How Did We Get Here? The Story of Science: Power, Proof and Passion


How Did We Get Here?

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There are some great questions that have intrigued and haunted us

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since the dawn of humanity...

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The story of our search to answer those questions

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is the story of science.

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Of all human endeavours, science has had the greatest

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impact on our lives,

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on how we see the world and how we see ourselves.

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Its ideas, its achievements, its results are all around us.

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So, how did we arrive at the modern world?

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Well, that is more surprising and more human than you might think.

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The history of science is often told as a series of eureka moments -

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the ultimate triumph of the rational mind.

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The truth is that power and passion,

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rivalry and sheer blind chance have played equally significant parts.

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In this series, I'll be offering a different view

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of how science happens. It has been shaped as much by

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what's outside the laboratory as inside.

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Whoa!

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This is the story of how history made science and science

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made history, and how the ideas that were generated changed our world.

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It is a tale of...

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This time, the most personal question we've asked...

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How did we get here?

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It's a question that provokes fierce argument and huge controversy.

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And that's because it gets to the heart of our human origins,

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our very significance. And yet, until relatively recently,

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it was not a question that people felt they had to keep asking.

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Most people believed they already knew the answer,

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handed down in religious text or in creation stories.

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We and everything else on earth

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had been put here by some kind of supernatural power.

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What's special about this question

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is not how long it took to get answered, but how long it took

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to get asked as a scientific question.

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And it's a story that begins over here.

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'The great voyages of discovery,

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of the 15th Century, heralded the start of the modern age.

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Advances in navigation and shipbuilding allowed

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European adventurers to explore and exploit the rest of the globe.

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We're absolutely storming along now, powered by the trade winds.

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And over there is the Caribbean island of Jamaica.

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In 1494, Christopher Columbus landed here.

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It was a completely unknown part of the world,

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at least unknown to Europeans. It is the Americas.

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The discovery of the Americas sent shock waves through European civilization.

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New peoples, new plants, new animals.

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The early explorers arrived utterly convinced that they were special,

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set apart from the rest of nature. The pinnacle of God's creation.

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Yet what they found here would begin to challenge that.

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And for me, the story begins with a man called Hans Sloane.

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An Irish doctor who arrived in Jamaica in 1687 to take up

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the lucrative post of personal physician to the island's Governor.

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To be fair to Sloane, he was more than simply an adventurer

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in search of a fast buck. He was also a passionate botanist

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who loved to go exploring the island on horseback with a guide.

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-OK, Marlin, are you ready to go?

-Yep.

-Lovely.

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HORSE BLUSTERS

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Elegantly done.

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Don't want to be left behind.

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My guide, Marlin Beale, is a botanist.

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And together we're heading for the Blue Mountains

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where Sloane would come face to face with what he described as,

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"all that is extraordinary in nature."

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I know that Sloane was a doctor and he was particularly interested in plants,

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-which had any sort of medicinal quality.

-Yes.

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-So if you see any, do let me know.

-Definitely, I will.

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'Since most 17th Century medicines came from plants,

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'it's not surprising that finding new species

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'was high on Sloane's agenda.'

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A-ha, here we go.

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-Smell it.

-Very pretty.

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Yeah. Taste it, if you want.

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Which end do I taste?

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That end, the cut end.

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That's ginger, isn't it?

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It's wild ginger.

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Interesting, because Sloane wrote quite a lot about wild ginger.

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He believed that ginger was very good for the stomach.

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I don't know about that. It's certainly good for sea sickness.

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If you were doing a two month voyage across the Atlantic, this would be useful.

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Sloane also claimed that wild ginger was good for treating cancers.

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I'm not sure about that either. Quite tasty though.

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Now, an interest in nature wasn't confined to collectors like Sloane.

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Because in nature, and particularly plants,

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lay the foundations of European imperial power.

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Trading vessels criss-crossed the globe, bringing home all sorts of natural produce,

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from tobacco and spices to tea and timber,

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the botanical booty was practically limitless.

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Even the ships, which carried the goods,

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were themselves made out of plants.

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There were trees for the framework, hemp provided the sails and ropes,

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and they used pine resin to produce pitch,

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which was used to waterproof the ships.

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What distinguished Sloane from most traders and plantation owners

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was an interest in all of nature. Not just plants but also animals.

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This interest would open the world's eyes to the beauty of God's creation

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and crucially to the puzzle of its incredible diversity.

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There aren't very many big animals here on Jamaica,

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but there are an awful lot of lizards and what Marlin

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is about to do is make a little noose I think, is that right?

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-Yes.

-And hopefully we'll capture a few lizards.

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Is this the sort of thing that Sloane might have used?

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Possibly, because this would be the most conventional method at that time.

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Just tight.

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What we've got to do now is persuade the lizard to stick its...

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-It's head inside. So we've got our noose.

-Very neat.

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A beautiful noose for catching lizards in the style of Hans Sloane.

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Where are we likely to find them, Marlin?

