Episode 7 World's Weirdest Events


Episode 7

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

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Oh, my!

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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 it 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.

-Ah!

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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 uncover the secrets behind some of the natural world's weirdest events.

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How did this woman find herself inside a meteorological monster?

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What creates a wonderland where flowers bloom underwater?

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How do you extinguish fire with an invisible force?

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And just why has this rat developed a death wish?

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But our first strange story comes to us

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via the internet, all the way from Thailand,

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where a familiar creature was caught doing something unbelievably bizarre.

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Have a look at this. Posted in May 2015, filmed during a fishing trip.

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Looks pretty ordinary, doesn't it?

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Your run-of-the-mill, bog-standard worm.

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Oh, no. Are you ready?

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I told you. Do you want to see it again? Of course you do.

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Hand on heart, this is real. There are no special effects here.

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Look, and just to prove it,

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here's another example found in a fisherman's net in Taiwan.

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These bizarre creatures are called ribbon worms.

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And although there are over 1000 species,

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most of them live in the ocean.

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So, you're unlikely to cross paths with these deep sea

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monstrosities, which is a relief, I suppose, unless, of course,

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you are a scientist obsessed with these weird worms.

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Ribbon worms are incredible animals.

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They really are a unique set of worms.

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You don't say.

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Oh, my goodness.

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Now, it's pretty obvious what sets these worms apart.

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That thing spewing from their bodies is actually a kind of tongue

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called a proboscis.

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It's a crucial appendage, because ribbon worms are a world

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away from the earth eaters we're familiar with.

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Oh, no, they have an appetite for something more substantial.

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Ribbon worms are predators.

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They are the carnivores around in the worm world.

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And what they'll do, is they'll send out this proboscis,

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sense that it's something that they want to eat.

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Then, game over.

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And the biology behind this alarming appendage is very clever indeed.

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The proboscis usually stays in a sack on top of the worm's gut,

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but once the worm senses prey approaching,

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its muscles contract quickly, forcing fluid into the sac

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and shooting it out through a hole in the worm's head.

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Imagine you've got a rubber glove inside your face which you can

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blow into, so that it forces outwards.

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That you can then use to grab whatever is on offer for your lunch,

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before you drop it into your stomach and eat it.

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It's genius.

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And if being able to jettison your innards towards a target

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wasn't spectacular enough, some worms have even customised their appendage.

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Sometimes, these proboscis have little stylets on,

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so hooks that they stab into their prey.

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Some will also produce mucus which then can stun their prey.

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And our friend from the first video is even more extraordinary.

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Only one of two ribbon worms with a branching proboscis that most

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scientists have only ever seen in textbooks.

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It's absolutely fantastic and it's absolutely very weird.

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I'd read about it before, but I have never actually seen any

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footage of it.

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Consider it our gift to you, Emma.

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OK, I can see that regurgitating your insides to grab your next meal

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might not be everyone's cup of tea,

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but our next contender has got an altogether more refined technique.

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Spiders. I suppose you could argue they're pretty weird.

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They're certainly a love them or hate them kind of animal.

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I'm firmly with team spider, of course.

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But I think we can all appreciate that they're very clever

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little creatures.

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They slowly build a web...

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..wait for a fly or another insect to get caught...

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..and then move in for a meal, right?

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Well, not quite.

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Many spiders spin webs which incorporate a type of silk

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which is sticky, but it's not only sticky.

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It's also statically charged, so that the web

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and the prey are drawn inextricably together.

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Can you see the web moving towards the fly?

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It's only a few millimetres, but it's just enough to make

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the difference between snaring a meal and going hungry.

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It's a fantastic trick that thousands of species put to good use.

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But deep in the Peruvian jungle, there's one spider who's refused

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to settle for the norm.

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Now, he might not look like much, but just watch this.

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Captured on film for the first time,

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this tiny spider has designed a projectile web.

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And why has he gone to such extraordinary lengths?

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Well, it's all a matter of expectation.

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You see, this arachnid might be diminutive,

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but it has its sights set very high.

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Flies... Nah!

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Midges... Yuck.

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This spider is only interested in fat, juicy mosquitoes.

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Which is a bit of a problem.

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Mosquitoes, compared to a lot of flying insects,

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they fly quite slowly and are quite deliberate in their movements.

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They also fly with their limbs outstretched.

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It's difficult for them to become trapped in a web.

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So, if they spot a web or feel it with their outstretched legs,

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they can change direction quickly and this allows them

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to avoid the deadliest of traps.

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So, if you're spider with a hankering for a mossie,

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what do you do?

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The spider draws a strand of silk from the centre of its web,

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stretching the whole silky trap into a cone shape, which it then

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catapults with itself attached, towards flying insect prey.

