Episode 3 World's Weirdest Events


Episode 3

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Let's face it, our world is downright weird.

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MAN YELLS

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Crawling with creatures you've never heard of...

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I can't believe that's a living thing.

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..full of the unexpected.

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Like freak weather exploding out of the blue...

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I thought I was going to die.

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..and rocks that spontaneously combust...

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I thought that was dynamite going off.

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..and the unexplained.

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An unborn twin discovered inside a brain!

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There was multiple hair follicles, bone and teeth.

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We've scoured the globe to bring you the very weirdest stories.

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MAN YELLS

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I could feel this intense pain,

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as if you were being stabbed by hundreds of syringes.

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In this series, we're going to examine the evidence,

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test the science and unravel the mysteries.

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We're going to discover what in the weird world is going on.

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In this episode,

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we expose the bizarre truth behind some of the world's weirdest mysteries.

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Can you actually get drunk without drinking a drop?

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HE EXHALES

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And what exactly causes this surfer's illuminating ride?

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What on Earth could possibly make the jungle glow green?

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I had never seen anything like this before.

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This was just totally new.

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And, in a change of tune, has this pop band cracked

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the code to the ultimate hit, written in liquid DNA?

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If we sell one little vial

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of our new album as DNA,

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we will have the highest-selling album of all time.

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In the summer of 2014,

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Europe was having a scorcher. A heatwave swept across

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the Continent. But what's really weird is that in Siberia, close to the Arctic Circle,

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it was even hotter.

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Now, Siberia's probably not a place that springs to mind when you think of balmy

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beach holidays, but away from the cold, dark winters, that's exactly what you can get.

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Summer 2014, temperatures soar to a whopping 40 degrees

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and the locals head to the banks of the River Ob to soak up the sun.

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But all of a sudden, everything changes.

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The winds pick up

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and beach-goers notice the air cooling...and cooling fast.

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In a matter of minutes, laughter turns to screams.

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Bullet-like ice replaces the blazing sun.

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An apocalyptic scene soon unfurls.

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Massive hailstones relentlessly raining down on horrified bathers.

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The locals rapidly have to deal with this terrifying onslaught,

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wearing nothing more than their swimwear.

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For more than a quarter of an hour,

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a powerful freak hailstorm pelts petrified sun worshippers.

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Their only escape? Sheltering under airbeds, towels and umbrellas.

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What on Earth was going on?

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Siberian weather is renowned for being extreme.

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The temperature can get down to minus 20 on regular occasions during the winter,

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but I guess less is known about the summer conditions.

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Typical temperature during daytime summer would be high 20s,

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but on this particular occasion in July 2014,

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the temperature had started to reach the low 40s -

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41 degrees, extreme heat in the middle of the continent.

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And then suddenly, the clouds built, grey, leaden skies. The temperature

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fell from 41 degrees down to 25 in just the space of ten or 15 minutes.

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So, what caused this ice storm of such Biblical proportions?

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Well, it was all down to a peculiar and potentially lethal

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set of circumstances.

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You see, for days, the unseasonable Siberian sun had

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been beating down on that sand.

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When the hot air began to rise, it met

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some exceptionally cold air that had come in from the mountains.

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That was a deadly cocktail for the perfect storm.

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Let's examine the evidence.

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Now, hail is pretty simple stuff.

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It starts life as water droplets. Cold conditions cause them

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to freeze inside clouds

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and when they become too heavy, they fall to Earth.

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But these hailstones were different.

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Typically, hailstones are about the size of a pea, maybe about 1cm

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across, but on this occasion, they were about the size of a golf ball.

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So, what made Siberia's hailstones so big?

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Well, it was all to do with that freakish heatwave.

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Normally, when a hailstone reaches this size,

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the forces of gravity come into play and it falls to the ground.

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But in this rising column of hot air,

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the hailstones were held up in that super-cool cloud

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where they bumped into other

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water particles, which stuck to them until they grew

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and grew and grew

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into monstrous chunks of ice

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this size!

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Then of course, eventually, gravity did do its work.

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And all HAIL broke loose.

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For small-size hailstones,

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they may hit the ground at about 20mph,

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but the larger hailstones - the hailstones we're looking at here -

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probably reached the ground at about 110mph.

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If you're hit by a hailstone at that size, at that speed, well,

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it can cause severe consequences.

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Cold downdraughts add to the process of acceleration.

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At these speeds, a hailstone becomes a deadly weapon,

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powerful enough to smash through toughened glass,

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as this man discovered

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when a scenic drive through Spain nearly cost him his life.

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It seems our Siberian sunbathers had a lucky escape.

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OK, so the cold can be a killer, but could it also, bizarrely,

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hold the key to unlocking one of the greatest

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medical mysteries of the 21st century?

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Creatures around our planet have adapted to living in some

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particularly cold environments. Temperatures so low,

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your blood would, literally, freeze in your veins.

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Take the wood frog. In winter, its blood does freeze in its veins.

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But, come spring, it's able to thaw out

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and bounce back to life as if nothing ever happened.

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Or the red-sided garter snake.

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It produces antifreeze that protects its major

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organs for several hours at a time.

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But there's one animal whose survival skills surpass all others.

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The Arctic ground squirrel.

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Yes, this seemingly unremarkable rodent is very special indeed.

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This species of squirrel employs a remarkable strategy

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and it's actually one which might help us.

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For this tiny mammal,

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the best way to survive the big freeze is a mega sleep.

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For eight months each year, these ground-dwellers hibernate.

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No surprise there, really.

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Lots of animals hunker down over winter,

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but for the ground squirrel this is no ordinary hibernation.

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One day in early August, they'll retreat into their burrow,

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pull their tail over their head and they'll fall asleep.