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Well, we can find some on the ground or even on trees.

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So, both looking on the ground and on trees is great.

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'It was this type of hands on approach...'

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I think there's one over here.

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'..that enabled Sloane to collect so many different specimens

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-'of Jamaican wildlife.'

-MICHAEL YELPS

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He jumped. I think he's gone.

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-Michael.

-Have you seen something?

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Yes. This one right, right there, do you see? Let's have a go.

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-Brilliant. Is he safe to hold?

-Yeah.

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Maybe a bit feisty. So I'm going to get the noose off of him.

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How many different species of lizards are there?

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There are many different species, over 20 different species.

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-I think we've done very well.

-Yeah.

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This book has illustrations of just some of the things that Sloane

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captured in Jamaica. A snake there.

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There's our friends, the lizards.

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I think the one I helped capture, is the one in the middle there.

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The book is just full of beautiful drawings.

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Birds, fishes...

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The thing is that Hans Sloane came to Jamaica not just to revel in its beauty,

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but to record everything he saw, which he did in enormous detail, so that other people who

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couldn't come here could enjoy and learn from what he had discovered.

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After 15 months on the island, Sloane returned to England.

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He brought back with him some 800 samples of flora and fauna,

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a fully grown crocodile and a recipe for drinking chocolate.

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Unlike many explorers who returned from the Americas with tall tales

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of giant sea serpents and men whose heads grow beneath their shoulders,

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Sloane returned with real data and real specimens.

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There was no reason as yet to think that all this diversity had anything to do with us.

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But it did unsettle traditional ideas of God's creation of the natural world.

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For people who believed that God had created the world

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and everything in it, permanent and perfect,

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this was also utterly bewildering.

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Why had God bothered to make so many small and apparently pointless variations on a theme?

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Why so many lizards? Why so many beetles?

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The questions started to come thick and fast.

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By the time Hans Sloane died in 1753, he had put together

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the world's greatest collection of natural objects.

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Most of which are still with us today.

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In front of me we have part of the Sloane Herbarium.

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There are many, many thousands of objects

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about 14,000 of these vegetable substances.

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Flowers, fruits, dried objects, which we can't press.

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'And with that there are about 270 bound volumes

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'with many, many thousands of specimens in.'

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So vast was Sloane's hoard of wonders

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that it was moved to a new type of institution

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beginning to appear across Europe.

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The national museum.

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Private collections, like Sloane's,

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could now be seen by a much wider audience.

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Bringing nature out of the wilderness and into the every day world.

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This new curiosity about life on earth

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would bring us closer to the question - how did we get here?

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It was fuelled by voyages of discovery and the money to be made from nature,

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by obsessive collectors, like Hans Sloane,

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who began to document nature's diversity.

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And by museums, where ordinary people could see it for themselves.

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And it now turned out that all this life also had a history, a rather rich one.

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Paris. Just after the French Revolution.

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Where the belief that God's creation was fixed and unchanging

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was about to be further undermined by a brilliant anatomist

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and a taste for new buildings.

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Paris is a city in love with its own beauty.

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Whatever events may have been dominating the headlines -

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the fall of the Bastille, the execution of the King,

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one thing has remained constant -

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the City's determination to build on its rich architectural heritage.

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Buildings began to appear, which were every bit as magnificent as their predecessors.

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'While others were added to.'

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'For example, the Louvre.

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'In the years following the Revolution, it grew

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'from a Bourbon palace into a museum large enough to house

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'France's rapidly expanding art collection.'

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But I'm less interested in what's in there than what's out here.

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And in particular this stuff - limestone.

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A rock which for centuries had been the mainstay of Parisian architecture.

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Now this limestone was hewn from a quarry that is very near to where I'm standing now.

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A hidden one, one that is down there.

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Deep beneath Paris lies an old network of stone quarries

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linked by hundreds of kilometres of connecting tunnels.

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Together they form a mirror image of the city above, right down to the street names.

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People began quarrying away underneath Paris in the middle ages.

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And they went on digging for hundreds of years.

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There should be a sign just over here.

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Yes, "3R."

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This is the old revolutionary calendar

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and it means three years after the start of the French Revolution.

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At that time, houses being built over my head

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would have contained limestone from quarries just like this one.

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Hello.

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-I'm Gilles. It's a pleasure to meet you.

-And you.

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I guess actually quarrying down here must have been pretty dangerous.

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It could be dangerous.

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It's the reason why quarrymen put this hand made pillar

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to protect them from falling roof, from collapse.

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Who actually dug these areas?

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It is specific to France when you are owner of the surface,

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you are owner of the underground until the centre of the earth.

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To the centre of the earth under French law?

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-Yeah, according to the French law.

-How interesting.

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'As more and more quarries were excavated,

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'people began to take a greater interest in the mysterious objects

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'they were finding embedded in the rock.'

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Ah, it's magical, isn't it? You can see there, a really clear shell.

