Episode 4 World's Weirdest Events


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

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Argh!

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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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..monkeys with first-aid skills...

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I sent it to my family.

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I sent it to my friends, said, "Have you seen this?

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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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Argh!

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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'll find the answers to some of the natural world's weirdest questions.

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What's causing these rocks to spontaneously explode?

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Why are bats' brains being removed in a cave in Hungary?

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What on earth are these strange green balls?

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And why are these cats wearing bibs?

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Deserts. Miles and miles of sand.

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But add in the power of a storm...

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..and the result is not exactly a marriage made in heaven.

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Phoenix, Arizona.

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Something strange is building out in the desert.

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Winds are strengthening.

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This is certainly not a nice day for a white wedding.

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ORGAN PLAYS "Here Comes The Bride"

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The day of the wedding itself was relatively calm.

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The weather itself was really great. It was bright and sunny.

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It was the big day

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for one happy couple.

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We came to the venue to get dressed, take pictures.

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Friends and family were still kind of arriving.

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Everything was going smoothly.

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It was a day they would never forget.

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Their dream wedding. Something they'd been planning for months.

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I'm standing at the altar looking for the future bride,

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future wife, coming in.

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That was an awesome sight to see.

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What could possibly go wrong?

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We're here this afternoon to share with Gustavo and Jennifer

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a most important moment in their lives.

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A good, solid ten minutes in, everything was going fine.

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And then, I remember looking at Jenny, and I remember looking up.

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My jaw dropped. My eyes got big.

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I look at Jenny, Jenny's looking at me with this scared face.

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I couldn't help it. I had to turn around to look.

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"What is he looking at?"

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What they saw was an immense wall of dust coming straight towards them.

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We just...pretty much just hold on tight!

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Hurtling towards them was an immense cloud of sand,

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a super-sized dust storm,

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a bizarre phenomenon with an even stranger name -

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haboob.

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Haboobs are amazing, because they're like this impending doom.

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It's just kind of this wall

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that is getting closer,

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like something apocalyptic, something incredible is happening

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and you're just standing there watching it

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and there's nothing you can do about it.

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Haboobs are a desert phenomenon, but they are no ordinary dust storm.

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It's this towering, churning wall of lifted sand and dust

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that sets them apart.

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But what starts them off?

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Haboobs are formed by thunderstorms.

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Out here, at least, when thunderstorms form,

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they just drop the rain straight out the bottom.

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Haboobs usually happen during the rainy season

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in Arizona between June and September,

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when thunderstorms can be particularly heavy.

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These thunderstorms create strong downdraughts of cold air,

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which hit the dry desert floor and spread out,

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kicking the dust up high into the air, creating an imposing wall.

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It's almost like a bomb exploded.

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The dust will start rolling away from the storm,

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and then, a lot of times, that air that's thrown out

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will actually kick up more storms above it

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and those storms will build up and they'll drop downdraughts as well.

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They kind of end up creating this huge wall of dust.

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So, pretty quickly, a few grains of sand

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can be whipped up into a swirling, spiralling wall of dust,

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sweeping across the desert floor,

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engulfing everything in its way.

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Haboobs can be massive.

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The biggest ones that I've seen have been a mile tall

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and 100 miles wide, and have winds packing around 60mph.

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Once the haboob hits,

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visibility can be reduced to near zero in a couple of minutes.

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Planes have to be grounded. There are huge pile-ups on the roads.

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'Let's look at the freeway. The freeway has backed up.

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'It looks like there's an accident over there right now.'

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The high winds tear down trees and pylons...

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..and the whipping dust gets everywhere.

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You don't usually get a lot of warning

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that a dust storm's coming in,

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so they can spring out of nowhere.

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Meanwhile, back at the wedding,

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things were beginning to take a turn for the weird,

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as the winds strengthened and the bridal party was blasted with sand.

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And as if there wasn't already enough dust blowing around,

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Jenny and Gus still had the sand ceremony to do.

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We each have a different colour sand and we pour it into a vase,

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so it creates kind of a swirl as you're pouring it into your vase,

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to symbolise the unity of both of us coming together as one.

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They represent all that you are and all that you will ever be

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as individuals.

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As we were pouring, we were getting pelted with sand left and right.

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My husband here is just, "Let's just stop this.

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"We don't need it. This is ridiculous right now."

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And of course, me being the bride and this is what I want,

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"We're going to continue to pour sand until we are done!"

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And so we got most of it in there,

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then, finally, even I had to concede we needed to stop.

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I'm going to make this quick, OK?

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We should just end it and just get out of here.

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I can't see them, I can't see us.

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Sure enough, the judge kind of skipped a lot of things

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and went to, "I pronounce you husband and wife," and we kissed.

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I present you, Mr and Mrs Gustavo Luna.

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You know, we look back at it now, and kind of laugh at it.

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-Cos it's nobody's fault.

-Yeah.

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-Definitely nobody's fault.

-We can't control the weather.

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CONGREGATION CHEERS

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Surely one of the weirdest weddings ever witnessed!

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I think it's safe to assume

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that no-one is going to forget that wedding in a hurry.

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But you know, in this weird, weird world,

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it's not just important events that we try to preserve for all eternity.

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No, some people have gone to extraordinary lengths

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to preserve themselves.

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A statue of a Buddha in a museum in Budapest.

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Surely nothing weird here?

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But in fact, this golden statue was hiding a secret.

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Whilst it was undergoing restoration,

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researchers spotted something peculiar...

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..and a CT scan revealed their discovery in full -

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an entire body, hidden inside.

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It had been covered with gold, to look like a Buddhist statue,

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suggesting that the body was most likely that of a Buddhist monk.

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But that wasn't the end of the story.

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It also appeared that before being placed inside the statue,

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the monk had been mummified.

