,949 The wolves have traded their freedom in exchange for a steady meal. 72 00:05:58,692 --> 00:06:01,036 They've given up their right to choose a mate. 73 00:06:01,194 --> 00:06:03,743 Now the humans choose for them. 74 00:06:04,406 --> 00:06:07,660 They consistently kill off the dogs that can't be trained... 75 00:06:07,826 --> 00:06:10,204 ...the ones that bite the feeding hand. 76 00:06:10,370 --> 00:06:13,795 And they breed the dogs that please them. 77 00:06:14,124 --> 00:06:16,798 [DOGS BARKING] 78 00:06:17,252 --> 00:06:19,971 They nurture those dogs that do their bidding... 79 00:06:20,130 --> 00:06:24,476 ...hunting, herding, guarding, hauling, and keeping them company. 80 00:06:24,634 --> 00:06:25,851 From every litter... 81 00:06:26,011 --> 00:06:28,764 ...the humans select the puppies they like best. 82 00:06:28,930 --> 00:06:32,355 Over the generations, the dogs evolve. 83 00:06:32,517 --> 00:06:35,987 This kind of evolution is called artificial selection... 84 00:06:36,146 --> 00:06:37,238 ...or breeding. 85 00:06:37,397 --> 00:06:39,866 Turning wolves into dogs was the first time... 86 00:06:40,025 --> 00:06:42,995 ...we humans took evolution into our own hands. 87 00:06:43,153 --> 00:06:44,951 And we've been doing it ever since... 88 00:06:45,113 --> 00:06:48,993 ...to shape all the plants and animals that we depend on. 89 00:06:49,159 --> 00:06:53,460 In a blink of cosmic time, just 15- or 20,000 years... 90 00:06:53,622 --> 00:06:58,344 ...we turned gray wolves into all the kinds of dogs we love today. 91 00:06:58,501 --> 00:07:02,051 Think of it. Every breed of dog you've ever seen... 92 00:07:02,213 --> 00:07:04,557 ...was sculpted by human hands. 93 00:07:04,716 --> 00:07:08,141 Many of our best friends, the most popular breeds... 94 00:07:08,303 --> 00:07:11,773 ...were created in only the last few centuries. 95 00:07:13,475 --> 00:07:18,026 The awesome power of evolution transformed the ravenous wolf... 96 00:07:18,188 --> 00:07:19,656 ...into the faithful shepherd... 97 00:07:19,814 --> 00:07:23,535 ...who protects the herd and drives the wolf away. 98 00:07:23,693 --> 00:07:25,616 [GROWLING] 99 00:07:37,791 --> 00:07:41,045 Artificial selection turned the wolf into the shepherd... 100 00:07:41,211 --> 00:07:43,885 ...and the wild grasses into wheat and corn. 101 00:07:44,047 --> 00:07:47,597 In fact, almost every plant and animal that we eat today... 102 00:07:47,759 --> 00:07:51,480 ...was bred from a wild, less-edible ancestor. 103 00:07:51,638 --> 00:07:54,892 If artificial selection can work such profound changes... 104 00:07:55,058 --> 00:07:59,985 ...in only 10 or 15,000 years, what can natural selection do... 105 00:08:00,146 --> 00:08:02,649 ...operating over billions of years? 106 00:08:03,608 --> 00:08:08,409 The answer is all the beauty and diversity of life. 107 00:08:08,571 --> 00:08:10,244 How does it work? 108 00:08:10,407 --> 00:08:15,789 Our ship of the imagination can take us anywhere in space and time... 109 00:08:15,954 --> 00:08:18,707 ...even to the hidden microcosmos... 110 00:08:18,873 --> 00:08:22,798 ...where one kind of life can be transformed into another. 111 00:08:22,961 --> 00:08:24,804 Come with me. 112 00:08:34,097 --> 00:08:35,144 May not seem like it... 113 00:08:35,306 --> 00:08:39,152 ...but we've been living in an ice age for the last two million years. 114 00:08:39,310 --> 00:08:41,938 This just happens to be one of the long intermissions. 115 00:08:42,105 --> 00:08:46,110 For most of those two million years, the climate has been cold and dry. 116 00:08:46,276 --> 00:08:48,745 The North Polar ice cap extended much farther south... 117 00:08:48,903 --> 00:08:51,031 ...than it does today. 118 00:08:51,197 --> 00:08:53,620 In one of those long, cold glacial periods... 119 00:08:53,783 --> 00:08:56,457 ...when the winter sea ice stretched from the North Pole... 120 00:08:56,619 --> 00:08:59,418 ...all the way down to what is now Los Angeles... 121 00:09:00,373 --> 00:09:04,469 ...great bears roamed the frozen wastes of Ireland. 122 00:09:10,967 --> 00:09:12,935 This might look like an ordinary bear... 123 00:09:13,094 --> 00:09:15,813 ...but something extraordinary is happening inside her. 124 00:09:16,556 --> 00:09:19,935 Something that will give rise to a new species. 125 00:09:20,101 --> 00:09:24,982 In order to see it, we'll need to descend down to a much smaller scale... 126 00:09:25,148 --> 00:09:26,821 ...to the cellular level... 127 00:09:26,983 --> 00:09:30,613 ...so that we can explore the bear's reproductive system. 128 00:09:35,325 --> 00:09:38,875 We'll take the subclavian artery through the heart. 129 00:09:43,917 --> 00:09:46,136 [HEART BEATING] 130 00:10:01,226 --> 00:10:02,694 Almost there. 131 00:10:09,025 --> 00:10:11,153 Those are some of her eggs. 132 00:10:11,319 --> 00:10:15,449 To see what's going on in one of them, we'll have to get even smaller. 133 00:10:15,615 --> 00:10:18,585 We'll have to shrink down to the molecular level. 134 00:10:21,663 --> 00:10:24,587 Our ship of the imagination is now so small... 