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TYSON: We search the heavens
for signs of intelligent life.
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00:00:08,660 --> 00:00:10,966
But what would we
do if we found it?
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00:00:11,402 --> 00:00:13,839
Are we ready
for first contact?
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00:00:14,013 --> 00:00:17,408
Would we be smart enough
to even know if someone was
sending us a message?
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00:00:19,410 --> 00:00:22,326
We've only been able
to detect radio signals for
a little over a century.
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00:00:23,370 --> 00:00:25,807
Extraterrestrial civilizations
could have been bombarding
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00:00:25,981 --> 00:00:29,550
Earth with radio signals
for millions and billions
of years before then,
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00:00:31,030 --> 00:00:33,946
and nobody here would
have had any inkling that
it had ever happened.
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00:00:35,339 --> 00:00:37,428
And what if we seem
just like ants to them.
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00:00:39,125 --> 00:00:41,562
We all know
how we treat ants.
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00:00:43,042 --> 00:00:45,305
What if the extraterrestrials
are smarter than we are,
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00:00:45,479 --> 00:00:49,179
have technology, weapons
that render us helpless?
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00:00:49,353 --> 00:00:52,573
The history of first contact
among terrestrial civilizations,
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00:00:52,747 --> 00:00:54,532
the humans of east and west,
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00:00:54,706 --> 00:00:58,579
north and south,
has been scarred by genocide.
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00:00:59,667 --> 00:01:01,539
In all of the cosmos,
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00:01:01,713 --> 00:01:04,977
is there such a thing as
a first contact story
with a happy ending?
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00:01:06,544 --> 00:01:08,676
I know of one
first contact story,
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00:01:08,850 --> 00:01:11,331
but it's too soon to
know how it will turn out...
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♪ ♪
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[theme music playing]
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♪ ♪
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♪ ♪
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00:02:42,292 --> 00:02:44,207
This scientific and
architectural wonder of the
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00:02:44,381 --> 00:02:46,905
world is in Southern China,
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00:02:53,564 --> 00:02:56,654
it's the largest
radio telescope on Earth,
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00:02:56,828 --> 00:03:00,179
in fact it's the largest
telescope of any kind.
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00:03:01,006 --> 00:03:04,314
The Five-Hundred Meter Aperture
Spherical Radio Telescope,
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00:03:04,488 --> 00:03:06,490
or FAST,
as it's known.
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00:03:06,664 --> 00:03:10,624
This dish is a giant listening
device for detecting radio waves
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00:03:10,798 --> 00:03:13,845
that propagate
throughout the cosmos.
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00:03:14,019 --> 00:03:16,674
The mission of this telescope
is to solve unanswered questions
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00:03:16,848 --> 00:03:18,284
about the origin
of the universe,
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00:03:18,458 --> 00:03:20,721
and its early history.
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00:03:22,854 --> 00:03:24,943
It will also
search for pulsars,
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00:03:25,117 --> 00:03:27,598
those rapidly
rotating neutron stars,
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00:03:27,772 --> 00:03:30,601
and for telltale signs
of gravitational waves,
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00:03:30,775 --> 00:03:32,907
ripples in the
fabric of space-time...
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00:03:34,169 --> 00:03:37,521
And it will search for
signs of alien civilizations.
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00:03:37,695 --> 00:03:40,306
Especially
those very far away...
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00:03:41,351 --> 00:03:43,614
I want to take you to
a place where we've begun to
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00:03:43,788 --> 00:03:46,660
eavesdrop on an intricate
global communications network.
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00:03:47,618 --> 00:03:49,968
We didn't even know it
existed until recently.
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00:03:50,142 --> 00:03:53,363
Complex beyond
our wildest imagining,
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00:03:53,537 --> 00:03:55,016
it was built by a
community whose population
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is inconceivably vast.
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00:04:05,375 --> 00:04:09,292
Our distant ancestors,
tiny shrew-like animals,
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00:04:09,466 --> 00:04:12,947
came of age in places not
too different from this one.
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00:04:13,731 --> 00:04:15,341
Forests.
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00:04:15,515 --> 00:04:18,518
Maybe they knew what we've
only recently discovered.
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00:04:19,127 --> 00:04:21,913
The secret life of this
place is filled with drama,
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00:04:22,087 --> 00:04:24,437
abuzz with conversation.
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00:04:24,611 --> 00:04:27,701
Much of it is spoken in
an electrochemical language,
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00:04:27,875 --> 00:04:29,877
and it takes place
on a scale too small,
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00:04:30,051 --> 00:04:31,879
and in motion too slow,
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00:04:32,053 --> 00:04:34,839
for creatures
like us to even notice.
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00:04:35,274 --> 00:04:36,928
But there's something even
more amazing that was going
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00:04:37,102 --> 00:04:40,235
on right beneath our feet,
for the longest time,
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00:04:40,410 --> 00:04:42,412
and on a global scale,
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00:04:42,586 --> 00:04:45,110
and we had no inkling
that it was there.
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00:04:46,241 --> 00:04:49,419
An ancient,
subterranean worldwide web,
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a vast neural network is
what binds the forest together,
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00:04:53,771 --> 00:04:55,207
making it an
intercommunicating,
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00:04:55,381 --> 00:04:58,036
and interacting
dynamic organism.
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One with agency,
and the power to influence
events above ground.
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00:05:04,129 --> 00:05:06,958
It's called the mycelium.
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00:05:22,800 --> 00:05:26,020
It's a hidden matrix,
the creation of an enduring
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00:05:26,194 --> 00:05:29,807
collaboration among fungi,
plants, bacteria, and animals.
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00:05:31,374 --> 00:05:34,507
90% of all the trees and
plants on Earth are involved
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in the mutually
beneficial relationship made
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possible by the mycelium.
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00:05:40,165 --> 00:05:42,254
They exchange
nourishment, messages,
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and empathy with one
another, across species,
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00:05:45,126 --> 00:05:47,302
and even across
the kingdoms of life.
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00:05:48,739 --> 00:05:51,524
Mushrooms are the
reproductive organs,
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00:05:51,698 --> 00:05:54,179
the fruiting
bodies of the mycelium.
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To see a mushroom growing
wild in the forest is to know
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that the great natural Internet
is online beneath your feet.
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00:06:09,324 --> 00:06:12,719
Some mushrooms
spread trillions
of spores on the breeze,
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00:06:13,546 --> 00:06:16,854
each spore a paratrooper
carrying life's message.
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This is mushroom sex.
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After a while, in
their search for moisture,
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this new segment of the
mycelium will return down
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00:06:28,822 --> 00:06:31,956
to the underworld, and
link up to the greater network.