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It must have been very strange for the workmen who first came

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down here when they realized they were looking at something which should be on the ocean floor.

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What they were looking at, of course, were fossils.

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For a long time, people had no idea what fossils really were.

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Some people claimed they'd come from the moon.

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Others that they were mud's unsuccessful attempt to turn into life.

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In fact, it wasn't until the end of the 18th Century

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that people fully appreciated they had once been living things.

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And this realization opened up a whole new window into the past.

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A past that was both ancient and unimaginably different.

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Here in France, many of those fossils

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ended up in the hands of a brilliant scientist.

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A man obsessed by old bones.

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His name was Georges Cuvier

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and he was widely regarded as the world's leading animal anatomist.

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There was barely an animal in existence

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whose remains hadn't come his way.

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There's a story about Cuvier, which I like, which I think really sums up the man.

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It's late at night and Cuvier has gone to bed...

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when one of his students dressed in a devil's costume bursts

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into his room and cries "Cuvier, Cuvier, I've come to eat you!"

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Cuvier opened one eye, calmly looked the student up and down and said,

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"All animals that have hooves and horns are herbivores -

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"you cannot eat me."

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Now the point is that Cuvier had realized

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that from a couple of features,

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you could work out the essential nature of any animal.

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This insight would lead Cuvier to propose a new, and to many minds,

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unthinkable story of life on earth.

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Now I'm no Cuvier, but I did train as a medical doctor

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and so I've seen a lot of bones, albeit human ones.

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In here I've got some fossil bones. I'm going to try and see if I can work out where they came from.

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Right. I think this is the end bit of the finger.

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But in this case is has a big claw attached.

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So I'm guessing this comes from a carnivore. I'm going to go and hunt carnivores.

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'By examining the form of any body part, Cuvier claimed

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'you could discover everything there was to know about its function.'

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It's a bit like a crocodile claw, but not really close enough.

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'And from its function, its likely source.'

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Bigger, but not bad. That's a dog.

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I think that's about right.

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I guess that this is from a hyena.

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Let's see if I'm right.

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No, close though, it's from a wolf apparently. Wolf.

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Cuvier was clearly better at this than me and this allowed him to

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identify many previously unknown fossils coming out of the ground.

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But also some remains that would have unsettling implications.

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One of the fossils that Cuvier was sent, was this one.

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It is, believe it or not, a giant tooth.

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You can tell that, because this is the enamel

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or biting layer over here.

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Now, the people who found this fossil

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were convinced it came from an elephant.

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But Cuvier had other ideas.

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The fossil I've got here is obviously much bigger

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than the elephant tooth you've got there,

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what other features did Cuvier notice were different?

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Well, you see the size of course, you are right.

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But, in this African elephant tooth

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you can see that the enamel is very different on the grinding surface.

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There are diamond enamel lamina.

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Here, there are parallel lamina

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and they are more numerous than in the African elephant.

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So there is a very important difference.

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We know that this tooth was coming from Russia

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and this tooth was called by Russians, the mammoth.

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-Ah, it's a mammoth.

-A mammoth.

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So he was able to look at this and go, "It's an elephant,

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"but a much bigger elephant,

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"and a very different, sort of a third species of elephant."

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The revelation that the mammoth was a species totally distinct

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from any living elephant was nothing compared to Cuvier's next bombshell.

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Cuvier thought long and hard about mammoths

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and he came to a surprising and radical conclusion.

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Now clearly, mammoths are enormous beasts yet no-one had ever seen one,

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which suggested that at some point in the past

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mammoths, all of them, must have gone extinct.

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And it wasn't just mammoths.

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Before long, hundreds of other strange looking fossils

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began to be identified as creatures that had mysteriously disappeared

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off the face of the earth.

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The claim that some animals that had once lived had gone extinct

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raised uncomfortable questions.

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If every creature in God's fixed universe had a place and a purpose,

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why had some died off?

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The suggestion that most of the creatures

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who had ever lived were now extinct was both baffling and disturbing.

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The only consolation was that this was still a history of life,

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which we humans were separate from.

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For now, the most pressing question raised by extinction was one of time.

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And whether this fossil record of long lost species was evidence

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that the earth was older, much older than previously believed.

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The 18th Century was the age of the experiment.

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There were experiments on light, liquids,

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gases,

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but also an experiment to establish the precise age of the earth.

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The man behind the experiment was Le Comte de Buffon.

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A fabulously wealthy French aristocrat, Buffon

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was the first person to seriously attempt to measure the age of the earth,

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and he did so using some metal balls, a pocket watch and a blacksmith's forge.

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-Good morning, Brian.

-Good morning.

-Hi there, I'm Michael Mosley.

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-Hello, Michael.

-I have a present for you.

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Two metal balls. I think you know what to do with them.

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You might imagine that back in Buffon's day, most people believed

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that the world was created in six days and was 6,000 years old.

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In fact, a lot of people, including many clerics,

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did not take the Bible that literally.