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But what's unusual about the Arctic ground squirrel - in fact, unique -

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is that it can drop to the lowest body temperature of any

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mammal on Earth, to minus-three degrees Celsius.

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Should be frozen but isn't.

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But the squirrel's body is 50-70% water,

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so how does it stop from becoming a furry ice pop?

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Well, there's some very weird science going on inside

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the Arctic ground squirrel.

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Let's compare this super squirrel to a raspberry and a cucumber.

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They're made up of a similar percentage of water.

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When they freeze, ice crystals form.

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As the water becomes ice, it expands into sharp-edged crystals,

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which puncture the cell walls of the fruit.

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When they defrost, these cell walls collapse

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and the fruit turns to mush.

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But the squirrel comes out of hibernation completely unscathed.

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You see, it's got a means of protecting its cells from damage,

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a technique called super-cooling.

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Super-cooling - what does that mean?

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Well, the blood in this curious critter acts

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just like the water in this bottle.

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Although liquid in appearance, it's actually well below freezing,

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around minus-six to minus-eight degrees Celsius,

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and it's still fluid.

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It should be solid ice, but it isn't.

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Just like the hibernating squirrel's blood.

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Once their blood drops below the freezing point, it should freeze,

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but in fact, liquids don't

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unless they're in the presence of what's called an ice nucleator.

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Water needs an

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ice nucleator to start the freezing off, it acts as a template for ice.

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The trick of the super-cool water is that it's super-pure.

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There are no tiny impurities - what we call nucleators -

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that ice crystals need to grab on to in order to grow.

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Lots of things can act as a nucleator -

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a simple speck of dust, or even tiny bubbles.

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By hitting this bottle on a hard surface, we create bubbles.

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And that kick starts ice crystals to form around them.

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And right in front of our eyes,

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a bottle of water transforms into a solid block of ice.

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But why doesn't this happen inside the ground squirrel?

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What these Arctic ground squirrels seem to do is

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cleanse their bodies and their blood of would-be ice nucleators

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and that allows them to reach this super-cool state,

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this lowest temperature that no other animal does.

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So, the ground squirrel's blood has evolved to be pure.

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If it had any impurities at all, it would freeze and eventually die.

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And that's what stops the hibernating squirrel

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from turning into a slush puppy.

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Remember I told you that these chaps could hold the key to solving

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a great medical mystery?

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Scientists have already discovered another amazing string to the

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Arctic ground squirrel's already impressive bow.

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Its brain.

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When a ground squirrel goes into torpor,

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its brain cools, of course, and the firing rate of the neurons,

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which is how we think, slows down,

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and in fact, when they're in their deepest torpid state,

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there's no electrical activity in their brain at all.

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The number of synapses and the connections between neurons

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is reduced - they actually pull apart -

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which in humans is known to be part of the disease of Alzheimer's.

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These ground squirrels, when they re-warm, they can reverse all of this.

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So, if we could understand how ground squirrels

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are able to reverse these symptoms that are

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irreversible in humans, it might help us cure Alzheimer's.

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So, super-cooling might be the key to preventing memory loss,

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which is great news, because we're all living that much longer

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and that's what we want - we want a long life with our memories intact.

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And, of course, youthful looks.

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Many of us humans will try all sorts of weird and exotic potions in our

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quest to stay looking young, with ingredients sourced from some pretty weird places,

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like snake venom, caviar and even, dare I say it, haemorrhoid cream.

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But perhaps we've been looking in the wrong place all the time.

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I give you the naked mole rat.

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No, really - the naked mole rat.

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Yes, this sabre-toothed, sausage-shaped creature spends

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its entire life in underground burrows with up to 300 mates

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in the arid regions of East Africa.

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Conditions in these subterranean burrows are quite extreme.

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Oxygen levels are incredibly low,

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carbon dioxide is high. It's hot, it's claustrophobic -

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it doesn't sound like the perfect recipe for a long and healthy life.

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Or does it?

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They can live up to 30 years,

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which is totally exceptional for a small rodent.

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Our naked mole rat guru

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has the inside track on these critters.

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So, that's nearly ten times longer than a mouse

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and about five times longer than you would predict from their body size.

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So, I guess if you compare a really old naked mole rat,

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it would be equivalent to a really old human of maybe 90 or 100,

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but without most of the signs of ageing.

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That's like someone in their 60s with the body of a 21-year-old.

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Normally, as humans and other mammals and animals age,

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we get predictable changes.

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We get muscle wasting, bones become weaker,

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blood vessels become less elastic.

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But it's been shown in naked mole rats that they resist those changes into their old age.

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You'd think that having the key to eternal life would be

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good enough for most of us. Probably so, but not for the naked mole rat.

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No, these remarkable little rodents have another amazing trait.

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They're actually cancer-resistant and the secret to that

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lies in the very thing that makes them look so weird.

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If I hold this one just by the scruff, which they are quite happy with,

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you can see how stretchy the skin is there.

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This really loose skin is a good adaptation

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to living underground in tight tunnels and tight situations

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with a lot of other individuals.

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That helps them avoid getting stuck. But this stretchy skin

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is a result of a gloopy substance that only naked mole rats

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appear to produce. It's known as high molecular weight hyaluronan.

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In fact, this substance is known to give them their cancer resistance.

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Now scientists are delving deep into this gloopy substance,

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trying to copy its extraordinary anti-cancer powers.

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So, maybe the old naked mole rat's subterranean secret will help us

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live longer, healthier lives.

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They are quite ugly little spuds but they are really amazing, yes.

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So, the old naked mole rat could help prevent the wear

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and tear of the ageing process.

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But, of course, our bodies are not the only thing we want to maintain.

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What if I were to tell you that we could preserve everything on our

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planet for ever,

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and that the secret lies in a very unexpected place?

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Meet OK Go.

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A pop band with futuristic ideas.