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The secret lives of trees
have been long-hidden from us.
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00:06:40,268 --> 00:06:44,055
For them, the mycelium is
their lifeline to one another.
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It makes the
forest a community.
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They use it to parent,
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to nurture each other
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00:07:00,985 --> 00:07:04,031
and even to devise a
stay of execution,
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00:07:04,205 --> 00:07:06,512
a reprieve from the axe.
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00:07:06,686 --> 00:07:08,601
When a tree is
cut down in the forest,
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00:07:08,775 --> 00:07:11,517
other trees reach out to
the victim with their root tips,
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00:07:11,691 --> 00:07:15,216
and send lifesaving
sustenance, water, sugar,
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00:07:15,390 --> 00:07:18,524
and other
nutrients via the mycelium.
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00:07:18,698 --> 00:07:21,962
This continuous IV drip
from neighboring trees can
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keep this stump alive for
decades, and even centuries.
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00:07:27,577 --> 00:07:30,275
And they don't only
do it for their own kind.
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They do it for the
trees of other species.
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Why?
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Is it because they know
that their lives depend on
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the health of the whole forest,
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and even on beings very
different from themselves?
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00:07:43,114 --> 00:07:46,944
Is it possible that
the trees can think in
longer terms than we do?
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00:07:48,728 --> 00:07:52,558
We know they have
excellent parenting skills.
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Take this fir tree.
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This younger tree
here is its offspring,
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and it requires
constant attention.
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00:08:01,175 --> 00:08:04,570
It's hardly young by
our standards, 60 years old.
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00:08:05,179 --> 00:08:07,660
But young trees don't
know that if they
grow up too quickly,
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00:08:07,834 --> 00:08:10,794
there will be too much air
in the cells of their trunks.
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00:08:10,968 --> 00:08:13,927
Later, when the stormy
winds and predators come,
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00:08:14,101 --> 00:08:16,147
they'll be weak
and vulnerable.
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00:08:16,321 --> 00:08:18,062
Like the young
of other kingdoms,
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the fir wants to grow into
the light as soon as possible.
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00:08:22,196 --> 00:08:24,547
But the mother fir shades
it with her branches so that
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00:08:24,721 --> 00:08:27,071
it cannot binge on sunlight,
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00:08:27,245 --> 00:08:29,856
and grow up too
fast for its own good.
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00:08:36,863 --> 00:08:40,084
How many forests have I
been in without any awareness
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00:08:40,258 --> 00:08:43,391
of what was really
happening all around me?
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Who are we to search
for alien intelligence when
we can't even recognize,
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00:08:50,616 --> 00:08:54,054
or respect, the
consciousness all around us,
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and even beneath our feet?
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00:09:04,891 --> 00:09:08,547
This stately maple
senses that the tiny caterpillar
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00:09:08,721 --> 00:09:10,723
is nipping at its leaf.
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00:09:10,897 --> 00:09:12,856
A signal is sent
through the tree,
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00:09:13,030 --> 00:09:15,206
just as it would go
through our own nervous system.
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00:09:15,380 --> 00:09:17,904
But not nearly so fast.
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00:09:18,078 --> 00:09:22,082
Again, the trees live
on a much slower time scale.
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00:09:22,256 --> 00:09:27,044
The speed of "“ouch"”
for a tree is only an inch,
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00:09:27,218 --> 00:09:31,788
every three minutes.
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00:09:34,225 --> 00:09:37,228
So, it will take at least
an hour for the tree to react
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00:09:37,402 --> 00:09:41,406
by generating the chemical
that will chase this pest away.
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00:09:41,580 --> 00:09:44,365
When a predator strikes,
the first thing a tree does
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00:09:44,539 --> 00:09:48,326
is to take a saliva sample
in order to sequence the
DNA of the invading species.
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00:09:49,544 --> 00:09:51,851
It then tailors its chemical
response to the special
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00:09:52,025 --> 00:09:54,549
vulnerability of its enemy.
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00:09:54,724 --> 00:09:58,292
In certain cases, it releases
the precise pheromone that
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00:09:58,466 --> 00:10:02,079
will attract its
enemy's enemy to do the
tree's fighting for it.
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00:10:03,602 --> 00:10:06,561
Is it fair to say that the
trees have a deep knowledge
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00:10:06,736 --> 00:10:09,739
of chemistry, entomology,
and other earth sciences?
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00:10:11,305 --> 00:10:15,092
How exactly is their
knowing different from ours?
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00:10:24,971 --> 00:10:29,280
Is it any different when
we humans do these things?
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00:10:48,342 --> 00:10:50,954
Throughout nature,
we find these electrochemical
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00:10:51,128 --> 00:10:53,434
conversations between the
life-forms of different
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00:10:53,608 --> 00:10:55,698
species and kingdoms.
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00:10:55,872 --> 00:10:59,658
But what of a conversation
between different worlds?
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00:10:59,832 --> 00:11:03,923
What might we share with
the intelligent civilization
of another world?
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00:11:04,097 --> 00:11:06,883
Science and mathematics.
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00:11:07,057 --> 00:11:09,233
The symbolic languages of
the scientist, mathematician,
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00:11:09,407 --> 00:11:11,931
and the engineer avoid
those things that are lost
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00:11:12,105 --> 00:11:15,021
in translation from
one culture to another.
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00:11:15,195 --> 00:11:18,329
Symbolic languages, including
those used in programming,
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00:11:18,503 --> 00:11:21,854
have a much higher degree
of precision than words do.
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00:11:22,028 --> 00:11:25,118
They are not as open
to misinterpretation.
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00:11:33,779 --> 00:11:37,217
I know of only one
nonhuman symbolic language,
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00:11:37,391 --> 00:11:40,743
and only one instance when
we humans made contact with
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00:11:40,917 --> 00:11:43,310
the life-form that uses it.
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00:11:43,484 --> 00:11:47,662
Their knowledge of
astronomy and mathematics
would astonish most of us.
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00:11:47,837 --> 00:11:51,057
Their commitment
to resolving their
differences democratically,
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00:11:51,231 --> 00:11:54,278
and reaching
the broadest possible
consensus through debate,
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00:11:54,452 --> 00:11:58,848
is unparalleled by any
human society that I know.
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00:11:59,022 --> 00:12:00,850
Tens of millions
of years ago,
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00:12:01,024 --> 00:12:03,113
they had been carnivores,
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00:12:03,287 --> 00:12:06,986
but they gave that
up to become vegans.
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00:12:07,378 --> 00:12:09,075
It changed their world,
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00:12:09,249 --> 00:12:12,731
and resulted in surpassing
beauty wherever they wandered.
