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Pascal:
The tip of Patagonia stretches
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00:00:10,286 --> 00:00:14,000
into the great Southern Ocean,
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00:00:14,042 --> 00:00:15,794
where giants roam.
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00:00:19,718 --> 00:00:22,514
In the deep, all is quiet.
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00:00:25,143 --> 00:00:28,859
But above, a storm is raging.
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00:00:53,400 --> 00:00:56,989
At these latitudes, the sea
can be terrifying.
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00:00:59,869 --> 00:01:02,415
They say that
below 40 degrees south,
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00:01:02,457 --> 00:01:04,502
there is no law,
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00:01:04,544 --> 00:01:08,050
but below 50, there is no god.
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00:01:15,980 --> 00:01:21,280
At the ends of the Earth
is a land of extremes...
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00:01:21,323 --> 00:01:23,660
...home to spectacular wildlife.
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00:01:25,871 --> 00:01:27,290
For centuries,
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00:01:27,333 --> 00:01:32,424
people and animals
have battled for supremacy.
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00:01:32,466 --> 00:01:38,017
But now enemies
are becoming allies.
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00:01:38,059 --> 00:01:41,315
Together they face
new challenges...
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00:01:43,485 --> 00:01:45,530
...in a rapidly changing world.
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00:01:45,572 --> 00:01:48,076
You are at the mercy
of the elements.
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Pascal:
This is the story
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00:01:49,369 --> 00:01:51,415
of what it takes to survive...
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00:01:52,959 --> 00:01:55,296
...on the edge of the world.
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00:02:08,152 --> 00:02:11,949
Patagonia's far south
is dominated by the wind...
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00:02:14,078 --> 00:02:15,622
...and the cold.
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00:02:21,800 --> 00:02:25,014
Extending below
the 50th parallel,
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00:02:25,055 --> 00:02:28,811
no other land mass lies
so close to Antarctica.
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00:02:35,657 --> 00:02:38,370
To survive here
takes resilience...
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00:02:39,872 --> 00:02:41,541
...determination,
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00:02:41,583 --> 00:02:44,547
and sometimes sheer size.
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00:02:50,056 --> 00:02:54,272
Much of the land is just empty,
wind-blasted tundra.
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00:02:57,235 --> 00:03:00,323
But the sea
is teeming with life.
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00:03:09,506 --> 00:03:11,050
A humpback whale.
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00:03:16,309 --> 00:03:19,939
This 30-ton giant
has traveled all the way
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00:03:19,982 --> 00:03:23,738
from its winter breeding grounds
in the tropical Pacific,
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00:03:23,779 --> 00:03:27,119
a journey of more
than 4,000 miles.
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00:03:30,834 --> 00:03:35,258
On its tail is wildlife
veterinarian Frederick Toro.
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00:03:45,858 --> 00:03:50,158
These are the waters of the
Francisco Coloane Marine Park
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00:03:50,200 --> 00:03:51,869
in the Straits of Magellan.
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00:03:55,625 --> 00:03:59,674
In 1997,
marine biologists realized
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00:03:59,716 --> 00:04:02,887
this is an important
feeding ground for humpbacks.
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00:04:05,893 --> 00:04:09,900
The forceful mixing of
the Atlantic and Pacific oceans
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00:04:09,941 --> 00:04:14,490
stirs up nutrients,
creating plankton blooms,
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00:04:14,532 --> 00:04:17,663
the foundation
of the marine food chain.
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00:04:19,749 --> 00:04:21,669
Food is so plentiful,
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00:04:21,712 --> 00:04:25,342
the whales behave
in extraordinary ways.
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00:04:46,754 --> 00:04:48,089
Wow.
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00:04:51,887 --> 00:04:56,228
But the whales aren't the only
ones plying these waters.
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00:05:10,502 --> 00:05:13,048
The steady stream of ships
through the Straits
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00:05:13,090 --> 00:05:16,178
might drive away
the whales entirely.