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Mummification is the preservation of dead bodies,

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so that the...significant amount of the soft tissue is preserved.

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Normally, dead bodies decay quite rapidly,

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because of bacteria and enzymes,

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so mummification really involves processes that stop decay.

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We know a lot about mummies through Egyptian mummies, of course -

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the iconic mummies, if you like.

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Many Egyptian mummies were carefully prepared once the person had died.

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The internal organs were removed

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and the body would be treated with natron,

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a type of salt with fantastic drying properties.

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They were then wrapped in hundreds of metres of linen.

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It's the drying out that's key.

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The lack of water prevents bacteria and enzymes from working,

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and this prevents the body from decomposing.

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But in the case of the golden statue mummy,

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it seems that something astonishing could have been going on.

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When you find a mummy like this,

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with that strong Buddhist connection,

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it's actually quite likely

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that there was self-mummification involved in this.

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It might just be that, in this case,

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the monk actually started to mummify himself whilst he was still alive.

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Self-mummification took place in countries like Japan and China

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in areas where Buddhism was practised.

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It started in about the 12th,

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and carried on through to the early 20th century,

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and it was a gruesome undertaking.

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With this process of self-mummification,

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It would be a question of the priest deciding

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they wanted to go on this journey, if you like,

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and so start by restricting their diet significantly.

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By limiting their food and water,

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they were beginning to preserve themselves

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months, even years, before they actually died...

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..and, by surrounding themselves with candles as they meditated,

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their bodies would dry out even further.

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They might also drink the sap from certain plants to poison themselves

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and destroy the bacteria that would decay their body after death.

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And it all took place in a tiny room.

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They would be in these very confined spaces,

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and they would have a bell that they would ring periodically

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to let their colleague priest know that they were still alive.

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When the bell stopped ringing, the monk had died.

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It's thought that by self-mummifying,

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the monks were attempting to become semi-divine beings,

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choosing to live in an in-between world

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between earth and permanent Nirvana,

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to help others become fully enlightened

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and reach Nirvana themselves.

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I think what is interesting about the self-mummifying priests

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is that they clearly understood the materials and methods

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they were using would actually go some significant way

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to preserve them forever, effectively.

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What can I say? I suppose it demonstrates commitment,

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although that's an understatement of enormous magnitude -

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but, over time, people haven't just been keen to mummify themselves -

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the ancient Egyptians liked to preserve their animals, too.

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They were huge cat fans,

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and perhaps, if they were still alive today,

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they'd feel very much at home in the American city of Minneapolis.

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You see, this isn't a music festival...

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or a comedy gig.

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No, this is a gathering of people with only one thing on their minds.

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You look around and there are all these people who are coming together

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to do something unbelievably ridiculous.

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This is the Internet Cat Video Festival.

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Yeah, we're all going to get together and watch videos of cats,

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two-minute videos of cats going like this.

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I am excited to see old ones and new ones, and all sorts of cat videos.

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Every year, over 10,000 feline obsessives turn up to watch

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back-to-back internet cat videos.

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It was nice to know that I'm not the only weirdo

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who sits on the internet and watches animal videos

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to get their animal fix all day.

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Cats are undoubtedly big news online.

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Last year alone, nearly two million cat videos were posted on YouTube.

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And they received a staggering 25 billion views.

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But why? Why are cat videos so popular?

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Cats have become an internet sensation,

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and I think there is probably a couple of reasons for that.

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One is that they are very photogenic.

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They've got these lovely round furry faces,

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which everybody seems to find appealing.

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They're rather like baby faces,

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because they have the forehead like babies do,

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and again, that makes them very appealing to us.

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It makes us want to look after them.

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The second thing is that their faces are not very expressive,

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which you might think is a drawback, but it's not.

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When you take a photograph or make a film of a cat,

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you can kind of put any connotation, any caption,

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you want on it, and it's believable.

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What's surprising is that,

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whilst there are many more dog than cat owners in the UK,

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cat videos are four times more likely to go viral

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than those featuring our canine companions.

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I've watched a lot of cat videos.

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I think the favourite one of mine

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is the cat that tries to get into smaller and smaller boxes.

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That is a very typical piece of cat behaviour.

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Cats love going inside boxes,

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because they like the security of a confined space,

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particularly if they're feeling a little bit nervous.

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This is a cat that has taken that to total extremes.

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But, look, whether you're watching the videos in a field

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with thousands of likeminded cat addicts, or on your own,

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I can't help but feel it's a bit of a waste of time, isn't it?

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Well, no. Apparently it's not.

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At the Indiana University Media School,

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recent research has shown that watching cat videos

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seems to increase your sense of emotional well being.

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Ha!

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I think she's eating it!

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Viewers boost their energy and positive emotions,

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whilst also feeling less anxious,

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annoyed and sad.

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And even if you're watching cat videos instead of working,

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any guilt you might feel seems to be outweighed by the enjoyment...

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..and may even help you to take on tougher tasks afterwards.

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But, whilst cats today are some of the biggest stars of the internet,

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they're not the first felines to be filmed doing something funny.

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The first ever cat film was shot way back in 1894,

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at the very dawn of cinema,

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with two cats having a boxing match.

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The man behind it was none other than Thomas Edison.

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But behind the veneer of the cute,

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the box surfing, the dog barking,

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the millions of adoring fans, I have to tell you,

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there is a darker side to our feline friends.

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Some of them are crack killers.

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Recent estimates suggest that 275 million small animals and birds

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are killed in the UK every year by cats.

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Most people have a cat, they want it to be a pet,

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they want to have a personal relationship with it,

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and they don't want the gory little bit of mouse

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being deposited on the kitchen floor in the morning.

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In Oregon, one such cat owner really had had enough

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of getting these grisly little presents each day.

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My cats killed birds.

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I like wildlife,

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and I like the garden,

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and they were ruining the whole thing.

