Antonio Donato Nobre: The magic of the Amazon: A river that flows invisibly all around us

133,609 views

2014-09-19 ・ TED


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Antonio Donato Nobre: The magic of the Amazon: A river that flows invisibly all around us

133,609 views ・ 2014-09-19

TED


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

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Translator: TED Translators admin Reviewer: Leonardo Silva
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What do you guys think?
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For those who watched Sir Ken's memorable TED Talk,
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I am a typical example of what he describes
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as "the body as a form of transport for the head,"
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a university professor.
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You might think it was not fair
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that I've been lined up to speak after these first two talks
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to speak about science.
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I can't move my body to the beat,
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and after a scientist who became a philosopher,
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I have to talk about hard science.
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It could be a very dry subject.
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Yet, I feel honored.
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Never in my career,
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and it's been a long career,
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have I had the opportunity to start a talk
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feeling so inspired, like this one.
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Usually, talking about science
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is like exercising in a dry place.
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However, I've had the pleasure
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of being invited to come here to talk about water.
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The words "water" and "dry" do not match, right?
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It is even better to talk about water in the Amazon,
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which is the splendid cradle of life. Fresh life.
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So this is what inspired me.
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That's why I'm here, although I'm carrying
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my head over here.
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I am trying, or will try to convey this inspiration.
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I hope this story will inspire you and that you'll spread the word.
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We know that there is controversy.
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The Amazon is the "lung of the world,"
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because of its massive power to have vital gases exchanged
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between the forest and the atmosphere.
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We also hear about the storehouse of biodiversity.
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While many believe it,
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few know it.
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If you go out there, in this marsh,
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you'll be amazed at the --
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You can barely see the animals.
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The Indians say, "The forest has more eyes than leaves."
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That is true, and I will try to show you something.
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But today, I'm going to use a different approach,
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one that is inspired by these two initiatives here,
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a harmonic one and a philosophical one.
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I'll try to use an approach that's slightly materialistic,
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but it also attempts to convey that, in nature, there is
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extraordinary philosophy and harmony.
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There'll be no music in my presentation,
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but I hope you'll all notice the music of the reality I'm going to show you.
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I'm going to talk about physiology — not about lungs,
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but other analogies with human physiology,
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especially the heart.
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We'll start
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by thinking that water is like blood.
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The circulation in our body distributes fresh blood,
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which feeds, nurtures and supports us,
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and brings the used blood back to be renewed.
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In the Amazon, things happen similarly.
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We'll start by talking about the power of all these processes.
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This is an image
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of rain in motion.
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What you see there is the years passing in seconds.
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Rains all over the world. What do you see?
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The equatorial region, in general,
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and the Amazon specifically,
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is extremely important for the world's climate.
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It's a powerful engine.
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There is a frantic evaporation taking place here.
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If we take a look at this other image,
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which shows the water vapor flow,
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you have dry air in black, moist air in gray,
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and clouds in white.
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What you see there is an extraordinary resurgence in the Amazon.
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What phenomenon -- if it's not a desert,
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what phenomenon makes water gush from the ground into the atmosphere
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with such power that it can be seen from space?
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What phenomenon is this?
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It could be a geyser.
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A geyser is underground water heated by magma,
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exploding into the atmosphere
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and transferring this water into the atmosphere.
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There are no geysers in the Amazon, unless I am wrong.
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I don't know of any.
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But we have something that plays the same role,
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with much more elegance though:
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the trees, our good old friends
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that, like geysers,
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can transfer an enormous amount of water from the ground into the atmosphere.
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There are 600 billion trees in the Amazon forest, 600 billion geysers.
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That is done with an extraordinary sophistication.
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They don't need the heat of magma.
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They use sunlight to do this process.
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So, in a typical sunny day in the Amazon,
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a big tree manages to transfer 1,000 liters of water
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through its transpiration --
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1,000 liters.
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If we take all the Amazon,
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which is a very large area,
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and add it up to all that water that is released by transpiration,
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which is the sweat of the forest,
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we'll get to an incredible number:
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20 billion metric tons of water.
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In one day.
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Do you know how much that is?
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The Amazon River, the largest river on Earth,
