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The secrets I find on the mysterious ocean floor | Laura Robinson | TEDxBrussels

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    I wanted to start out by saying to you
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    that my younger brother
    is actually a journalist
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    and he's told me that he writes an article
    in about an hour or so.
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    It gets posted online,
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    and within that day about 100,000 people
    might read that article.
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    I could spend maybe a couple of years
    planning an expedition,
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    a couple more years writing that article,
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    and if my article is very well received -
    or perhaps very badly received -
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    it might be cited about a hundred times
    over the next ten years.
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    So Im'never going to receive
    the same statistics as my younger brother.
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    However, this afternoon
    you're helping me to do a little better,
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    so thank you for your attention.
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    (Applause)
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    So, I hope anyhow you'll find
    what I'm going to say very interesting.
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    I'm an ocean chemist.
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    I look at the chemistry
    of the ocean today.
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    I look at the chemistry
    of the ocean in the past.
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    The way I look back in the past
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    is by using the fossilized remains
    of deepwater corals.
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    You can see an image of one
    of these corals behind me.
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    It was collected from close to Antarctica,
    thousands of meters below the sea,
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    so, very different
    than the kinds of corals
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    you may have been lucky enough to see
    if you've had a tropical holiday.
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    So I'm hoping that this talk will give you
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    a four-dimensional view of the ocean.
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    Two dimensions, such as this
    beautiful two-dimensional image
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    of the sea surface temperature.
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    This was taken using satellite,
    so it's got tremendous spatial resolution.
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    The overall features are extremely
    easy to understand.
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    The equatorial regions are warm
    because there's more sunlight.
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    The polar regions are cold
    because there's less sunlight.
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    And that allows big icecaps
    to build up on Antarctica
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    and up in the Northern Hemisphere.
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    If you plunge deep into the sea,
    or even put your toes in the sea,
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    you know it gets colder as you go down,
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    and that's mostly because the deep waters
    that fill the abyss of the ocean
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    come from the cold polar regions
    where the waters are dense.
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    If we travel back in time
    20,000 years ago,
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    the earth looked very much different.
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    And I've just given you a cartoon version
    of one of the major differences
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    you would have seen
    if you went back that long.
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    The icecaps were much bigger.
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    They covered lots of the continent,
    and they extended out over the ocean.
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    Sea level was 120 meters lower.
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    Carbon dioxide [levels] were very
    much lower than they are today.
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    So the earth was probably about three
    to five degrees colder overall,
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    and much, much colder
    in the polar regions.
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    What I'm trying to understand,
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    and what other colleagues of mine
    are trying to understand,
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    is how we moved from that
    cold climate condition
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    to the warm climate condition
    that we enjoy today.
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    We know from ice core research -
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    and in fact this is a picture
    of an iceberg
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    taken by one of my colleagues,
    Dann Blackwood,
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    down in the Southern Ocean -
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    that the transition from these
    cold conditions to warm conditions
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    wasn't smooth, as you might predict
    from the slow increase in solar radiation.
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    And we know this from ice cores,
    because if you drill down into ice,
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    you find annual bands of ice,
    and you can see this in the iceberg.
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    You can see those blue-white layers.
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    Gases are trapped in the ice cores,
    so we can measure CO2 --
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    that's why we know CO2
    was lower in the past --
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    and the chemistry of the ice
    also tells us about temperature
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    in the polar regions.
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    And if you move in time
    from 20,000 years ago to the modern day,
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    you see that temperature increased.
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    It didn't increase smoothly.
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    Sometimes it increased very rapidly,
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    then there was a plateau,
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    then it increased rapidly.
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    It was different in the two polar regions,
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    and CO2 also increased in jumps.
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    So we're pretty sure the ocean
    has a lot to do with this.
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    The ocean stores huge amounts of carbon,
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    about 60 times more
    than is in the atmosphere.
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    It also acts to transport heat
    across the equator,
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    and the ocean is full of nutrients
    and it controls primary productivity.
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    So if we want to get down and find out
    what's going on down in the deep sea,
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    we really need to get down there,
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    see what's there
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    and start to explore.
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    This is some spectacular footage
    coming from a seamount
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    about a kilometer deep
    in international waters
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    in the equatorial Atlantic, far from land.
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    You're amongst the first people
    to see this bit of the seafloor,
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    along with my research team.
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    You're probably seeing new species.
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    We don't know.
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    You'd have to collect the samples
    and do some very intense taxonomy.
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    You can see beautiful bubblegum corals.
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    There are brittle stars
    growing on these corals.
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    Those are things that look
    like tentacles coming out of corals.