135 00:10:24,749 --> 00:10:28,879 ...you could fit a million of them into a grain of sand. 136 00:10:29,629 --> 00:10:32,883 See those guys over there strutting along those girders? 137 00:10:33,049 --> 00:10:35,598 They are proteins called kinesin. 138 00:10:35,760 --> 00:10:38,388 These kinesin are part of the transport crew... 139 00:10:38,555 --> 00:10:41,229 ...that's busy moving cargo around the cell. 140 00:10:41,391 --> 00:10:43,234 How alien they seem. 141 00:10:43,393 --> 00:10:46,522 And yet these tiny creatures, and beings like them... 142 00:10:46,688 --> 00:10:52,366 ...are a part of every living cell, including the ones inside you. 143 00:10:53,361 --> 00:10:56,080 If life has a sanctuary... 144 00:10:56,239 --> 00:11:00,585 ...it's here in the nucleus which contains our DNA. 145 00:11:01,286 --> 00:11:03,914 The ancient scripture of our genetic code. 146 00:11:04,080 --> 00:11:09,587 And it's written in a language that all life can read. 147 00:11:14,924 --> 00:11:18,849 DNA is a molecule shaped like a long twisted ladder... 148 00:11:19,012 --> 00:11:21,060 ...or double helix. 149 00:11:21,222 --> 00:11:25,443 The rungs of the ladder are made of four different kinds of smaller molecules. 150 00:11:25,602 --> 00:11:28,526 These are the letters of the genetic alphabet. 151 00:11:28,688 --> 00:11:30,656 Particular arrangements of those letters... 152 00:11:30,815 --> 00:11:33,534 ...spell out the instructions for all living things... 153 00:11:33,693 --> 00:11:36,788 ...telling them how to grow, move, digest... 154 00:11:36,946 --> 00:11:40,541 ...sense the environment, heal, and reproduce. 155 00:11:40,700 --> 00:11:43,544 The DNA double helix is a molecular machine... 156 00:11:43,703 --> 00:11:48,174 ...with about 100 billion parts called atoms. 157 00:11:48,333 --> 00:11:51,963 There are as many atoms in a single molecule of your DNA... 158 00:11:52,128 --> 00:11:55,098 ...as there are stars in a typical galaxy. 159 00:11:55,256 --> 00:12:00,057 The same is true for dogs and bears... 160 00:12:00,220 --> 00:12:02,598 ...and every living thing. 161 00:12:03,306 --> 00:12:08,654 We are, each of us, a little universe. 162 00:12:16,319 --> 00:12:19,163 The DNA message handed down from cell to cell... 163 00:12:19,322 --> 00:12:21,745 ...and from generation to generation is copied... 164 00:12:21,908 --> 00:12:22,955 ...with extreme care. 165 00:12:23,117 --> 00:12:27,497 The birth of a new DNA molecule begins when an unwinding protein... 166 00:12:27,664 --> 00:12:30,042 ...separates the two strands of the double helix... 167 00:12:30,208 --> 00:12:32,176 ...breaking the rungs apart. 168 00:12:32,335 --> 00:12:34,463 Inside the liquid of the nucleus... 169 00:12:34,629 --> 00:12:38,179 ...the molecular letters of the genetic code float freely. 170 00:12:38,341 --> 00:12:41,845 Each strand of the helix copies its lost partner... 171 00:12:42,011 --> 00:12:44,935 ...resulting in two identical DNA molecules. 172 00:12:45,098 --> 00:12:47,817 That's how life reproduces genes and transmits them... 173 00:12:47,976 --> 00:12:50,195 ...from one generation to the next. 174 00:12:50,353 --> 00:12:52,606 When a living cell divides in two... 175 00:12:52,772 --> 00:12:57,118 ...each one takes away with it a complete copy of the DNA. 176 00:12:57,277 --> 00:13:00,030 A specialized protein proofreads to make sure... 177 00:13:00,196 --> 00:13:05,418 ...that only the right letters are accepted so that the DNA is accurately copied. 178 00:13:05,576 --> 00:13:07,249 But nobody's perfect. 179 00:13:07,412 --> 00:13:10,461 Occasionally, a proofreading error slips through... 180 00:13:10,623 --> 00:13:14,253 ...making a small, random change in the genetic instructions. 181 00:13:14,419 --> 00:13:17,889 A mutation has occurred in the bear's egg cell. 182 00:13:18,047 --> 00:13:21,426 A random event as tiny as this one can have consequences... 183 00:13:21,592 --> 00:13:24,562 ...on a far grander scale. 184 00:13:26,055 --> 00:13:29,901 That mutation altered the gene that controls fur color. 185 00:13:30,059 --> 00:13:33,233 It will affect the production of dark pigment in the fur... 186 00:13:33,396 --> 00:13:35,444 ...of the bear's offspring. 187 00:13:35,606 --> 00:13:37,734 Most mutations are harmless. 188 00:13:37,900 --> 00:13:39,447 Some are deadly. 189 00:13:39,610 --> 00:13:42,329 But a few, purely by chance, can give an organism... 190 00:13:42,488 --> 00:13:46,083 ...a critical advantage over the competition. 191 00:13:46,242 --> 00:13:49,416 A year has passed. Our bear is now a mother. 192 00:13:49,579 --> 00:13:51,832 And as a result of that mutation... 193 00:13:51,998 --> 00:13:55,252 ...one of her two cubs was born with a white coat. 194 00:13:55,418 --> 00:13:59,013 When the cubs get old enough to venture out on their own... 195 00:13:59,172 --> 00:14:00,845 ...which bear is more likely... 196 00:14:01,007 --> 00:14:04,432 ...to be able to sneak up on unsuspecting prey? 197 00:14:04,594 --> 00:14:07,894 The brown bear can be seen against the snow a mile away. 198 00:14:08,056 --> 00:14:10,730 The white bear prospers and passes on... 199 00:14:10,892 --> 00:14:13,611 ...its own particular set of genes. 