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00:05:29,952 --> 00:05:32,915
To make his case,
Frederick needs proof
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00:05:32,957 --> 00:05:34,877
that the whales are stressed --
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00:05:34,919 --> 00:05:37,923
and that means taking a sample.
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00:05:42,056 --> 00:05:45,603
But chasing whales in boats
may panic them.
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00:05:51,155 --> 00:05:54,744
So Frederick and his team
are trying something new.
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00:05:57,415 --> 00:05:59,585
A drone.
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00:05:59,627 --> 00:06:01,129
Its mission?
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00:06:01,171 --> 00:06:04,009
To hover over the whale's spout
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00:06:04,051 --> 00:06:06,848
and catch a sample of its snot.
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00:06:12,107 --> 00:06:15,321
Spout samples reveal levels
of stress hormones
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as well as pollution.
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00:06:20,454 --> 00:06:23,877
But catching a sample
is easier said than done.
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00:06:26,506 --> 00:06:28,551
The timing has to be just right.
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00:06:41,073 --> 00:06:42,658
Missed.
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00:06:45,330 --> 00:06:47,166
The whale disappears.
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00:06:52,592 --> 00:06:54,220
Flying against the wind,
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00:06:54,262 --> 00:06:56,766
the drone's battery
is running out of juice.
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00:07:01,190 --> 00:07:03,319
If the whale doesn't
surface soon,
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00:07:03,360 --> 00:07:04,946
they'll have to give up.
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00:07:22,101 --> 00:07:23,645
One last chance.
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00:07:31,532 --> 00:07:32,952
Got it.
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00:07:48,937 --> 00:07:52,276
Frederick hopes that his sample
will provide the proof
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00:07:52,318 --> 00:07:55,156
that these humpbacks
need protection.
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00:08:00,874 --> 00:08:03,837
The rich waters
of Patagonia's far south
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00:08:03,879 --> 00:08:05,716
have the power of life...
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00:08:09,096 --> 00:08:10,683
...and death.
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00:08:23,412 --> 00:08:25,499
Pascal: Crab fisherman Fernando Monje
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has worked the waters
of the Beagle Channel
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00:08:27,795 --> 00:08:29,339
for over a decade.
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00:08:35,432 --> 00:08:40,525
The 130-mile seaway
runs east-west across Patagonia.
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00:08:43,154 --> 00:08:44,824
The narrow channel funnels
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00:08:44,865 --> 00:08:47,704
the Southern Ocean's
ferocious winds.
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00:09:14,624 --> 00:09:17,128
Pascal:
Some ships don't make it.
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00:09:20,968 --> 00:09:22,971
The waters of the far south
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00:09:23,013 --> 00:09:27,270
have claimed
well over 1,000 ships...
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00:09:27,312 --> 00:09:30,109
...and more than 10,000 sailors.
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00:09:36,119 --> 00:09:38,164
At first, Fernando
saw these wrecks
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00:09:38,206 --> 00:09:41,127
as nothing more
than rusting monuments.
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00:09:45,050 --> 00:09:48,389
But then he decided
to take a closer look.
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00:10:08,298 --> 00:10:13,181
Nature has claimed
this steel hulk.
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00:10:13,224 --> 00:10:16,270
Thanks to the nutrients
stirred up by the storms,
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00:10:16,312 --> 00:10:18,649
these waters are full of life.
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00:10:28,124 --> 00:10:30,837
But free-diving here is risky.
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00:10:33,383 --> 00:10:35,678
You can easily
get disoriented...
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00:10:37,932 --> 00:10:39,518
...even trapped.
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00:11:00,971 --> 00:11:03,892
Luckily,
today's conditions are good.
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00:11:03,935 --> 00:11:08,359
Fernando gets out safely
with his haul.
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00:11:08,400 --> 00:11:11,363
He makes a good living from
the shellfish he collects here.
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00:11:37,700 --> 00:11:42,165
Further up the coast,
another underwater forager
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00:11:42,207 --> 00:11:43,918
is also returning home.
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00:11:58,610 --> 00:12:04,829
A mother gentoo penguin
bringing food to her baby.