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# I won't let you down No, I won't let you down... #

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A quirky quartet with more than 200 million views on YouTube.

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# ..I won't let you down No, I won't let you down... #

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Known for their wildly entertaining music videos...

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# ..Nikki, she's got no flag to fly... #

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..these arty musos are at the top of their musical game.

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But for frontman Damian Kulash,

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living in an age of cutting-edge technology has its pitfalls.

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I recorded music 15-20 years ago in college that

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I can't play any more.

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I can't find the right DAT machine, or the right ADAT machine,

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or the right 16-track digital machine

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that looked like it was the future then and now I can't even find one

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to play these tapes on, and that's only 15 years.

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But a chance meeting with a biochemist in 2012 meant

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that Damian would never, ever think about music

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in the same way again.

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I met Sri Kosuri, who was at Harvard at the time.

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We were both speaking at a storytelling conference

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and I learned of his work coding text.

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He'd done a book at that time.

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Amazingly, Kosuri had converted the entire contents of a book to DNA.

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53,000 words stored artificially using genetic material.

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If you can do text as DNA, you can do any data as DNA,

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and immediately, the first thing I thought was,

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"I want my music to be made of DNA!"

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Now, music and books stored in the building blocks of life? Hold on.

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Our bodies are basically the hardware

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and the software is essentially DNA.

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It builds the hardware as it goes.

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Your DNA is just a long code.

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Operating off that model, we can take pieces of DNA

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and put any data we want in there.

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For instance, our band is releasing our album on DNA.

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The same ones and zeroes that would be on the CD version will be on tiny,

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tiny pieces of DNA.

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It sounds complicated, doesn't it, but let me try and explain.

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You see, digital information, such as music, is stored in binary code.

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It's got two units. It's got a zero and a one.

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Well, DNA is a coded mechanism too. It doesn't have two units,

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it has four -

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G, C, T and A.

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They're not notes, of course, they're chemical compounds.

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But if we can store digital information using two units,

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we can also store it using four.

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It might be a bit more difficult, but it works.

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Using computer software, scientists can translate those ones and zeros

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into a code for DNA.

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For example, zeros become As and Ts and ones become Cs and Gs.

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Essentially, going from a long list of numbers, that's music,

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to a long list of letters, DNA.

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That's all we do, is make data. We make music, we make videos,

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we make art of all sorts, but it always comes out as ones and zeros,

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and those ones and zeros could be on DNA and that's just awesome.

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When songsmith Damian met Kosuri, they made beautiful molecular

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music together.

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Now DNA data is set to become all the rage.

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In theory, if we sell one little vial of our new album as DNA,

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we will have sold trillions and trillions of copies,

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which, I think, will make it the highest-selling album of all time.

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Only one person will have all those copies, and they'd need

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a lab to be able to read them, but, hey, technicalities.

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Yes, technicalities.

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So, using DNA for albums might still be in its infancy,

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but whilst Damian's looking to DNA for music,

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scientists have their eyes on a bigger prize -

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storing all human knowledge.

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Yes, scientists reckon every bit of information in the world right now -

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that's all of your photos, all of my photos, phone data, CDs, DVDs,

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computer hard drives, the World Wide Web,

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in fact, every last byte of data on the entire planet -

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could be stored, not on hard drives, but in little vials like this.

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And what's more, we could squeeze it all into the back

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of just one truck.

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Six zettabytes of information in one truck.

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You've got to admit, it's absolutely incredible!

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A freak hailstorm heralds an icy reign of terror for us,

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but thanks to its weird blood, the arctic ground squirrel

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doesn't fear the big freeze,

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and good genes allow the naked mole rat to live a long

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and healthy life, whilst DNA has another trick up its sleeve

0:23:550:24:00

that could help preserve all the world's data for ever.

0:24:000:24:05

Next, from an unanticipated intoxication,

0:24:170:24:21

to a surprising invasion.

0:24:210:24:24

First, watch this, because this guy swears that he hasn't

0:24:240:24:28

touched a drop.

0:24:280:24:30

Honest.

0:24:310:24:33

Why are you recording me?

0:24:330:24:35

Because I want to show this to the doctors.

0:24:350:24:37

Please tell me how you're feeling.

0:24:370:24:41

-What? Why are you recording me?

-Nick, I need you to focus.

0:24:440:24:50

HE EXHALES

0:24:530:24:55

Let's be frank. Nick Hess looks absolutely hammered,

0:24:560:25:00

but according to him, no alcohol has passed his lips.

0:25:000:25:02

His wife, Karen, wasn't convinced.

0:25:040:25:07

He started having mental confusion and he was slurring.

0:25:070:25:12

He was disorientated.

0:25:120:25:14

It was almost like he had had a couple of drinks, even though

0:25:140:25:16

we had spent the entire day together.

0:25:160:25:18

I decided, at that moment, I would go through the house and determine

0:25:180:25:21

if he was indeed hiding alcohol.

0:25:210:25:23

When she first accused me of being drunk without drinking, I thought

0:25:230:25:27

she was crazy, or she was just playing a joke on me,

0:25:270:25:30

or she was just not being serious.

0:25:300:25:33

I didn't believe it.

0:25:330:25:35

But Karen was serious and she wasn't alone.

0:25:350:25:38

Friends often thought that Nick was drunk.

0:25:380:25:41

Friends and family were kind of like, well, he's always a goofy,

0:25:410:25:45

party kind of guy anyway, so maybe he is over there drinking

0:25:450:25:49

by himself, or a secret alcoholic, or whatever.

0:25:490:25:54

Desperate for him to see his behaviour through other

0:25:540:25:56

people's eyes, Karen decided to film him in the act.

0:25:560:26:00

What do you feel like?

0:26:020:26:03

I feel like... I feel like I'm on some hard drug or something.