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    There are corals made of different forms
    of calcium carbonate
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    growing off the basalt of this
    massive undersea mountain,
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    and the dark sort of stuff,
    those are fossilized corals,
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    and we're going to talk
    a little more about those
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    as we travel back in time.
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    To do that, we need
    to charter a research boat.
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    This is the James Cook,
    an ocean-class research vessel
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    moored up in Tenerife.
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    Looks beautiful, right?
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    Great, if you're not a great mariner.
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    Sometimes it looks
    a little more like this.
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    This is us trying to make sure
    that we don't lose precious samples.
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    Everyone's scurrying around,
    and I get terribly seasick,
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    so it's not always a lot of fun,
    but overall it is.
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    So we've got to become
    a really good mapper to do this.
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    You don't see that kind of spectacular
    coral abundance everywhere.
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    It is global and it is deep,
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    but we need to really find
    the right places.
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    We just saw a global map,
    and overlaid was our cruise passage
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    from last year.
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    This was a seven-week cruise,
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    and this is us, having made our own maps
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    of about 75,000 square kilometers
    of the seafloor in seven weeks,
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    but that's only a tiny fraction
    of the seafloor.
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    We're traveling from west to east,
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    over part of the ocean that would
    look featureless on a big-scale map,
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    but actually some of these mountains
    are as big as Everest.
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    So with the maps that we make on board,
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    we get about 100-meter resolution,
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    enough to pick out areas
    to deploy our equipment,
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    but not enough to see very much.
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    To do that, we need to fly
    remotely-operated vehicles
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    about five meters off the seafloor.
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    And if we do that, we can get maps
    that are one-meter resolution
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    down thousands of meters.
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    Here is a remotely-operated vehicle,
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    a research-grade vehicle.
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    You can see an array
    of big lights on the top.
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    There are high-definition cameras,
    manipulator arms,
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    and lots of little boxes and things
    to put your samples.
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    Here we are on our first dive
    of this particular cruise,
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    plunging down into the ocean.
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    We go pretty fast to make sure
    the remotely operated vehicles
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    are not affected by any other ships -
    parts of the ship.
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    You can see the bubbles going,
    I quite like that footage.
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    And we go down,
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    and these are the kinds of things you see.
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    These are deep sea sponges, meter scale.
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    This is a swimming holothurian --
    it's a small sea slug, basically.
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    This is slowed down.
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    Most of the footage I'm showing
    you is speeded up,
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    because all of this takes a lot of time.
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    This is a beautiful holothurian as well.
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    And this animal you're going to see
    coming up was a big surprise.
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    I've never seen anything like this
    and it took us all a bit surprised.
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    This was after about 15 hours of work
    and we were all a bit trigger-happy,
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    and suddenly this giant
    sea monster started rolling past.
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    It's called a pyrosome
    or colonial tunicate, if you like.
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    This wasn't what we were looking for.
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    We were looking for corals,
    deep sea corals.
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    You're going to see a picture
    of one in a moment.
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    It's small, about five centimeters high.
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    It's made of calcium carbonate,
    so you can see its tentacles there,
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    moving in the ocean currents.
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    An organism like this probably lives
    for about a hundred years.
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    And as it grows, it takes in
    chemicals from the ocean.
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    And the chemicals,
    or the amount of chemicals,
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    depends on the temperature;
    it depends on the pH,
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    it depends on the nutrients.
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    And if we can understand how
    these chemicals get into the skeleton,
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    we can then go back,
    collect fossil specimens,
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    and reconstruct what the ocean
    used to look like in the past.
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    And here you can see us collecting
    that coral with a vacuum system,
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    pull it up,
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    and we put it into a sampling container.
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    We can do this very
    carefully, I should add.
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    Some of these organisms live even longer.
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    This is a black coral called Leiopathes,
    an image taken by my colleague,
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    Brendan Roark, about 500
    meters below Hawaii.
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    Four thousand years is a long time.
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    If you take a branch from one
    of these corals and polish it up,
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    this is about 100 microns across.
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    And Brendan took some analyses
    across this coral --
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    you can see the marks --
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    and he's been able to show
    that these are actual annual bands,
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    so even at 500 meters deep in the ocean,
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    corals can record seasonal changes,
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    which is pretty spectacular.
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    But 4,000 years is not enough to get
    us back to our last glacial maximum.
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    So what do we do?
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    We go in for these fossil specimens.
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    This is what makes me really unpopular
    with my research team.
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    So going along,
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    there's giant sharks everywhere,
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    there are pyrosomes,
    there are swimming holothurians,
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    there's giant sponges,
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    but I make everyone go down
    to these dead fossil areas
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    and spend ages kind of shoveling
    around on the seafloor.