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That's why it's called the slingshot spider.

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The slingshot ratchets back and then fires...

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..colliding with prey before it's had a chance to change its course.

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It's a masterful piece of engineering that makes this spider

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truly deadly...

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..if you're really, really small.

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Now, these spiders are just a few millimetres long,

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so they pose no threat at all to humans, but there is another

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creature that has a far more sinister way of reaching its next victim

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and it's something that we should be truly terrified of.

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Have a look at this.

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A rat chasing a cat.

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Just look at that. Go on, get him!

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This behaviour defies all the rules of nature.

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And it's not a one-off case.

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But this is not a new species of uber-aggressive fighting rodent.

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These rats weren't born with a death wish.

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No, scientists think that this bizarre behaviour might be

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brought about from a run-in with something altogether stranger.

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It's quite possible that these rodents aren't

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acting in their right minds.

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They've been hijacked.

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Hijacked by a parasite.

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Toxoplasma gondii,

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a tiny single cell organism that lives in the rodent's brain.

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Here, it meddles with the neurones

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to render the rat completely fearless.

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But why?

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What possible benefit could it be to the parasite to give the rat

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a death wish?

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Well, here's the really weird thing.

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This parasite doesn't actually like rats very much.

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They're purely a means to an end.

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You see, the ultimate aim for toxoplasma, is to get into a cat.

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What is unique about this parasite, is that it can only reproduce,

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it can only sexually reproduce inside the gut of a cat.

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What it needs to do its life cycle, its evolutionary pressure,

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its need, is to get from one cat to another cat and the question is,

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how does a tiny parasite with no legs, no means of moving

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on its own, how does it get all the way from one cat to another cat?

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Mind control. Toxoplasma makes rats its rodent slaves.

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Here's how it works.

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Toxoplasmosis offspring exit the cat in its faeces.

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The rat or mouse then eats those faeces.

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Once embedded in the rodent's brain,

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the parasite does its thing, significantly lowering the rat's

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inhibitions, making it less cautious and more likely to get eaten.

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Et voila. The life cycle is complete.

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Toxoplasma is a very focused little organism,

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going to extraordinary lengths to make sure

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that this cycle is fulfilled.

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The parasite doesn't only make rats less afraid of cats,

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it does something much weirder.

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We find that in the brains of these animals that are infected

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with the parasite, it looks a little bit like these

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animals are actually sexually attracted

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to the smell of the cat urine.

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Infected rodents aroused by the aroma are enticed into feline

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hang-outs and then eaten.

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The cats are kind of like love hotels for the parasite

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and the rats and the mice are taxis that take them

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in between each individual love hotel.

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Quite a thought. And that's not the end of it.

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The toxoplasma's tale is about to get even darker because,

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and I hate to tell you this, the parasite can infect us too.

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Here's the real shocker.

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Research suggests that this parasite could be lying

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dormant in the brains of one third of us.

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It's truly terrifying.

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Of course, toxoplasma doesn't want to be inside us. We're a dead end.

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It lives trapped inside our brains and what it might be

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doing in there, is, of course, serious cause for concern.

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The big neurobiological question that we want to answer is, if it's

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changing the behaviour of rats and mice, what is it doing to people?

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Well, toxoplasmosis won't have us sniffing out cat urine,

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but studies show that it might be having some very serious

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and very disturbing effects on our mental health.

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Around the world, studies have shown that people with schizophrenia

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have high rates of this parasite.

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Toxoplasmosis is able to alter the way the rat's brain functions.

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When this parasite gets into people, maybe it's doing the same thing.

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Maybe you can have chronic effects on something like mental illness.

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If Patrick can find a link between the parasite and our behaviour,

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then it would change the way we look at mental illness and,

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of course, potentially help find a treatment.

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And just before you lock the cat flap for good, let me reassure you.

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You're most likely to get toxoplasmosis through eating

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raw meat.

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Fertilisers can contain a fair bit of cat faeces, so when the parasite

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gets into the crops, it gets into the cows and then it gets into us.

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Cook your food well, keep your hands washed

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and then you can cuddle your cat free of fear.

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So, toxoplasmosis, the Black Death, Weil's disease, salmonella,

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oh, I don't know.

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The poor old rat really does have a bad reputation,

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which very much upsets me, because I'm a great fan of the rat and that's

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why I'm really pleased that a small group of people are doing everything

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they can to raise its reputation from the mud of human loathing.

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In East Africa, there's one species that is challenging

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the rodent's stereotype.

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The giant African pouched rat.

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This is the new hero of the rodent world.

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Not pests, but highly trained life-saving specialists.

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In the foothills of Tanzania,

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an army of these giant rodents have been trained to save human lives...

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..with just a clicker and a tasty treat.