200 00:14:13,770 --> 00:14:16,193 This happens repeatedly. 201 00:14:16,356 --> 00:14:17,983 Over succeeding generations... 202 00:14:18,149 --> 00:14:23,451 ...the gene for white fur spreads through the entire population of Arctic bears. 203 00:14:23,613 --> 00:14:28,961 The gene for dark fur loses out in the competition for survival. 204 00:14:30,620 --> 00:14:34,750 Mutations are entirely random and happen all the time. 205 00:14:34,916 --> 00:14:36,634 But the environment rewards those... 206 00:14:36,793 --> 00:14:38,966 ...that increase the chance for survival. 207 00:14:39,128 --> 00:14:43,804 It naturally selects the living things that are better suited to survive. 208 00:14:43,966 --> 00:14:46,640 And that selection is the opposite of random. 209 00:14:50,139 --> 00:14:54,189 The two populations of bears separated and over thousands of years... 210 00:14:54,352 --> 00:14:57,777 ...evolved other characteristics that set them apart. 211 00:14:57,939 --> 00:15:01,364 They became different species. 212 00:15:02,693 --> 00:15:07,665 That's what Charles Darwin meant by "the origin of species." 213 00:15:08,449 --> 00:15:10,827 An individual bear doesn't evolve. 214 00:15:10,993 --> 00:15:15,840 The population of bears evolves over generations. 215 00:15:16,666 --> 00:15:18,714 If the Arctic ice continues to dwindle... 216 00:15:18,876 --> 00:15:22,631 ...due to global warming, the polar bears may go extinct. 217 00:15:22,797 --> 00:15:24,720 They'll be replaced by brown bears... 218 00:15:24,882 --> 00:15:27,556 ...better adapted to the now defrosted environment. 219 00:15:29,178 --> 00:15:31,977 This is a different story from the one about the dogs. 220 00:15:32,140 --> 00:15:34,643 No breeder guided these changes. 221 00:15:34,809 --> 00:15:38,063 Instead, the environment itself selects them. 222 00:15:38,229 --> 00:15:40,857 This is evolution by natural selection... 223 00:15:41,023 --> 00:15:44,618 ...the most revolutionary concept in the history of science. 224 00:15:44,777 --> 00:15:48,873 Darwin first presented the evidence for this idea in 1859. 225 00:15:49,031 --> 00:15:52,706 The uproar it caused has never subsided. 226 00:15:52,869 --> 00:15:54,997 Why? 227 00:16:02,712 --> 00:16:04,589 [BIRDS CHIRPING] 228 00:16:04,755 --> 00:16:06,849 We all understand the twinge of discomfort... 229 00:16:07,008 --> 00:16:09,932 ...at the thought that we share a common ancestor with the apes. 230 00:16:10,845 --> 00:16:13,473 No one can embarrass you like a relative. 231 00:16:13,639 --> 00:16:15,562 Our closest ones, the chimpanzees... 232 00:16:15,725 --> 00:16:18,604 ...they frequently behave inappropriately in public. 233 00:16:18,769 --> 00:16:22,694 There's an understandable human need to distance ourselves from them. 234 00:16:22,857 --> 00:16:25,406 A central premise of traditional belief... 235 00:16:25,568 --> 00:16:29,198 ...is that we were created separately from all the other animals. 236 00:16:29,363 --> 00:16:34,585 It's easy to see why this idea has taken hold. It makes us feel special. 237 00:16:35,077 --> 00:16:41,130 But what about our kinship with the trees? How does that make you feel? 238 00:16:49,592 --> 00:16:54,644 Okay, here's a segment of the oak tree's DNA. Think of it like a barcode. 239 00:16:54,805 --> 00:17:00,107 The instructions written in the code of life tell the tree how to metabolize sugar. 240 00:17:00,269 --> 00:17:03,148 Now let's compare it with the same section of my own DNA. 241 00:17:08,986 --> 00:17:10,283 The DNA doesn't lie. 242 00:17:10,446 --> 00:17:14,246 This tree and me, we're long-lost cousins. 243 00:17:14,408 --> 00:17:15,910 And it's not just the trees. 244 00:17:16,077 --> 00:17:18,830 If you go back far enough, you'll find that we share... 245 00:17:18,996 --> 00:17:21,966 ...a common ancestor with the butterfly... 246 00:17:22,124 --> 00:17:26,546 "Gray Wolf... ...mushroom... ...shark... 247 00:17:26,712 --> 00:17:29,473 ...bacterium... ...sparrow. 248 00:17:29,632 --> 00:17:31,009 What a family. 249 00:17:31,175 --> 00:17:34,395 Other parts of the barcode vary from species to species. 250 00:17:34,554 --> 00:17:38,149 That's what makes the difference between an owl and an octopus. 251 00:17:38,307 --> 00:17:40,355 Unless you have an identical twin... 252 00:17:40,518 --> 00:17:45,024 ...there's no one else in the universe with the exact same DNA as you. 253 00:17:45,189 --> 00:17:47,408 Within other species, the genetic differences... 254 00:17:47,567 --> 00:17:50,741 ...provide the raw material for natural selection. 255 00:17:50,903 --> 00:17:54,999 The environment selects which genes survive and multiply. 256 00:17:55,157 --> 00:17:58,661 When it comes to the genetic instructions for life's most basic functions... 257 00:17:58,828 --> 00:18:03,504 ...say, digesting sugars, we and other species are almost identical. 258 00:18:03,666 --> 00:18:06,966 That's because those functions are so basic to life... 259 00:18:07,128 --> 00:18:11,053 ...they evolved before the various life-forms branched off from each other. 