1. Antarctica.
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2. The coldest, the harshest,
and the most remote continent on Earth.
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3. No human being has ever descended
into the depths that surround it...
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4. until now.
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5. The deep ocean is as
challenging to explore as space.
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6. We know more about the surface of Mars
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7. than we do about
the deepest parts of our seas.
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8. Now we can dive
these uncharted depths,
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9. to discover what secrets lie beneath.
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10. Sinking down beside
the submerged wall of an iceberg,
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11. we enter an unforgiving world.
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12. These waters
are the coldest on Earth.
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13. As we descend into the deep,
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14. the pressure increases relentlessly.
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15. And the light from above
all but disappears.
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16. Yet, incredibly...
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17. there is life here.
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18. We might have expected
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19. that deep beneath
the surface of the Polar seas,
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20. the waters would be truly barren.
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21. But, in fact, we find life here
in unimaginable abundance.
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22. Nor is such great abundance
confined to Antarctic waters.
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23. Currents carry this richness
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24. into the depths of almost
every ocean around the world.
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25. Astonishingly, in the deep sea,
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26. there is more life
than anywhere else on Earth.
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27. The sunlight fades,
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28. and the seas darken.
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29. Here, in the Pacific, 200 metres down,
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30. we enter an alien world.
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31. The Twilight Zone,
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32. a sea of eternal gloom.
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33. There are strange creatures here.
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34. A pyrosome.
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35. A tube of jelly two metres long
that dwarfs a visitor from above,
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36. an oceanic whitetip shark.
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37. Only a tiny amount of light
filters down this far.
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38. Survival here means making the most
of every last glimmer.
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39. A swordfish.
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40. Its eyes are as big as tennis balls
to help it see in the perpetual dusk.
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41. A squid, but this is one
that lives only here.
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42. Its right eye
looks permanently downwards.
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43. But its left eye is much bigger
and trained upwards
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44. to detect the silhouettes of prey
swimming nearer the surface.
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45. No wonder it's nicknamed
the "cock-eyed squid".
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46. And even stranger,
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47. this is barreleye,
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48. a fish with a transparent head,
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49. filled with jelly,
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50. so that it can look up
through its skull.
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51. We now know that
the Twilight Zone is a refuge
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52. for an incredible 90%
of all fish in the ocean.
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53. Only at night,
do vast shoals of lanternfish
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54. migrate to the surface
to feed on tiny plankton.
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55. By day, they retreat back down here.
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56. Humboldt squid.
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57. Two metres long
and 50 kilos in weight.
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58. Like most squid,
they're voracious hunters.
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59. There are hundreds of them.
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60. They found a shoal of lanternfish
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61. hiding 800 metres down,
off the coast of South America.
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62. Their tentacles are armed
with powerful suckers
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63. with which they grab their prey.
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64. And when there are
no more lanternfish to be found,
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65. they turn on each other.
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66. This squid has caught
a smaller one in its tentacles.
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67. To hide its capture from the rest,
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68. it releases a smokescreen of black ink.
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69. But then, an even
bigger one challenges it
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70. and steals its catch.
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71. The Twilight Zone
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72. is the Humboldt squid's
favourite hunting ground.
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73. They seldom go deeper
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74. into the world
of perpetual blackness below.
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75. The Midnight Zone.
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76. Two-thirds of
a mile from the surface,
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77. beyond the reach of the sun.
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78. A giant black void
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79. larger than all the rest
of the world's habitat's combined.
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80. There's life here,
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81. but not as we know it.
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82. Alien-like creatures
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83. produce dazzling displays of light.
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84. Nearly all animals
need to attract mates
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85. and repel predators.
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86. This language of light
is so widespread here,
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87. that these signals are probably
the commonest form of communication
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88. on the entire planet.
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89. And yet,
we still know little about them.
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90. Hunters illuminate themselves,
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91. and by doing so
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92. attract inquisitive prey.
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93. This is fangtooth.
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94. It has the largest teeth
for its size of any fish.
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95. There are pressure sensors
all over its head and body
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96. which can detect anything
moving in the surrounding water.
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97. It's the Midnight Zone's
most voracious fish.
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98. But prey use light as a distraction.
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99. A decoy of luminous ink.
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100. Down here, in this blackness,
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101. creatures live beyond
the normal rules of time.
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102. Siphonophores are virtually eternal.
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103. They repeatedly clone themselves,
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104. some eventually growing
longer than a blue whale.
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105. Down here, it snows.
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106. Continuous clouds of organic debris
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107. drift slowly down from above.
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108. This is food,
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109. and a whole variety
of filter feeders depend on it.
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110. Jellyfish.
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111. And delicate sea cucumbers.
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112. The 1% of marine snow they miss
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113. eventually settles on the sea floor.