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00:12:13,340 --> 00:12:16,604
They are explorers who
use their symbolic language
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00:12:16,779 --> 00:12:20,347
to tell each other
about the things they have
discovered on their travels.
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00:12:24,569 --> 00:12:27,920
This is their night sky.
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00:12:31,750 --> 00:12:36,015
I want to tell
you their story.
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00:12:46,634 --> 00:12:50,421
TYSON: This is the shore
of the Panthalassic Ocean,
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a sea that covered Earth's
entire Northern Hemisphere
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00:12:53,946 --> 00:12:56,862
in a period
named the Ordovician.
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00:12:57,645 --> 00:13:00,953
We've compressed all of
the time from this very second,
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00:13:01,127 --> 00:13:03,129
back to the
beginning of the universe,
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00:13:03,303 --> 00:13:07,264
into a single calendar
Earth year, a Cosmic Calendar.
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00:13:08,831 --> 00:13:12,008
Every month represents
a little more
than a billion years.
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00:13:12,269 --> 00:13:15,228
Every week,
nearly 300 million years.
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00:13:15,402 --> 00:13:18,623
Every day,
about 40 million years.
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00:13:18,797 --> 00:13:22,714
The Big Bang is the
first moment of New Year's Day.
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00:13:22,888 --> 00:13:26,109
Our present, right now, is
at the stroke of midnight on
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00:13:26,283 --> 00:13:28,981
New Year's Eve.
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00:13:29,634 --> 00:13:32,724
I'm standing on the
morning of December 20th
on the Cosmic Calendar,
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00:13:33,768 --> 00:13:36,989
480 million years
ago in Earth's history.
186
00:13:37,772 --> 00:13:41,776
This was the time when
life began to diversify.
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00:13:42,865 --> 00:13:45,693
It's remembered as the
Great Ordovician
Biodiversity Event.
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00:13:47,130 --> 00:13:50,133
It came 40 million years
after life's first big leap
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00:13:50,307 --> 00:13:53,440
into diversification known
as the Cambrian explosion.
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00:13:54,746 --> 00:13:58,097
This was the dawn
of the arthropods,
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00:13:58,271 --> 00:14:01,579
the invertebrates who wear
their skeletons on the outside,
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00:14:01,753 --> 00:14:03,711
instead of on the inside,
193
00:14:03,886 --> 00:14:06,671
as we would one day do
hundreds of millions
of years later.
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00:14:07,802 --> 00:14:10,805
The arthropods of the
Ordovician pioneered the most
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00:14:10,980 --> 00:14:14,287
successful body plan
ever evolved by life.
196
00:14:15,767 --> 00:14:20,032
Even today, more than
80% of all living
animals are arthropods.
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00:14:22,992 --> 00:14:25,342
But around the time the
plants began to venture out
198
00:14:25,516 --> 00:14:29,389
of the waters, a
crustacean staggered ashore,
199
00:14:29,563 --> 00:14:32,305
and made a home in the
new world of the land.
200
00:14:35,134 --> 00:14:38,094
Insects evolved
from the crustaceans.
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00:14:38,964 --> 00:14:41,836
A thought I do my best to
hold at bay whenever I'm dining
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00:14:42,011 --> 00:14:44,187
in a seafood restaurant.
203
00:14:46,885 --> 00:14:49,409
We think that the insects
and the plants colonized
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00:14:49,583 --> 00:14:54,066
the land at
about the same time,
400 million years ago,
205
00:14:55,241 --> 00:14:58,897
or December 21 on
the Cosmic Calendar.
206
00:14:59,550 --> 00:15:03,032
This was a time when
giant mushrooms towered
over the world's trees,
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00:15:04,207 --> 00:15:06,905
which were then no
more than a few feet high.
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00:15:11,083 --> 00:15:14,608
Mushrooms this gigantic
make you wonder just how big
209
00:15:14,782 --> 00:15:17,698
the underground network that
supported them must have been.
210
00:15:23,530 --> 00:15:26,969
And this was
the time on Earth when
life learned how to fly.
211
00:15:41,592 --> 00:15:45,552
The insects would have
it all to themselves for
another 90 million years.
212
00:15:47,250 --> 00:15:50,296
No flying reptiles,
no birds, no bats to
gobble them up,
213
00:15:51,602 --> 00:15:54,083
just other bugs.
214
00:15:56,694 --> 00:16:00,567
Powered flight was a huge
evolutionary leap for insects,
215
00:16:00,741 --> 00:16:03,744
allowing them to
spread all over the planet.
216
00:16:04,310 --> 00:16:07,052
The insects put
human pretensions to shame.
217
00:16:08,097 --> 00:16:10,882
Their tenure on Earth
is hundreds of times
greater than ours.
218
00:16:12,449 --> 00:16:14,973
They look much
the same to us today,
219
00:16:15,147 --> 00:16:18,020
as they did to the dinosaurs
in the late Cretaceous.
220
00:16:19,673 --> 00:16:22,459
Even back then, you
didn't want to mess with a wasp.
221
00:16:23,286 --> 00:16:26,071
They've always
been voracious hunters.
222
00:16:30,554 --> 00:16:35,037
Yes, there were giant
redwoods on the Earth
240 million years ago.
223
00:16:47,092 --> 00:16:51,053
That wasp is out
hunting for food for her young.
224
00:17:08,766 --> 00:17:12,465
Wasps did their thing
for another 100 million years.
225
00:17:12,639 --> 00:17:16,295
And then, something happened
on an almost microscopic scale
226
00:17:16,469 --> 00:17:19,951
that would paint the Earth in
a whole new spectrum of colors.
227
00:17:21,648 --> 00:17:24,999
Back then, there was no such
thing as an animal partner to
228
00:17:25,174 --> 00:17:27,567
aid the plants in
their fertilization,
229
00:17:27,741 --> 00:17:30,396
to efficiently transport
their seed to the reproductive
230
00:17:30,570 --> 00:17:33,530
organs of distant
plants, in other words,
231
00:17:33,704 --> 00:17:36,141
to play cupid for them.
232
00:17:39,536 --> 00:17:42,191
The drama unfolding here
is not the struggle between
233
00:17:42,365 --> 00:17:44,367
the spider and the wasp,
234
00:17:44,541 --> 00:17:47,935
it's those tiny particles
sticking to the wasp's legs.
235
00:17:48,110 --> 00:17:51,461
Nothing much to look
at, just a few grains,
236
00:17:51,635 --> 00:17:55,204
but this magic
dust, called pollen,
237
00:17:55,378 --> 00:17:58,076
contained the power
to transform the world,
238
00:17:58,250 --> 00:18:00,296
and to make possible
some of the most beautiful
239
00:18:00,470 --> 00:18:03,821
sights ever seen
on this planet.