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one fifth of all the fresh water
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that leaves the continents of the whole world and ends up in the oceans,
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dumps 17 billion metric tons of water a day in the Atlantic Ocean.
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This river of vapor
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that comes up from the forest and goes into the atmosphere
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is greater than the Amazon River.
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Just to give you an idea.
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If we could take a gigantic kettle,
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the kind you could plug into a power socket, an electric one,
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and put those 20 billion metric tons of water in it,
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how much power would you need to have this water evaporated?
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Any idea? A really big kettle.
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A gigantic kettle, right?
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50 thousand Itaipus.
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Itaipu is still the largest hydroelectric plant in the world.
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and Brazil is very proud of it
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because it provides more than 30 percent of the power
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that is consumed in Brazil.
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And the Amazon is here, doing this for free.
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It's a vivid and extremely powerful plant, providing environmental services.
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Related to this subject,
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we are going to talk about what I call the paradox of chance,
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which is curious.
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If you look at the world map --
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it's easy to see this --
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you'll see that there are forests in the equatorial zone,
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and deserts are organized at 30 degrees north latitude,
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30 degrees south latitude, aligned.
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Look over there, in the southern hemisphere, the Atacama;
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Namibia and Kalahari in Africa; the Australian desert.
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In the northern hemisphere, the Sahara, Sonoran, etc.
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There is an exception, and it's curious:
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It's the quadrangle that ranges from Cuiabá to Buenos Aires,
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and from São Paulo to the Andes.
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This quadrangle was supposed to be a desert.
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It's on the line of deserts.
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Why isn't it? That's why I call it the paradox of chance.
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What do we have in South America that is different?
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If we could use the analogy
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of the blood circulating in our bodies,
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like the water circulating in the landscape,
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we see that rivers are veins,
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they drain the landscape, they drain the tissue of nature.
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Where are the arteries?
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Any guess?
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What takes --
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How does water get to irrigate the tissues of nature
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and bring everything back through rivers?
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There is a new type of river,
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which originates in the blue sea,
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which flows through the green ocean --
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it not only flows, but it is also pumped by the green ocean --
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and then it falls on our land.
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All our economy, that quadrangle,
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70 percent of South America's GDP comes from that area.
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It depends on this river.
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This river flows invisibly above us.
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We are floating here on this floating hotel,
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on one of the largest rivers on Earth, the Negro River.
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It's a bit dry and rough, but we are floating here,
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and there is this invisible river running above us.
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This river has a pulse.
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Here it is, pulsing.
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That's why we also talk about the heart.
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You can see the different seasons there.
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There's the rainy season. In the Amazon, we used to have two seasons,
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the humid season and the even more humid season.
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Now we have a dry season.
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You can see the river covering that region
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which, otherwise, would be a desert. And it is not.
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We, scientists -- You see that I'm struggling here
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to move my head from one side to the other.
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Scientists study how it works, why, etc.
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and these studies are generating a series of discoveries,
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which are absolutely fabulous,
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to raise our awareness of the wealth,
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the complexity, and the wonder that we have,
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the symphony we have in this process.
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One of them is: How is rain formed?
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Above the Amazon, there is clean air,
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as there is clean air above the ocean.
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The blue sea has clean air above it and forms pretty few clouds;
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there's almost no rain there.
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The green ocean has the same clean air, but forms a lot of rain.
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What is happening here that is different?
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The forest emits smells,
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and these smells are condensation nuclei,
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which form drops in the atmosphere.
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Then, clouds are formed and there is torrential rain.
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The sprinkler of the Garden of Eden.
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This relation between a living thing, which is the forest,
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and a nonliving thing, which is the atmosphere,
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is ingenious in the Amazon,
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because the forest provides water and seeds,
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and the atmosphere forms the rain and gives water back,
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guaranteeing the forest's survival.
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There are other factors as well.
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We've talked a little about the heart,
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and let's now talk about another function: the liver!
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When humid air, high humidity and radiation are combined
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with these organic compounds,
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which I call exogenous vitamin C, generous vitamin C in the form of gas,
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the plants release antioxidants
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which react with pollutants.
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You can rest assured
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that you are breathing the purest air on Earth, here in the Amazon,