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I didn't know how to stop them.

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I kept them inside, and they really didn't like it.

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They had cat fights, they sprayed, I would come home from work

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and the place reeked of urine and the cats hated each other.

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It was just horrible, trying to keep them inside.

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To stop cats from catching birds,

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you can get collars complete with bells or sonic deterrents on them,

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but sometimes, these don't work.

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So, Sue had to think outside the box.

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Or not...

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I started to think about, if I could build a wall around the cat,

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and so I envisioned a cardboard box with a hole cut out.

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I think someone's already got that one covered, Sue.

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And then it was, "Well, maybe I could just put a piece of cardboard

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"in front of them."

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Sue started by tying a flap of old boot leather around their necks.

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Whether it would work or not, it was worth a try, you know?

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So I let her out, and she didn't catch a bird for a week.

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And her prototype soon turned into this.

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By interfering with the cat's timing and co-ordination,

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a study has shown that this bib could stop 80% of cats from killing...

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..but then, even if they do manage to catch something,

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at least they won't spill anything down their front.

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So, from the ultimate wedding crashers

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in the arid deserts of Arizona...

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Go, go, go!

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..to monks drying themselves out

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in the hope of achieving immortality...

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..thousands of feline fans watching adorable cats on the internet...

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..and killer cats wearing bibs -

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it really is a weird world out there.

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Our next journey takes us from some unexpected explosions

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via an albeit tortuous route to some insects in disguise.

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Let's head to the golden state of California.

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Twain Harte, on the edge of the Sierra Nevada,

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is a small holiday town popular with families.

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Twain Harte, in the summer,

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for us and our family is a getaway, where we go to relax.

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It's a place we can leave the city behind

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and just have some family time.

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It's crowded, the beach is full, there are kids screaming and running

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and people walking around and walking their dogs.

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But, on the weekend of Twain Harte's annual water carnival,

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something was about to happen

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that would completely shock this close-knit community.

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When I first heard it, I thought it was dynamite going off.

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If it had happened a day earlier,

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there would have been 350 people out on that rock.

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But there was one family on the rock that day.

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We decided to go down to the beach because the weather had turned.

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I was with my in-laws and my kids and my niece and nephew.

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So we were hiking along and decided to go across the dam,

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over to the rock.

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All of a sudden, it was like a bomb went off.

0:23:290:23:32

From the local cafe, the commotion was caught on camera.

0:23:320:23:36

HUGE CRASH

0:23:380:23:40

PEOPLE SHOUT

0:23:400:23:42

The entire rock started to shift and move,

0:23:450:23:49

and I actually thought it was an earthquake.

0:23:490:23:52

California is no stranger to earthquakes.

0:23:520:23:54

They can be completely devastating,

0:23:560:23:58

causing billions of dollars' worth of damage.

0:23:580:24:02

The San Andreas Fault,

0:24:040:24:06

part of a sliding boundary between two of the earth's tectonic plates,

0:24:060:24:10

is responsible for much of this seismic activity.

0:24:100:24:13

But, back on the rock, Steve was beginning to think

0:24:140:24:18

that maybe earthquakes weren't to blame this time.

0:24:180:24:22

As we started to realise that it really wasn't an earthquake,

0:24:220:24:26

because being from the area we had felt earthquakes

0:24:260:24:29

and it was very different...

0:24:290:24:31

..a crack appeared from the back of the rock

0:24:330:24:36

and it started moving towards us.

0:24:360:24:38

Explosions were coming out of the crevice.

0:24:400:24:43

It was terrifying for the kids and for us,

0:24:440:24:47

because we really didn't know what was going on.

0:24:470:24:49

We truly thought that this thing was going to blow.

0:24:490:24:52

Over the next couple of weeks,

0:24:580:25:01

more explosions occurred on the rock.

0:25:010:25:04

Whoa!

0:25:050:25:06

The whole area, including the dam, became unsafe.

0:25:110:25:14

The lake had to be closed.

0:25:170:25:20

Geologists were fascinated by these unusual explosions.

0:25:230:25:27

Rocks are like people.

0:25:280:25:30

They get stressed and they react to stresses in very different ways.

0:25:300:25:34

Rocks can accommodate stress and deal with it,

0:25:360:25:39

or, if the stress is strong enough, they break.

0:25:390:25:44

The question at Twain Harte, really,

0:25:440:25:46

is what actually caused the stress.

0:25:460:25:48

Dr Eppes thinks there's not one simple explanation,

0:25:490:25:52

but a possible combination of three elements.

0:25:520:25:56

As well as being in an earthquake zone,

0:25:580:26:00

at the time, California was suffering

0:26:000:26:02

one of the most severe droughts on record.

0:26:020:26:05

Due to the ongoing drought,

0:26:060:26:08

The water table there has been lowering.

0:26:080:26:11

This could be causing, or could have caused,

0:26:120:26:15

another sort of stress to develop.

0:26:150:26:17

The rock at Twain Harte is a granite dome.

0:26:180:26:21

As the water table lowered during this drought,

0:26:230:26:26

it lightened the load on the dome, allowing it to rise up.

0:26:260:26:30

As the dome lifted, the edges were compressed by surrounding rock...

0:26:320:26:36

..but there was one final stress to add into the mix.

0:26:380:26:41

On the week leading up to August 3rd at Twain Harte,

0:26:450:26:48

you had temperatures that were ten degrees above normal.

0:26:480:26:52

And then, the day that the rock cracked

0:26:530:26:55

was actually ten degrees below normal.

0:26:550:26:58

Dr Eppes believes that the rock cracked on this exact day

0:26:580:27:03

because of simple expansion and contraction

0:27:030:27:06

under huge temperature swings.

0:27:060:27:08

It was the straw that broke the camel's back.

0:27:080:27:11

The pressure builds and the rock cracks open explosively

0:27:140:27:18

to relieve that pressure.