0:26:060:26:12

Have you had anything to drink?

0:26:120:26:15

Nothing.

0:26:150:26:17

When I first saw the video, I looked in my eyes in the video

0:26:180:26:21

and I could tell I wasn't there.

0:26:210:26:23

I didn't remember her taking the video and when I see

0:26:230:26:26

myself like that, I just...

0:26:260:26:28

It was terrifying. It was terrible to see yourself like that.

0:26:280:26:33

SLURRED SPEECH BLEEP!

0:26:330:26:36

He's sworn, he's gotten combative...

0:26:360:26:38

-Please.

-I need to do this.

0:26:380:26:41

..he's mooned me on camera. I mean, everything you can think of

0:26:410:26:45

that you would imagine someone who's had seven shots of whisky doing,

0:26:450:26:48

he's done.

0:26:480:26:49

Maybe something else was brewing here.

0:26:520:26:54

Because unbeknown to Nick and Karen, in Texas,

0:26:540:26:59

a similar story was playing out

0:26:590:27:02

and it was brought to the attention of Dr Barbara Cordell.

0:27:020:27:06

I had a friend in 2010, that came to me and he and his wife were very

0:27:060:27:13

concerned about some symptoms he was having.

0:27:130:27:16

It seemed like he was getting drunk without having drunk any alcohol.

0:27:160:27:21

But the weird thing was that Barbara's friend, Joe, was teetotal.

0:27:210:27:26

That's when I really started to research and try to figure out

0:27:260:27:29

what was going on with him.

0:27:290:27:30

Initially, we thought Joe was having some low blood sugar issues,

0:27:300:27:34

or that he was a diabetic, or that he maybe even was a closet drinker.

0:27:340:27:40

So, Barbara's patient had exactly the same symptoms as Nick.

0:27:400:27:45

But why?

0:27:450:27:46

In order to pin down Joe's specific diagnosis, we went to a doctor.

0:27:460:27:53

He actually hospitalised Joe for 24 hours and gave him

0:27:530:27:57

a high-carbohydrate diet.

0:27:570:27:59

He had no access to alcohol and that's

0:27:590:28:01

when the folks in the hospital saw Joe's blood alcohol level

0:28:010:28:06

increase on its own without any ingestion of alcohol.

0:28:060:28:09

What Barbara had discovered was that Nick

0:28:090:28:12

and Joe were suffering from a very rare syndrome called auto-brewery.

0:28:120:28:17

But what's that?

0:28:170:28:19

Well, to find out, we have to examine how booze is made.

0:28:190:28:24

Take vodka, for instance.

0:28:280:28:29

One of its key ingredients is the potato, the ultimate carb.

0:28:290:28:34

Carbohydrates are essentially sugars and when you add yeast to them,

0:28:370:28:41

they ferment, producing alcohol.

0:28:410:28:42

Normally, our liver naturally stores most sugars,

0:28:450:28:49

but if there's too much, it gets into the intestine

0:28:490:28:53

and that's where Nick and Joe's guts differ from the rest of us.

0:28:530:28:58

Their intestines turn those carbohydrates

0:28:580:29:01

and yeasts into alcohol.

0:29:010:29:04

It's as if they've got their own little distillery in their bellies.

0:29:040:29:08

So, why doesn't this happen to all of us?

0:29:080:29:11

Well, there was something else going on in Nick's body.

0:29:150:29:18

I took a DNA culture test and when it came back,

0:29:190:29:24

I had 400% more yeast than anybody my doctor had ever seen.

0:29:240:29:29

And when all that yeast started dining out on all that sugar,

0:29:300:29:34

it produced the perfect conditions to make alcohol.

0:29:340:29:38

For Nick, it had brewed booze without him ever drinking a drop.

0:29:390:29:45

But having a microbrewery in your stomach isn't as much

0:29:450:29:48

fun as you might think.

0:29:480:29:50

For Nick, it was completely debilitating.

0:29:500:29:52

It was a daily routine. I'd wake up in the morning and I'd throw up,

0:29:550:29:58

from the moment I woke up to the moment I went to bed,

0:29:580:30:01

every single day.

0:30:010:30:02

I've watched people suffer with it and the most frightening

0:30:020:30:06

part of auto-brewery, is that it can come on at any time,

0:30:060:30:09

so, for example,

0:30:090:30:11

a person could be at work, or they could be driving, and it could

0:30:110:30:14

hit them suddenly and they would be so drunk

0:30:140:30:16

that they couldn't function,

0:30:160:30:18

and that's a terrifying prospect for the people who are going through it,

0:30:180:30:23

and the people who are watching their loved ones go through it.

0:30:230:30:26

He'll have good and bad days and on his really bad days,

0:30:260:30:29

it's very hard to... Sorry.

0:30:290:30:32

..it's very hard to watch.

0:30:340:30:36

But there is hope.

0:30:380:30:40

Now that doctors have worked out what's happening inside Nick's gut,

0:30:400:30:44

he's been put on a strict carb-free diet to eliminate foods

0:30:440:30:48

that break down to sugar, and by getting his yeast under control,

0:30:480:30:53

Nick is slowly getting back on much steadier feet.

0:30:530:30:57

Honestly, who'd have thought that such an innocent part

0:31:020:31:06

of our staple diet could lead to such dangerous intoxication?

0:31:060:31:10

But, you know, we're not the only ones at the top of a food chain

0:31:100:31:14

that are vulnerable to a deadly tonic.

0:31:140:31:17

4th October 1997.

0:31:210:31:25

A group of whale watchers out near the Farallon Islands,

0:31:250:31:28

close to San Francisco, chanced upon a surprising display.

0:31:280:31:32

We got a call from another fishing boat

0:31:320:31:35

and he said to our captain,

0:31:350:31:37

"Mick, get over to the islands.