260 00:18:11,215 --> 00:18:14,014 This is our tree of life. 261 00:18:14,176 --> 00:18:17,726 Science has made it possible for us to construct this family tree... 262 00:18:17,888 --> 00:18:20,232 ...for all the species of life on Earth. 263 00:18:20,391 --> 00:18:23,520 Close genetic relatives occupy the same branch of the tree... 264 00:18:23,686 --> 00:18:27,065 ...while more distant cousins are farther away. 265 00:18:27,231 --> 00:18:30,360 Each twig is a living species. 266 00:18:31,611 --> 00:18:34,785 And the trunk of the tree represents the common ancestors... 267 00:18:34,947 --> 00:18:37,666 ...of all life on Earth. 268 00:18:37,825 --> 00:18:40,044 The stuff of life is so malleable... 269 00:18:40,202 --> 00:18:42,921 ...that once it got started, the environment molded it... 270 00:18:43,080 --> 00:18:46,129 ...into a staggering variety of forms... 271 00:18:46,292 --> 00:18:50,968 ...10,000 times more than we can possibly show here. 272 00:18:52,965 --> 00:18:54,387 Biologists have cataloged... 273 00:18:54,550 --> 00:18:57,645 ...a half a million different kinds of beetles alone. 274 00:19:01,182 --> 00:19:04,652 Not to mention the numberless varieties of bacteria. 275 00:19:05,186 --> 00:19:07,564 There are many millions of living species... 276 00:19:07,730 --> 00:19:11,325 ...of animals and plants, most of them still unknown to science. 277 00:19:11,484 --> 00:19:14,533 Think of that. We have yet to make contact... 278 00:19:14,695 --> 00:19:18,245 ...with most of the forms of terrestrial life. 279 00:19:18,407 --> 00:19:23,379 That's how many kinds of life there are on this tiny planet alone. 280 00:19:24,288 --> 00:19:27,041 The tree of life extends its feelers in all directions... 281 00:19:27,208 --> 00:19:30,257 ...finding and exploiting what works, creating new environments... 282 00:19:30,419 --> 00:19:33,093 ...and opportunities for new forms. 283 00:19:36,300 --> 00:19:39,725 The tree of life is three and a half billion years old. 284 00:19:39,887 --> 00:19:44,893 That's plenty of time to develop an impressive repertoire of tricks. 285 00:19:48,187 --> 00:19:52,112 Evolution can disguise an animal as a plant... 286 00:19:57,697 --> 00:20:01,543 ...taking thousands of generations to contrive an elaborate costume... 287 00:20:01,701 --> 00:20:06,582 ...that fools predators into looking elsewhere for someone to eat. 288 00:20:06,747 --> 00:20:10,468 Or it can disguise a plant as an animal... 289 00:20:10,626 --> 00:20:13,630 ...evolving blossoms that take on the appearance of a wasp... 290 00:20:13,796 --> 00:20:17,642 ...the orchid's way of fooling real wasps into pollinating it. 291 00:20:19,677 --> 00:20:24,934 This is the awesome shape-shifting power of natural selection. 292 00:20:31,147 --> 00:20:35,653 Among the dense, tangled limbs of the vast tree of life... 293 00:20:35,818 --> 00:20:37,866 ...you are here. 294 00:20:38,028 --> 00:20:42,078 One tiny branch among countless millions. 295 00:20:42,241 --> 00:20:47,998 Science reveals that all life on Earth is one. 296 00:20:50,291 --> 00:20:53,761 Darwin discovered the actual mechanism of evolution. 297 00:20:53,919 --> 00:20:56,513 The prevailing belief was that the complexity... 298 00:20:56,672 --> 00:21:00,518 ...and variety of life must be the work of an intelligent designer... 299 00:21:00,676 --> 00:21:04,726 ...who created each of these millions of different species separately. 300 00:21:04,889 --> 00:21:08,359 Living things are just too intricate, it was said... 301 00:21:08,517 --> 00:21:12,067 ...to be the result of unguided evolution. 302 00:21:12,229 --> 00:21:17,611 Consider the human eye, a masterpiece of complexity. 303 00:21:20,529 --> 00:21:26,127 It requires a cornea, iris, lens, retina... 304 00:21:26,285 --> 00:21:28,413 ...optic nerves, muscles... 305 00:21:28,579 --> 00:21:33,585 ...let alone the brain's elaborate neural network to interpret images. 306 00:21:34,126 --> 00:21:39,599 It's more complicated than any device ever crafted by human intelligence. 307 00:21:39,757 --> 00:21:43,853 Therefore, it was argued, the human eye can't be the result... 308 00:21:44,011 --> 00:21:46,389 ...of mindless evolution. 309 00:21:46,555 --> 00:21:50,230 To know if that's true, we need to travel across time... 310 00:21:50,392 --> 00:21:54,863 ...to a world before there were eyes to see. 311 00:22:14,416 --> 00:22:17,295 In the beginning, life was blind. 312 00:22:19,755 --> 00:22:23,510 This is what our world looked like four billion years ago... 313 00:22:23,676 --> 00:22:26,555 ...before there were any eyes to see. 314 00:22:26,720 --> 00:22:31,601 Until a few hundred million years passed, and then, one day... 315 00:22:31,767 --> 00:22:35,692 ...there was a microscopic copying error in the DNA of a bacterium. 316 00:22:35,855 --> 00:22:41,112 This random mutation gave that microbe a protein molecule that absorbed sunlight. 317 00:22:41,277 --> 00:22:44,907 Want to know what the world looked like to a light-sensitive bacterium? 