240
00:18:03,995 --> 00:18:07,129
Even today, more than
100 million years later,
241
00:18:07,303 --> 00:18:10,262
this is still true.
242
00:18:10,436 --> 00:18:14,310
Each grain of pollen sculpted
differently by evolution,
243
00:18:14,484 --> 00:18:17,400
each a novel
strategy for survival,
244
00:18:17,574 --> 00:18:21,012
sharpened by vast
expanses of time.
245
00:18:21,708 --> 00:18:23,580
Pollen is tough.
246
00:18:23,754 --> 00:18:25,364
It has to be.
247
00:18:25,538 --> 00:18:28,933
It's so well-built that
you can fire it from a gun,
248
00:18:29,107 --> 00:18:32,632
and it will emerge unscathed
with its identity fully intact.
249
00:18:34,286 --> 00:18:36,767
The wasps had nurtured their
young during their helpless,
250
00:18:36,941 --> 00:18:40,814
larval stage by bringing
home game for them to feast on.
251
00:18:41,075 --> 00:18:44,035
The pollen was
rich in protein,
252
00:18:44,209 --> 00:18:48,474
a meal for the grubs when
Mom came home without any kills.
253
00:18:49,214 --> 00:18:52,435
Over the eons, a new
kind of life-form evolved,
254
00:18:52,609 --> 00:18:55,438
one that stopped bringing
meat home for dinner.
255
00:18:55,612 --> 00:18:59,398
This new creature brought
only the magic dust
that the flowers made.
256
00:19:02,662 --> 00:19:04,403
Bees.
257
00:19:04,577 --> 00:19:07,537
They had no appetite for the
mangled parts of dead insects.
258
00:19:08,146 --> 00:19:12,019
They went on the all-pollen
diet, and it was no fad.
259
00:19:12,194 --> 00:19:16,110
The bees became fully
committed pollinators.
260
00:19:16,285 --> 00:19:18,983
The plants rewarded
them handsomely by evolving
261
00:19:19,157 --> 00:19:22,726
evermore alluring
female sexual organs,
262
00:19:22,900 --> 00:19:25,772
in outrageous colors
and seductive forms.
263
00:19:27,296 --> 00:19:30,777
They concocted delicious
secretions, sweet nectars,
264
00:19:30,951 --> 00:19:34,259
that would keep the
bees coming back for more,
265
00:19:34,868 --> 00:19:38,002
again and again.
266
00:19:39,482 --> 00:19:43,442
The Age of the Flowers
had begun.
267
00:19:52,234 --> 00:19:54,888
Bees are masters of time,
268
00:19:55,062 --> 00:19:57,804
traveling across
100 million years,
269
00:19:57,978 --> 00:20:00,242
and they are
none the worse for wear.
270
00:20:00,416 --> 00:20:03,636
These beings did more
than anyone else to fill the
271
00:20:03,810 --> 00:20:07,031
Palace of Life with
sustenance and beauty.
272
00:20:09,207 --> 00:20:14,517
We will explore its
treasures and mysteries
later on our voyage.
273
00:20:20,349 --> 00:20:21,741
TYSON: For thousands of years,
274
00:20:21,915 --> 00:20:25,092
bees have been
symbols of mindless industry.
275
00:20:25,267 --> 00:20:26,920
We always think of them
as being something like
276
00:20:27,094 --> 00:20:31,490
biological robots,
doomed to live out
their lives in lockstep,
277
00:20:31,664 --> 00:20:34,885
shackled to the dreary roles
assigned to them by nature.
278
00:20:36,190 --> 00:20:39,368
This is our
first contact story.
279
00:20:39,542 --> 00:20:43,110
It happened in a place called
Brunnwinkl in rural Austria,
280
00:20:43,285 --> 00:20:46,157
in the early 1900s.
281
00:20:49,856 --> 00:20:52,946
From the time
Karl von Frisch was a child,
282
00:20:53,120 --> 00:20:56,036
he longed to understand
what the other animals knew,
283
00:20:56,210 --> 00:20:58,648
how they perceived the world.
284
00:20:58,822 --> 00:21:01,390
He wanted to know
if tiny fish saw color,
285
00:21:01,564 --> 00:21:03,653
or had a sense of smell.
286
00:21:03,827 --> 00:21:06,743
He invented experiments
to explore animal experience,
287
00:21:06,917 --> 00:21:09,006
and he filmed them.
288
00:21:09,180 --> 00:21:11,356
Starting in the
early 20th century,
289
00:21:11,530 --> 00:21:14,316
he was the first to use the
new medium of motion pictures
290
00:21:14,490 --> 00:21:17,797
to create popular science
entertainment and communication.
291
00:21:19,582 --> 00:21:21,192
For thousands of years,
292
00:21:21,366 --> 00:21:24,804
humans have noted the
eccentric dances of the bees.
293
00:21:25,631 --> 00:21:27,894
But no one had ever looked at
them with the kind of respect
294
00:21:28,068 --> 00:21:30,854
that assumed there was
a reason to their dancing.
295
00:21:31,724 --> 00:21:33,552
Before Karl von Frisch,
296
00:21:33,726 --> 00:21:36,468
no one ever thought to
ask why they moved this way and
297
00:21:36,642 --> 00:21:39,428
that way in a succession
of elaborate figure eights...
298
00:21:40,907 --> 00:21:44,041
Von Frisch studied
every tiny bee gesture,
299
00:21:44,215 --> 00:21:47,000
and became fascinated by a
mystery he couldn't explain.
300
00:21:48,785 --> 00:21:50,961
He would set out a dish
of sugar water for a bee from
301
00:21:51,135 --> 00:21:54,051
his experimental hive.
302
00:21:54,573 --> 00:21:57,141
The bee would feast upon
it before flying back home.
303
00:22:00,449 --> 00:22:02,799
The marked bee would
later return to dine on
304
00:22:02,973 --> 00:22:05,236
the delicious sugar water.
305
00:22:05,410 --> 00:22:08,108
Von Frisch noted
that in just a few hours,
306
00:22:08,282 --> 00:22:10,633
a multitude of other
bees would join her there.
307
00:22:13,157 --> 00:22:16,639
They were always
her fellow hive mates.
308
00:22:17,901 --> 00:22:19,990
But here was the
really amazing thing,
309
00:22:20,164 --> 00:22:22,340
von Frisch knew that
the other bees had not
310
00:22:22,514 --> 00:22:25,038
followed the marked
bee to the feeding place.
