Deep ocean mysteries and wonders - David Gallo

1,145,473 views ・ 2012-03-12

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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You know, I had a real rough time in school with ADD,
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and I have a PhD.
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I earned a PhD, but ... tough to pay attention --
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biology, geology, physics, chemistry -- really tough for me.
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Only one thing grabbed my attention,
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and it's that planet called Earth.
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But in this picture here, you'll see that Earth is mostly water.
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That's the Pacific.
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Seventy percent of Earth is covered with water.
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You can say, "Hey, I know Earth. I live here."
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You don't know Earth.
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You don't know this planet, because most of it's covered with that --
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average depth, two miles.
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And when you go outside
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and look up at the Empire State Building, Chrysler Building,
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the average depth of the ocean is 15 of those on top of one another.
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We've explored about five percent of what's in that water.
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"Explored," meaning, for the first time, go peek and see what's there.
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So what I want to do today is show you some things
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about this planet, about the oceans.
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I want to take you from shallow water down to the deep water,
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and hopefully, like me, you'll see some things
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that get you hooked on exploring planet Earth.
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You know things like corals; you've seen plenty of corals,
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those of you who've been to the beach, snorkeling,
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know corals are an amazing place to go -- full of life,
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some big animals, small animals, some nice, some dangerous,
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sharks, whales, all that stuff.
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They need to be protected from humanity.
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They're great places.
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But what you probably don't know is in the very deep part of the ocean,
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we have volcanic eruptions.
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Most volcanoes on Earth are at the bottom of the sea --
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more than 80 percent.
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And we actually have fire,
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fire deep inside the ocean, going on right now.
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All over the world -- in the Pacific, the Atlantic, the Indian Ocean.
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In this place, the ocean floor, the rocks actually turn to liquid.
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So you actually have waves on the ocean floor.
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You'd say nothing could live there, but when we look in detail,
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even there, in the deepest, darkest places on Earth, we find life,
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which tells us that life really wants to happen.
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So, pretty amazing stuff.
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Every time we go to the bottom of the sea,
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we explore with our submarines, with our robots,
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we see something that's usually surprising,
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sometimes it's startling and sometimes revolutionary.
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You see that puddle of water sitting there.
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And all around the water there's a little cliff,
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there's a little white sandy beach.
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We'll get closer, you'll see the beach a little bit better,
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some of the waves in that water, down there.
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The thing that's special about this water
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is that it's at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico.
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So you're sitting inside a submarine,
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looking out the window at a little pond of water beneath the sea.
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We see ponds, we see lakes, we see rivers --
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in fact, right here is a river at the bottom of the ocean
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going from the lower left to the upper right.
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Water is actually flowing through there.
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This totally blew our minds.
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How can you have this at the bottom?
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You're in the ocean looking at more water.
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And there's animals that only live in that water.
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So, the bottom of the ocean --
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I love this map, because it shows in the middle of the ocean,
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there's a mountain range.
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It's the greatest mountain range on Earth, called the mid-ocean ridge --
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50,000 miles long, and we've hardly had a peek at it.
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Hardly had a peek at it.
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We find valleys, many thousands of valleys,
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larger, wider, deeper than the Grand Canyon.
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We find, as I said, underwater lakes, rivers, waterfalls.
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The largest waterfall on the planet
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is actually under the ocean, up near Iceland.
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All that stuff is in that five percent that we've explored.
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So the deal about the ocean is that to explore it,
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you've got to have technology.
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Not only technology, but it's not just Dave Gallo
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or one person exploring, it's a team of people.
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You've got to have the talent, the team.
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You've got to have the technology.
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In this case, it's our ship, Atlantis, and the submarine, Alvin.
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Inside that submarine -- this is an Alvin launch --
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there's three people.
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They're being wheeled out onto deck.
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There's 47 other people,
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the teamwork on that ship, making sure that these people are okay.
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Everybody in that submarine is thinking one thing right now:
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Should I have gone to the bathroom one more time?
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Because you're in there for 10 hours --
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10 hours in that little sphere.
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Three of you together and nobody is going to be around you.
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You go into the water and once you hit the water, it's amazing.
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There's a lovely color blue that penetrates right inside you.
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You don't hear the surface ship anymore,
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you hear that pinging of a sonar.