0:27:180:27:20

It's called exfoliation, where the outer layers of the rock split,

0:27:220:27:27

like peeling the rings off an onion.

0:27:270:27:29

But the damage, the chaos caused at Twain Harte by that exfoliation,

0:27:330:27:38

was nothing compared to what happens if you add in much larger rocks,

0:27:380:27:43

and the forces of gravity.

0:27:430:27:45

Just up the road at Yosemite National Park,

0:27:460:27:49

the effect can be breathtaking.

0:27:490:27:51

These rocks may crack at any time, without warning.

0:27:520:27:55

A rockfall, look!

0:27:570:27:59

Look at that piece!

0:28:020:28:03

They may look small,

0:28:040:28:05

but in fact, some are bigger than a double-decker bus...

0:28:050:28:09

..and, in an area with four million visitors a year,

0:28:160:28:19

this is one weird force of nature that has to be reckoned with.

0:28:190:28:23

But the danger of exploding rocks won't put some people off

0:28:250:28:29

from returning to Twain Harte.

0:28:290:28:31

We'll never stop coming back to Twain Harte.

0:28:310:28:33

We're going there this weekend

0:28:330:28:35

and hopefully we'll see the lake filling up

0:28:350:28:37

and we'll get ready to get out on that rock.

0:28:370:28:40

It's a dangerous world out there,

0:28:420:28:44

there's no doubt about it,

0:28:440:28:45

but sometimes the threats come from where you'd least expect it.

0:28:450:28:49

I saw the shadow come up on my left-hand side and go past me.

0:28:530:28:57

I just stopped dead in my tracks and I could feel this intense pain...

0:28:590:29:03

..as if you were being stabbed by hundreds of syringes.

0:29:040:29:08

The lower part of my ear felt like it was on fire.

0:29:080:29:13

It was a pain that I had never felt before.

0:29:130:29:16

Tom Hart Dyke is a plant hunter

0:29:200:29:23

who's travelled all over the world

0:29:230:29:25

in his search for the weird and wonderful.

0:29:250:29:28

He's used to putting himself in some pretty testing situations...

0:29:310:29:35

..and an expedition to the tropical rainforest

0:29:370:29:39

of Queensland in Australia was no exception.

0:29:390:29:43

The conditions on the expedition were pretty tough.

0:29:440:29:48

I was on my own, seeing plants in the wild.

0:29:480:29:50

On the forest floor, it is very dark.

0:29:500:29:53

You can hardly see where you're walking

0:29:530:29:55

and you're always pushing away foliage of various sorts.

0:29:550:29:58

I just stopped dead in my tracks

0:29:590:30:02

and I could just feel

0:30:020:30:03

this extraordinary, intense throbbing pain.

0:30:030:30:06

Now, Australia is renowned for its long list of dangerous wildlife.

0:30:080:30:14

Where Tom was walking there were funnel-web spiders

0:30:140:30:17

and brown tree snakes capable of inflicting a nasty wound

0:30:170:30:21

on the unsuspecting.

0:30:210:30:23

Initially, I assumed it was a massive hornet

0:30:250:30:29

or some insect that had stung me.

0:30:290:30:31

It was unbelievable, intense throbbing pain.

0:30:330:30:38

Tom had stumbled across something he'd heard about

0:30:410:30:44

but never actually experienced before.

0:30:440:30:47

It was the gympie gympie plant,

0:30:480:30:51

otherwise known as the deadly stinger.

0:30:510:30:55

The deadly stinger is known as the world's most dangerous plans.

0:30:550:30:59

It's a very unassuming plant that you wouldn't know, particularly,

0:30:590:31:02

was that poisonous.

0:31:020:31:03

When you look at it, it's not that interesting.

0:31:030:31:05

The berries are quite nice, the leaves have quite nice shapes,

0:31:050:31:08

but it's not a plant that certainly stands out.

0:31:080:31:11

Gympie gympie means stinging tree or bush,

0:31:130:31:19

and it belongs to the same family

0:31:190:31:21

as the familiar stinging nettle in the UK.

0:31:210:31:24

But, whilst nettles can hurt,

0:31:260:31:28

it's nothing in comparison to the agony inflicted by the gympie gympie.

0:31:280:31:33

The sting is extraordinary painful.

0:31:340:31:37

Depending how much you get stung,

0:31:370:31:39

it can cause your immune system to just shut down.

0:31:390:31:42

When you're stung by the deadly stinger, you never forget it.

0:31:430:31:46

Months after you've been stung, the pain can come back.

0:31:460:31:50

There's no other plant in the world

0:31:500:31:52

that causes as much re-occurring pain as the deadly stinger.

0:31:520:31:56

Small red spots can appear

0:31:590:32:01

and form a larger swollen area.

0:32:010:32:04

Pain may spread to other parts of the body

0:32:040:32:07

like the head, limbs or armpits,

0:32:070:32:10

lasting for days.

0:32:100:32:13

And the cause of all of this pain

0:32:130:32:16

can be seen with a closer look at the surface of the leaves.

0:32:160:32:21

They are covered in tiny silica-tipped hairs,

0:32:210:32:25

as many as 15,000 on each side of a single leaf.

0:32:250:32:30

Each hair is like a hollow hypodermic needle.

0:32:320:32:36

As you just lightly brush past it,

0:32:380:32:41

there's a round circular bubble at the apex of each particular hair

0:32:410:32:45

that breaks off and this then penetrates into your skin

0:32:450:32:49

releasing a concoction of acid.

0:32:490:32:52

The top bit of the needle or the whole part

0:32:520:32:54

can break off into the skin so it remains in there.

0:32:540:32:57

That's what causes the reoccurring pain.

0:32:570:33:00

I've heard stories of it recurring for up to two and a half years

0:33:010:33:05

after the initial sting.