311
00:22:25,212 --> 00:22:26,910
How?
312
00:22:27,084 --> 00:22:29,913
Because he had the hive
closely watched at all times.
313
00:22:30,087 --> 00:22:32,829
He had been careful to use
sugar water, and not honey,
314
00:22:33,003 --> 00:22:36,354
so that the bees'
sense of smell could not
guide them to the reward.
315
00:22:37,616 --> 00:22:40,663
He continued to move the dish
of sugar water farther away,
316
00:22:40,837 --> 00:22:43,622
until it was several
kilometers from the hive.
317
00:22:43,796 --> 00:22:47,713
Still, the hive mates
would find their way to it.
318
00:22:47,887 --> 00:22:50,629
So, how did the painted
bee reveal the exact location
319
00:22:50,803 --> 00:22:53,545
of the sugar water with such
precision that her hive mates
320
00:22:53,719 --> 00:22:56,330
could unerringly
find their way there?
321
00:22:59,246 --> 00:23:02,641
There was a secret
message in her choreography.
322
00:23:03,599 --> 00:23:06,384
What had seemed to countless
generations of observers
323
00:23:06,558 --> 00:23:08,604
to be nothing more
than the meaningless,
324
00:23:08,778 --> 00:23:13,130
spasmodic motions
of a dumb animal was
actually a complex message,
325
00:23:14,566 --> 00:23:18,265
an equation informed
by mathematics, astronomy,
326
00:23:18,440 --> 00:23:21,225
and an acute
knowledge of time,
327
00:23:21,399 --> 00:23:24,402
all synthesized to convey
the location of the riches
328
00:23:25,185 --> 00:23:27,710
she hoped to
share with her sisters.
329
00:23:30,974 --> 00:23:34,499
The dancer used the
angle of our star, the sun,
330
00:23:34,673 --> 00:23:37,415
to indicate the
general direction of
the food's location.
331
00:23:41,506 --> 00:23:44,640
Von Frisch noted that when
a bee danced straight upward,
332
00:23:44,814 --> 00:23:47,338
she meant,
"“fly toward the sun."”
333
00:23:47,512 --> 00:23:50,297
And when she moved downward,
she meant, "“fly away from it."”
334
00:23:52,125 --> 00:23:55,694
Her swivels left and
right conveyed the food's
exact coordinates in space,
335
00:23:56,347 --> 00:23:58,567
sometimes kilometers away.
336
00:24:05,965 --> 00:24:08,664
The duration of her dance, down
to a fraction of a second,
337
00:24:10,100 --> 00:24:13,320
indicated the length
of time it would take her
fellow bees to get there.
338
00:24:17,194 --> 00:24:20,850
She even factored in wind
speed to more finely calibrate
the message she danced.
339
00:24:24,767 --> 00:24:27,378
And this was true at
any time of the year,
340
00:24:27,552 --> 00:24:31,251
and from hive to hive,
from continent to continent.
341
00:24:34,080 --> 00:24:37,475
Bees can do the math.
342
00:24:43,046 --> 00:24:46,310
Why do I call this
a first contact story?
343
00:24:46,484 --> 00:24:49,922
Two species as different
as any you can imagine,
344
00:24:50,096 --> 00:24:53,796
humans and bees, evolved
on evolutionary pathways that
345
00:24:53,970 --> 00:24:56,581
diverged 600
million years ago.
346
00:24:58,061 --> 00:25:01,804
And yet, these two
species and as far as we know,
347
00:25:01,978 --> 00:25:04,458
only they and
we on this planet,
348
00:25:04,633 --> 00:25:06,896
managed to create a
symbolic language written
349
00:25:07,070 --> 00:25:10,073
in mathematics and science.
350
00:25:10,247 --> 00:25:13,250
We lived side-by-side
with the bees for millennia,
351
00:25:13,424 --> 00:25:16,862
never dreaming
of the complexity
of their communications.
352
00:25:17,036 --> 00:25:19,517
What we've learned about bee
society in the decades since
353
00:25:19,691 --> 00:25:23,390
von Frisch puts
some of our loftiest human
aspirations to shame,
354
00:25:25,001 --> 00:25:30,310
and changes forever our idea
of intelligent life on Earth.
355
00:25:42,714 --> 00:25:45,456
TYSON: We live in a time when
the world's democracies are
356
00:25:45,630 --> 00:25:48,067
even more fragile than ever.
357
00:25:48,241 --> 00:25:50,809
But there are places on
Earth where that's not true.
358
00:25:50,983 --> 00:25:52,985
Where every
individual has a voice.
359
00:25:53,159 --> 00:25:55,292
Where corruption is unknown.
360
00:25:55,466 --> 00:25:57,947
Where the community
acts only when it has arrived
361
00:25:58,121 --> 00:26:00,776
at consensus
through reason and debate.
362
00:26:02,691 --> 00:26:06,259
This is one of those places.
363
00:26:14,528 --> 00:26:19,098
Contrary to popular belief,
the hive is no monarchy.
364
00:26:19,272 --> 00:26:23,712
The queen is no absolute ruler
controlling the other bees.
365
00:26:23,886 --> 00:26:27,585
The queen's role is
almost entirely reproductive.
366
00:26:27,759 --> 00:26:31,850
Any female bee,
and that's what the vast
majority of bees are,
367
00:26:32,024 --> 00:26:35,767
can ascend to the throne
given the right food
and the space to grow.
368
00:26:37,073 --> 00:26:40,163
When the weather warms,
and the trees bloom,
369
00:26:40,337 --> 00:26:43,209
she graciously passes
her scepter to a new
generation of queens.
370
00:26:45,516 --> 00:26:47,736
That's the time in
the life of a hive,
371
00:26:47,910 --> 00:26:49,955
in late spring
or early summer,
372
00:26:50,129 --> 00:26:53,393
when about half the hive's
bees, around 10,000 of them,
373
00:26:53,567 --> 00:26:55,787
grow restless.
374
00:26:55,961 --> 00:26:59,225
They decide it's time
to leave the mother hive,
375
00:26:59,399 --> 00:27:02,141
to found a new colony,
they know not where.
376
00:27:03,708 --> 00:27:06,493
Once they depart,
there's no turning back.
377
00:27:07,581 --> 00:27:10,236
It takes courage to
leave home with no way back,
378
00:27:10,410 --> 00:27:13,587
to risk everything,
and choose the unknown.
379
00:27:16,025 --> 00:27:19,028
That pushing and shoving
is not meant to be hostile.