318 00:22:45,072 --> 00:22:48,372 Take a look at the right side of the screen. 319 00:22:49,368 --> 00:22:51,462 Mutations continued to occur at random... 320 00:22:51,620 --> 00:22:55,716 ...as they always do in any population of living things. 321 00:22:57,418 --> 00:23:02,640 Another mutation caused a dark bacterium to flee intense light. 322 00:23:03,299 --> 00:23:05,301 What is going on here? 323 00:23:05,467 --> 00:23:06,844 Night and day. 324 00:23:07,011 --> 00:23:09,639 Those bacteria that could tell light from dark... 325 00:23:09,805 --> 00:23:12,479 ...had a decisive advantage over the ones that couldn't. 326 00:23:12,641 --> 00:23:16,441 Why? Because the daytime brought harsh, ultraviolet light... 327 00:23:16,604 --> 00:23:18,698 ...that damages DNA. 328 00:23:19,273 --> 00:23:22,026 The sensitive bacteria fled the intense light... 329 00:23:22,192 --> 00:23:24,866 ...to safely exchange their DNA in the dark. 330 00:23:25,029 --> 00:23:26,656 They survived in greater numbers... 331 00:23:26,822 --> 00:23:29,245 ...than the bacteria that stayed at the surface. 332 00:23:30,117 --> 00:23:34,588 Over time, those light-sensitive proteins became concentrated in a pigment spot... 333 00:23:34,747 --> 00:23:37,876 ...on the more advanced, one-celled organism. 334 00:23:38,334 --> 00:23:41,554 This made it possible to find the light... 335 00:23:41,712 --> 00:23:43,180 ...an overwhelming advantage... 336 00:23:43,339 --> 00:23:46,969 ...for an organism that harvests sunlight to make food. 337 00:23:53,724 --> 00:23:57,319 Here's a flatworms-eye view of the world. 338 00:23:57,478 --> 00:24:01,949 This multi-celled organism evolved a dimple in the pigment spot. 339 00:24:02,107 --> 00:24:03,609 The bowl-shaped depression... 340 00:24:03,776 --> 00:24:07,451 ...allowed the animal to distinguish light from shadow... 341 00:24:07,613 --> 00:24:10,412 ...to crudely make out objects in its vicinity... 342 00:24:10,574 --> 00:24:14,750 ...including those to eat and those that might eat it... 343 00:24:14,912 --> 00:24:17,131 ...a tremendous advantage. 344 00:24:17,790 --> 00:24:21,465 Later, things became a little clearer. The dimple deepened... 345 00:24:21,627 --> 00:24:24,801 ...and evolved into a socket with a small opening. 346 00:24:24,964 --> 00:24:26,637 Over thousands of generations... 347 00:24:26,799 --> 00:24:30,849 ...natural selection was slowly sculpting the eye. 348 00:24:32,054 --> 00:24:37,231 The opening contracted to a pinhole covered by a protective transparent membrane. 349 00:24:37,393 --> 00:24:39,680 Only a little light could enter the tiny hole 350 00:24:39,692 --> 00:24:41,990 but it was enough to paint a dim image... 351 00:24:42,147 --> 00:24:46,744 ...on the sensitive inner surface of the eye. This sharpened the focus. 352 00:24:46,902 --> 00:24:49,121 A larger opening would have let in more light... 353 00:24:49,279 --> 00:24:52,874 ...to make a brighter image but one that was out of focus. 354 00:24:53,033 --> 00:24:57,880 This development launched the visual equivalent of an arms race. 355 00:25:09,425 --> 00:25:13,180 The competition needed to keep up to survive. 356 00:25:13,345 --> 00:25:17,270 But then a splendid new feature of the eye evolved... 357 00:25:17,433 --> 00:25:22,610 ...a lens that provided both brightness and sharp focus. 358 00:25:23,272 --> 00:25:24,774 In the eyes of primitive fish... 359 00:25:24,940 --> 00:25:28,615 ...the transparent gel near the pinhole formed into a lens. 360 00:25:28,777 --> 00:25:32,782 At the same time, the pinhole enlarged to let in more and more light. 361 00:25:32,948 --> 00:25:35,827 Fish could now see in high-def... 362 00:25:35,993 --> 00:25:39,839 ...both close up and far away. 363 00:25:39,997 --> 00:25:42,591 And then something terrible happened. 364 00:25:43,751 --> 00:25:46,379 Have you ever noticed that a straw in a glass of water... 365 00:25:46,545 --> 00:25:48,513 ...looks bent at the surface of the water? 366 00:25:48,672 --> 00:25:51,346 That's because light bends when it goes from one medium... 367 00:25:51,508 --> 00:25:54,261 ...to another, say from water to air. 368 00:25:54,428 --> 00:25:58,478 Our eyes originally evolved to see in water. 369 00:25:58,640 --> 00:26:00,938 The watery fluid in those eyes... 370 00:26:01,101 --> 00:26:03,820 ...neatly eliminated the distortion of that bending effect. 371 00:26:06,482 --> 00:26:10,658 But for land animals, the light carries images from dry air... 372 00:26:10,819 --> 00:26:13,743 ...into their still-watery eyes. 373 00:26:13,906 --> 00:26:18,503 That bends the light rays causing all kinds of distortions. 374 00:26:19,161 --> 00:26:22,131 When our amphibious ancestors left the water for the land... 375 00:26:22,289 --> 00:26:25,293 ...their eyes, exquisitely evolved to see in water... 376 00:26:25,459 --> 00:26:27,553 ...were lousy for seeing in the air. 377 00:26:27,711 --> 00:26:30,385 Our vision has never been as good since. 378 00:26:30,547 --> 00:26:33,266 We like to think of our eyes as state-of-the-art... 379 00:26:33,425 --> 00:26:35,723 ...but 375 million years later... 