0:33:050:33:07

But it gets worse.

0:33:080:33:10

These plants have been known to kill dogs, kill horses,

0:33:140:33:18

even lead to the deaths of humans.

0:33:180:33:21

In World War II, an Australian serviceman was stung

0:33:210:33:24

during his military training.

0:33:240:33:26

He then spent the next three weeks tied to a hospital bed

0:33:260:33:31

because the pain was so intense.

0:33:310:33:34

There's a story, and it may be just a story,

0:33:340:33:36

that an officer mistakenly used one of the leaves as toilet paper

0:33:360:33:41

and then shot himself because he couldn't take the pain.

0:33:410:33:45

The actual chemicals in the plant are not fully understood,

0:33:470:33:51

but it seems like a cocktail of compounds are involved -

0:33:510:33:56

and they're so stable that, even in dried specimens

0:33:560:34:00

where the leaves are more than 100 years old,

0:34:000:34:02

the hairs can still give a horrendous sting.

0:34:020:34:06

But the gympie gympie is not invincible.

0:34:090:34:12

Sometimes, the entire shrub is stripped overnight

0:34:120:34:16

leaving just a chewed-up stem...

0:34:160:34:19

..but which species could possibly eat a plant

0:34:200:34:23

covered in such toxic spines?

0:34:230:34:26

The hardy culprit was a shy, rather harmless-looking rainforest wallaby

0:34:320:34:38

with an equally odd name -

0:34:380:34:40

the red-legged pademelon.

0:34:400:34:44

It usually lives alone, feeding on fallen leaves on the forest floor

0:34:440:34:49

and berries and fruits from shrubs,

0:34:490:34:52

but it can eat the gympie gympie as well,

0:34:520:34:54

and seems simply to have adapted to deal with the sting over time...

0:34:540:34:59

..and it's not the only one.

0:35:000:35:02

A number of species, like this green ringtail possum,

0:35:020:35:06

can eat the plant -

0:35:060:35:07

but they're all native to Australia.

0:35:070:35:10

And you might think that the excruciating pain

0:35:130:35:16

Tom Hart Dyke suffered in the Queensland forest

0:35:160:35:19

would mean he'd never want to see a gympie gympie again -

0:35:190:35:24

but he's actually brought one of them back home

0:35:240:35:27

where it has pride of place in his collection.

0:35:270:35:30

But don't worry,

0:35:300:35:32

it's highly doubtful that the gympie gympie

0:35:320:35:34

would ever grow wild in the UK.

0:35:340:35:36

It's a tropical plant,

0:35:360:35:38

so it would be unlikely to survive outside of Tom's greenhouse.

0:35:380:35:42

But you don't always need spines filled full of vicious toxins

0:35:480:35:52

to deter predators. Oh, no.

0:35:520:35:55

Some species have evolved far less deadly ways

0:35:550:35:58

to avoid being on the menu.

0:35:580:36:01

This is Papilio dardanus,

0:36:040:36:07

the African mocker swallowtail -

0:36:070:36:10

and, although it may not look like it,

0:36:100:36:12

it's been described as the most interesting butterfly in the world.

0:36:120:36:17

For 100 years, collectors only ever found males -

0:36:170:36:22

which is clearly a bit weird -

0:36:220:36:25

and, whilst these collectors were trying to work out

0:36:250:36:27

why they only ever found male mocker swallowtails,

0:36:270:36:30

they came across other strange butterfly conundrums.

0:36:300:36:35

What was equally strange was that, for some of these species,

0:36:350:36:39

they only ever found females.

0:36:390:36:42

No males.

0:36:420:36:43

It was a complete mystery.

0:36:460:36:48

So what on earth was going on?

0:36:480:36:50

Well, to get to the bottom of this mystery,

0:36:520:36:55

scientists took some eggs from one of the female butterflies.

0:36:550:36:59

When the scientists first bred out the butterflies

0:36:590:37:02

from a batch of eggs,

0:37:020:37:03

they assumed that there'd be

0:37:030:37:05

just the one female type and one male type.

0:37:050:37:07

In some species of butterfly,

0:37:120:37:14

the males and females look very different.

0:37:140:37:17

In others, they look pretty much the same.

0:37:180:37:21

Either way, there's usually only one form of the male

0:37:230:37:27

and one form of the female,

0:37:270:37:30

but when the African mocker swallowtails

0:37:300:37:32

emerged from their pupae,

0:37:320:37:34

those scientists discovered something astonishing.

0:37:340:37:38

They were surprised to find

0:37:390:37:41

that there were several different-coloured female forms

0:37:410:37:44

in the same batch.

0:37:440:37:46

So, whilst the males all looked the same,

0:37:460:37:49

the females were a whole range of colours and shapes.

0:37:490:37:53

At last, the collectors had an answer to the mystery.

0:37:550:37:59

All of these different-looking butterflies

0:38:000:38:03

are actually the same species.

0:38:030:38:06

So why did the females come in such a huge variety of colour and design?

0:38:080:38:13

The answer lay in self-defence.

0:38:160:38:20

Some species use camouflage to hide themselves from predators.

0:38:200:38:24

Others taste toxic and are brightly coloured to let predators know that.

0:38:270:38:33

If a young bird eats a distasteful butterfly,

0:38:350:38:38

it learns very quickly that that butterfly is not nice

0:38:380:38:42

and tends to avoid that colour of butterfly for the rest of its life.

0:38:420:38:47

And the female African mocker swallowtail

0:38:470:38:50

has an incredible twist on this tactic.

0:38:500:38:52

The female mocker swallowtail has developed different colour forms

0:38:550:38:58

to match these different poisonous butterflies

0:38:580:39:01

so they don't get predated so much.

0:39:010:39:03

Ingenious.