0:31:370:31:38

"We just saw two killer whales kill a sea lion

0:31:380:31:42

"and they partly ate it."

0:31:420:31:43

Sightings were just virtually unknown that close to the islands for killer whales.

0:31:430:31:48

So, we headed over there very, very quickly

0:31:510:31:54

and saw the two killer whales.

0:31:540:31:55

But then research volunteer Mary Jane Schramm spotted

0:31:550:31:59

something else in the water.

0:31:590:32:02

Suddenly we saw a dark form

0:32:020:32:04

just going parallel to the whole of the boat, really hugging it

0:32:040:32:09

and moving almost directly toward where the killer whales were.

0:32:090:32:13

And it was a white shark, it was a good-sized animal, about 11 or 12 feet.

0:32:160:32:19

The ocean's deadliest hunters,

0:32:190:32:22

the great white and the killer whale,

0:32:220:32:24

so rarely seen together, were now about to collide.

0:32:240:32:29

What happened next would leave the onlookers stunned.

0:32:290:32:33

One of the killer whales stopped

0:32:330:32:35

and broke off and went on an intercept path

0:32:350:32:38

with the white shark, and they pretty much disappeared into the waves.

0:32:380:32:42

Everything after that point for the next 15 minutes was dead.

0:32:470:32:50

We had no indication what was going on.

0:32:500:32:53

We collectively were holding our breath to find out exactly how this drama would play out.

0:32:530:32:58

For 15 long minutes nothing but calm seas.

0:33:000:33:05

Unseen below, a clash of the titans.

0:33:050:33:09

All of a sudden, we saw a killer whale swimming directly back to the boat

0:33:110:33:15

with a white shark upside down in its mouth.

0:33:150:33:19

Oh, my God!

0:33:190:33:21

Astonishing!

0:33:210:33:22

The great white, the predator supreme, was dead,

0:33:220:33:26

chomped by the killer whale.

0:33:260:33:29

It swam directly to the boat

0:33:290:33:31

and it actually did a few laps with this dead shark in its mouth,

0:33:310:33:35

almost like victory laps, while we were watching,

0:33:350:33:38

not believing what we had just seen.

0:33:380:33:40

After a while, the other killer whale joined in

0:33:410:33:45

and they were dismembering the shark

0:33:450:33:47

and they were feeding on its liver.

0:33:470:33:49

Mary Jane had witnessed what appeared to be the first time

0:33:520:33:55

a great white shark had been taken out by another apex predator.

0:33:550:33:59

How did the orca overpower the great white?

0:34:030:34:06

After all, the shark has razor-sharp teeth

0:34:060:34:10

and the ultimate killer instinct.

0:34:100:34:13

But orcas are known for using their big brains

0:34:170:34:20

and their wily hunting methods to sneak up on unsuspecting seals on sand.

0:34:200:34:26

Or make waves to knock them into the water.

0:34:280:34:32

When it comes to great whites,

0:34:420:34:43

the orcas need to bring out their big guns.

0:34:430:34:47

In fact, they've developed a special tactic

0:34:470:34:50

which renders the great white defenceless.

0:34:500:34:53

This is just a baby lemon shark,

0:34:550:34:58

but most sharks will stop struggling

0:34:580:35:02

if they're turned upside down.

0:35:020:35:06

It sends them into a sort of a trance,

0:35:060:35:08

which scientists call tonic immobility.

0:35:080:35:12

The killer whale had exploited the Achilles heel of the great white -

0:35:140:35:18

turn it on its back and it goes into sleep mode.

0:35:180:35:21

In this relaxed state, the mighty shark

0:35:210:35:24

can't respond to an attack with its lethal teeth.

0:35:240:35:27

Hmm. It's a nifty trick.

0:35:270:35:29

So the orca, with its big brain,

0:35:310:35:33

put the great white into a state of tonic immobility

0:35:330:35:37

and then it held it there for 15 minutes,

0:35:370:35:40

and that is the clever part.

0:35:400:35:43

You see, sharks have to keep swimming in order to breathe.

0:35:430:35:47

So, by holding it upside down and still,

0:35:470:35:50

the orca was able to suffocate it.

0:35:500:35:53

To see it play out in this drama of life or death,

0:35:580:36:02

where a white shark is killed,

0:36:020:36:04

it was more than anybody could possibly have even imagined.

0:36:040:36:09

Nothing like that has ever been observed since then.

0:36:090:36:12

There you have it - the great white shark can be overcome

0:36:120:36:18

and killed without much of a fight.

0:36:180:36:20

The orca's secret superpower is all to do

0:36:230:36:26

with what's going on up here,

0:36:260:36:29

but, you know, there is another sea creature

0:36:290:36:32

which has a formidable, hidden strength.

0:36:320:36:35

Although, on the surface of it, I've got to say,

0:36:350:36:38

its credentials are not nearly so impressive.

0:36:380:36:41

It might be the size of a 50 pence piece, but scientists recently

0:36:430:36:48

discovered something truly amazing about the humble limpet.

0:36:480:36:53

It has a super strength like no other.

0:36:530:36:55

Now, if you've ever trodden on one of these molluscs in bare feet,

0:36:550:37:00

you'll know exactly how painfully hard their conical shells can be

0:37:000:37:04

and you'd be forgiven for thinking that's where their toughness lies.

0:37:040:37:09

But you'd be wrong.

0:37:110:37:13

So, if it's not the shell,

0:37:130:37:15

you might think it's the vice-like grip that it uses to

0:37:150:37:18

cling onto rocks as it battles against the ocean's currents.

0:37:180:37:22

But that's not where the limpet's super strength lies either.

0:37:230:37:28

Remarkably, you know, it's in its teeth.

0:37:280:37:31

Yes, its teeth!