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00:12:04,871 --> 00:12:08,669
She's back on Hammer Island
after a 10-hour fishing trip.
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00:12:13,760 --> 00:12:16,182
She swam nearly 13 miles,
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00:12:16,223 --> 00:12:19,396
diving down 200 feet
or more to feed.
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00:12:23,903 --> 00:12:27,326
Now she hikes through hoards
of her cousins --
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00:12:27,368 --> 00:12:29,036
Magellanic penguins.
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00:12:44,730 --> 00:12:46,483
Exhausted,
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00:12:46,525 --> 00:12:48,402
but home at last.
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00:12:53,495 --> 00:12:56,208
Finally, a chance to rest.
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00:12:59,130 --> 00:13:00,674
Or maybe not.
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00:13:03,303 --> 00:13:06,350
Her 6-week-old chick
is ravenous.
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00:13:10,691 --> 00:13:14,197
Growing fast, he has
an insatiable appetite.
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00:13:17,911 --> 00:13:21,709
Mom needs to keep some food
back for herself,
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00:13:21,751 --> 00:13:24,881
but her chick won't
take "no" for an answer.
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00:13:40,449 --> 00:13:42,703
Sometimes it's not easy
being a mom.
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00:13:48,171 --> 00:13:51,676
And raising a family here
is especially hard.
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00:13:54,515 --> 00:13:58,605
One moment, you're basking
in the sunshine.
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00:13:58,647 --> 00:14:02,195
The next, you're being stalked
by an outsider.
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00:14:11,835 --> 00:14:14,924
Pascal: On Hammer Island,
deep in the far south,
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00:14:14,967 --> 00:14:19,515
gentoo penguins face a harsh
and remote existence.
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00:14:22,061 --> 00:14:23,981
But they're not alone.
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00:14:29,366 --> 00:14:33,122
This is marine biologist
Dr. Andrea Raya Rey.
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00:14:51,612 --> 00:14:56,077
Pascal: Andrea and her team
don't just observe the penguins.
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00:14:56,119 --> 00:14:57,622
They get hands-on.
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00:15:06,721 --> 00:15:10,644
They take blood samples and give
the birds a health check.
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00:15:26,379 --> 00:15:29,175
Studying them on land
is one thing.
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00:15:29,217 --> 00:15:31,972
But what happens
when the gentoos go to sea?
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00:15:34,058 --> 00:15:36,604
Andrea wants to learn
how they feed.
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00:15:39,151 --> 00:15:41,697
A small camera is attached
to this male's back
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00:15:41,738 --> 00:15:44,368
to document
his hunting strategy.
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00:15:52,673 --> 00:15:54,593
Ungainly on land,
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00:15:54,635 --> 00:15:58,141
the gentoo is the world's
fastest underwater bird.
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00:16:02,941 --> 00:16:06,405
His wings propel him
at over 20 miles per hour
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00:16:06,447 --> 00:16:08,909
into a shoal of small fish.
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00:16:19,343 --> 00:16:23,267
But he's not the only
one feasting here.
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00:16:23,309 --> 00:16:27,775
Seabirds dive in from above,
grabbing what they can.
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00:16:31,281 --> 00:16:34,285
Gentoos were thought
to primarily feed at depth,
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00:16:34,328 --> 00:16:35,913
but now Andrea has discovered
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00:16:35,955 --> 00:16:38,877
that they're also
opportunistic feeders.
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00:16:49,520 --> 00:16:52,065
Right now, there are
only 50 pairs
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00:16:52,108 --> 00:16:54,778
of gentoos
living on Hammer Island.
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00:16:57,784 --> 00:16:59,787
But the colony is growing.
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00:16:59,828 --> 00:17:02,751
Fish are plentiful
in the open water,
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00:17:02,792 --> 00:17:06,757
and nearby is a habitat
that supports yet more food.
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00:17:13,310 --> 00:17:16,064
A giant kelp forest.
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00:17:28,169 --> 00:17:30,297
Like an underwater rainforest,
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00:17:30,339 --> 00:17:34,262
it's one of the most biodiverse
habitats in the ocean,
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00:17:34,304 --> 00:17:38,519
providing food and shelter
for hundreds of species.