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They're not strong enough to drag you from a burning building.

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That would be daft.

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But they are just the right size to pull off an astonishing

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feat of bravery.

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Something so clever,

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that you'll never look at a rat in the same way again.

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But first, we need some context.

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Tanzania's neighbour, Mozambique, has had a troubled past.

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Years of civil war have left their mark and nearly 20 years after

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a ceasefire, peaceful fields still claim lives.

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More than 100 million land mines still litter the ground worldwide.

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And they kill more than 4,000 people a year.

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So clearing land mines safely is a pressing concern.

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But how do you do it without the loss of even more lives?

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Well, here is an extraordinary solution.

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A giant, pouched, bomb squad.

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It's not as ridiculous as it sounds.

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Rats have a sense of smell which rivals dogs and, in fact, they can

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smell an infinitesimally small amount of TNT from a metre away or even

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when it's buried deep underground.

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Sniffing out a land mine is a breeze for an African rat.

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But a dangerous job needs serious training.

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Which is easier than you might imagine.

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Because rats are incredibly intelligent animals.

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And if there's one thing they'll do anything for, it's a banana.

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During a nine-month boot camp the rats are taught to

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move along a piece of rope, sniffing for teabags stuffed with TNT.

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They scratch to mark the spot

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and then come running back to the sound of a clicker.

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Mmm, banana!

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Looks like this rat has passed the test.

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Now fully trained, the bomb squad's job becomes deadly serious.

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No more teabags.

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These rats are now searching for real land mines.

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Mines that are designed to activate under foot.

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But these rats haven't gone through all of that training,

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all of those kilos of bananas, just to sacrifice themselves.

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You see, not only are these fantastic rats clever, with a wonderful

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sense of smell, they're also light.

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Just over a kilogram.

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Small enough to go undetected by any mines below.

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And look, he's found the mine.

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Superb!

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Now the disposal team can go to work.

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In just 20 minutes, the rats can cover the same amount of land that

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humans would take five days to search.

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And so far the bomb squad have cleared over 13,000 mines.

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Giving more than 11 million square metres back to the farmers.

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The heroic African pouched rat.

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Making the fields of Mozambique safe, one banana at a time.

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Yes, finally the rat's reputation is on the rise.

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Vive le rat!

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So, an unassuming worm might be concealing a weapon.

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And a tiny spider could be packing a slingshot.

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Invincible rodents are really being controlled by a parasite

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and creatures that we all once thought were pests are now heroes.

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Come on, give that rat a medal.

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For our next journey we're going from a watery wonderland to a stony

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relative with a soft heart.

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And it all starts in the mountains of Austria.

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Dotted with quaint villages, flower-strewn meadows...

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COW MOOS

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..and home to the strangest lake on the planet.

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Every year hundreds of people come from all around the world to

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visit the Emerald Lake near the town of Tragoess.

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But not to picnic by its picture-perfect shores.

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For just two weeks of the year, it entices a different type of tourist.

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Drawn to Tragoess by a secret that lies under the surface.

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You see, something very strange happens at Tragoess.

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And Marc makes a yearly pilgrimage to capture it on camera.

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Bridges...

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..flowers...

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..pathways...

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..benches...

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It's beautiful but totally bizarre.

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I mean, how is it possible that a place exists where fish swim

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through grass and flowers bloom underwater?

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These aren't sub-aquatic species.

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And there hasn't been some sort of natural disaster at Tragoess.

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In fact, the Emerald Lake is only part of the story

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because for much of the year the place looks entirely different.

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For several months the valley lies under a covering of snow.

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You're more likely to see snow bums than divers.

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But as the spring arrives the snow melts.

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Revealing a shallow lake and some very familiar looking landmarks.

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'Pretty? Well, yes. Strange, no.

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'Where is our watery wonderland?

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'Well, stick with me.'

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In early spring, Lake Tragoess is just one metre deep.

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It's a pond, really.

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Diving would be tricky.

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But, as all the melt-water rushes down from the mountains it

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disappears underground.

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Raising the water table under the lake so dramatically...

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..that it begins to fill.

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Until, for two very surreal weeks of the year, the spring growth

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finds itself submerged...

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..ten metres deep.

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An underwater wonderland...

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..created by the seasons.

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Must be pretty confusing to be a fish there. One minute you're

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swimming around in a puddle, the next minute you're in a veritable ocean.

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But there is one species for which the world very rarely changes.

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The Atacama Desert in Chile.

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A hostile moonscape in which temperatures can vary by up

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to 20 Celsius in a day.

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And rain doesn't come for years at a time.

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Not much survives out here.

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Well, except for these.

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Huge bright green blobs melting into the desert.

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Despite their bizarre looks, these blobs had gone under

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the public radar...