0:37:310:37:33

The limpet's pearly whites have got one mechanical engineer gripped.

0:37:330:37:38

The teeth are almost alien, so they look like claws

0:37:390:37:44

that are scraping away at rock surfaces to loosen the food

0:37:440:37:48

so the limpet can feed,

0:37:480:37:50

and this is really an incredibly demanding process.

0:37:500:37:53

The teeth can't afford to break, because if the teeth break,

0:37:550:37:58

it doesn't feed and it will die of starvation.

0:37:580:38:01

What limpets are looking for is microscopic algae

0:38:010:38:06

that finely carpet rocks.

0:38:060:38:08

But to get it off, they need some mighty molars.

0:38:080:38:11

If you look closely...

0:38:130:38:15

hidden in its mouth is a rolled-up radula,

0:38:150:38:19

a tongue-like appendage.

0:38:190:38:22

When unravelled, it reveals rows and rows of teeth -

0:38:220:38:26

1,000, to be precise.

0:38:260:38:29

If you thought that limpets having 1,000 teeth was mindboggling enough,

0:38:320:38:37

Asa discovered something even more exciting

0:38:370:38:40

when he was looking at their gnashers.

0:38:400:38:42

There's been a little bit of a race to discover

0:38:420:38:45

what's the strongest biological material,

0:38:450:38:48

and spider silk has been winning that race for a long, long time,

0:38:480:38:53

but we found that limpet teeth, this mundane sea creature,

0:38:530:38:57

produced teeth that were actually even stronger than spider silk.

0:38:570:39:02

It really is astounding.

0:39:020:39:04

So the strength of a limpet tooth is over twice that

0:39:040:39:08

of Kevlar fibres that are commonly used in ballistic protection.

0:39:080:39:12

So, tucked away under their shell,

0:39:130:39:15

these tiny teeth, less than a millimetre long,

0:39:150:39:19

are the strongest biological material on Earth.

0:39:190:39:23

It's incredible!

0:39:240:39:25

Now scientists think that by understanding how limpets grow

0:39:250:39:30

their teeth, they can mimic their design in modern-day structures,

0:39:300:39:34

everything from aircraft wings to Formula One cars,

0:39:340:39:38

but with a greener twist.

0:39:380:39:40

The great thing about limpets that we have to remember is

0:39:430:39:46

the teeth are made from elements found in the local environment.

0:39:460:39:50

It's using a very efficient biological manufacturing process

0:39:500:39:54

that's sustainable.

0:39:540:39:56

So the design found in limpet teeth could be very

0:39:560:39:59

important for the composites of the future.

0:39:590:40:02

I like it when we accept that we get some of our better ideas from nature

0:40:060:40:11

and there are plenty of examples around us.

0:40:110:40:13

We've all got air bags in our car.

0:40:130:40:15

Well, allegedly that idea came from gannets.

0:40:150:40:19

Yes, they have air bags in their bodies

0:40:190:40:22

so when they plunge into the water at high speed, they don't get hurt.

0:40:220:40:26

And now look, the engineers have turned to the

0:40:260:40:29

teeth of limpets for ideas.

0:40:290:40:32

Smart.

0:40:320:40:33

But sometimes we have to admit that nature

0:40:330:40:36

wants a little bit of what we've got -

0:40:360:40:39

our gardens.

0:40:390:40:40

On the southern tip of Africa,

0:40:440:40:46

there's been an invasion.

0:40:460:40:49

These beach-side retreats are under

0:40:490:40:51

attack by something particularly menacing

0:40:510:40:54

and it's keeping residents up all night.

0:40:540:40:57

They are very tough, very aggressive,

0:40:570:41:00

quite dangerous animals.

0:41:000:41:02

A stench, which stinks like hell.

0:41:020:41:05

They can inflict very nasty bites.

0:41:050:41:07

And when the wind blows, we get all this bloody black

0:41:070:41:10

rubbish into the house.

0:41:100:41:12

They can inflict extremely nasty scratches with their claws.

0:41:120:41:15

And the noise at night is unreal.

0:41:150:41:18

HE BELLOWS

0:41:180:41:20

They bellow and bellow and bellow and bellow.

0:41:200:41:22

HE BELLOWS

0:41:220:41:25

I didn't sleep from quarter to four the other morning.

0:41:250:41:27

The picturesque seaside towns of Betty's Bay,

0:41:310:41:34

and its neighbour Boulders Beach, are under siege.

0:41:340:41:37

From -

0:41:370:41:39

and wait for it -

0:41:390:41:41

a badly behaved group of African penguins.

0:41:410:41:45

Known as jackass penguins because of their donkey-like bray,

0:41:480:41:52

the African bird's black and white markings and frankly adorable waddle

0:41:520:41:56

are a firm family favourite.

0:41:560:41:59

Unless, of course, you live in Betty's Bay.

0:42:010:42:03

Look what they've done to the bush here, they've killed all the garden.

0:42:030:42:07

So, what is bringing hundreds of jackasses to Barbara's back yard?

0:42:080:42:12

Could it be the manicured lawn,

0:42:120:42:15

the beautifully planted beds or the irresistible sea view?

0:42:150:42:18

The real problem with Betty's Bay is that it's the only growing

0:42:200:42:23

colony of African penguins and there's no space.

0:42:230:42:26

Professor Peter Barham is just potty about penguins.

0:42:260:42:30

These animals arrived in Betty's Bay around about 30-odd years ago

0:42:300:42:34

in 1982 for the first time.

0:42:340:42:36

They've increased in numbers ever since and started to

0:42:360:42:38

invade the areas where people live as well.

0:42:380:42:41

These jackasses normally hang out in the neighbouring penguin reserve

0:42:430:42:47

with about 5,000 others.

0:42:470:42:48

The problem is it's full to bursting and, when space is at a premium,

0:42:490:42:53

they'll quite happily up sticks in search of another place to live.