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00:17:53,837 --> 00:17:57,009
The conditions here are perfect.
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00:17:57,051 --> 00:18:01,349
These are the largest, most
pristine kelp beds in the world.
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00:18:07,861 --> 00:18:10,407
The fjords and seaways
of the far south stretch
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00:18:10,448 --> 00:18:12,744
for thousands of miles.
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00:18:14,873 --> 00:18:18,128
Remote and rarely visited
by humans.
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00:18:22,928 --> 00:18:29,273
In 2003, scientists made
a surprising discovery
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00:18:29,314 --> 00:18:32,987
here in the heart of the
Tierra del Fuego archipelago.
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00:18:35,741 --> 00:18:38,120
On this small island,
they found an animal
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00:18:38,162 --> 00:18:40,833
that was completely unexpected.
155
00:18:45,967 --> 00:18:49,347
One of the largest birds
to take to the skies...
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00:18:52,979 --> 00:18:54,523
...albatross.
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00:18:58,989 --> 00:19:03,163
These giants normally nest
on remote oceanic islands,
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00:19:03,205 --> 00:19:06,711
not in narrow fjords
surrounded by mountains.
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00:19:09,048 --> 00:19:11,469
No-one knows why these
black-browed albatross
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00:19:11,511 --> 00:19:14,265
have chosen to settle here.
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00:19:14,306 --> 00:19:16,644
Exposed and steep,
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00:19:16,686 --> 00:19:20,442
it's a challenging place
to build a nest.
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00:19:20,484 --> 00:19:22,112
But every spring,
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00:19:22,154 --> 00:19:25,910
60 pairs return to
their small dirt mounds.
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00:19:34,341 --> 00:19:39,641
Black-browed albatross
can live over 70 years.
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00:19:39,683 --> 00:19:43,022
This couple may well have been
together for decades.
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00:19:45,193 --> 00:19:50,284
They only produce a single
precious egg every year or two.
168
00:20:12,155 --> 00:20:16,286
The female could be away
for days, even weeks.
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00:20:18,415 --> 00:20:23,256
And there's a chance
she may not come back at all...
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00:20:23,299 --> 00:20:26,471
...because out at sea,
there is something deadly.
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00:20:38,532 --> 00:20:40,870
Pascal: This black-browed
albatross father
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00:20:40,912 --> 00:20:43,041
is keeping
his precious egg warm.
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00:20:49,677 --> 00:20:52,807
And he needs to sit tight.
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00:20:52,848 --> 00:20:54,644
a snowstorm is coming.
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00:21:04,201 --> 00:21:07,248
When the wind is this
bitterly cold,
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00:21:07,290 --> 00:21:10,713
leaving the egg
for a moment might kill it.
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00:21:17,640 --> 00:21:22,440
And in the far south,
it can blow for days.
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00:21:22,482 --> 00:21:23,985
And days.
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00:21:32,708 --> 00:21:35,212
It's been a week
since his partner left.
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00:21:38,760 --> 00:21:42,391
Cold and hungry,
soon he will have no choice
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00:21:42,433 --> 00:21:45,605
but to abandon his egg and feed.
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00:21:55,162 --> 00:21:58,335
Finally, his partner returns.
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00:22:05,347 --> 00:22:08,685
For now, their egg is safe.
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00:22:08,727 --> 00:22:11,983
And dad is free to search
for his own food.
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00:22:20,330 --> 00:22:22,458
Time to head for the open ocean.
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00:22:32,142 --> 00:22:35,272
His wings,
nearly 8 feet across,
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00:22:35,314 --> 00:22:38,903
allow him to glide
with almost no effort.
188
00:22:59,480 --> 00:23:03,570
He may travel hundreds of miles
on a single feeding trip.
189
00:23:06,242 --> 00:23:10,916
Riding the winds, he soars
with barely a wing flap.
190
00:23:22,519 --> 00:23:25,398
But there's danger
in the feeding grounds.