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..until 2010 when a photographer with a peculiar interest spotted

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a picture online.

0:30:340:30:36

They truly look alien. They are so strange looking.

0:30:370:30:40

I was definitely intrigued. I could tell right away

0:30:430:30:46

they were going to be very photogenic.

0:30:460:30:48

Inspired by these green globules Rachel embarked upon

0:30:560:31:00

a 10,000km journey to photograph them.

0:31:000:31:04

We headed up into some very high elevations and some extremely arid

0:31:040:31:10

conditions, so parts of the Atacama are known as absolute desert.

0:31:100:31:14

And here, amongst the llamas, Rachael found what she was looking for.

0:31:150:31:20

The first time I saw them they were visually stunning.

0:31:200:31:25

Stunning?

0:31:280:31:29

I suppose so, if pea-coloured pillows are your sort of thing.

0:31:290:31:32

But it certainly got Rachael clicking.

0:31:320:31:35

Some are bulbous, some are these very large, expansive mats.

0:31:350:31:39

They look like they might be soft to the touch like moss would be,

0:31:410:31:44

but they're not. They're a little prickly.

0:31:440:31:47

OK, so what on earth are these spiky, bulbous, matted mounds?

0:31:490:31:53

These bizarre desert sponges may look alien, but they're not.

0:31:590:32:02

They're very much of this world.

0:32:020:32:04

And their closest living relative?

0:32:040:32:06

The humble carrot. Yes.

0:32:070:32:10

The carrot.

0:32:100:32:12

No really, I'm not joking, the carrot.

0:32:120:32:14

Yes, look closely and these blobs reveal themselves as plants.

0:32:160:32:20

Millions of tiny flowering heads called yareta.

0:32:200:32:24

One of the Apiaceae family, alongside carrots, parsley and fennel.

0:32:250:32:30

But don't let their earthly origins or commonplace cousins

0:32:330:32:36

disappoint you.

0:32:360:32:37

Remember I said Rachael had a peculiar artistic interest?

0:32:380:32:43

She didn't travel all that way just to photograph any old flower.

0:32:430:32:48

The yareta was on her photographic hitlist for one very strange reason.

0:32:480:32:53

I spent about ten years working on a project called

0:32:540:32:57

The Oldest Living Things In The World.

0:32:570:33:00

Rachael had been searching for the most ancient plants on our planet.

0:33:000:33:05

When I heard about the yareta it was not only that it was

0:33:050:33:08

an unusual plant, it also happens to be old.

0:33:080:33:12

I saw a whole range of ages from some babies up

0:33:120:33:16

until probably around 3,000 years old.

0:33:160:33:19

3,000 years old.

0:33:200:33:21

That means this yareta germinated at the start of the Iron Age.

0:33:230:33:27

Growing just one centimetre every year since.

0:33:300:33:33

In a complete no-man's land.

0:33:350:33:37

If you're a plant, surviving in an arid desert

0:33:430:33:47

environment like this is actually pretty difficult.

0:33:470:33:50

Take a look around.

0:33:500:33:52

It may appear that there are lots of cacti here,

0:33:520:33:54

lots of drought-resistant species, but then look again.

0:33:540:33:58

In fact, there are very few different types of plant here.

0:33:580:34:01

'Cacti are one of the few species that thrive in the heat.

0:34:030:34:06

'Living for up to 180 years, which is impressive

0:34:070:34:12

'but nothing on our green blobs.'

0:34:120:34:16

So how does the yareta manage to survive in such a hostile

0:34:160:34:20

environment for so long?

0:34:200:34:22

It turns out that this other-worldly blob has a secret super power.

0:34:230:34:28

And a clue? Well, it's in the yereta's looks.

0:34:290:34:33

That blob shape reduces the plant's surface area.

0:34:350:34:40

And the tiny heads packed tightly together protect against

0:34:400:34:44

the worst of the weather.

0:34:440:34:47

And under those green heads,

0:34:470:34:48

the remnants of 3,000 years of growth form a cushion, storing water

0:34:480:34:55

and helping the plant to regulate its temperature.

0:34:550:34:58

It's a pretty humbling experience to stand in front of these

0:34:580:35:02

organisms and think about how much they've witnessed

0:35:020:35:06

and weathered and survived.

0:35:060:35:07

The yareta is a super weird, super survivor.

0:35:090:35:12

3,000 years - puts a lifespan of a carrot to shame.

0:35:170:35:20

And it's strange to think that these green blobs are related to

0:35:200:35:24

a vegetable we eat.

0:35:240:35:26

But then I suppose I'm always surprised

0:35:260:35:28

by what people are prepared to put in their mouths.

0:35:280:35:32

For our next weird event we're staying in Chile

0:35:380:35:42

but moving on to a very different habitat.

