The story of life in photographs | Frans Lanting

64,450 views ・ 2007-05-14

TED


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Nature's my muse and it's been my passion.
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As a photographer for National Geographic, I've portrayed it for many.
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But five years ago, I went on a personal journey.
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I wanted to visualize the story of life.
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It's the hardest thing I've ever attempted,
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and there have been plenty of times when I felt like backing out.
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But there were also revelations.
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And one of those I'd like to share with you today.
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I went down to a remote lagoon in Australia, hoping to see the Earth
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the way it was three billion years ago,
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back before the sky turned blue.
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There's stromatolites down there --
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the first living things to capture photosynthesis --
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and it's the only place they still occur today.
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Going down there was like entering a time capsule,
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and I came out with a different sense of myself in time.
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The oxygen exhaled by those stromatolites
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is what we all breathe today.
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Stromatolites are the heroes in my story.
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I hope it's a story that has some resonance for our time.
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It's a story about you and me, nature and science.
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And with that said, I'd like to invite you for
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a short, brief journey of life through time.
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Our journey starts in space, where matter condenses into spheres over time ...
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solidifying into surface, molded by fire.
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The fire gave way, Earth emerged -- but this was an alien planet.
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The moon was closer; things were different.
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Heat from within made geysers erupt -- that is how the oceans were born.
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Water froze around the poles and shaped the edges of the Earth.
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Water is the key to life, but in frozen form, it is a latent force.
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And when it vanishes, Earth becomes Mars.
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But this planet is different -- it's roiling inside.
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And where that energy touches water, something new emerges: life.
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It arises around cracks in the Earth.
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Mud and minerals become substrate; there are bacteria.
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Learn to multiply, thickening in places ...
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Growing living structures under an alien sky ...
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Stromatolites were the first to exhale oxygen.
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And they changed the atmosphere.
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A breath that's fossilized now as iron.
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Meteorites delivered chemistry, and perhaps membranes, too.
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Life needs a membrane to contain itself
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so it can replicate and mutate.
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These are diatoms, single-celled phytoplankton
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with skeletons of silicon ...
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circuit boards of the future.
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Shallow seas nurtured life early on, and that's where it morphed
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into more complex forms.
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It grew as light and oxygen increased.
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Life hardened and became defensive.
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It learned to move and began to see. The first eyes grew on trilobites.
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Vision was refined in horseshoe crabs,
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among the first to leave the sea.
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They still do what they've done for ages, their enemies long gone.
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Scorpions follow prey out of the sea. Slugs became snails.
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Fish tried amphibian life. Frogs adapted to deserts.
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Lichens arose as a co-op. Fungi married algae ...
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clinging to rock, and eating it too ... transforming barren land.
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True land plants arose, leafless at first.
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Once they learn how to stay upright, they grew in size and shape.
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The fundamental forms of ferns followed,
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to bear spores that foreshadowed seeds.
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Life flourished in swamps.
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On land, life turned a corner. Jaws formed first; teeth came later.
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Leatherbacks and tuataras are echoes from that era.
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It took time for life to break away from water,
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and it still beckons all the time.
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Life turned hard so it could venture inland.
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And the dragons that arose are still among us today.
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Jurassic Park still shimmers in part of Madagascar,
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and the center of Brazil,
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where plants called "cycads" remain rock hard.
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Forests arose and nurtured things with wings.
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One early form left an imprint, like it died only yesterday.
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And others fly today like echoes of the past.
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In birds, life gained new mobility.
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Flamingos covered continents. Migrations got underway.
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Birds witnessed the emergence of flowering plants.
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Water lilies were among the first.
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Plants began to diversify and grew, turning into trees.
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In Australia, a lily turned into a grass tree,
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and in Hawaii, a daisy became a silver sword.
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In Africa, Gondwana molded Proteas.
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But when that ancient continent broke up, life got lusher.
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Tropical rainforests arose, sparking new layers of interdependence.
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Fungi multiplied. Orchids emerged, genitalia shaped to lure insects ...
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a trick shared by the largest flower on Earth.
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Co-evolution entwined insects and birds and plants forever.
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When birds can't fly, they become vulnerable.
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Kiwis are, and so are these hawks trapped near Antarctica.
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Extinction can come slowly, but sometimes it arrives fast.
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An asteroid hits, and the world went down in flames.
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But there were witnesses, survivors in the dark.
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When the skies cleared, a new world was born.
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A world fit for mammals. From tiny shrews [came]
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tenrecs, accustomed to the dark.
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New forms became bats. Civets.
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New predators, hyenas, getting faster and faster still.
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Grasslands created opportunities.
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Herd safety came with sharpened senses.
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Growing big was another answer, but size always comes at a price.
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Some mammals turned back to water.
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Walruses adapted with layers of fat. Sea lions got sleek.
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And cetaceans moved into a world without bounds.
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There are many ways to be a mammal. A 'roo hops in Oz;
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a horse runs in Asia; and a wolf evolves stilt legs in Brazil.
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Primates emerge from jungles, as tarsiers first,
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becoming lemurs not much later.
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Learning became reinforced. Bands of apes ventured into the open.
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And forests dried out once more. Going upright became a lifestyle.
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So who are we? Brothers of masculine chimps,
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sisters of feminine bonobos? We are all of them, and more.
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We're molded by the same life force.
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The blood veins in our hands
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echoed a course of water traces on the Earth.
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And our brains -- our celebrated brains --
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reflect a drainage of a tidal marsh.
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Life is a force in its own right. It is a new element.
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And it has altered the Earth. It covers Earth like a skin.
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And where it doesn't, as in Greenland in winter,
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Mars is still not very far.
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But that likelihood fades as long as ice melts again.
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And where water is liquid, it becomes a womb
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for cells green with chlorophyll -- and that molecular marvel
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is what's made a difference -- it powers everything.
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The whole animal world today lives on a stockpile
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of bacterial oxygen that is cycled constantly
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through plants and algae, and their waste is our breath,
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and vice versa.
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This Earth is alive, and it's made its own membrane.
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We call it "atmosphere." This is the icon of our journey.
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And you all here today can imagine and will shape where we go next.
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(Applause)
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Thank you. Thank you.
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