380 00:26:35,886 --> 00:26:38,605 ...we still can't see things right in front of our noses... 381 00:26:38,764 --> 00:26:42,985 ...or discern fine details in near darkness the way fish can. 382 00:26:43,143 --> 00:26:46,522 When we left the water, why didn't nature just start over again... 383 00:26:46,688 --> 00:26:50,864 ...and evolve us a new set of eyes that were optimal for seeing in the air? 384 00:26:51,026 --> 00:26:52,778 Nature doesn't work that way. 385 00:26:52,945 --> 00:26:56,199 Evolution reshapes existing structures over generations... 386 00:26:56,365 --> 00:26:58,413 ...adapting them with small changes. 387 00:26:58,575 --> 00:27:02,751 It can't just go back to the drawing board and start from scratch. 388 00:27:02,913 --> 00:27:06,087 At every stage of its development, the evolving eye... 389 00:27:06,250 --> 00:27:10,175 ...functioned well enough to provide a selective advantage for survival. 390 00:27:10,337 --> 00:27:13,716 And among animals alive today, we find eyes... 391 00:27:13,882 --> 00:27:16,260 ...at all these stages of development. 392 00:27:19,680 --> 00:27:21,682 And all of them function. 393 00:27:23,475 --> 00:27:25,398 The complexity of the human eye... 394 00:27:25,561 --> 00:27:28,110 ...poses no challenge to evolution by natural selection. 395 00:27:28,272 --> 00:27:33,745 In fact, the eye and all of biology makes no sense without evolution. 396 00:27:33,902 --> 00:27:39,204 Some claim that evolution is just a theory as if it were merely an opinion. 397 00:27:39,366 --> 00:27:42,245 The theory of evolution, like the theory of gravity... 398 00:27:42,411 --> 00:27:44,413 ...is a scientific fact. 399 00:27:44,580 --> 00:27:47,003 Evolution really happened. 400 00:27:47,166 --> 00:27:51,717 Accepting our kinship with all life on Earth is not only solid science. 401 00:27:51,879 --> 00:27:56,476 In my view, it's also a soaring spiritual experience. 402 00:28:04,057 --> 00:28:06,059 Because evolution is blind... 403 00:28:06,226 --> 00:28:10,356 ...it cannot anticipate or adapt to catastrophic events. 404 00:28:11,440 --> 00:28:13,909 The tree of life has some broken branches. 405 00:28:14,067 --> 00:28:17,867 Many of them were severed in the five greatest catastrophes... 406 00:28:18,030 --> 00:28:20,283 ...that life has ever known. 407 00:28:20,449 --> 00:28:22,292 Somewhere, there's a memorial... 408 00:28:22,451 --> 00:28:27,298 ...to the multitude of lost species, the Hails of Extinction. 409 00:28:27,456 --> 00:28:29,129 Come with me. 410 00:28:43,639 --> 00:28:46,483 Welcome to the Halls of Extinction. 411 00:28:47,643 --> 00:28:52,399 A monument to the broken branches on the tree of life. 412 00:29:02,616 --> 00:29:06,541 For every single one of the millions of species alive today... 413 00:29:06,703 --> 00:29:09,832 ...perhaps a thousand others have perished. 414 00:29:09,998 --> 00:29:13,844 Most of them died out in everyday competition with other life-forms. 415 00:29:14,002 --> 00:29:17,472 But many of them were swept away in vast cataclysms... 416 00:29:17,631 --> 00:29:19,383 ...that overwhelmed the planet. 417 00:29:20,092 --> 00:29:24,518 In the last 500 million years, this has happened five times. 418 00:29:26,431 --> 00:29:30,436 Five extinctions devastated life on Earth. 419 00:29:31,144 --> 00:29:35,524 The worst happened 250 million years ago... 420 00:29:35,691 --> 00:29:40,367 ...at the end of an era known as the Permian. 421 00:29:57,004 --> 00:29:59,098 Trilobites were armored animals that hunted... 422 00:29:59,256 --> 00:30:02,135 ...in great herds across the seafloor. 423 00:30:02,301 --> 00:30:06,556 They were among the first animals to evolve image-forming eyes. 424 00:30:09,433 --> 00:30:13,654 Trilobites had a good long run, some 270 million years. 425 00:30:13,812 --> 00:30:17,077 Earth was once the planet of the trilobites. 426 00:30:17,089 --> 00:30:20,366 But now they're all gone. Extinct. 427 00:30:20,527 --> 00:30:22,996 The last of them were swept from life's stage... 428 00:30:23,155 --> 00:30:29,413 ...along with countless other species in an unparalleled environmental disaster. 429 00:30:33,999 --> 00:30:37,629 [RUMBLING AND EXPLOSIONS] 430 00:30:38,211 --> 00:30:42,091 The apocalypse began in what is now Siberia... 431 00:30:42,257 --> 00:30:48,765 ...with volcanic eruptions on a scale unlike anything in human experience. 432 00:31:01,151 --> 00:31:03,404 Earth was very different then... 433 00:31:03,570 --> 00:31:07,746 ...with one single supercontinent and one great ocean. 434 00:31:07,908 --> 00:31:10,331 Relentless floods of fiery lava... 435 00:31:10,494 --> 00:31:13,794 ...engulfed an area larger than Western Europe. 436 00:31:13,955 --> 00:31:18,426 The pulsing eruptions went on for hundreds of thousands of years. 437 00:31:18,585 --> 00:31:22,089 The molten rock ignited coal deposits and polluted the air... 438 00:31:22,255 --> 00:31:25,805 ...with carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. 439 00:31:25,967 --> 00:31:27,219 This heated the Earth... 440 00:31:27,386 --> 00:31:31,357 ...and stopped the ocean currents from circulating. 