0:35:420:35:45

Imagine you're walking along the shoreline when you come across this.

0:35:460:35:51

You probably wouldn't give this rocky outcrop a second look.

0:35:520:35:56

Unless, of course, you're a local.

0:35:570:36:00

Because they know that there's more to this lump than meets the eye.

0:36:020:36:05

Gives new meaning to blood from a stone.

0:36:110:36:14

But this weird lump is actually alive.

0:36:170:36:20

It's pyura,

0:36:220:36:24

a filter feeder that grows in rocky clumps along the tide line.

0:36:240:36:28

Its hard exterior hides a soft, gooey centre that these

0:36:300:36:34

locals consider a seaside delicacy.

0:36:340:36:38

A bit like an oyster, delicious...

0:36:390:36:42

PEOPLE YELL

0:36:440:36:45

..well, apparently.

0:36:470:36:48

HE EXCLAIMS

0:36:510:36:53

Now, Chilean taste buds are one thing,

0:36:530:36:55

but its the lifestyle of this living rock that's truly bizarre.

0:36:550:36:59

It actually starts life as a tiny tadpole.

0:37:060:37:09

Before fixing itself in position and turning into a living rock.

0:37:100:37:15

Stuck fast.

0:37:170:37:19

Which is a problem.

0:37:200:37:22

I mean, how does a male rock find a female rock and make tadpoles?

0:37:220:37:27

Well, it's easy if you're actually male and female.

0:37:300:37:34

Yes, the living rock needs to look no further than itself to procreate.

0:37:380:37:42

Surely it can't get any weirder than

0:37:450:37:48

a self-fertilizing, sex changing invertebrate masquerading as a rock?

0:37:480:37:52

Oh, but, yes, it can.

0:37:530:37:55

Because our gooey geode has a backbone.

0:37:590:38:03

No, really, it's true. It develops at the tadpole stage.

0:38:040:38:08

And then compare it to,

0:38:100:38:12

I don't know, a human embryo.

0:38:120:38:15

See any similarities?

0:38:160:38:17

The living rock evolved this kind of backbone at the same time

0:38:200:38:24

our ancestors did

0:38:240:38:26

some 600 million years ago. Cutting straight to the uncomfortable truth.

0:38:260:38:32

We're related.

0:38:370:38:39

This super strange pseudo-rock is our closest invertebrate cousin.

0:38:420:38:48

It's quite hard to swallow.

0:38:480:38:49

An underwater wonderland created by the seasons.

0:38:520:38:57

A green colony that's seen centuries pass.

0:38:570:39:02

And our rocky relatives, unchanged for thousands of years.

0:39:020:39:07

And apparently, delicious. But do you know what, I think

0:39:070:39:12

I'll take their word for it.

0:39:120:39:14

Finally, we're going to get very hot and bothered

0:39:170:39:20

when we meet one of the world's most dangerous meteorological phenomena.

0:39:200:39:24

'And discover the science behind a very strange

0:39:260:39:30

'fire extinguishing invention.

0:39:300:39:31

'But first, a trip to the States.'

0:39:310:39:34

The Florida Keys, in fact, renowned for their long, sandy beaches,

0:39:380:39:42

deep blue waters, and beautiful sunny days.

0:39:420:39:46

But on the 25th of September 2013, a local fisherman found himself at the

0:39:480:39:53

centre of some very strange weather.

0:39:530:39:56

On that day I was out enjoying a typical summer day

0:40:040:40:06

with my friend Erin and we were catching lobster.

0:40:060:40:09

During the course of that time we had seen this cloud on the horizon.

0:40:120:40:16

We thought that there was the

0:40:200:40:21

potential for something to happen but we didn't recognise how

0:40:210:40:24

great an event it was going to become.

0:40:240:40:26

What he thought was just another cloud,

0:40:270:40:29

turned out to be something much weirder.

0:40:290:40:33

As we approached the base of this cloud it was a rapidly

0:40:330:40:35

changing formation.

0:40:350:40:37

This was something that caught us off guard

0:40:370:40:39

and we couldn't have prepared for.

0:40:390:40:41

It was a waterspout and Kevin was headed straight for it.

0:40:420:40:48

Look at the funnel starting on this. Looks like it's getting angry.

0:40:490:40:52

So what creates these strange, spinning spouts?

0:40:540:40:57

The basic ingredients of a waterspout are a warm water surface

0:41:000:41:04

and a storm cloud over the top of that surface.

0:41:040:41:06

All sorts of places are prone to them,

0:41:120:41:15

the Great Lakes of North America,

0:41:150:41:17

the Mediterranean gets a lot of water spouts.

0:41:170:41:20

They can even form in a swimming pool!