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If you've got an iPhone you've got sonar on there --
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it's that same pinging that goes down to the bottom and comes back up.
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Divers check out the sub to make sure the outside is okay,
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and then they say "Go,"
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and down you go to the bottom of the ocean and it's an amazing trip.
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So for two and a half hours, you sink down to the bottom.
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And two hours of it is totally pitch black.
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We thought that nothing could live inside that world
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at the bottom of the ocean.
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And when we look, we find some amazing things.
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All the way down -- we call it the mid-water --
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from the top of the ocean down to the bottom, we find life.
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Whenever we stop and look, we find life.
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I'm going to show you some jellies.
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They're absolutely some of the coolest creatures on Earth.
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Look at that thing, just flailing his arms around.
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That's like a little lobster.
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That one is like all these animals with their mouths hooked together,
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the colonial animals.
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Some animals are tiny, some can be longer than this stage.
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Just amazing animals.
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And you can't collect them with a net --
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we have to go with our cameras and take a look at them.
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So every time we go, new species of life.
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The ocean is full of life.
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And yet the deepest part of the ocean --
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when we go to that mountain range, we find hot springs.
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Now we were sure -- because this is poisonous water,
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because it's so deep it would crush the Titanic
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the same way you crush an empty cup in your hand --
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we were sure there would be no life there at all.
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Instead, we find more life and diversity and density
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than in the tropical rainforest.
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So, in one instance, in one peek out the window of the sub,
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we discover something
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that revolutionizes the way we think about life on Earth;
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and that is, you don't always have to have sunlight
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to get life going.
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There's big animals down there too, some that look familiar.
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That guy's called Dumbo. I love him. Dumbo's great.
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This guy -- oh man, I wish I had more footage of this.
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We're trying to get an expedition together to go look at this
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and maybe in a year we'll have that.
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Go online and look.
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Vampyroteuthis infernalis. The vampire squid.
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Incredibly cool.
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In the darkness of the deep sea, he's got glowing tentacles,
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so if I'm coming at you like him, I put my arms out in the darkness
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so all you see are little glowing things over here.
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Meanwhile, I'm coming at you.
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When he wants to escape,
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he's got these glowing pods on his butt that look like eyes.
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Glowing eyes on his butt. How cool is that?
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Just an amazing animal.
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(Laughter)
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"Vampire" squid, because when it gets protective,
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it pulls this black cape over its whole body,
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and curls up into a ball.
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Outrageous animal.
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This ship, "The Ship of Dreams" --
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a hundred years ago this coming April,
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this ship was supposed to show up in New York.
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It's the Titanic.
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I co-led an expedition out there last year.
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We are learning so much about that ship.
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The Titanic is an interesting place for biology,
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because animals are moving in to live on the Titanic.
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Microbes are actually eating the hull of the Titanic.
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That's where Jack was king of the world there on the bow of the Titanic.
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So we're doing real good.
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And what's exciting to me is that we're making a virtual Titanic,
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so you can sit there at home with your joystick and your headset on,
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and you can actually explore the Titanic for yourself.
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That's what we want to do, make these virtual worlds,
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so it's not Dave Gallo or someone else exploring the world; it's you.
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You explore it for yourself.
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So here's the bottom line:
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The oceans are unexplored
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and I can't begin to tell you how important that is,
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because they're important to us.
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Seven billion people live on this planet
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and all of us are impacted by the sea,
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because the oceans control the air you breathe, the water you drink,
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the food you eat.
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All those are controlled in some way by the ocean,
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and this is a thing that we haven't even explored --
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five percent.
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The thing I want to leave you with is,
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in that five percent, I showed you some cool stuff.
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There's a lot more cool stuff --
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every dive we go on in the ocean, we find something new about the sea.
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So what's in that other 95 percent?
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Did we get the exciting stuff or is there more out there?
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And I'm here to tell you that the ocean is full of surprises.
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There's a quote I love by Marcel Proust:
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"The true voyage of exploration is not so much in seeking new landscapes,"
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which we do,
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"but in having new eyes."
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And so I hope today, by showing you some of this,
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it's given you some new eyes about this planet,
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and for the first time, I want you to think about it differently.
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Thank you very much. Thank you.
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(Applause)
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