0:39:050:39:07

It's an extraordinary adaptation.

0:39:090:39:12

Up to a dozen or more different forms of the female

0:39:120:39:15

have been discovered so far.

0:39:150:39:17

Although the mocker swallowtail isn't poisonous,

0:39:200:39:24

they've evolved to look like other species which are.

0:39:240:39:27

OK, but there's one last thing that doesn't seem to make sense.

0:39:360:39:40

I mean, how does a male African mocker swallowtail

0:39:400:39:45

find a female African mocker swallowtail

0:39:450:39:48

if those females look like a great range of other butterflies species?

0:39:480:39:52

The males look for females of the same species -

0:39:560:39:59

first by visual cues,

0:39:590:40:00

but closer to, they use their antennae to sniff them out

0:40:000:40:04

and they use pheromones to make sure it's the right

0:40:040:40:06

species of female before they can mate with them.

0:40:060:40:08

The males can sometimes mistake other butterflies for the female,

0:40:080:40:13

but I've never seen one mate with the wrong species.

0:40:130:40:16

So this mimicry is a brilliant solution

0:40:180:40:21

to the problem of avoiding predators,

0:40:210:40:24

and it's allowed the African Mocker Swallowtail

0:40:240:40:28

to become extremely successful.

0:40:280:40:31

So, exploding rocks in a sleepy holiday town gave tourists

0:40:350:40:39

a nasty surprise...

0:40:390:40:41

..whilst one unsuspecting traveller

0:40:430:40:45

got a sharp shock from a plant with a spiky form of self-defence...

0:40:450:40:49

..and there's an insect which protects itself

0:40:520:40:55

with some incredible impersonations.

0:40:550:40:57

All extraordinary goings-on in our strange world.

0:40:580:41:02

Finally, we start with a monstrous headache

0:41:240:41:27

and end up in a bizarre alien landscape full of green blobs.

0:41:270:41:31

Yamini Karanam was born in Hyderabad in India in 1988.

0:41:330:41:38

At the age of 25,

0:41:390:41:41

she came to the University of Indiana to study for a PhD...

0:41:410:41:45

..and that's when things started to turn a little bit strange.

0:41:470:41:51

For more than six months,

0:41:540:41:55

I just didn't know what it was like to not have a headache.

0:41:550:41:58

I would wake up with a headache

0:42:010:42:02

and I would have headaches through the day,

0:42:020:42:05

and I would have headaches through the night.

0:42:050:42:08

Yamini's life was on hold.

0:42:080:42:09

She had to stop her studies for several months

0:42:100:42:14

until her quest for medical advice led her to a leading surgeon

0:42:140:42:18

at the Skull Base Institute in California.

0:42:180:42:21

When Yamini first came to see me,

0:42:250:42:27

her symptoms were - first, headaches, second, fatigue.

0:42:270:42:32

I would sleep for more than 10-15 hours a day

0:42:320:42:35

and still wake up very, very drowsy.

0:42:350:42:38

What was more concerning to me

0:42:380:42:40

were another set of symptoms that were cognitive symptoms.

0:42:400:42:43

She's a 26-year-old PhD candidate,

0:42:430:42:45

so she's a fairly intelligent human being,

0:42:450:42:48

and she reported that she could not understand what she was reading.

0:42:480:42:52

It went from "I'm not sure what I understand from this text"

0:42:520:42:58

to, "Oh, my God! My head is in the clouds

0:42:580:43:01

"after reading a couple of lines!"

0:43:010:43:03

And that if she was in a room full of people,

0:43:030:43:05

she could not comprehend the conversation.

0:43:050:43:08

An MRI scan revealed a worrying lump right in the middle of her brain.

0:43:110:43:16

My biggest fear was that this was a malignant,

0:43:200:43:23

what we refer to as a cancerous, brain tumour.

0:43:230:43:26

We had to do something because she was literally dying.

0:43:280:43:31

Dr Shahinian specialises in pioneering keyhole surgery

0:43:330:43:37

at the base of the skull.

0:43:370:43:39

We can see this is the upper brain and this is the lower brain,

0:43:400:43:44

and between the two, there is a natural space that you can see.

0:43:440:43:47

So we access this space, the natural space,

0:43:470:43:51

through a tiny opening here, a keyhole approach,

0:43:510:43:54

and use an endoscope to go between the upper brain

0:43:540:43:58

and the lower brain and access this tumour that way.

0:43:580:44:01

But during the surgery, when he saw the exterior of the tumour,

0:44:050:44:09

his worst fears appeared to be confirmed.

0:44:090:44:12

The tumour surface was extremely gritty and hard,

0:44:130:44:17

and normally that is a bad sign,

0:44:170:44:19

because malignant tumours can be that way.

0:44:190:44:22

But when he looked inside the tumour,

0:44:230:44:26

what Dr Shahinian discovered left him truly astonished.

0:44:260:44:31

There was multiple hair follicles, bone and teeth inside the tumour.

0:44:320:44:38

It wasn't cancer -

0:44:420:44:43

but what was this bony, hairy, toothy lump inside her head?

0:44:430:44:48

It was a bizarre benign growth known as a teratoma.

0:44:520:44:56

Teratoma comes from the Greek word "monstrous tumour"

0:45:000:45:03

because, over the ages,

0:45:030:45:06

we have known that these tumours

0:45:060:45:07

can have all kinds of structures in them - sometimes hair,

0:45:070:45:11

sometimes teeth, sometimes bone, sometimes eyes, sometimes limbs.

0:45:110:45:15

And the teratoma had been with her much longer than she'd realised.

0:45:170:45:21

They told me that I was born with it,

0:45:240:45:26

and it's been growing for the past 26 years.

0:45:260:45:29

So Yamini's teratoma had always been there,

0:45:300:45:33

but it was only in recent times that it had created problems -

0:45:330:45:37

but then, the causes of these teratomas in the first place

0:45:370:45:41

is something that's been disputed and debated in medical circles for years.