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Buffon was not unusual in suspecting that the earth might be very old.

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Where he was unusual was he was prepared to do an experiment to find out just how old.

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Right, anything I can do?

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Give it a nice long stroke, just slow, straight down.

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How long will it actually take to heat up to red hot?

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Probably the best part of an hour looking at the size of the ball.

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The experiment was actually based on a suggestion by Sir Isaac Newton.

0:26:490:26:54

He said imagine the world had started off as a red, hot piece of iron.

0:26:540:26:59

If you could work out how long it had taken to cool

0:26:590:27:02

from that state to the present state,

0:27:020:27:04

then you could work out just how old the earth really is.

0:27:040:27:08

By timing how long it took for different size balls to cool down,

0:27:110:27:16

Buffon was confident he could extrapolate his figures

0:27:160:27:19

and establish how long it had taken the earth to reach a similar state.

0:27:190:27:25

Do you reckon they're ready yet, Brian?

0:27:250:27:27

Well, they're well up to temperature, yes.

0:27:270:27:29

It's hot, isn't it?

0:27:290:27:31

I'm trying to avoid dropping this on my toes.

0:27:310:27:35

Take that down there.

0:27:350:27:37

Brilliant. I've got my pocket watch here now.

0:27:390:27:42

So, how long do you think before we can actually touch them?

0:27:420:27:45

Looking at least 25 minutes or even longer for the small one.

0:27:450:27:49

The larger ones much more mass, probably an hour.

0:27:490:27:53

'A little later and I'm finally ready to start to plot my graph,

0:28:010:28:06

'extrapolating my timings for the two balls,

0:28:060:28:10

'to allow for the much bigger diameter of the earth.'

0:28:100:28:14

Right. Now for the age of the earth using Buffon's method.

0:28:140:28:19

I calculate the age of the earth at 92,000 years.

0:28:190:28:25

And Buffon, well, he said it was a suspiciously accurate

0:28:250:28:29

74,832 years old.

0:28:290:28:35

As we now know, both these figures are in fact way out.

0:28:350:28:41

Wildly inaccurate though Buffon's method was,

0:28:430:28:47

it would be churlish to let that detract from his legacy.

0:28:470:28:51

The important point is, that by doing the experiments

0:28:540:28:57

and by publishing the results, Buffon sparked a debate.

0:28:570:29:01

Not just about how old the earth actually is,

0:29:010:29:05

but how and why every creature on earth came into being.

0:29:050:29:09

A debate that would now be intensified

0:29:100:29:14

by a new way of looking at the world.

0:29:140:29:17

Standing between northern and southern Europe

0:29:250:29:28

is one of the world's most formidable natural barriers -

0:29:280:29:32

the Alps.

0:29:320:29:34

Even as late as the mid 18th Century,

0:29:340:29:36

no-one had yet climbed this region's highest peak -

0:29:360:29:40

Mont Blanc.

0:29:400:29:42

In 1760, a young Swiss aristocrat called Horace Benedict de Saussure

0:29:530:30:00

came to the small Alpine village of Chamonix, in the foothills of Mont Blanc.

0:30:000:30:05

Now, he came originally to collect plants. But he soon became so enchanted by the mountain

0:30:050:30:11

that he offered a reward to the first person who could climb it.

0:30:110:30:14

Despite many attempts,

0:30:200:30:22

it was 26 years before anyone managed to reach the summit.

0:30:220:30:26

de Saussure himself got to the top a year later.

0:30:290:30:33

But de Saussure was much more than a rich man with a passion for extreme sports.

0:30:350:30:41

For once he'd climbed Mont Blanc, he proceeded to carry out a series

0:30:410:30:45

of experiments to discover much more about the mountain.

0:30:450:30:50

Going to remote places and getting your hands dirty was a new way

0:30:500:30:55

of trying to understand the processes which shaped the earth.

0:30:550:30:59

And de Saussure gave it a name...

0:30:590:31:01

geology.

0:31:010:31:02

With its emphasis on direct observation

0:31:040:31:07

this new way of looking at the earth would play a vital role

0:31:070:31:11

in unravelling not just the mysteries of the planet,

0:31:110:31:13

but also the entire history of life on earth including ours.

0:31:130:31:20

All across Europe practically dressed men

0:31:260:31:30

armed with small hammers headed off into the countryside

0:31:300:31:34

in search of the earth's hidden secrets.

0:31:340:31:37

Driven by an intense curiosity

0:31:390:31:41

that would have surprised their predecessors,

0:31:410:31:45

they began to notice a number of strange anomalies in the landscape.

0:31:450:31:50

I've come here to the east coast of Scotland

0:31:500:31:53

to a place called Siccar Point.

0:31:530:31:54

It is wild, windy and rather beautiful.

0:31:540:31:58

And just down there is something truly remarkable, something which an early

0:31:580:32:02

geologist who came here described as like looking into the abyss of time.

