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24 hours on Earth -- in one image

  • 0:01 - 0:05
    Nature reveals
    itself to us in unique ways,
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    if we stop and look at the world
    through a window of time.
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    Over the last decade,
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    I've observed endangered
    species and habitats around the world
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    using a photographic technique
    that captures the passage of time,
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    literally from day to night,
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    all within a single image.
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    It has allowed me to witness
    the fleeting moments
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    between wildlife and the natural habitat
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    as time changes
    over the course of a single day.
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    In the Serengeti,
    during a five week drought,
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    I discovered a watering hole
    and watched for 26 hours
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    diverse and competitive wildlife
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    calmy share our planet's
    most precious resource:
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    water.
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    On Lake Bogoria in Kenya,
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    I photographed the great
    migration of flamingos.
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    This happens normally
    during the peak of dry season,
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    but climate change
    has created evening thunderstorms,
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    turning normally dry hills green
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    and creating freshwater streams
    in which the flamingos joyously bathe.
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    Our planet is changing before our eyes.
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    But to witness that change
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    is also to witness the remarkable
    relationships between all of nature,
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    to see the infinite beauty of it,
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    to learn how much bigger than us it is
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    and why it is worth fighting for.
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    In 2019, the Greenland ice sheet
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    was experiencing its largest melt
    in recorded history.
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    200 billion tons of ice
    liquified into the ocean.
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    When glacial ice melts,
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    caving icebergs release sediments
    and particles into the seawater,
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    initiating our ocean's food chain.
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    Plankton feed on the sediment,
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    krill eat plankton,
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    and the humpback whales feed on the krill.
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    This photograph is the result
    of witnessing with my camera
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    a 36-hour feast by humpback whales.
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    We assume that the greatest
    threat of glacial melt
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    will be sea level rise,
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    which will certainly have
    major impacts on coastlines
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    and populations around the world.
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    But within this image,
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    we discover that perhaps
    the greatest threat from glacial melt
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    might be our ocean's ability
    to feed itself.
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    Without ice, the ocean
    food chain may break.
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    Creating this photograph
    opened my consciousness.
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    I hope through your willingness
    to look and see,
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    it may open yours.
Title:
24 hours on Earth -- in one image
Speaker:
Stephen Wilkes
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
02:33

English subtitles

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