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because the plants take care of this characteristic as well.
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This benefits the very way plants work,
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which is another ingenious cycle.
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Speaking of fractals,
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and their relation with the way we work,
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we can establish other comparisons.
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As in the upper airways of our lungs,
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the air in the Amazon gets cleaned up from the excess of dust.
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The dust in the air that we breathe is cleaned by our airways.
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This keeps the excess of dust from affecting the rainfall.
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When there are fires in the Amazon,
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the smoke stops the rain, it stops raining,
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the forest dries up and catches fire.
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There is another fractal analogy.
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Like in the veins and arteries,
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the rain water is a feedback.
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It returns to the atmosphere.
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Like endocrinal glands and hormones,
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there are those gases which I told you about before,
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that are formed and released into the atmosphere, like hormones,
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which help in the formation of rain.
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Like the liver and the kidneys, as I've said, cleaning the air.
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And, finally, like the heart:
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pumping water from outside, from the sea,
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into the forest.
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We call it the biotic moisture pump,
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a new theory that is explained in a very simple way.
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If there is a desert in the continent
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with a nearby sea,
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evaporation's greater on the sea,
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and it sucks the air above the desert.
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The desert is trapped in this condition. It will always be dry.
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If you have the opposite situation, a forest,
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the evaporation, as we showed, is much greater, because of the trees,
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and this relation is reversed.
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The air above the sea is sucked into the continent
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and humidity is imported.
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This satellite image was taken one month ago —
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that's Manaus down there, we're down there —
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and it shows this process.
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It's not a common little river that flows into a canal.
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It's a mighty river that irrigates South America,
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among other things.
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This image shows those paths,
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all the hurricanes that have been recorded.
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You can see that, in the red square, there hardly are any hurricanes.
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That is no accident.
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This pump that sucks the moisture into the continent
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also speeds up the air above the sea,
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and this prevents hurricane formations.
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To close this part and sum up,
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I'd like to talk about something a little different.
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I have several colleagues
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who worked in the development of these theories.
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They think, and so do I,
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that we can save planet Earth.
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I'm not talking only about the Amazon.
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The Amazon teaches us a lesson
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on how pristine nature works.
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We didn't understand these processes before
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because the rest of the world is messed up.
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We could understand it here, though.
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These colleagues propose that, yes, we can
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save other areas,
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including deserts.
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If we could establish forests in those other areas,
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we can reverse climate change,
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including global warming.
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I have a dear colleague in India,
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whose name is Suprabha Seshan, and she has a motto.
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Her motto is, "Gardening back the biosphere,"
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"Reajardinando a biosfera" in Portuguese.
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She does a wonderful job rebuilding ecosystems.
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We need to do this.
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Having closed this quick introduction,
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we see the reality that we have out here,
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which is drought, this climate change,
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things that we already knew.
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I'd like to tell you a short story.
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Once, about four years ago,
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I attended a declamation, of a text by Davi Kopenawa,
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a wise representative of the Yanomami people,
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and it went more or less like this:
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"Doesn't the white man know
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that, if he destroys the forest, there will be no more rain?
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And that, if there's no more rain,
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there'll be nothing to drink, or to eat?"
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I heard that, and my eyes welled up
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and I went, "Oh, my!
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I've been studying this for 20 years, with a super computer,
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dozens, thousands of scientists,
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and we are starting to get to this conclusion, which he already knows!"
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A critical point is the Yanomami have never deforested.
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How could they know the rain would end?
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This bugged me and I was befuddled.
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How could he know that?
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Some months later, I met him at another event and said,
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"Davi, how did you know that if the forest was destroyed, there'd be no more rain?"
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He replied: "The spirit of the forest told us."
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For me, this was a game changer,
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a radical change.
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I said, "Gosh!
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Why am I doing all this science
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to get to a conclusion that he already knows?"
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Then, something absolutely critical hit me,
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which is,
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seeing is believing.
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Out of sight, out of mind.
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This is a need the previous speaker pointed out:
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We need to see things --
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I mean, we, Western society,