380
00:27:19,202 --> 00:27:21,334
The workers are putting
the queen on a rigorous
381
00:27:21,508 --> 00:27:24,555
exercise program so
that she can lose weight,
382
00:27:24,729 --> 00:27:27,427
and get back
into flying shape.
383
00:27:27,601 --> 00:27:28,951
When everything's ready,
384
00:27:29,125 --> 00:27:32,345
it's time for the first
leg of their odyssey.
385
00:27:32,519 --> 00:27:35,348
It's time to swarm.
386
00:27:48,100 --> 00:27:51,756
With a new queen
now installed on her throne
in the original hive,
387
00:27:51,930 --> 00:27:54,716
the old Queen Mother has
pride of place at the very
388
00:27:54,890 --> 00:27:58,197
center of the
swarm of adventurers.
389
00:28:00,939 --> 00:28:03,768
Hundreds of their most
senior members, scouts,
390
00:28:03,942 --> 00:28:07,467
are dispatched on missions
of reconnaissance over
a five kilometer radius.
391
00:28:09,861 --> 00:28:13,473
The scouts reconnoiter
the local trees for
the best possible new home.
392
00:28:14,518 --> 00:28:16,781
And they're extremely picky.
393
00:28:16,955 --> 00:28:19,044
Not just any place will do.
394
00:28:19,218 --> 00:28:21,438
The front door,
a hollow in a tree,
395
00:28:21,612 --> 00:28:24,528
must be too high for
bears and other marauders to
396
00:28:24,702 --> 00:28:27,444
easily reach in and
plunder their precious honey.
397
00:28:28,532 --> 00:28:31,187
Total square footage
is of critical concern.
398
00:28:31,361 --> 00:28:33,363
Honeybees don't hibernate.
399
00:28:33,537 --> 00:28:35,931
They'll have to heat the
place for the long winter,
400
00:28:36,105 --> 00:28:38,629
and be sure to
produce enough food, honey,
401
00:28:38,803 --> 00:28:41,023
to see them through.
402
00:28:41,197 --> 00:28:43,895
Each scout must measure
the exact dimensions,
403
00:28:44,069 --> 00:28:46,724
height, width, and depth.
404
00:28:46,898 --> 00:28:50,032
If it's even slightly
too small, or too large,
405
00:28:50,206 --> 00:28:53,122
the entire swarm will be wiped
out before the next spring.
406
00:28:56,255 --> 00:28:59,084
When all the scouts return,
the bees are ready to hold
407
00:28:59,258 --> 00:29:02,131
their annual convention.
408
00:29:02,305 --> 00:29:06,004
Each scout finds a place
to stand on the swarm.
409
00:29:06,178 --> 00:29:08,833
There, she presents her
argument for the best site
410
00:29:09,007 --> 00:29:10,530
she has discovered.
411
00:29:10,704 --> 00:29:13,142
This house-hunting
discourse is conducted in
412
00:29:13,316 --> 00:29:17,233
their scientific and
mathematical language.
413
00:29:17,407 --> 00:29:20,802
Hundreds of scouts now use
the waggle dance to advertise
414
00:29:20,976 --> 00:29:23,630
the home that they've found.
415
00:29:23,935 --> 00:29:27,199
At first,
opinions vary widely,
416
00:29:27,373 --> 00:29:30,812
as each advocate attracts
her share of followers.
417
00:29:32,857 --> 00:29:36,556
At our political conventions,
people routinely lie.
418
00:29:36,730 --> 00:29:39,516
They press our buttons,
demonizing, scapegoating,
419
00:29:39,690 --> 00:29:41,692
appealing to our fears.
420
00:29:41,866 --> 00:29:44,608
But the bees can't risk that.
421
00:29:44,782 --> 00:29:47,350
In both cases,
ours and theirs,
422
00:29:47,524 --> 00:29:50,875
the future depends on
seeing reality clearly.
423
00:29:51,049 --> 00:29:52,529
But for some reason,
424
00:29:52,703 --> 00:29:55,575
we are easily
manipulated and deceived.
425
00:29:55,749 --> 00:29:59,101
The bees somehow know that
they have to stick to the facts.
426
00:29:59,449 --> 00:30:01,103
They have to be accurate.
427
00:30:01,277 --> 00:30:03,148
They can't oversell.
428
00:30:03,322 --> 00:30:06,760
They act as if they understand
that it matters what's true.
429
00:30:06,935 --> 00:30:09,633
That nature won't be fooled.
430
00:30:10,590 --> 00:30:12,549
The scouts who have found
the optimum sites for the
431
00:30:12,723 --> 00:30:16,422
swarm's new home are the
most passionate waggle dancers.
432
00:30:18,120 --> 00:30:21,123
Close scientific observation
over many decades affirms
433
00:30:21,297 --> 00:30:23,386
this astonishing fact,
434
00:30:23,560 --> 00:30:27,433
each bee has a platonic
ideal of home in mind.
435
00:30:28,434 --> 00:30:30,784
Moreover, the members
of the swarm don't take the
436
00:30:30,959 --> 00:30:34,397
testimony of the most
popular dancers on faith.
437
00:30:34,571 --> 00:30:37,443
Many of them go
to see for themselves.
438
00:30:37,617 --> 00:30:41,404
Skepticism is a
survival mechanism.
439
00:30:42,405 --> 00:30:44,711
The fact-checkers fly
off to the site to make
440
00:30:44,886 --> 00:30:47,410
an independent evaluation.
441
00:30:47,584 --> 00:30:50,239
Just think for a minute
how articulate the waggle
442
00:30:50,413 --> 00:30:52,937
dance messaging has to be.
443
00:30:53,285 --> 00:30:55,766
It's the coordinates
for one particular tree in
444
00:30:55,940 --> 00:30:58,334
a whole forest of them.
445
00:30:58,508 --> 00:31:02,120
The scouts make a
beeline for it every time.
446
00:31:03,208 --> 00:31:05,689
If the hollow turns out
to be as good as advertised,
447
00:31:05,863 --> 00:31:07,909
they will return to
the swarm, where they,
448
00:31:08,083 --> 00:31:12,174
too, will dance its praises.
449
00:31:12,696 --> 00:31:16,613
Without deceit, or
violence, or back-hive deals,
450
00:31:16,787 --> 00:31:20,530
the scouts are the first
to arrive at consensus.
451
00:31:21,923 --> 00:31:25,274
But the larger population
remains to be persuaded.
452
00:31:25,448 --> 00:31:28,320
Once they all
align behind one dance,
453
00:31:28,494 --> 00:31:32,585
once they've achieved
unanimity on the best
new place to call home,
454
00:31:32,759 --> 00:31:35,675
the great migration can begin.