0:32:020:32:07

This is what I've come to see and it is very strange indeed.

0:32:240:32:28

It's called an unconformity.

0:32:280:32:31

What you have down there is layers of rock that appear to be laid down vertically.

0:32:310:32:36

And then just above them a layer of red sandstone, which appears to have been laid down horizontally.

0:32:360:32:43

But as odd as this may seem,

0:32:480:32:50

to some there appeared to be a startling explanation.

0:32:500:32:54

This layer of rock looks as though it was laid down vertically.

0:32:570:33:01

But at some point in the past it must have been at the bottom of the ocean

0:33:010:33:05

and formed horizontally by layer after layer of sediment.

0:33:050:33:09

Then the whole thing rose to the surface, was flipped

0:33:090:33:12

through 90 degrees and sank to the bottom of the seas again.

0:33:120:33:16

There another layer formed,

0:33:160:33:19

until finally the whole thing rose to the surface once again.

0:33:190:33:24

All these processes are extremely slow and all this implied

0:33:280:33:34

that the earth is incredibly old - practically eternal.

0:33:340:33:38

And it wasn't just Siccar Point.

0:33:420:33:46

The evidence for slow change was everywhere.

0:33:460:33:48

Geologists looked at waterfalls and saw how the constant

0:33:500:33:54

flow of water had gradually eroded the surrounding rock.

0:33:540:33:58

They saw how rain had inexorably worn away the tops of mountains.

0:34:010:34:06

And how the slow movement of glaciers

0:34:080:34:11

had carved out entire valleys.

0:34:110:34:14

They came to realize that the single most important factor

0:34:180:34:22

in why the world looks the way it does

0:34:220:34:25

was time and lots of it.

0:34:250:34:29

The moment that people first began to think in terms of deep time

0:34:330:34:37

is one of the most significant in the history of science.

0:34:370:34:40

It would go on to profoundly affect how people see themselves.

0:34:400:34:44

But trying to grasp deep time is extremely difficult, because it is so different to human time.

0:34:440:34:49

So you have to rely on analogies.

0:34:490:34:52

One of my favourites is to imagine the age of the earth as a length from my shoulder to my finger tips.

0:34:520:34:59

On that scale, the whole of human history, everything we've achieved in the last few thousand years

0:34:590:35:06

would be wiped away by the single swipe of a nail file.

0:35:060:35:11

So, why did this concept of deep time take root now?

0:35:130:35:17

There was the expansion of quarrying and mining exposing more of the hidden earth.

0:35:190:35:24

The fossils of extinct creatures that were being uncovered.

0:35:250:35:29

And the emergence of geology - a new scientific view of the planet.

0:35:310:35:36

Finally, the pieces were in place to try and answer the question - how did WE get here?

0:35:390:35:45

The industrial revolution was a time of rapid, dizzying change.

0:35:520:35:58

Great industrial cities spread across Victorian Britain,

0:35:580:36:03

their factories drawing in workers from far and wide.

0:36:030:36:09

New railways snaked across the landscape cutting journey times

0:36:090:36:14

and bringing cheap goods to the masses.

0:36:140:36:18

'It was a whirlwind of new ideas, new methods

0:36:200:36:25

'and all of it in the name of progress.'

0:36:250:36:29

Belief in progress was one of the defining characteristics of the Victorian age.

0:36:310:36:36

Factory owners from humble origins had country houses, even seats in Parliament.

0:36:360:36:42

Britain was the leading industrial country in the world thanks to the ingenuity of her people.

0:36:420:36:48

It was out of this belief in progress that a radical theory

0:36:570:37:00

of how WE got here exploded onto the scene.

0:37:000:37:04

The theory proposed that not only were societies and nations

0:37:110:37:15

capable of progressive change, but also nature.

0:37:150:37:19

In 1844, this slim, rather ordinary looking book was first published

0:37:380:37:42

and it swiftly became one of THE most controversial books

0:37:420:37:46

of the Victorian age.

0:37:460:37:48

It was a literary sensation selling tens of thousands of copies

0:37:480:37:52

and it was read by everyone of influence from the Queen downwards.

0:37:520:37:56

Adding to its mystique was the fact that its author made strenuous

0:37:560:38:00

efforts throughout his lifetime to remain strictly anonymous.

0:38:000:38:05

The author was a Scotsman -

0:38:090:38:12

Robert Chambers.

0:38:120:38:14

Robert Chambers was born with six fingers and six toes.

0:38:150:38:20

When was young he had an operation to get rid of the extra digits,

0:38:200:38:23

which unfortunately went wrong.

0:38:230:38:25

Self conscious, Robert now immersed himself in the world of print.

0:38:250:38:30

Few changes embodied the Victorian ideal of progress

0:38:340:38:39

as much as the 19th Century transformation of the print industry.

0:38:390:38:43

The steam-powered printing press ushered in a new age of cheap,

0:38:430:38:49

mass-produced books creating a hunger for knowledge right across society.