0:45:410:45:45

There are two competing theories.

0:45:510:45:53

One theory is this is just an embryologic accident...

0:45:530:45:57

When Yamini was in her mother's womb,

0:45:570:45:59

it could have been that some rogue cells in her body

0:45:590:46:03

started to grow in places they shouldn't...

0:46:030:46:06

..but the alternative hypothesis behind teratomas

0:46:070:46:11

is almost too bizarre to be believed.

0:46:110:46:13

..and then the other theory is what we refer to as the foetus in foetu,

0:46:150:46:19

which is the theory of the trapped twin.

0:46:190:46:21

A foetus in foetu is when, during the very early stages of pregnancy,

0:46:230:46:27

one twin doesn't develop normally

0:46:270:46:30

and instead is absorbed into the body of the other.

0:46:300:46:33

When they told me that it could have been my twin,

0:46:350:46:37

I just called it my evil twin sister,

0:46:370:46:39

because it's been putting me through so much trouble!

0:46:390:46:42

About 12,000 sets of twins are born in the UK every year

0:46:430:46:48

and some research has suggested that up to 12% of pregnancies

0:46:480:46:53

may begin as twins,

0:46:530:46:54

but then something changes and only one foetus develops.

0:46:540:46:58

As for Yamini, although having undergone major brain surgery

0:46:590:47:04

to remove what she describes as her evil twin,

0:47:040:47:08

she's made a full recovery.

0:47:080:47:10

All my symptoms have reversed,

0:47:100:47:13

and so I just found this new joy in life.

0:47:130:47:16

I suppose having your head invaded by a monster from within

0:47:190:47:23

is a pretty unthinkable fate -

0:47:230:47:25

but perhaps not nearly as bad as having your brains pecked out

0:47:250:47:29

by an unlikely killer on the rampage.

0:47:290:47:31

The Bukk Mountains in northern Hungary.

0:47:340:47:36

Bats were discovered in a cave with their brains removed.

0:47:390:47:43

Local naturalist Peter Estok had heard a grisly story

0:47:470:47:51

that pointed to an unlikely culprit.

0:47:510:47:55

I was very surprised, and I could not really believe that story.

0:47:550:47:59

So, we came to the cave and see it for ourselves.

0:48:050:48:09

It's usually birds of prey, like hawks and owls, which go for bats.

0:48:120:48:17

But what Peter discovered went against all his expectations.

0:48:200:48:24

I couldn't believe what I saw.

0:48:260:48:28

Peter found a bird in the gloom...

0:48:300:48:32

..but this was no bird of prey.

0:48:350:48:38

Suddenly, a tit, a great tit, entered the cave,

0:48:380:48:42

and it was looking for something near the crevices.

0:48:420:48:46

Great tits? In caves? Surely they couldn't be to blame.

0:48:480:48:52

We're more used to seeing them in our gardens.

0:48:540:48:57

When they're not feeding on nuts and seeds at the bird table,

0:48:570:49:01

the largest prey they are likely to dine out on

0:49:010:49:04

are small insects and spiders...

0:49:040:49:06

..but these great tits weren't searching for creepy crawlies.

0:49:090:49:13

After some several minutes,

0:49:150:49:18

we observed that the tit got a bat in its beak

0:49:180:49:23

and it started to eat the bat.

0:49:230:49:27

And this wasn't just an unfortunate one-off.

0:49:300:49:34

We saw several occasions when great tits managed to get bats.

0:49:350:49:40

When they were eating the bats, some of them were still alive.

0:49:460:49:51

One of our favourite garden birds had gone bad.

0:49:540:49:57

But what could turn a sweet little great tit

0:49:580:50:01

into a vicious bat-hunting killer?

0:50:010:50:04

Great tits aren't the only species

0:50:040:50:07

to track down and eat things out of the ordinary.

0:50:070:50:10

Over in the States, a couple caught this vegetarian on camera.

0:50:110:50:16

It's got a bird.

0:50:170:50:19

On the ground, Michael.

0:50:190:50:20

Yeah, there's a bird on the ground. It's hurt.

0:50:200:50:23

The culprit is a white tailed deer, munching on a chick.

0:50:230:50:27

He's got it in his mouth.

0:50:270:50:29

He's got the bird in his mouth.

0:50:290:50:31

Oh, my goodness! He ate a bird!

0:50:340:50:36

Michael, he ate a bird!

0:50:360:50:39

He ate a bird!

0:50:390:50:41

-Did you see that?

-Yeah.

0:50:410:50:43

It's not the kind of thing you see every day.

0:50:430:50:47

Experts think it was either supplementing its diet

0:50:470:50:50

with a quick protein-rich meal,

0:50:500:50:53

or trying to get the calcium it needs to grow strong antlers.

0:50:530:50:56

So, animals will find new sources of food when needs must.

0:50:580:51:03

And with the great tits,

0:51:040:51:06

Peter had a hunch what might be making them search for unusual prey.

0:51:060:51:13

In hard winters,

0:51:130:51:14

it is difficult for the great tits to find food outside,

0:51:140:51:18

especially when the snow cover is significant.

0:51:180:51:22

So the great tits were starving.

0:51:240:51:26

As soon as Peter put out an alternative source of food,

0:51:260:51:30

they stopped hunting the bats straightaway.

0:51:300:51:33

They only did it in times of extreme hardship.

0:51:330:51:36

This is not the first time that we've seen great tits

0:51:360:51:39

finding a different source of food when things get tough.

0:51:390:51:43

Back in the day, when milk was delivered to our doorsteps,

0:51:460:51:49

great tits learned how to peck through the foil

0:51:490:51:52

to get to the rich cream at the top.