191
00:23:30,324 --> 00:23:33,830
Hooks --
often lethal for albatross.
192
00:23:35,833 --> 00:23:39,005
Commercial fishing vessels
trail hundreds of them on lines
193
00:23:39,047 --> 00:23:41,259
that can be over a mile long.
194
00:23:46,143 --> 00:23:50,900
Every year, thousands of
albatross are hooked and drown.
195
00:24:00,834 --> 00:24:03,672
This longline fishing boat
is different.
196
00:24:06,636 --> 00:24:09,807
And not just
because it's smaller,
197
00:24:09,849 --> 00:24:14,023
but because of its skipper --
Juan Carrasco.
198
00:24:37,855 --> 00:24:39,858
Pascal:
On a heavily weighted line,
199
00:24:39,900 --> 00:24:44,074
Juan's bait quickly sinks beyond
the reach of the albatross.
200
00:24:52,505 --> 00:24:54,717
This one may be hungry,
201
00:24:54,758 --> 00:24:56,720
but at least he's safe.
202
00:25:15,377 --> 00:25:17,463
Pascal: Sometimes
gatherings of albatross
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00:25:17,506 --> 00:25:19,967
even guide Juan
to good fishing spots.
204
00:25:24,851 --> 00:25:28,357
And in return, he gives them
nutritious cast-offs
205
00:25:28,399 --> 00:25:29,860
from his catch.
206
00:25:37,289 --> 00:25:40,252
But perhaps the most
incredible part of this story
207
00:25:40,294 --> 00:25:43,675
is how widely Juan's
technique is spreading.
208
00:25:45,678 --> 00:25:47,890
Prompted by scientists,
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00:25:47,932 --> 00:25:50,186
the Chilean
commercial longline fleet
210
00:25:50,228 --> 00:25:53,483
is now using Juan's
heavy-weighted bait technique.
211
00:25:57,239 --> 00:25:59,242
Hook-related deaths in Patagonia
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00:25:59,285 --> 00:26:03,708
have dropped
to practically zero.
213
00:26:03,751 --> 00:26:09,009
It's an extraordinary
conservation success story.
214
00:26:09,051 --> 00:26:12,181
Juan's technique has even
been adopted by other fleets
215
00:26:12,223 --> 00:26:14,727
across the rest
of the Southern Ocean.
216
00:26:34,553 --> 00:26:37,724
While the rich waters
of Patagonia's far south support
217
00:26:37,766 --> 00:26:40,270
an amazing diversity
of sea life...
218
00:26:42,650 --> 00:26:46,489
...the land appears desolate.
219
00:26:46,532 --> 00:26:48,869
Much of it is a treeless steppe.
220
00:26:51,415 --> 00:26:55,003
Only the very toughest animals
can survive here.
221
00:27:05,981 --> 00:27:07,901
Pascal: Isla Grande,
222
00:27:07,942 --> 00:27:11,198
the largest land mass
of Tierra del Fuego,
223
00:27:11,239 --> 00:27:14,495
covers 18,000 square miles.
224
00:27:17,208 --> 00:27:21,382
This is the last land
before Antarctica --
225
00:27:21,424 --> 00:27:23,886
the very end of the world.
226
00:27:26,975 --> 00:27:29,604
It takes a tough customer
to survive here.
227
00:27:37,034 --> 00:27:41,249
Europeans introduced sheep
around 150 years ago
228
00:27:41,291 --> 00:27:43,001
for wool and meat.
229
00:27:46,049 --> 00:27:49,763
In summer, they graze
on the hills.
230
00:27:49,805 --> 00:27:51,474
But winter is coming.
231
00:27:57,819 --> 00:28:01,199
Freezing rain is forecast.
232
00:28:01,241 --> 00:28:03,870
Shepherd Cristian Trina must
get his sheep down
233
00:28:03,912 --> 00:28:05,665
to his lowland ranch.
234
00:28:08,086 --> 00:28:10,132
All 1,200 of them.
235
00:28:31,459 --> 00:28:33,379
Pascal:
If they get cold and wet,
236
00:28:33,421 --> 00:28:35,675
many could die from pneumonia.