0:38:490:38:53

In response to this demand,

0:38:580:39:00

Robert Chambers helped his brother set up a successful publishing firm,

0:39:000:39:05

while still leaving enough time to devote to his first love -

0:39:050:39:09

writing.

0:39:090:39:12

Robert Chambers was not a very original thinker but he was well read.

0:39:120:39:17

His writing was clear, vivid and above all thought provoking.

0:39:170:39:21

It was these qualities plus the fact that he had an insider's knowledge

0:39:210:39:26

of the publishing industry, which ensured his book was a huge success.

0:39:260:39:31

Chambers called it Vestiges Of The Natural History Of Creation

0:39:310:39:37

and in it he presented a compelling case

0:39:370:39:40

for the notion that species are not fixed - they change.

0:39:400:39:45

That everything had developed from an earlier form.

0:39:480:39:52

He called this concept transmutation.

0:39:530:39:56

We call it evolution.

0:39:560:40:00

Evolution emerged out of a world of progress, a conviction that

0:40:040:40:10

all things are capable of change, of improvement.

0:40:100:40:14

A history of life that was as diverse as it was baffling.

0:40:140:40:20

And a realization that the earth was almost immeasurably old.

0:40:200:40:24

But the real significance of evolution to this story is that

0:40:260:40:30

it now forced people to confront the uncomfortable question -

0:40:300:40:34

how did we get here?

0:40:340:40:36

Chambers was not the first person to write about evolution,

0:40:390:40:42

but he did take the argument further than others had.

0:40:420:40:45

Instead of being set apart from the rest of creation,

0:40:450:40:48

Chambers was saying we were simply an extension of it.

0:40:480:40:52

No wonder he wanted to remain anonymous.

0:40:520:40:55

SCREAMING

0:40:570:40:58

For a society where people fervently believed that

0:40:590:41:03

humans had a special place in God's creation,

0:41:030:41:06

the claim we were descended from animals was deeply shocking.

0:41:060:41:11

And so the backlash began.

0:41:120:41:15

There were attacks from the scientific community

0:41:160:41:19

on the book's accuracy.

0:41:190:41:22

And from the clergy for undermining moral and social order.

0:41:220:41:28

One particularly scathing review described it as,

0:41:300:41:33

"not merely shallow and superficial, but utterly false throughout."

0:41:330:41:37

Harsh. But despite the controversy,

0:41:370:41:40

or let's face it probably because of it,

0:41:400:41:42

the public simply couldn't get enough of this book.

0:41:420:41:46

For all its success, what Chambers' book didn't do

0:41:490:41:53

was come up with an explanation of how evolution happens.

0:41:530:41:57

The man who answered that question was, of course, Charles Darwin.

0:42:010:42:06

A keen geologist and an ardent believer in the earth's antiquity,

0:42:100:42:14

Darwin had been working on his own theory of evolution

0:42:140:42:17

for several years when Vestiges first appeared.

0:42:170:42:20

But, it would be a further 15 years, by which time much of the fuss

0:42:230:42:29

surrounding evolution had died down, before Darwin felt ready to publish.

0:42:290:42:34

His explanation for how animals evolved had its roots in

0:42:430:42:47

the same industrial landscape from which Chambers' book had emerged.

0:42:470:42:52

According to Darwin, life was one long struggle for survival.

0:43:040:43:08

And just as within the cotton industry,

0:43:080:43:10

there was competition between manufacturers,

0:43:100:43:13

so in nature there was competition between and amongst species.

0:43:130:43:17

Just as new technology might give one factory an edge over another,

0:43:190:43:24

so it was in nature.

0:43:240:43:27

Any new trait that gave an organism an edge over its rival would prevail

0:43:290:43:35

and become more common in later generations.

0:43:350:43:39

Gradually giving rise to the appearance of new species.

0:43:390:43:45

A mechanism for change that Darwin called Natural Selection.

0:43:480:43:54

Darwin's followers must have hoped that his theory of Natural Selection

0:43:570:44:02

would help answer the question - how did we get here?

0:44:020:44:05

But there were holes in the theory.

0:44:050:44:07

Although Darwin acknowledged the critical importance of the environment on driving evolution,

0:44:070:44:13

he never fully grasped the incredible extent

0:44:130:44:16

to which life on earth is shaped by changes in our violent planet.

0:44:160:44:20

Something which has only relatively recently come to light.

0:44:200:44:24

While biology raced ahead in the early 20th Century,

0:44:300:44:34

geology had more or less settled into a routine.

0:44:340:44:38

Stones were dated,

0:44:380:44:40

fossils examined, collections expanded.

0:44:400:44:44

But, as so often happens in the story of science,

0:44:450:44:48

it's the non-specialists, the enthusiasts who shake things up.

0:44:480:44:53

One such enthusiast was Alfred Wegener.

0:44:540:44:57

He was a German meteorologist, a weather man,

0:44:570:45:00

and with his brother, he held a world record for ballooning.