0:51:520:51:55

Something completely out of the ordinary,

0:51:550:51:57

in terms of their usual diet.

0:51:570:51:59

This behaviour was then passed from one bird to the next,

0:51:590:52:03

simply by copying one another.

0:52:030:52:06

And then, from one generation to the next,

0:52:060:52:09

as the great tits turned out to be excellent social networkers.

0:52:090:52:12

In the cave, the birds were seen to be attacking the bats over

0:52:180:52:21

a period of ten years, yet great tits only live till they're about two.

0:52:210:52:26

So, scientists think that the birds were passing the behaviour

0:52:280:52:31

on by watching one another, just like the tits and the milk bottle tops,

0:52:310:52:37

only a little bit more gruesome.

0:52:390:52:41

Vampire great tits. Sounds like a cheap sci-fi movie, doesn't it?

0:52:490:52:54

What could we add to the plot to improve it? Um...

0:52:540:52:58

How about...some green balls?

0:52:580:53:02

Australia in 2014.

0:53:050:53:07

Sun, sea, sand, surf,

0:53:100:53:13

and strange sightings on a beach in northern Sydney.

0:53:170:53:21

The sands of Dee Why Beach

0:53:210:53:22

were transformed into something of a Martian landscape today,

0:53:220:53:26

covered in green alien balls.

0:53:260:53:28

I'm not sure what they are.

0:53:310:53:33

I haven't heard anyone who does know what they are, actually.

0:53:330:53:36

They're crazy.

0:53:360:53:37

They could be anything. They could be aliens.

0:53:400:53:42

But could there really be an extraterrestrial connection?

0:53:430:53:48

So, when these strange green furry balls

0:53:480:53:50

washed up on the beach in Australia, lots of people were really confused.

0:53:500:53:54

Bizarre as they may be,

0:53:580:54:01

Mark thinks there's a surprisingly sensible explanation.

0:54:010:54:04

These green balls are basically a type of algae.

0:54:060:54:09

Algae are very simple plants, but they're really important

0:54:120:54:17

and they use sunlight energy, like land plants,

0:54:170:54:20

to photosynthesise to produce food.

0:54:200:54:23

Algae usually grow on rocks or the sea floor,

0:54:230:54:26

but they can grow just as happily drifting in the currents.

0:54:260:54:30

But in this situation, they're doing something rather unusual.

0:54:310:54:36

Each little tiny colony, bit by bit,

0:54:360:54:38

is rolling around on the bottom of the sea

0:54:380:54:41

and as sunlight energy hits the top of the ball,

0:54:410:54:44

it grows a bit, and then it rotates and then it grows a bit -

0:54:440:54:48

and that means the growth is kept even,

0:54:480:54:50

and slowly getting bigger and bigger, as the seasons progress,

0:54:500:54:55

until you get these wonderful green balls.

0:54:550:54:57

But why did these balls suddenly turn up on just one beach in Australia?

0:54:590:55:05

That mystery of their occurrence and then their disappearance

0:55:070:55:11

is something we still don't really understand.

0:55:110:55:14

Maybe in that one bay for a short period of time,

0:55:160:55:19

local environmental conditions were just right

0:55:190:55:23

for this rotation and growth to occur -

0:55:230:55:26

and then maybe something happened.

0:55:260:55:29

The currents shift, the water got colder, the nutrients changed,

0:55:290:55:33

and the phenomenon stops,

0:55:330:55:35

and this is one of the mysteries of these little organisms.

0:55:350:55:38

It can occur in an individual water body, like a lake,

0:55:380:55:42

for several years and then stop and never be known to occur again.

0:55:420:55:46

So, what's seen as a strange anomaly down under...

0:55:460:55:50

Well, take a trip to Japan and it's a different story altogether.

0:55:500:55:54

Here, Lake Akan on the northern island

0:55:590:56:01

has been home to these furry wonders for years.

0:56:010:56:05

THEY SING

0:56:120:56:16

They're so revered that every year,

0:56:230:56:25

the indigenous Ainu people hold a three day festival in their honour.

0:56:250:56:30

They're seen as something of a national treasure.

0:56:330:56:35

The Japanese also keep them as very low-maintenance pets.

0:56:410:56:46

I mean, you'll never need to go out in the rain to take these for a walk.

0:56:460:56:51

And if you haven't got room for an aquarium,

0:56:510:56:54

you could buy the cuddly toy instead.

0:56:540:56:56

TOY LAUGHS

0:56:580:57:00

So, the strange green balls on the beach in Australia

0:57:030:57:07

were green algae rolled in to balls by the movement of water,

0:57:070:57:11

and not unidentified floating objects, after all.

0:57:110:57:15

So, a monstrous tumour caused a major headache

0:57:210:57:24

for one student in America,

0:57:240:57:26

whilst brain-hungry great tits spelled the end

0:57:260:57:30

for some bats in a cave in Hungary...

0:57:300:57:32

..and some strange green balls triggered

0:57:350:57:37

a bit of a commotion on a beach in Australia.

0:57:370:57:40

And if you think that's the end of it

0:57:430:57:45

when it comes to weirdness in our world,

0:57:450:57:47

we're only just getting started.

0:57:470:57:49

Next time, we'll discover what causes a beach combing trip

0:57:530:57:57

to end in disaster...

0:57:570:58:00

As I looked down, there are flames shooting off of my shorts.

0:58:000:58:05

..why a flower chooses to smell like a corpse...

0:58:050:58:08

It's really doing a good job of pretending to be a dead animal.

0:58:080:58:11

..what's causing three suns to miraculously appear in our skies...

0:58:110:58:15

..and why a person with perfectly good eyesight can't even recognise

0:58:200:58:23

her own children.

0:58:230:58:25

It's funny that we have so many pictures of them,

0:58:250:58:28

since I can't tell them apart.

0:58:280:58:29

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