0:41:200:41:23

And although they look bizarre,

0:41:260:41:28

the science behind these spouts is actually fairly simple.

0:41:280:41:32

We can even make our own in miniature.

0:41:320:41:34

The dry ice represents warm air rising from the ocean surface.

0:41:390:41:43

It forms a column that draws in surrounding water and clouds.

0:41:440:41:49

This cloud-filled column starts to rotate,

0:41:490:41:53

creating a whirling vortex, a waterspout.

0:41:530:41:56

On a hot, stormy day

0:41:590:42:01

weather conditions can be ideal for making waterspouts.

0:42:010:42:04

Perhaps a little too ideal.

0:42:050:42:06

Just off the coast of Liguria, Italy, a passer-by captured this

0:42:090:42:13

footage of something incredible...

0:42:130:42:15

..twin waterspouts.

0:42:170:42:18

If under a particular cloud there's more than one column of air

0:42:210:42:24

rising at a time, then you can get multiple waterspouts.

0:42:240:42:27

Back in Florida, Kevin

0:42:320:42:34

was surrounded not by one, or even two spouts.

0:42:340:42:37

They're everywhere.

0:42:390:42:40

There's one, two, three, four and a fifth over there.

0:42:400:42:44

Look how fast it's spinning.

0:42:450:42:47

So, multiple spouts is a very real, very weird possibility.

0:42:490:42:54

But there is one thing crazier than a sky full of raging vortices

0:42:540:42:59

and that's this man.

0:42:590:43:00

I think we should go inside!

0:43:030:43:05

All right, let's go, we're going to batten down the hatches,

0:43:050:43:08

put on the waterproof housing and we are going inside.

0:43:080:43:11

Kevin was playing with fire... well, water.

0:43:120:43:16

There is a million decisions going on.

0:43:190:43:22

Can I really do this? What are the repercussions and

0:43:220:43:25

who's going to get mad at me and who's going to see this?

0:43:250:43:29

My girlfriend's going to kill me.

0:43:290:43:31

Aah!

0:43:360:43:39

Your ears pop, you feel the hairs on your neck stand up on end.

0:43:470:43:50

It was such a sensory overload, your body didn't know how to react

0:43:560:44:00

to it and your brain didn't have time to process

0:44:000:44:03

so the first emotion to come out was pure joy.

0:44:030:44:06

That opened all my hatches and everything.

0:44:060:44:09

Kevin sailed through a spout and lived to tell the tale.

0:44:110:44:15

He was very lucky, the boat only suffered

0:44:170:44:20

some minor damage, war wounds, really.

0:44:200:44:23

We won't do that again.

0:44:250:44:26

-And just in case you felt yourself asking...

-No animals were

0:44:280:44:33

harmed in the making of this film.

0:44:330:44:35

Now, Kevin and his friend survived their adventure because waterspouts

0:44:370:44:42

aren't necessarily that powerful.

0:44:420:44:45

The vortices that he filmed weren't spinning fast enough to

0:44:450:44:48

lift the boat from the water.

0:44:480:44:50

'But when a vortex forms over land it becomes

0:44:520:44:57

'a very different beast altogether.'

0:44:570:44:59

April 27th, 2011, Alabama.

0:45:010:45:05

And a drive to work is about to take a very frightening turn.

0:45:070:45:10

SCREAMING

0:45:130:45:15

I heard on the radio there were weather warnings

0:45:180:45:22

but living in the south you brush them off.

0:45:220:45:25

When it started to

0:45:280:45:30

get 150, 100 yards near me,

0:45:300:45:32

I knew it was coming towards me.

0:45:320:45:34

Lauren's commute was cut short.

0:45:360:45:39

-Oh, my God.

-Something terrifying was coming right for her.

0:45:410:45:46

You could hear the rocks hitting my car.

0:45:470:45:50

About ten seconds after that, that's when it hit me.

0:45:530:45:56

LAUREN SCREAMS

0:45:560:45:57

I stood no chance, at all.

0:46:000:46:02

Lauren had found herself in the path of a spinning vortex.

0:46:070:46:11

But unlike the water spout that Kevin encountered,

0:46:110:46:14

this thing was much more dangerous.

0:46:140:46:17

I threw my car in reverse...

0:46:210:46:23

..and did a 180.

0:46:260:46:28

I put my foot all the way down and tried to get

0:46:280:46:30

out of there as fast as I could.

0:46:300:46:32

I just remember closing my eyes.

0:46:350:46:37

SCREAMING

0:46:370:46:39

It pushed me into a building and sucked me back out.

0:46:430:46:46

Unlike Kevin, Lauren wasn't left smiling.

0:46:490:46:52

This vortex ripped her car from the ground, spinning it skyward.