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114. Over millions of years,
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115. it forms a layer of mud
up to a mile thick.
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116. It's an empty plain
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117. that covers half
the surface of our planet.
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118. The deep seabed may,
at first, appear lifeless,
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119. but it's home to a unique
cast of mud dwellers.
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120. The sea toad.
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121. It is an ambush predator
with an enormous mouth
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122. and infinite patience.
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123. This fish has been
living for so long here
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124. that its fins have changed
into something more useful.
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125. Feet.
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126. They help it shuffle about
on the sea floor.
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127. The flapjack octopus.
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128. It hovers just above
the surface of the mud
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129. as it delicately sifts through it
searching for worms.
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130. But it can jet away
at the first sign of danger.
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131. A sixgill shark,
as big as a great white.
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132. It may not have eaten
for an entire year.
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133. It patrols the mud plains
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134. using a minimum amount of energy.
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135. High above,
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136. the carcass of a huge sperm whale
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137. is slowly decaying.
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138. This will be a bonanza
for the creatures of the deep.
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139. Food.
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140. Thirty tonnes of it.
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141. Finally it settles on the ocean floor
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142. and its presence is soon detected.
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143. Sixgills sharks
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144. have an exceptionally
acute sense of smell.
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145. just 25 minutes
after the whale's carcass arrives,
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146. a sixgill finds it.
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147. Each bite releases
blood into the current.
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148. The news that food
is here spreads quickly.
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149. Two more ravenous sixgills arrive.
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150. Within 12 hours,
there are seven enormous sharks
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151. jostling with one another
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152. as they compete to tear off mouthfuls.
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153. No one is prepared to back off.
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154. Twenty-four hours later,
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155. and a third of the carcass has gone.
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156. The first arrival has gorged
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157. until it's completely full.
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158. This single meal
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159. may be enough to sustain it
for a whole year.
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160. Now, the clean up team arrives.
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161. Spider crabs carrying coral
in their hind legs,
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162. presumably as makeshift body armour.
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163. There are rock crabs here too.
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164. They probably detected the carcass
almost as soon as the sharks,
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165. but they can't move as fast.
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166. A month on,
and over 30 species of scavenger
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167. are clearing away
the last edible fragments.
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168. But now, the scavengers
are attracting their own predators.
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169. Scabbardfish, habitually
swimming upright,
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170. are picking them off one by one.
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171. Some of the whale's teeth
have been dislodged
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172. as the skeleton starts to fall apart.
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173. Four months later,
there is nothing left but a few bones.
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174. But even they are food
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175. for something.
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176. Zombie worms.
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177. They tunnel into the bones
by injecting acid
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178. and so reach the tiny amounts of fat
that still remain there.
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179. It may take decades,
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180. but eventually,
the last of the bones will crumble,
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181. and the whole 50-tonne carcass
will have been recycled.
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182. A whale fall is a temporary oasis
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183. in the desert of the sea floor.
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184. But there are permanent oases here too.
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185. Rocks projecting above the mud
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186. provide anchorage for deep sea corals.
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187. As far down
as three and a half miles,
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188. there are more species of coral
in the deep
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189. than on shallow tropical reefs.
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190. Without sunlight,
they rely solely on food
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191. drifting in the current.
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192. And they grow
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193. just a hair's breadth a year.
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194. But some of them
can live for 4,000 years.
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195. They, like their
shallow water relatives,
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196. provide homes for all kinds
of other creatures.
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197. Growing among the corals,
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198. is one of the most beautiful of sponges.
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199. This is Venus' flower basket.
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200. These sponges have lodgers.
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201. Shrimps.
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202. There are plenty
of predators on the reef
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203. so the shrimps are fortunate.
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204. Both this male and female,
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205. were swept into this sponge
when they were tiny larvae,
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206. along with the minute particles of food
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207. on which the sponge feeds.
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208. They found each other
and have been here ever since.
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209. Now, they're full-grown
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210. and the female is carrying eggs.
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211. Once hatched, the larvae will swim
out through the sponge's walls.
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212. But the shrimps will never leave.
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213. They can't.
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214. They're now far too big
to go out the way they came in.
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215. And, no doubt,
they will live longer here
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216. than they would if they were
wandering about on the reef unprotected.
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217. But how one
of the simplest of all animals,
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218. a sponge, is able to build
such a complex structure
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219. to the great benefit of the shrimps
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220. is a mystery.
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221. And, surely, a marvel.
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222. But today,
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223. their timeless world
is being reduced to rubble.
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224. As over-fishing empties
the surface waters of the seas,
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225. trawlers have started
to ransack the deep.
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226. Now, countless numbers of the reefs
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227. that have flourished here for millennia
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228. lie in ruins.
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229. Over time,
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230. organic matter on the sea floor
slowly decays
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231. producing methane.