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which is becoming global, civilized --
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we need to see.
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If we don't see, we don't register the information.
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We live in ignorance.
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So, I propose the following --
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of course, the astronomer wouldn't like the idea --
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but let's turn the Hubble telescope upside down.
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And let's make it look down here,
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rather than to the far reaches of the universe.
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The universe is wonderful,
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but we have a practical reality,
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which is we live in an unknown cosmos,
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and we're ignorant about it.
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We're trampling on this wonderful cosmos
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that shelters us and houses us.
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Talk to any astrophysicist.
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The Earth is a statistical improbability.
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The stability and comfort that we enjoy, despite the droughts of the Negro River,
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and all the heat and cold and typhoons, etc.,
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there is nothing like it in the universe, that we know of.
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Then, let's turn Hubble in our direction,
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and let's look at the Earth.
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Let's start with the Amazon!
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Let's dive,
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let's reach out the reality we live in every day,
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and look carefully at it, since that's what we need.
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Davi Kopenawa doesn't need this.
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He has something already that I think I missed.
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I was educated by television.
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I think that I missed this,
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an ancestral record,
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a valuation of what I don't know, what I haven't seen.
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He is not a doubting Thomas.
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He believes, with veneration and reverence,
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in what his ancestors and the spirits taught him.
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We can't do it, so let's look into the forest.
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Even with Hubble up there --
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this is a bird's-eye view, right?
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Even when this happens,
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we also see something that we don't know.
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18:28
The Spanish called it the green inferno.
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If you go out there into the bushes and get lost,
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and, let's say, if you head west,
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18:36
it's 900 kilometers to Colombia,
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and another 1,000 to somewhere else.
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So, you can figure out why they called it the green inferno.
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But go and look at what is in there.
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It is a live carpet.
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Each color you see is a tree species.
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Each tree, each tree top,
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has up to 10,000 species of insects in it,
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let alone the millions of species of fungi, bacteria, etc.
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All invisible.
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All of it is an even stranger cosmos to us
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than the galaxies billions of light years away from the Earth,
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which Hubble brings to our newspapers everyday.
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I'm going to end my talk here --
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I have a few seconds left --
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by showing you this wonderful being.
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When we see the morpho butterfly in the forest,
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we feel like someone's left open the door to heaven,
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19:24
and this creature escaped from there, because it's so beautiful.
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However, I cannot finish
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without showing you a tech side.
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We are tech-arrogant.
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We deprive nature of its technology.
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19:39
A robotic hand is technological,
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mine is biological,
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19:42
and we don't think about it anymore.
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19:43
Let's then look at the morpho butterfly,
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19:46
an example of an invisible technological competence of life,
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19:51
which is at the very heart of our possibility of surviving on this planet,
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19:56
and let's zoom in on it. Again, Hubble is there.
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Let's get into the butterfly's wings.
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20:00
Scholars have tried to explain: Why is it blue?
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Let's zoom in on it.
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What you see is that the architecture of the invisible humiliates
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the best architects in the world.
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20:14
All of this on a tiny scale.
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Besides its beauty and functioning, there is another side to it.
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In nature,
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20:22
all that is organized in extraordinary structures has a function.
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20:26
This function of the morpho butterfly — it is not blue;
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it does not have blue pigments.
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20:32
It has photonic crystals on its surface, according to people who studied it,
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20:36
which are extremely sophisticated crystals.
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20:38
Our technology had nothing like that at the time.
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20:42
Hitachi has now made a monitor
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20:45
that uses this technology,
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20:46
and it is used in optical fibers to transmit --
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20:48
Janine Benyus, who's been here several times, talks about it: biomimetics.
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My time's up.
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Then, I'll wrap it up with what is at the base of this capacity,
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21:00
of this competence of biodiversity,
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21:02
producing all these wonderful services:
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21:05
the living cell.
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21:06
It is a structure with a few microns, which is an internal wonder.
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There are TED Talks about it. I won't talk much longer,
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21:13
but each person in this room, including myself,
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21:16
has 100 trillion of these micromachines in their body,
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21:20
so that we can enjoy well-being.
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21:23
Imagine what is out there in the Amazon forest:
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21:25
100 trillion. This is greater than the number of stars in the sky.
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21:29
And we are not aware of it.
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Thank you so much. (Applause)
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About this website

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