0:46:540:46:58

I thought I was going to die.

0:47:000:47:01

I look around and see all the damage that it did, not only to my car

0:47:080:47:12

but to everything else.

0:47:120:47:14

'So where had all this power come from?'

0:47:240:47:27

Well, it was a hot day in Alabama

0:47:280:47:30

and the clouds forming over Lauren's head were much bigger.

0:47:300:47:35

And bigger clouds mean bigger vortexes.

0:47:370:47:40

Just like waterspouts, it's all about hot air.

0:47:450:47:49

The hot ground heats the air, sending it skywards.

0:47:510:47:54

Then winds at different altitudes

0:47:570:47:59

blowing at different speeds make the column of hot air spin.

0:47:590:48:02

As the column rises higher, it spins faster

0:48:060:48:10

and faster and becomes more powerful.

0:48:100:48:13

Now it's a tornado spinning at up to 300mph.

0:48:200:48:25

Giving it, as footage from this Indiana high school proves,

0:48:280:48:31

the power to destroy everything in its path.

0:48:310:48:35

Tornados are classified by how powerful they are

0:48:470:48:50

and how much destruction they do.

0:48:500:48:52

And they range from an EF-0 tornado, which is a very light,

0:48:520:48:55

weak tornado...

0:48:550:48:57

..right up to EF-5, which is a very destructive storm that can

0:49:000:49:03

blow over trees,

0:49:030:49:05

knock down houses, even pick up cars and move them some distance.

0:49:050:49:08

Lauren had survived a first-hand encounter with an EF-5 tornado.

0:49:130:49:19

She was very lucky to make it out alive.

0:49:200:49:24

Don't mess with Mother Nature because she is mean sometimes.

0:49:240:49:29

Lauren had gone head-to-head with a meteorological monster

0:49:330:49:37

and lived to tell the tale, but the tornado has an altogether

0:49:370:49:42

stranger cousin that leaves no survivors.

0:49:420:49:46

The Australian outback.

0:49:500:49:52

One of the most extreme environments on the planet.

0:49:520:49:55

Temperatures here can soar to 40 Celsius.

0:49:570:50:01

And the parched bush is like tinder to a flame.

0:50:020:50:06

Wildfires are a force to be reckoned with.

0:50:090:50:12

But from the belly of the fire comes an altogether different beast.

0:50:140:50:19

It's only been captured on film a few times.

0:50:220:50:25

But it's utterly spectacular.

0:50:270:50:28

The firenado.

0:50:340:50:36

A swirling vortex of fire reaching high into the sky.

0:50:380:50:41

These things may look like a special effect,

0:50:430:50:46

but they're not, they're very real, they're very powerful

0:50:460:50:49

and they're very dangerous.

0:50:490:50:52

And the weirdest thing about them, notice there are no clouds.

0:50:520:50:56

There's no storm.

0:50:580:51:00

A firenado doesn't need outside help to wreak havoc.

0:51:000:51:04

You see, the fire generates very hot air,

0:51:150:51:19

rising in a column that starts to spin.

0:51:190:51:23

It produces its own tornado.

0:51:240:51:27

And then you get this strange, spinning, raging, fiery hybrid.

0:51:270:51:32

The vortex sucks flames from the wildfire below.

0:51:370:51:40

And combustible gases from the air all around it...

0:51:420:51:45

..creating a jet engine-like inferno

0:51:460:51:49

with a core that can reach over 1,000 degrees Celsius.

0:51:490:51:54

Experts studying a bush fire in Australia

0:52:040:52:07

found a 25-kilometre strip of torched earth,

0:52:070:52:11

tracing the path of just one of these fiery beasts.

0:52:110:52:15

We might have given it a Hollywood name

0:52:180:52:20

but the firenado is a weird weather phenomena

0:52:200:52:23

not to be trifled with.

0:52:230:52:26

Fire is one of the most devastating forces on earth

0:52:330:52:37

and fighting it is a real challenge.

0:52:370:52:39

So what have we got at our disposal?

0:52:390:52:41

Well, we've got sand - plenty of that around here,

0:52:410:52:44

or we've got CO2, water, foam...

0:52:440:52:49

But in Virginia, USA, two engineering students have come up

0:52:500:52:54

with an extraordinary, new flame extinguishing solution.

0:52:540:52:58

A patented design that they hope will reinvent firefighting.

0:53:010:53:05

The first time that we were able to show it to the fire marshals -

0:53:110:53:14

these people that see fire every day -

0:53:140:53:16

they see it going out instantly, they are like,

0:53:160:53:19

"Wow! What is this? Why do we not use this?"

0:53:190:53:21

MACHINE HUMS

0:53:220:53:24

The concept itself is not new

0:53:270:53:29

but nothing practical has ever come about.