455
00:31:35,849 --> 00:31:38,896
Within 60 seconds
of the first takeoff,
456
00:31:39,070 --> 00:31:42,682
10,000 bees depart in
formation for their new home.
457
00:31:44,554 --> 00:31:46,599
With the sun
as their compass,
458
00:31:46,773 --> 00:31:50,125
the airborne colony turns
to its queen for leadership.
459
00:31:50,777 --> 00:31:54,825
The swarm is a kind of mind,
a collective consciousness to
460
00:31:54,999 --> 00:31:58,176
which every individual
bee makes a contribution.
461
00:32:04,443 --> 00:32:08,534
Now that the move is
complete, it's time to unpack,
462
00:32:08,708 --> 00:32:12,190
decorate the nursery,
stock the pantry,
463
00:32:12,364 --> 00:32:15,411
and make the place their
own, until the weather warms,
464
00:32:15,585 --> 00:32:18,066
and the trees bloom again.
465
00:32:18,240 --> 00:32:22,592
And so it has been for
tens of millions of years.
466
00:32:24,637 --> 00:32:27,597
This intimate knowledge of
the lives of the bees is the
467
00:32:27,771 --> 00:32:31,949
legacy of Karl von Frisch,
who was the first to decrypt
468
00:32:32,123 --> 00:32:36,258
their symbolic language, to
make contact with a completely
469
00:32:36,432 --> 00:32:40,175
different kind of mind.
470
00:32:40,349 --> 00:32:43,656
Today, we study bee brains.
471
00:32:43,830 --> 00:32:46,529
We are building a bridge over
the chasm that has separated
472
00:32:46,703 --> 00:32:50,359
two species for
half a billion years.
473
00:32:50,533 --> 00:32:52,796
And yet,
after all that time,
474
00:32:52,970 --> 00:32:56,626
there are places
where our species
and theirs converged,
475
00:32:56,800 --> 00:33:01,065
agriculture, architecture,
language, and politics.
476
00:33:02,632 --> 00:33:05,765
We now know that bees sleep,
477
00:33:05,939 --> 00:33:10,161
and some scientists
suspect that they dream.
478
00:33:14,948 --> 00:33:16,994
What knocked us
out of our trance,
479
00:33:17,168 --> 00:33:19,997
so that we could finally
recognize another intelligence
480
00:33:20,171 --> 00:33:21,781
that had always been there?
481
00:33:21,955 --> 00:33:24,306
A few generations
before von Frisch,
482
00:33:24,480 --> 00:33:28,049
one man did more than
any other to open the way.
483
00:33:28,223 --> 00:33:31,965
For me, he was the
greatest spiritual teacher
of the last thousand years.
484
00:33:33,445 --> 00:33:37,493
The flowers he planted
here long ago still bloom.
485
00:33:41,671 --> 00:33:44,108
The hive he founded,
and studied with open eyes,
486
00:33:44,282 --> 00:33:46,371
continues to flourish.
487
00:33:46,545 --> 00:33:49,679
It was he who figured out
how the Palace of Life could
488
00:33:49,853 --> 00:33:54,292
evolve from a modest
one-room structure to an
edifice of soaring towers,
489
00:33:54,466 --> 00:33:57,556
reaching to the
stars and it was he who
490
00:33:57,730 --> 00:34:02,953
first glimpsed the secret
lives of our fellow earthlings.
491
00:34:16,358 --> 00:34:19,970
TYSON: Somewhere,
there's a place called
the Halls of Extinction,
492
00:34:20,144 --> 00:34:23,843
a shrine to all the broken
branches on the tree of life.
493
00:34:24,017 --> 00:34:26,368
But that tree still lives,
494
00:34:26,542 --> 00:34:30,415
it's seen 4 billion
springtimes since
it first took root.
495
00:34:30,589 --> 00:34:34,071
Its flowers burst forth with
unforeseeable possibilities.
496
00:34:37,857 --> 00:34:40,512
A tiny, one-celled
organism evolves into you
497
00:34:40,686 --> 00:34:43,428
and everything else
that is Earthlife.
498
00:34:43,602 --> 00:34:46,127
There's just no way of
predicting, for now, anyway,
499
00:34:46,301 --> 00:34:47,998
where life can lead.
500
00:34:48,172 --> 00:34:50,740
No way of foretelling the
forms and capabilities that
501
00:34:50,914 --> 00:34:54,309
can issue from
simpler organisms over
vast expanses of time.
502
00:34:55,919 --> 00:35:00,010
Life itself can be seen as an
emergent property of chemistry,
503
00:35:00,184 --> 00:35:03,579
science as an
emergent property of life,
504
00:35:03,753 --> 00:35:07,583
a way that life has found
to begin to know itself.
505
00:35:14,285 --> 00:35:17,984
Four billion years.
506
00:35:19,899 --> 00:35:23,425
These are the most
ancient towers that life built.
507
00:35:43,967 --> 00:35:47,057
♪ ♪
508
00:36:07,643 --> 00:36:10,733
Nobody knew this
palace existed.
509
00:36:10,907 --> 00:36:15,738
It was hidden by the mists
of time, and enshrouded in myth.
510
00:36:16,739 --> 00:36:20,133
But one man dared
to part that curtain.
511
00:36:20,308 --> 00:36:23,354
He studied as many
kinds of life as he could.
512
00:36:33,364 --> 00:36:35,758
He sailed to a group of
islands on the far side of
513
00:36:35,932 --> 00:36:39,196
the planet in search
of exotic species.
514
00:36:39,370 --> 00:36:42,678
He studied the bees,
the flowers, the finches,
515
00:36:42,852 --> 00:36:46,943
mollusks, and
earthworms, for 30 years.
516
00:36:47,117 --> 00:36:50,729
A radical pattern emerged,
one that would shake the world.
517
00:36:51,643 --> 00:36:56,082
It still does, he debunked
the story of Adam and Eve.
518
00:36:57,432 --> 00:37:00,043
Humans are not the kings
of life, created separately,
519
00:37:00,217 --> 00:37:03,089
and charged with its
management but instead,
520
00:37:03,264 --> 00:37:06,484
an upstart offspring of
its stately, ancient family.
521
00:37:07,920 --> 00:37:10,053
He waited to tell the world
what he had discovered until
522
00:37:10,227 --> 00:37:13,796
he could demonstrate its truth
beyond a shadow of a doubt.
523
00:37:13,970 --> 00:37:17,278
But then he made
another great leap,
524
00:37:19,149 --> 00:37:22,457
Charles Darwin was also one
of the first to recognize that
525
00:37:22,631 --> 00:37:24,850
if all life is related,
526
00:37:25,024 --> 00:37:28,376
there were certain
philosophical implications.