441 00:31:45,946 --> 00:31:47,948 Noxious bacteria bloomed... 442 00:31:48,115 --> 00:31:51,836 ...but nearly everything else in the seas died. 443 00:31:51,993 --> 00:31:56,669 The stagnant waters belched deadly hydrogen sulfide gas into the air... 444 00:31:56,832 --> 00:32:00,382 ...which suffocated most of the land animals. 445 00:32:13,181 --> 00:32:16,811 Nine in 10 of all species on the planet went extinct. 446 00:32:17,853 --> 00:32:20,948 We call it the Great Dying. 447 00:32:33,702 --> 00:32:36,626 Life on Earth came so near to being wiped out... 448 00:32:36,788 --> 00:32:40,088 ...that it took more than 1O million years to recover. 449 00:32:40,250 --> 00:32:42,298 But new life-forms slowly evolved... 450 00:32:42,461 --> 00:32:46,261 ...to fill the openings left by the Permian holocaust. 451 00:32:53,972 --> 00:32:57,226 Among the biggest winners were the dinosaurs. 452 00:32:57,392 --> 00:33:00,111 Now the Earth was their planet. 453 00:33:00,270 --> 00:33:04,320 Their reign continued for over 150 million years. 454 00:33:04,483 --> 00:33:09,364 Until it too came crashing down in another mass extinction. 455 00:33:09,821 --> 00:33:12,415 Life on Earth has taken quite a beating over the eons. 456 00:33:12,574 --> 00:33:17,831 And yet it's still there. The tenacity of life is mind-boggling. 457 00:33:17,996 --> 00:33:20,590 We keep finding it where no one thought it could be. 458 00:33:25,420 --> 00:33:27,798 That nameless corridor? 459 00:33:28,465 --> 00:33:31,059 That's for another day. 460 00:33:36,348 --> 00:33:41,149 I know an animal that can live in boiling water or in solid ice. 461 00:33:41,311 --> 00:33:44,485 It can go 10 years without a drop of water. 462 00:33:44,648 --> 00:33:46,650 It can travel naked in the cold vacuum... 463 00:33:46,816 --> 00:33:51,196 ...and intense radiation of space and will return unscathed. 464 00:33:51,363 --> 00:33:53,786 The tardigrade, or water bear. 465 00:33:53,949 --> 00:33:56,202 It's equally at home atop the tallest mountains... 466 00:33:56,368 --> 00:33:58,837 ...and in the deepest trenches of the sea. 467 00:33:58,995 --> 00:34:01,714 And in our own backyards, where they live among the moss... 468 00:34:01,873 --> 00:34:04,171 ...in countless numbers. 469 00:34:04,334 --> 00:34:07,304 You've probably never noticed them because they're so small. 470 00:34:07,462 --> 00:34:09,464 About the size of a pinpoint. 471 00:34:09,631 --> 00:34:10,974 But they're tough. 472 00:34:11,132 --> 00:34:14,978 The tardigrades have survived all five mass extinctions. 473 00:34:15,136 --> 00:34:17,810 They've been in business for a half a billion years. 474 00:34:17,973 --> 00:34:21,273 We used to think that life was finicky, that it would only take hold... 475 00:34:21,434 --> 00:34:24,233 ...where it was not too hot, not too cold... 476 00:34:24,396 --> 00:34:27,650 ...not too dark or salty or acidic or radioactive. 477 00:34:27,816 --> 00:34:30,945 And whatever you do, don't forget to add water. 478 00:34:31,111 --> 00:34:34,490 We were wrong. As the hardy tardigrade demonstrates... 479 00:34:34,656 --> 00:34:39,036 ...life can endure conditions that would mean certain death for us humans. 480 00:34:39,202 --> 00:34:41,204 But differences between us and life found... 481 00:34:41,371 --> 00:34:43,999 ...in even the most extreme environments on our planet... 482 00:34:44,165 --> 00:34:49,547 ...are only variations on a single theme, dialects of a single language. 483 00:34:49,713 --> 00:34:51,807 The genetic code of Earth life. 484 00:34:56,886 --> 00:34:59,548 But what would life be like on other worlds? 485 00:34:59,560 --> 00:35:02,234 Worlds with a completely different history... 486 00:35:02,392 --> 00:35:05,612 ...chemistry and evolution from our planet? 487 00:35:07,856 --> 00:35:11,326 There's a distant world I wanna take you to. 488 00:35:11,901 --> 00:35:17,158 A world far different from our own, but one that may harbor life. 489 00:35:17,324 --> 00:35:21,295 If it does, it promises to be unlike anything... 490 00:35:21,453 --> 00:35:24,127 ...we've ever seen before. 491 00:35:43,224 --> 00:35:46,444 Clouds and haze completely hide the surface of Titan... 492 00:35:46,603 --> 00:35:48,731 ...Saturn's giant moon. 493 00:35:48,897 --> 00:35:51,491 Titan reminds me a little bit of home. 494 00:35:51,650 --> 00:35:54,529 Like Earth, it has an atmosphere that's mostly nitrogen. 495 00:35:54,694 --> 00:35:56,742 But it's four times denser. 496 00:35:56,905 --> 00:35:59,533 Titan's air has no oxygen at all. 497 00:35:59,699 --> 00:36:06,048 And it's far colder than anywhere on Earth. But still, I wanna go there. 498 00:36:08,375 --> 00:36:11,845 We have to descend through a couple hundred kilometers of smog... 499 00:36:12,003 --> 00:36:14,597 ...before we can even see the surface. 500 00:36:14,756 --> 00:36:19,603 But hidden beneath lies a weirdly familiar landscape. 501 00:36:27,394 --> 00:36:31,649 Titan is the only other world in the solar system where it ever rains. 502 00:36:31,815 --> 00:36:35,285 It has rivers and coastlines. 