0:53:290:53:32

Nothing that can really be used.

0:53:320:53:33

We know how devastating fire can be,

0:53:350:53:37

but putting it out is just as dangerous.

0:53:370:53:42

The problem is that different substances burn in different ways,

0:53:490:53:53

which means that when it comes to extinguishing them,

0:53:530:53:56

you need to use different methods.

0:53:560:53:57

and if you get it wrong, it can be disastrous.

0:53:570:54:00

Like throwing water on a burning chip fat fryer in the kitchen.

0:54:000:54:04

So Seth and Viet saw a gap in the market for a simple solution.

0:54:070:54:12

A lot of people freak out and throw water on it.

0:54:130:54:15

That's the worst thing you could do for a grease fire.

0:54:150:54:17

We designed it to work on liquid fires and things of that nature.

0:54:170:54:20

But this wasn't to be your average extinguisher.

0:54:230:54:26

Seth and Viet had something more unusual in mind.

0:54:270:54:32

An idea so outlandish that, at first, well,

0:54:320:54:36

everyone thought they were a bit mad.

0:54:360:54:38

The person that leads the class, he's telling us, you know,

0:54:400:54:42

you guys should know if it doesn't work,

0:54:420:54:44

you've put yourselves at risk of failing the class.

0:54:440:54:46

With their engineering degrees on the line,

0:54:460:54:49

Seth and Viet still dared to dream.

0:54:490:54:52

It came down to this technology is going to happen one day.

0:54:520:54:56

Why not us be the ones to create it?

0:54:560:54:58

Seth and Viet weren't working on a miraculous powder

0:55:010:55:04

or some sort of fire dampening fluid.

0:55:040:55:07

No. They believed that an invisible force could be

0:55:070:55:11

channeled to extinguish the flames.

0:55:110:55:13

They'd made...

0:55:170:55:18

..the world's first...

0:55:200:55:21

MACHINE HUMS

0:55:230:55:25

..sound extinguisher.

0:55:250:55:27

This is the first time that a device like this has actually been put into practice.

0:55:270:55:31

MACHINE HUMS

0:55:310:55:33

But how does it work?

0:55:340:55:36

Well, this sound generating, flame-busting, backpack

0:55:370:55:42

is based on some very simple science.

0:55:420:55:44

For a fire to burn, it needs both fuel and oxygen.

0:55:520:55:57

If you take one of these away, it simply can't burn any more.

0:55:570:56:01

Seth and Viet realised that you could use sound to split these elements.

0:56:040:56:10

WHISTLING SOUND

0:56:100:56:12

This should make things clearer.

0:56:150:56:17

So we know that sound moves in waves.

0:56:190:56:21

Send sound waves through a gas-filled tube,

0:56:240:56:27

light it,

0:56:270:56:29

and you can clearly see the wave pattern.

0:56:290:56:31

Changing the volume and frequency of sound

0:56:340:56:37

changes the shape of the wave.

0:56:370:56:39

What the guys had realised is that specific frequencies of sound waves,

0:56:410:56:46

combined together,

0:56:460:56:48

could separate the oxygen from the fuel,

0:56:480:56:51

thus extinguishing the flames.

0:56:510:56:54

This is just the start for the sound extinguisher.

0:56:580:57:01

MACHINE HUMS

0:57:010:57:03

It has potential far beyond the kitchen.

0:57:030:57:05

It would be awesome to see this being applied,

0:57:070:57:10

just attached to drones and swarms of them attacking a forest fire,

0:57:100:57:14

building fires - that'd be really cool to see.

0:57:140:57:16

Putting human life out of harm's way.

0:57:160:57:20

Engineering is all about finding a way to make the impossible, possible. So that's what we did.

0:57:200:57:24

So, in the future, we might be fighting fire with big beats

0:57:270:57:31

instead of water hoses.

0:57:310:57:33

But in the meantime, if you hear the roar of wind

0:57:350:57:39

and see a spinning vortex spewing flames...

0:57:390:57:42

..hurtling over land,

0:57:440:57:46

or whipping up water...

0:57:460:57:49

-..don't do a Kevin.

-Ha-ha, ha!

0:57:510:57:52

Argh!

0:57:520:57:53

Stay out of its way.

0:57:530:57:55

All very curious and strange stuff.

0:57:580:58:02

But I can assure you there's a bit more weirdery to come yet.

0:58:020:58:05

Next time...

0:58:090:58:10

How does a lake form at the bottom of the ocean?

0:58:100:58:14

Does money really grow on trees?

0:58:160:58:19

How does a kingfisher help design a super-fast train?

0:58:200:58:24

And could robot swarms cure cancer?

0:58:260:58:29

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