0:45:000:45:03

He was not, however, a trained geologist.

0:45:030:45:06

But that didn't put him off proposing a radical

0:45:060:45:09

and controversial new theory about the forces that shaped the earth.

0:45:090:45:14

Forces so powerful as to have shaped even life itself.

0:45:140:45:19

The story goes the Wegner was looking at an atlas when he noticed something rather peculiar.

0:45:220:45:29

Take a map of the world, a pair of scissors and cut your way down through Greenland

0:45:290:45:35

until you get to the cost of South America.

0:45:350:45:38

And then it requires a little bit more finesse

0:45:380:45:41

working away carefully around Brazil.

0:45:410:45:46

And then at the end, just slash away again.

0:45:460:45:49

If you move the coast of South America over to the coast

0:45:490:45:52

of Africa what you'll notice is that they seem to match very closely.

0:45:520:45:58

It's almost as if they were once joined.

0:45:580:46:00

Wegner noticed this, but he did nothing about it for around a year,

0:46:020:46:07

until he came across some fascinating fossil finds.

0:46:070:46:11

Take a look at this.

0:46:200:46:22

It's a fossilized leaf and it's about 250 million years old.

0:46:220:46:28

It came from a tree fern that is now extinct.

0:46:280:46:31

Now, the odd thing these tree ferns grew in the tropics

0:46:310:46:34

but these fossils have been found in cold, remote places like this one.

0:46:340:46:40

In fact, places even colder than here in Iceland.

0:46:400:46:44

So how was that possible?

0:46:440:46:47

Then, there were reptiles.

0:46:490:46:52

A particular species of reptile found in South America

0:46:520:46:55

but mysteriously matched by exactly the same species in Africa more than 7,000 kms away.

0:46:550:47:02

In attempting to explain these mysteries, Wegner would transform geology.

0:47:050:47:12

Science would have to embrace a new

0:47:120:47:15

and very different history of life on earth.

0:47:150:47:19

Wegner developed a theory that was logical, but also, on the surface, completely ludicrous.

0:47:220:47:29

He suggested that all the great seven continents had once been clumped together

0:47:290:47:34

into a single super continent that he called Pangaea meaning, "all lands".

0:47:340:47:39

And then Pangaea had simply split apart.

0:47:390:47:43

A process that Wegner attempted to illustrate.

0:47:450:47:48

Wegner compared the moving continents to the huge floating icebergs

0:47:560:48:00

he'd seen on his many field trips to Greenland.

0:48:000:48:04

But instead of blocks of ice weighing a few thousand tons,

0:48:060:48:09

he was talking about great slabs of rock weighing trillions of tons.

0:48:090:48:16

The problem for Wegner was nobody was buying his big idea.

0:48:160:48:21

To his eternal frustration, Wegner had no way to explain

0:48:220:48:27

how the slabs moved, no hard evidence to convince the sceptics.

0:48:270:48:33

One of Wegner's many critics described his ideas as "utter, damned rot."

0:48:330:48:39

And you can see why.

0:48:390:48:40

The idea that we are floating around seems preposterous.

0:48:400:48:45

And it didn't help that Wegner was an amateur geologist,

0:48:450:48:48

in many eyes, a jumped-up weather forecaster.

0:48:480:48:52

Wegner went back to meteorology and his theory was shelved

0:48:540:48:59

until a series of unexpected discoveries made during the height of the Cold War.

0:48:590:49:06

In the 1950s, as the Cold War intensified, the United States

0:49:100:49:15

and the Soviet Union found themselves engaged in a game of cat and mouse deep beneath the ocean.

0:49:150:49:22

A game that demanded a much more accurate picture of this underwater landscape.

0:49:250:49:30

And so the oceanographers set to work.

0:49:330:49:38

They began taking thousands of photographs of the ocean floor.

0:49:400:49:44

Echo soundings plotted the rise and fall of deep sea ridges...

0:49:480:49:54

..while drill rods were sent down to establish the composition of the sea bed.

0:49:560:50:02

But, in mapping the oceans, the scientists discovered something entirely unexpected.

0:50:040:50:11

They found that the sea floor didn't consists of one thick uniform crust,

0:50:130:50:19

as used to be thought, but a number of thin interlocking plates.

0:50:190:50:24

And that the boundaries to those plates featured mountain ranges...

0:50:260:50:31

..deep rift valleys...

0:50:340:50:37

..even volcanoes.

0:50:390:50:41

And this entire landscape was floating on a bed of molten rock constantly on the move.

0:50:470:50:55

And you can also see evidence of this on dry land.

0:51:040:51:09

I've come to Thingvellir in Iceland, one of the wonders of the world.

0:51:120:51:16

It is one of the few places on earth

0:51:160:51:19

that you can actually see with your own eyes

0:51:190:51:21

the joins in our patchwork planet.