0:42:530:42:57

And that's exactly what 50 or so have done in Betty's Bay.

0:42:570:43:02

The penguins moved to wherever they can get more space.

0:43:020:43:05

As soon as the density goes up, they seem to want to move away.

0:43:050:43:09

As the gardens are further away, they'll move into those gardens.

0:43:090:43:13

Penguins breed best in a really nice, dry burrow.

0:43:130:43:16

Well, there are no dry, nice burrows, but a little shed is great,

0:43:160:43:19

a building is great.

0:43:190:43:21

Anything which has a good roof on it, that's where they're going to nest.

0:43:210:43:24

Finding the perfect habitat is key to their breeding success.

0:43:240:43:28

What these guys are looking for is enough room to breed and nest,

0:43:280:43:33

far away from the rest of the colony.

0:43:330:43:36

It's that that's brought them into conflict with the locals.

0:43:360:43:39

As the penguin colony grew in numbers, there were so many

0:43:440:43:47

birds starting to breed in people's gardens that the people found

0:43:470:43:51

they were too noisy, too smelly

0:43:510:43:53

and the guano was killing off their plants -

0:43:530:43:56

everything you can imagine.

0:43:560:43:58

People, for some reason, didn't like having them in their garden.

0:43:580:44:01

It wasn't romantic.

0:44:010:44:02

When there was just one or two in the colony it was fine,

0:44:040:44:07

but when there are 20 or 30, it suddenly becomes too many.

0:44:070:44:10

It's understandable, I suppose.

0:44:160:44:17

But it does create a bit of a dilemma for the residents here.

0:44:170:44:21

You see, although these penguins are a bit of a nuisance,

0:44:210:44:24

the African penguin is, in fact, in serious decline.

0:44:240:44:28

100 years ago, there were one and a half million pairs.

0:44:280:44:31

These days there are only 20,000

0:44:310:44:34

and I've got to tell you,

0:44:340:44:36

the only place where the population is doing any good is Betty's Bay.

0:44:360:44:41

So you might say - and Barbara is not going to thank me for this -

0:44:410:44:46

that's all down to people's back yards.

0:44:460:44:49

Our world is wonderfully weird.

0:44:510:44:53

We've seen how an inexplicable intoxication

0:44:530:44:57

was explained by a deadly diet.

0:44:570:45:00

While fearsome sharks go belly-up when they're flipped on their backs.

0:45:000:45:05

And when it comes to strength,

0:45:050:45:07

the tiny limpet has super-tough teeth to take on anything.

0:45:070:45:11

Oh, and if you want to pick up a penguin,

0:45:110:45:14

you might get lucky in a garden.

0:45:140:45:17

And, finally, what's the link between an extraordinary eruption

0:45:320:45:37

and a Day-Glo dilemma?

0:45:370:45:39

Well...

0:45:410:45:42

it all starts with a bang.

0:45:420:45:45

Volcanoes.

0:45:510:45:53

These fiery giants inspire awe and terror in equal measure.

0:45:550:46:00

I fall in love on volcanoes

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and I really want to spend

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as much time as I can on volcanoes.

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For Olivier Grunewald they're an obsession.

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I've been on maybe 100 volcanoes in the world

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but one changed really my life.

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Kawah Ijen.

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East Java.

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Olivier had heard that something out of the ordinary was going on

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at this rather special volcano.

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It was absolutely something strange.

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It's very rare to have a phenomenon like that.

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I tried to find some information on the internet.

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There is no picture, no info, nothing.

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I decide to take my chance.

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So, Olivier headed to Indonesia

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to see for himself whether the rumours were true.

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I arrive at the top of the crater

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and the crater is full of gas and I saw nothing.

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In my mind, I really think we've travelled so far for nothing.

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The decision to travel more than 7,000 miles based just on hearsay

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was beginning to feel a little bit foolhardy,

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but then Olivier's luck changed.

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Suddenly, the wind changed

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and some... Like lightning in a storm,

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some blue line appeared in the crater.

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I was so excited.

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The plumes of gas parted

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to reveal something bizarre.

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Glowing rivers of blue light.

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It's something absolutely incredible.

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It's difficult to describe, because when the light disappear,

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we can see the blue light glowing.

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The lava pouring from the crater's mouth

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wasn't the usual river of red.

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It was like a dream.

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I spent the night in a trance, taking picture.

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I remember nothing of this night except the picture.

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It was a natural spectacle unlike anything he'd ever seen.

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Back home, Olivier's photographs went viral and caught

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the attention of geologists.

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I've been studying volcanoes for years,

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but I'm constantly surprised by them.

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Everything about this blue material

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that's flowing down the volcano appears to be like lava.

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It flows over the mounds and troughs.

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It looks like lava but it's blue,

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which means it can't possibly be the lava itself.

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When lava erupts from the Earth's crust,

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it can flow at temperatures of more than 1,000 degrees Centigrade.

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And it's the heat from the lava that tends to give

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a volcano its incandescent red glow.

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So, if it's blue, then it can't be lava.

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If it's not lava, then what is it?

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Well, Kawah Ijen has some secret ingredients

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and Olivier's photographs have gone some way to explain its source.

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During the day, he watched the locals moving in,

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completely unfazed, hacking off what appeared to be

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chunks of yellow rock.

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But it's not rock that they're mining,

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it's actually solid sulphur

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that's cooled and solidified on top of the rocks.

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Could this sulphur be the cause of Olivier's blue volcano?

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We're used to the yellow flame that carbon produces

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from burning wood or paper,

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but some compounds burn with more unusual coloured flames.

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This is boron.

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Lithium.

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Sodium.

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But as the sulphur burns, it reacts with oxygen to produce -

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and you've guessed it -

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a bright blue flame,

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the source of the extraordinary blue in Olivier's pictures.