237
00:28:38,471 --> 00:28:41,518
To get to the lower pastures,
they must cover more
238
00:28:41,559 --> 00:28:44,189
than 10 miles before nightfall.
239
00:28:47,820 --> 00:28:50,825
Moving so many sheep
is a tough job,
240
00:28:50,867 --> 00:28:54,248
but Cristian
has some expert helpers.
241
00:29:03,137 --> 00:29:07,437
It's not an easy life,
but Cristian loves it.
242
00:29:17,996 --> 00:29:20,417
But times are changing.
243
00:29:20,459 --> 00:29:23,881
Fewer young people
are choosing this way of life.
244
00:29:26,928 --> 00:29:29,557
And the modern world
is taking over.
245
00:29:34,566 --> 00:29:37,655
A highway now runs alongside the
old traditional trail
246
00:29:37,696 --> 00:29:39,866
Cristian uses for his sheep.
247
00:30:05,327 --> 00:30:09,917
Finally, the flock can move
away from the road.
248
00:30:09,959 --> 00:30:14,258
Their 10-mile journey
is almost at an end.
249
00:30:14,300 --> 00:30:15,886
The weather has held,
250
00:30:15,928 --> 00:30:18,515
and home is in sight.
251
00:30:46,605 --> 00:30:50,236
And just a few miles south
from here, a remarkable animal
252
00:30:50,277 --> 00:30:53,658
is making a surprising
comeback to Patagonia.
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00:30:59,502 --> 00:31:01,212
The king penguin.
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00:31:27,758 --> 00:31:31,764
These are the only king penguins
on the South American land mass.
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00:31:34,268 --> 00:31:36,648
Once,
hundreds of thousands of them
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00:31:36,690 --> 00:31:38,610
lived on Tierra del Fuego.
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00:31:40,947 --> 00:31:44,536
But they were hunted to
extinction by European settlers.
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00:31:47,040 --> 00:31:50,588
It was only in 2010, unexpectedly,
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00:31:50,630 --> 00:31:55,763
a handful of king penguins returned.
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00:31:55,806 --> 00:31:58,434
But the land's owner,
Cecilia Durán,
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00:31:58,476 --> 00:32:00,605
was not the first person
to find them.
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00:32:30,739 --> 00:32:33,869
Pascal: Since that moment,
she has dedicated her life
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00:32:33,911 --> 00:32:36,124
to looking after these penguins.
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00:33:06,759 --> 00:33:10,306
Pascal: To keep them safe,
Cecilia has built an enclosure
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00:33:10,348 --> 00:33:12,977
around the penguins'
breeding grounds.
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00:33:22,493 --> 00:33:26,626
Pascal: Visitors
are kept at a safe distance.
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00:33:26,667 --> 00:33:31,676
Ticket sales fund research
and conservation.
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00:33:31,718 --> 00:33:35,140
Cecilia is so devoted
to protecting them,
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00:33:35,182 --> 00:33:38,896
she is known locally as
"the mother of penguins."
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00:34:02,353 --> 00:34:07,737
The colony may be small,
but it's growing every year
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00:34:07,778 --> 00:34:10,742
under the vigilance
of its passionate protector.
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00:34:16,836 --> 00:34:19,006
King penguins are under
increasing threat
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00:34:19,048 --> 00:34:21,553
from climate change
and over-fishing.
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00:34:24,850 --> 00:34:28,188
So their unexpected return
to Tierra del Fuego
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00:34:28,230 --> 00:34:30,108
is something to be celebrated.
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00:34:35,409 --> 00:34:37,496
But where prey goes,
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00:34:37,537 --> 00:34:40,543
predators follow.
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00:34:40,584 --> 00:34:45,384
And a fearsome penguin hunter
has arrived in Patagonia.
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00:35:04,834 --> 00:35:06,795
Pascal:
The San Rafael glacier.