0:51:210:51:24

This may look like an ordinary cliff edge, but it's actually the start of an enormous great slab of rock

0:51:420:51:48

which extends all the way from here in Iceland,

0:51:480:51:50

across the Atlantic Ocean, across North America to the Pacific Ocean.

0:51:500:51:55

It is called the North American Plate.

0:51:550:51:57

And just over there, well, that is the beginning of another enormous plate.

0:51:570:52:03

It is called the Eurasian Plate, and it extends all the way from here to Shanghai.

0:52:030:52:09

Now, if I was to stand here long enough, say, a few thousand years,

0:52:120:52:18

I'd notice the gap between me and Eurasia was getting wider.

0:52:180:52:25

Scientists have measured this movement.

0:52:250:52:27

It ranges from a very gradual seven millimetres a year here at Thingvellir,

0:52:270:52:34

to almost ten centimetres a year elsewhere.

0:52:340:52:38

Over hundreds of millions of years,

0:52:380:52:40

this shifting of the earth's plates has transformed the face of our planet,

0:52:400:52:46

a never-ending cycle of change that Wegner had called continental drift.

0:52:460:52:51

Sadly, Wegner didn't live long enough to see his theory vindicated.

0:52:540:52:58

In 1930, he went on an expedition to Greenland.

0:52:580:53:02

There, in temperatures of minus 60, he died of cold and exhaustion.

0:53:020:53:06

He was buried on the ice.

0:53:060:53:09

Because of continental drift, his body is now two metres further away from home.

0:53:090:53:15

But continental drift has done much more than shape the earth.

0:53:220:53:28

By showing how a fossilised tree fern could travel all the way from the tropics to the ice,

0:53:280:53:34

or why it is that a single species of reptile can be found on what are now two widely separated continents.

0:53:340:53:42

The theory also takes us closer to solving the mystery of how we got here.

0:53:420:53:48

And that's because when the earth moves in this way, the results can also be incredibly violent.

0:53:530:54:01

When the earth's plates collide...

0:54:010:54:04

..they can trigger volcanic eruptions so powerful as to block out the sun for months on end.

0:54:060:54:13

As those same plates grind against each other,

0:54:180:54:21

so they cause devastating earthquakes...

0:54:210:54:26

..which themselves can spawn mega-tsunamis, that destroy everything in their way.

0:54:280:54:35

While it's easy to imagine that all this violent upheaval

0:54:390:54:43

brought with it nothing but death and destruction, the truth is very different.

0:54:430:54:49

It's now clear that throughout our four and half billion year history,

0:54:490:54:53

the balance of our planet has been absolutely central to the creation of new life.

0:54:530:54:59

Because, every time our planet experiences violent change,

0:55:050:55:11

a new opportunity for life opens up...

0:55:110:55:14

..making continental drift one of the great drivers of evolution.

0:55:160:55:22

And here are just a couple of ways it has changed life on earth.

0:55:220:55:27

Some 30 million years ago,

0:55:290:55:31

the plate boundary separating Africa from Arabia began to pull apart,

0:55:310:55:37

causing the land in between to fall away.

0:55:370:55:41

A 5,000 km gash in the earth's crust,

0:55:440:55:46

that we know as the East African Rift Valley.

0:55:460:55:50

As a new landscape of broken savannah formed,

0:55:550:55:58

it allowed the ancestors of many today's animals to gain a foothold, and to flourish.

0:55:580:56:05

And then there is climate change, when continental drift has also played a major role...

0:56:140:56:19

..not least by accelerating the onset of ice ages,

0:56:210:56:25

by pushing land towards the poles, and altering the flow of ocean currents.

0:56:250:56:30

Changes which have forced animals to adapt in the most remarkable of ways.

0:56:350:56:40

And, just occasionally, we're subjected to violence...

0:56:420:56:48

..from beyond our planet,

0:56:500:56:53

so extreme, that many species are wiped out altogether...

0:56:530:56:59

..only for others to take their place.

0:57:010:57:05

And so, what of us?

0:57:110:57:15

How did we get here?

0:57:150:57:17

Well, we are just the latest in a long line of lucky survivors,

0:57:180:57:24

born out of death, destruction, and the immensity of deep time.

0:57:240:57:29

And if this great experiment that is life on earth

0:57:320:57:37

were to be run again...

0:57:370:57:38

..we might never even show up.

0:57:440:57:46

It's now clear that the story of life, and the story of our planet,

0:57:530:57:58

which were once seen as separate, are actually intrinsically linked.

0:57:580:58:01

The evolution of new life has been driven by climate change,

0:58:010:58:05

by asteroid impacts, and by the slow-motion collision of continents.

0:58:050:58:11

It turns out that we and every other living creature

0:58:110:58:16

are marching to the drum beat of our violent planet.

0:58:160:58:20

Next time, an ancient human ambition...

0:58:400:58:45

the search for limitless power.

0:58:450:58:48

Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:59:030:59:06

E-mail [email protected]

0:59:060:59:09

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