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Now, sulphur is common at every single volcano around the world,

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but what's special at this particular volcano is that

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it's got really high concentrations of sulphur.

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A breathtakingly beautiful phenomena explained by simple chemistry.

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The sulphur at Kawah Ijen burns day and night,

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but, of course, during the daytime,

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with all of that blue reflected light coming from the sky,

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you can't actually see the flames.

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It's only at night when they look truly spectacular.

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Then, of course, a light in the dark is often an irresistible lure.

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The Peruvian rainforest -

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dark, mysterious,

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where strange things come out at night.

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But on a moonlit hike in 2012,

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something unusual caught the eye of intrepid wildlife photographer

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Jeff Cremer.

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We stopped in an area just

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to turn off the headlamps and look at all the stars.

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It's really dark in the Amazon jungle.

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The stars are amazing when you're out.

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You can see the whole Milky Way.

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Jeff, expecting to take in the celestial beauty of the night sky,

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was met by something much stranger.

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Right when we turned the headlamps off,

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we were surrounded by a wall of glowing lights.

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I've never seen anything like that before.

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They were everywhere, like, hundreds of them.

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Glowing green dots, flickering in front of him.

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I've worked in the Amazon for about five years.

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I've seen a lot of really cool stuff, a lot of weird things.

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I've never seen a wall of glowing lights.

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Each light revealed something peculiar,

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a creature that Jeff had never seen before.

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Mystified, he quickly took pictures of this rather odd sight

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in the hope that someone would be able to help identify it.

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Cue entomologist Aaron Pomerantz.

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I first came across Jeff's photos online.

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They were causing this big stir, because nobody knew what they were

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and they were so bizarre-looking.

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They looked like glowing worms that were bursting out of the earth.

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I'd never seen any picture like this before of an animal.

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Intrigued, Aaron wanted to see them in their natural habitat.

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So, with the light on, this might just look like a bunch of dirt.

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But when the lights are off...

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..we'll see a bunch of little green, glowing dots in here.

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Let's focus right here, because I can see one sticking his head out.

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Right there. So, let's kill the lights.

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(No way.)

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I had never seen anything like this before.

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Even working with lots of insects, this was just totally new.

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What on earth were they?

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We really dug in and started doing a lot more in-depth research

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on what these were.

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How long are they?

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Look at its other different body parts, how many legs do they have?

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What do their mandibles look like?

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There he is.

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We took a closer look and that's when we could confirm right away

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that they were some sort of insect larvae,

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but then the question on all of our minds was,

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why are these things glowing in the middle of the Amazon rainforest?

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The mysterious worms were the larvae of an unknown type of beetle

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and not your average larvae.

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Not only was light coming from their heads, which is pretty weird,

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but they also had huge mandibles.

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Aaron and Jeff's larvae were armed, but why?

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Our first clue came from their behaviour.

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They looked tough, they looked dangerous,

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like they can grab something and kill it.

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What Aaron did is he took some termites,

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some tiny, little termites.

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He kind of dropped them in really close to where these larvae were.

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We were like, "Yeah, they're definitely predatory."

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The larvae were using their illuminated heads

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to lure in their lunch -

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fiendishly clever.

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By observing the behaviour of these predatory larvae,

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Aaron has been able to shed some light on their mysterious glow.

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But is he any closer to knowing which beetle species it is?

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This discovery is really exciting and we really want to figure out,

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how long have they been there, what are they doing and what are they going to turn into,

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because we've never seen an adult before.

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This could be a new species.

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To make new discoveries and add to the body of knowledge is unbelievable.

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To be on the front lines with that kind of discovery

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has just been such a dream come true.

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Because they're a new species, we're not entirely sure yet,

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but it's likely that these beetles

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produce their light in the same way that glow worms do.

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It's a bit like the fuel, the wood here,

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burning in the presence of oxygen.

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Because inside the insect's body, there are two chemicals,

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luciferin and luciferase,

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and in the presence of oxygen, they actually produce their own light.

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It's called bioluminescence.

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The beetle larvae are in good company.

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Fireflies and glow worms create breathtaking light displays,

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but the greatest numbers of bioluminescent species

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aren't found on land.

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Look at this.

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A video gone viral

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of a surfer on the San Diego coast.

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This is astonishingly beautiful and it's 100% real,

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but what creatures create light on this kind of scale?

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The reason the wave is glowing like that is because

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within the water, there are thousands of tiny, single-celled creatures

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known as dinoflagellates.

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And they do that when they're knocked around.

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So, whether it's the water moving, or the surfer with his board

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touching the waves, each of them only glowing for maybe half a second

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at a time, but because there are thousands of them,

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you get this twinkling and glowing effect across the whole wave.

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Dinoflagellates use their illumination as a security light

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to deter predators.

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But other species, like this cone jellyfish, use it to attract

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their prey, just like our mysterious beetle in Peru.

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It's certainly a pretty neat survival skill.

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So, sulphur explains a volcano burning blue,

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while a brand-new species survives by the same chemical reaction

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that gave a surfer a really epic ride,

0:57:410:57:44

but it also enables a tiny organism living deep in the blue

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to put on a spectacular light display.

0:57:490:57:52

If you thought all of those stories were weird,

0:57:540:57:57

just wait, because things are going to get a lot weirder.

0:57:570:58:00

Next time...

0:58:020:58:04

..how can the weather ruin your perfect day?

0:58:060:58:09

You just see it coming, like the end of the world.

0:58:090:58:13

How could cats in bibs save millions of lives?

0:58:130:58:16

What's the secret behind some mysterious green balls?

0:58:180:58:22

And how could a twin appear inside your brain?

0:58:220:58:26

She was literally dying.

0:58:260:58:28

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