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    And we pick up all these corals,
    bring them back, we sort them out.
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    But each one of these is a different age,
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    and if we can find out how old they are
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    and then we can measure
    those chemical signals,
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    this helps us to find out
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    what's been going on
    in the ocean in the past.
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    So on the left-hand image here,
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    I've taken a slice through a coral,
    polished it very carefully
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    and taken an optical image.
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    On the right-hand side,
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    we've taken that same piece of coral,
    put it in a nuclear reactor,
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    induced fission,
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    and every time there's some decay,
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    you can see that marked out in the coral,
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    so we can see the uranium distribution.
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    Why are we doing this?
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    Uranium is a very poorly regarded element,
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    but I love it.
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    The decay helps us find out
    about the rates and dates
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    of what's going on in the ocean.
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    And if you remember from the beginning,
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    that's what we want to get at
    when we're thinking about climate.
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    So we use a laser to analyze uranium
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    and one of its daughter products,
    thorium, in these corals,
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    and that tells us exactly
    how old the fossils are.
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    This beautiful animation
    of the Southern Ocean
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    I'm just going to use illustrate
    how we're using these corals
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    to get at some of the ancient
    ocean feedbacks.
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    You can see the density
    of the surface water
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    in this animation by Ryan Abernathey.
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    It's just one year of data,
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    but you can see how dynamic
    the Southern Ocean is.
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    The intense mixing,
    particularly the Great Passage,
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    which is shown by the box,
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    is really one of the strongest
    currents in the world
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    coming through here,
    flowing from west to east.
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    It's very turbulently mixed,
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    because it's moving over those
    great big undersea mountains,
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    and this allows CO2 and heat to exchange
    with the atmosphere in and out.
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    And essentially, the oceans are breathing
    through the Southern Ocean.
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    We've collected corals from back and forth
    across this Antarctic passage,
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    and we've found quite a surprising thing
    from my uranium dating:
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    the corals migrated from south to north
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    during this transition from the glacial
    to the interglacial.
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    We don't really know why,
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    but we think it's something
    to do with the food source
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    and maybe the oxygen in the water.
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    So here we are.
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    I'm going to illustrate what I think
    we've found about climate
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    from those corals in the Southern Ocean.
  • 11:04 - 11:07
    We went up and down sea mountains.
    We collected little fossil corals.
  • 11:07 - 11:08
    This is my illustration of that.
  • 11:08 - 11:10
    We think back in the glacial,
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    from the analysis
    we've made in the corals,
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    that the deep part of the Southern Ocean
    was very rich in carbon,
  • 11:15 - 11:18
    and there was a low-density
    layer sitting on top.
  • 11:18 - 11:21
    That stops carbon dioxide
    coming out of the ocean.
  • 11:22 - 11:24
    We then found corals
    that are of an intermediate age,
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    and they show us that the ocean mixed
    partway through that climate transition.
  • 11:29 - 11:31
    That allows carbon to come
    out of the deep ocean.
  • 11:32 - 11:35
    And then if we analyze corals
    closer to the modern day,
  • 11:35 - 11:37
    or indeed if we go down there today anyway
  • 11:37 - 11:40
    and measure the chemistry of the corals,
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    we see that we move to a position
    where carbon can exchange in and out.
  • 11:44 - 11:46
    So this is the way
    we can use fossil corals
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    to help us learn about the environment.
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    So I want to leave you
    with this last slide.
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    It's just a still taken out of that first
    piece of footage that I showed you.
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    This is a spectacular coral garden.
  • 11:58 - 12:00
    We didn't even expect
    to find things this beautiful.
  • 12:00 - 12:02
    It's thousands of meters deep.
  • 12:02 - 12:04
    There are new species.
  • 12:04 - 12:06
    It's just a beautiful place.
  • 12:06 - 12:08
    There are fossils in amongst,
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    and now I've trained you
    to appreciate the fossil corals
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    that are down there.
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    So next time you're lucky enough
    to fly over the ocean
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    or sail over the ocean,
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    just think -- there are massive
    sea mountains down there
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    that nobody's ever seen before,
  • 12:20 - 12:22
    and there are beautiful corals.
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    Thank you.
  • 12:23 - 12:28
    (Applause)
Title:
The secrets I find on the mysterious ocean floor | Laura Robinson | TEDxBrussels
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

Hundreds of meters below the surface of the ocean, Laura Robinson probes the steep slopes of massive undersea mountains. She's on the hunt for thousand-year-old corals that she can test in a nuclear reactor to discover how the ocean changes over time. By studying the history of the earth, Robinson hopes to find clues of what might happen in the future.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
12:31

English subtitles

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