503 00:36:39,656 --> 00:36:45,288 Titan has hundreds of lakes. One of them larger than Lake Superior in North America. 504 00:36:45,453 --> 00:36:49,253 Vapor rising from the lakes condenses and falls again as rain. 505 00:36:50,792 --> 00:36:53,011 The rain feeds rivers... 506 00:36:53,795 --> 00:36:59,393 ...which carve valleys into the landscape, just like on Earth. 507 00:37:00,969 --> 00:37:02,937 But with one big difference. 508 00:37:03,096 --> 00:37:05,474 On Titan, the seas and the rain... 509 00:37:05,640 --> 00:37:09,690 ...are made not of water, but of methane and ethane. 510 00:37:09,853 --> 00:37:12,527 On Earth, those molecules form natural gas. 511 00:37:14,107 --> 00:37:17,532 On frigid Titan, they're liquid. 512 00:37:22,991 --> 00:37:27,622 Titan has lots of water but all of it is frozen hard as rock. 513 00:37:27,787 --> 00:37:32,543 In fact, the landscape and mountains are made mainly of water ice. 514 00:37:32,709 --> 00:37:34,882 At hundreds of degrees below zero... 515 00:37:35,044 --> 00:37:38,548 ...Titan is far too cold for water to ever be liquid. 516 00:37:40,759 --> 00:37:44,104 Astrobiologists since Carl Sagan have wondered... 517 00:37:44,262 --> 00:37:47,983 ...if life might swim in Titan's hydrocarbon lakes. 518 00:37:49,893 --> 00:37:51,645 The chemical basis for such life... 519 00:37:51,811 --> 00:37:55,441 ...would have to be entirely different from anything we know. 520 00:37:55,607 --> 00:38:00,488 All life on Earth depends on liquid water, and Titan's surface has none of that. 521 00:38:00,653 --> 00:38:02,951 But we can imagine other kinds of life. 522 00:38:03,114 --> 00:38:07,164 There might be creatures that inhale hydrogen instead of oxygen. 523 00:38:07,327 --> 00:38:10,422 And exhale methane instead of carbon dioxide. 524 00:38:10,580 --> 00:38:14,050 They might use acetylene instead of sugar as an energy source. 525 00:38:14,209 --> 00:38:16,553 How could we find out if such creatures... 526 00:38:16,711 --> 00:38:21,012 ...rule a hidden empire beneath the oil-dark waves? 527 00:38:36,523 --> 00:38:39,868 We're diving down deep into the Kraken Sea... 528 00:38:40,026 --> 00:38:43,246 ...named for the mythic Norse sea monster. 529 00:38:46,074 --> 00:38:49,749 Even if there is one of those down there, we probably couldn't see it. 530 00:38:49,911 --> 00:38:52,209 It's so dark. 531 00:38:53,331 --> 00:38:56,756 If you took all the oil and natural gas on Earth... 532 00:38:56,918 --> 00:39:00,764 ...it would amount to but a tiny fraction of Titan's reserves. 533 00:39:04,259 --> 00:39:06,603 Let's turn on some lights. 534 00:39:10,682 --> 00:39:14,607 We're now 200 meters beneath the surface. 535 00:39:18,356 --> 00:39:22,987 Did you see something? Over there, by that vent. 536 00:39:23,152 --> 00:39:27,077 Maybe it was just my imagination. I guess we'll have to come back... 537 00:39:27,240 --> 00:39:29,493 ...if we want to find out for sure. 538 00:39:32,954 --> 00:39:36,333 There's one last story I want to tell you. 539 00:39:36,499 --> 00:39:40,549 And it's the greatest story science has ever told. 540 00:39:44,924 --> 00:39:49,100 It's the story of life on our world. 541 00:40:11,034 --> 00:40:13,878 Welcome to the Earth of four billion years ago. 542 00:40:14,829 --> 00:40:17,833 This was our planet before life. 543 00:40:17,999 --> 00:40:20,548 Nobody knows how life got started. 544 00:40:20,710 --> 00:40:23,133 Most of the evidence from that time was destroyed... 545 00:40:23,296 --> 00:40:25,674 ...by impact and erosion. 546 00:40:25,840 --> 00:40:29,515 Science works on the frontier between knowledge and ignorance. 547 00:40:29,677 --> 00:40:31,896 We're not afraid to admit what we don't know. 548 00:40:32,055 --> 00:40:33,728 There's no shame in that. 549 00:40:33,890 --> 00:40:37,861 The only shame is to pretend that we have all the answers. 550 00:40:38,019 --> 00:40:39,441 Maybe someone watching this... 551 00:40:39,604 --> 00:40:44,826 ...will be the first to solve the mystery of how life on Earth began. 552 00:40:52,075 --> 00:40:53,793 The evidence from living microbes... 553 00:40:53,952 --> 00:40:57,422 ...suggest that their earliest ancestors preferred high temperatures. 554 00:40:58,081 --> 00:41:02,712 Life on Earth may have arisen in hot water around submerged volcanic vents. 555 00:41:07,548 --> 00:41:09,926 In Carl Sagan's original Cosmos series... 556 00:41:10,093 --> 00:41:12,767 ...he traced the unbroken thread that stretches... 557 00:41:12,929 --> 00:41:15,182 ...directly from the one-celled organisms... 558 00:41:15,348 --> 00:41:19,649 ...of nearly four billion years ago to you. 559 00:41:19,811 --> 00:41:23,111 Four billion years in 40 seconds. 560 00:41:23,272 --> 00:41:26,617 From creatures who had yet to discern day from night... 561 00:41:26,776 --> 00:41:31,498 ...to beings who are exploring the cosmos. 562 00:42:19,412 --> 00:42:22,791 SAGAN: Those are some of the things that molecules do... 563 00:42:22,957 --> 00:42:26,461 ...given four billion years of evolution. 51331

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