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232. In the Gulf of Mexico,
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233. these eruptions also release
a super salty liquid.
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234. Brine.
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235. Five times heavier than sea water,
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236. it accumulates in great pools
on the sea floor.
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237. It's difficult to make sense
of the sight.
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238. A lake of concentrated salt water,
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239. fifteen metres deep,
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240. at the bottom of the sea.
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241. Around its margin,
perhaps even more strangely,
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242. there is a profusion of life.
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243. Giant mussels that can live
or grow for a century or more,
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244. pack tightly together,
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245. dwarfing the shrimps and squat lobsters
that feed around them.
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246. Cutthroat eels, scavengers,
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247. come to the shores of the brine lake
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248. in search of something edible.
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249. Some even venture into the brine.
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250. Spending too long in it
can send an eel into toxic shock.
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251. It' only hope
is to rise above it.
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252. It manages to escape.
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253. Others are not so lucky.
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254. The brine embalms their bodies,
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255. and the casualties of decades
accumulate around the margins.
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256. But parts of the deep
are even more hostile.
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257. In places,
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258. gigantic cracks stretch for many miles
across the ocean floor.
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259. Canyons that plunge
towards the centre of the earth.
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260. Scans from survey vessels
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261. make it possible to graphically
reconstruct an image
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262. of this vast submarine landscape.
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263. The deepest of all,
at almost seven miles,
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264. is the Mariana Trench
in the Pacific Ocean.
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265. Even Mount Everest
could disappear inside it.
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266. Down here, in these deep ravines,
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267. it was once thought that
nothing whatever could possibly survive.
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268. But there is life even here.
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269. A kind of sea slug.
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270. A so-called sea pig.
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271. They, and other simple creatures,
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272. manage to survive on the minuscule
amount of food that drifts down here.
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273. Like this starfish,
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274. they can withstand pressure
equivalent of 50 jumbo jets
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275. stacked on top of one another.
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276. A remote camera probe
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277. reveals the most
extraordinary discovery of all.
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278. The ethereal snailfish.
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279. At five miles down,
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280. this is the deepest living fish
so far discovered.
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281. No one imagined
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282. than an animal as complex as a fish
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283. could exist in such extreme pressures.
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284. From the greatest depths
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285. to the uppermost limit
of the Twilight Zone,
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286. it seems that there is
nowhere in the deep sea
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287. where life of some kind can't survive.
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288. And we now think
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289. that the deep sea may well be
where life on Earth began.
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290. Here,
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291. in a world hidden within the greatest
geological feature on Earth,
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292. running right down the middle
of the world's oceans,
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293. an underwater mountain range
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294. spanning the entire globe.
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295. The mid-ocean ridge.
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296. In the South Pacific,
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297. the ocean floor is being torn apart.
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298. Over three quarters
of the planet's volcanic activity
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299. occurs in the deep.
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300. Almost all of it along
the mid-ocean ridge.
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301. But from this titanic violence
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302. come great riches.
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303. Gases and scalding water
gush up through the crevices.
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304. Minerals condensing from these jets
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305. build up great chimneys.
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306. Hydrothermal vents.
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307. This one, 30 metres tall,
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308. has been named "Godzilla
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309. Astonishingly, we now know
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310. that they hold as much life
as tropical rainforests.
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311. In places, half a million
individual animals
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312. are crammed into a single square metre.
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313. They depend entirely
for their food on bacteria.
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314. And they feed on chemicals
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315. dissolved in the searingly hot fluid.
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316. Crabs consume the bacterial mats
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317. that coat their shells.
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318. Others maintain
bacterial cultures,
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319. actually within their bodies.
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320. Shrimps carry such cultures
in their mouth parts.
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321. But that is a strategy
fraught with danger.
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322. To provide sustenance
for these microbes,
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323. the shrimps must dash
into the hot vents,
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324. and that risks being boiled alive.
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325. In the last decade,
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326. the number of hydrothermal vents
discovered has doubled.
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327. Every one has its own unique
character and community.
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328. But, perhaps, the most important
one of all is in the Atlantic.
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329. It has been named "The Lost City".
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330. Within its 60-metre towers,
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331. something truly extraordinary
is taking place.
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332. Under extremes
of pressure and temperature,
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333. hydrocarbons,
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334. the molecules that are the basic
component of all living things,
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335. are being created spontaneously.
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336. Indeed, many scientists now believe
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337. that life on Earth
may have begun around a vent like this
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338. four billion years ago.
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339. We now know
that there are deep seas
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340. on the moons of Jupiter and Saturn.
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341. If life can exist under
such extreme conditions down here,
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342. then surely it could exist
somewhere out there.
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343. Next time, we travel
to bustling coral reefs.
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344. Here, animals must go
to extraordinary lengths
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345. to get ahead of the competition
in these crowded cities.
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