527
00:37:33,772 --> 00:37:36,209
If we were not created
separately from
the other animals,
528
00:37:36,384 --> 00:37:39,996
must we not share more
of who we are with them?
529
00:37:40,170 --> 00:37:43,304
Our awareness, our
relationships with others,
530
00:37:43,478 --> 00:37:45,567
even our feelings?
531
00:37:45,741 --> 00:37:49,222
Instead of a single
island of human perception
in the universe,
532
00:37:49,397 --> 00:37:52,400
Darwin realized that
we are surrounded by other
533
00:37:52,574 --> 00:37:55,794
ways of being
alive and conscious.
534
00:37:55,968 --> 00:37:59,058
For Darwin, science was
a pathway to a deeper level
535
00:37:59,232 --> 00:38:02,584
of empathy and humility.
536
00:38:04,063 --> 00:38:07,023
When word reached him
that a local farmer was
mistreating his sheep,
537
00:38:07,197 --> 00:38:10,809
Darwin dropped his research
to make an arrest of the man.
538
00:38:10,983 --> 00:38:13,551
He exposed the horrendous
suffering of wild animals
539
00:38:13,725 --> 00:38:16,162
caught in the
jaws of steel traps,
540
00:38:16,337 --> 00:38:19,688
and experimented on surgically
without benefit of anesthesia.
541
00:38:20,863 --> 00:38:24,040
Throughout his entire life,
he was haunted by an image of
542
00:38:24,214 --> 00:38:27,217
the helpless dog who licked
his tormentor's hand while
543
00:38:27,391 --> 00:38:30,568
being dissected by a scientist.
544
00:38:30,742 --> 00:38:35,007
And this compassion extended
even to our own species.
545
00:38:35,181 --> 00:38:38,837
He recognized the blindness of
his 19th century contemporaries.
546
00:38:39,011 --> 00:38:41,492
In his autobiography,
he recounted the story of
547
00:38:41,666 --> 00:38:45,409
an African woman who jumped off
a cliff to her certain death,
548
00:38:45,583 --> 00:38:49,326
rather than submit to being
enslaved by the Portuguese.
549
00:38:50,153 --> 00:38:54,418
Darwin observed that
if she had been a Roman matron
from classical antiquity,
550
00:38:54,592 --> 00:38:57,595
she would be
viewed very differently.
551
00:38:57,769 --> 00:39:01,033
We would be naming
our daughters after her.
552
00:39:07,039 --> 00:39:10,434
It was he who began the
scientific study of the hidden
553
00:39:10,608 --> 00:39:14,090
world beneath
the forest floor.
554
00:39:14,264 --> 00:39:17,136
Darwin worshipped nature.
555
00:39:17,310 --> 00:39:21,402
His knowledge of science
informed and drove his
compassion to new heights.
556
00:39:36,286 --> 00:39:41,117
Behold,
Saccorhytus coronarius.
557
00:39:41,639 --> 00:39:44,860
When it lived, 550 million
years ago, it was microscopic.
558
00:39:46,383 --> 00:39:50,343
But for us now, it looms
large because this creature is
559
00:39:50,518 --> 00:39:53,869
the earliest common
ancestor we've yet found,
560
00:39:54,043 --> 00:39:57,612
a physical connection
we share with almost
every animal on Earth.
561
00:40:11,234 --> 00:40:14,411
If we could only take
that connection to heart.
562
00:40:14,585 --> 00:40:17,893
If some day, we could
synthesize all our knowledge
563
00:40:18,067 --> 00:40:22,158
of life, and use it to
build an Arch of Experience,
564
00:40:22,332 --> 00:40:26,815
a way for us to really feel
what it's like to be the other.
565
00:40:30,949 --> 00:40:34,475
What if we could truly
know the joy of a giant condor
566
00:40:34,779 --> 00:40:38,087
riding the thermals
high in the Andes,
567
00:40:38,261 --> 00:40:41,699
or the anguish of a humpback
whale singing to its lover
568
00:40:41,873 --> 00:40:46,138
across the vast Pacific,
or the fear in the heart of
569
00:40:46,312 --> 00:40:50,708
our most hated enemy, how
would that change this world?
570
00:40:53,145 --> 00:40:55,931
And all of them,
and each of us,
571
00:40:56,105 --> 00:40:59,325
made from the same toolbox,
with the same genetic
572
00:40:59,500 --> 00:41:03,199
material, but on
different evolutionary voyages.
573
00:41:19,432 --> 00:41:21,783
Are there other possible
worlds in the cosmos where
574
00:41:21,957 --> 00:41:25,613
life's pathways
converge and intersect?
575
00:41:25,787 --> 00:41:28,354
Remember our friends,
the tardigrades,
576
00:41:28,529 --> 00:41:30,879
who can rise from the dead
to thrive on Earth in those
577
00:41:31,053 --> 00:41:34,099
hellish places where
no one else can live?
578
00:41:34,273 --> 00:41:38,016
They have survived all
five mass extinctions,
579
00:41:38,190 --> 00:41:42,934
and they can even
live in the vacuum of
space without protection.
580
00:41:43,108 --> 00:41:45,981
These creatures, too small
to see with the naked eye,
581
00:41:46,155 --> 00:41:47,809
have been observed
by scientists,
582
00:41:47,983 --> 00:41:50,028
using a scanning
electron microscope,
583
00:41:50,202 --> 00:41:53,292
doing something that we
like to think only humans do.
584
00:41:55,294 --> 00:41:57,383
They're not performing any of
the known biological functions
585
00:41:57,558 --> 00:42:00,169
that organisms
need to survive.
586
00:42:00,343 --> 00:42:03,825
They're gently giving
each other pleasure,
587
00:42:03,999 --> 00:42:08,090
affection,
tenderness for its own sake.
588
00:42:10,832 --> 00:42:14,052
If bees dream,
and tardigrades snuggle,
589
00:42:15,445 --> 00:42:17,534
are there countless roads
in the universe that life can
590
00:42:17,708 --> 00:42:20,145
take to wonder and to love?
591
00:42:23,279 --> 00:42:26,630
If we could stand beneath
the Arch of Experience,
592
00:42:26,804 --> 00:42:30,025
or build one inside ourselves,
593
00:42:30,199 --> 00:42:34,856
maybe we'd be able
to give our first contact
story a better outcome.
594
00:42:46,563 --> 00:42:50,045
[computer signals]
595
00:43:04,537 --> 00:43:08,454
[computer signals]
596
00:43:53,151 --> 00:43:55,676
Captioned by
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