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00:35:10,761 --> 00:35:12,764
Located in southern Chile,
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00:35:12,805 --> 00:35:17,230
hundreds of miles north
of the king penguin colony,
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00:35:17,271 --> 00:35:20,485
it empties into
an almost landlocked lagoon.
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00:35:25,535 --> 00:35:30,210
Because of the steepness of this
glacier and climate change,
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00:35:30,251 --> 00:35:32,088
a lot of ice falls here.
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00:35:38,140 --> 00:35:39,601
On average,
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00:35:39,643 --> 00:35:43,650
a volume twice the size of
the Empire State Building
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00:35:43,691 --> 00:35:48,032
crashes into the lagoon
every day.
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00:35:48,074 --> 00:35:53,040
And the fractured ice flows hide
a formidable predator...
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00:35:56,630 --> 00:35:59,927
...a leopard seal.
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00:35:59,969 --> 00:36:01,930
Normally, they live and breed
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00:36:01,972 --> 00:36:04,393
almost exclusively
in the Antarctic...
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00:36:07,022 --> 00:36:10,069
...where penguins are one
of their main prey.
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00:36:29,811 --> 00:36:31,898
But in the San Rafael lagoon,
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00:36:31,939 --> 00:36:35,028
more than 1,200 miles
from Antarctica,
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00:36:35,070 --> 00:36:37,074
there are no penguins,
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00:36:37,115 --> 00:36:40,914
and it's a mystery how these
seals are surviving here.
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00:36:44,211 --> 00:36:46,548
On a mission to learn
more about them
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00:36:46,590 --> 00:36:49,678
is national park ranger
Nicolas Fernandez.
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00:37:03,869 --> 00:37:05,747
Pascal: Although Nicolas doesn't
yet have the funds
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00:37:05,789 --> 00:37:08,627
to analyze the seals' diet,
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00:37:08,669 --> 00:37:10,923
he thinks he knows
what they're eating.
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00:37:13,051 --> 00:37:15,680
Large numbers
of Patagonian rock cod
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00:37:15,722 --> 00:37:18,477
live just below
the glacier wall.
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00:37:26,490 --> 00:37:27,993
Whenever there's an icefall,
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00:37:28,035 --> 00:37:31,040
the leopard seals
swim directly for it.
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00:37:38,719 --> 00:37:40,472
Nicolas suspects
the leopard seals
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00:37:40,514 --> 00:37:43,602
are hunting fish
scattered by the impact.
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00:37:52,409 --> 00:37:56,249
But his biggest discovery
has come from his observation
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00:37:56,291 --> 00:37:58,336
of this particular seal.
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00:38:22,627 --> 00:38:25,382
Pascal: Nicolas has proved this
is the most northerly
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00:38:25,424 --> 00:38:29,723
established breeding population
of leopard seals on the planet.
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00:38:37,026 --> 00:38:41,659
In a world where so many large
predators are disappearing,
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00:38:41,702 --> 00:38:44,832
the arrival of this
incredible hunter
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00:38:44,873 --> 00:38:48,003
into new territory
is remarkable.
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00:39:08,831 --> 00:39:11,794
Pascal:
Here in Patagonia's far south,
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00:39:11,835 --> 00:39:15,341
life is making a comeback,
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00:39:15,384 --> 00:39:18,305
returning home to habitats
once abandoned.
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00:39:20,851 --> 00:39:22,687
Growing in number.
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00:39:25,943 --> 00:39:29,532
And even expanding
into new areas.
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00:39:31,494 --> 00:39:33,664
There are still
great challenges ahead.
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00:39:35,876 --> 00:39:38,005
But the people here
love this place
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00:39:38,047 --> 00:39:41,720
and the life it sustains.
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00:39:41,761 --> 00:39:45,726
With such passion
and commitment,
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00:39:45,768 --> 00:39:47,479
anything is possible.
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00:39:52,822 --> 00:39:57,037
Next on "Patagonia: Life on the
Edge of the World"...
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00:39:58,873 --> 00:40:03,799
These are the forests
that time forgot --
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00:40:03,840 --> 00:40:07,722
home to creatures
both strange and wonderful.
25234
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