01x06 - Out of the Ashes

Episode transcripts for the TV show, "Life on Our Planet". Aired: October 25, 2023.
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Series focuses on the evolutionary history of complex life on Earth.
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01x06 - Out of the Ashes

Post by bunniefuu »

[ominous music playing]

[Morgan Freeman] It's winter

but like none the world has ever known.

This is a post-apocalyptic winter.

Sixty-six million years ago,

and the world has all but been destroyed

by a cataclysmic event.

[mournful vocalizing]

This is the story

of the fall of the dinosaurs

and the rise from the ashes

of the survivors

who would inherit the Earth.

[squawking]

[music ends]

[rousing music playing]

[snarling]

[trilling]

[screeching]

[rousing music continues]

[growling]

[wind howling]

[rumbling]

[rousing music intensifies]

[music fades]

[mournful vocalizing]

Our story begins in the Cretaceous period

[grunting]

on a day that would change

the course of history.

[gentle music playing]

For Edmontosaurus in North America,

it's nesting season.

As usual, this female must tend

to her hungry young

[brays]

[mewling]

giving them

the best possible start in life.

[mewling]

[adult brays]

[majestic music playing]

A thousand kilometers south,

an adult tyrannosaur

[snorts]

is teaching her offspring

the art of the hunt.

But they're a little impatient.

[snarling]

[grunting]

[snorting]

[roaring]

The youngsters still have a lot to learn.

Perhaps they'll have more luck tomorrow.

[birds tweeting]

[majestic music continues]

To the west, a herd of Alamosaurus

[bellows]

some of the largest dinosaurs

to have ever lived,

begin their day

as they have for generations,

enjoying tender pine sh**t.

Below the waves, off the coast of Africa,

the oceans are bountiful,

bursting with life

a realm dominated by huge marine reptiles.

[majestic music continues]

Along with the dinosaurs,

they have ruled planet Earth

for a staggering 150 million years.

[animals calling]

[snarling]

But today will be a day like no other.

[music ends]

An asteroid the size of Mount Everest

is tumbling towards Earth

at 100,000 kilometers per hour.

Its impact will change the world forever

[ominous music playing]

unleashing the power

of a billion atomic bombs

setting in motion

a devastating chain of events.

First comes a deadly blast

of thermal radiation.

[roaring]

Every living thing

within a thousand kilometers

is vaporized in a matter of seconds.

[expl*sive blast]

[rumbling, hissing]

[high-pitched whine]

[expl*sive blast]

The planet's crust

buckles from the impact,

sending seismic shock waves

around the world.

In mere minutes

[braying]

off-the-scale earthquakes rock the globe.

[grunting]

[rumbling]

[bellowing]

For the Alamosaurus

this is just the beginning.

[bellows]

[bellows]

The earthquakes trigger

a series of giant waves

that rip through seas and inland lakes.

[animals calling]

Huge surges of water

sweep across North America.

[epic, mournful music playing]

The rapidly rising torrent

is impossible to withstand,

even for the mightiest.

[bellowing]

Less than an hour after impact,

debris ejected into space

is pulled back to Earth by gravity.

On re-entry, it turns scorching red-hot.

The super-heated atmosphere

advances like a fiery hell.

[epic, mournful music continues]

On the ground, it's like standing

under a 400-degree grill.

[screeching]

Animals are slowly cooked alive.

[screeching]

[grunting, screeching]

[infants mewling]

To make matters worse,

the rock debris starts to rain down.

[screeching]

Less than two hours after impact,

the firestorm of choking dust

has enveloped half the planet.

It's so hot,

trees burst into flames.

The growing inferno

is impossible to escape.

[grunting]

[squawking]

[wind whistling]

[mournful vocalizing]

[groaning]

Nothing can save them now.

[screeching]

[mournful vocalizing continues]

The great reign of the dinosaurs,

over in a single day.

[thunder crashing]

The oceans were just as devastated

as the land.

Sulfur-rich dust poured down as acid rain.

Ancient reefs were obliterated.

The web of life collapsed,

k*lling off the great marine reptiles.

Their bodies provided

a lifeline for scavengers,

searching out death in the deep.

Arthropods.

Sharks.

Away from the carnage of the asteroid,

many life-forms survived,

devouring the immense carcasses

feasting on extinction.

But back on the surface, the picture

couldn't have been more different.

For years after the impact,

Earth looked dead.

[mournful vocalizing resumes]

The forests,

the plains

the mountains

lifeless.

But as the dust cloud dispersed

and the light finally returned

it became clear that all was not lost.

The insects

were some of the first to emerge

feeding on the fallen.

Survivors were protected by burrows

cocoons

and armored bodies.

Sheltering below ground

some reptiles survived too.

[intriguing music playing]

[croaks]

Beneath the surface

of river deltas and wetlands,

others were also shielded from the mayhem.

The amphibians.

With little food around,

only small creatures had made it

including from our dynasty,

the mammals.

They'd inherited a planet

free of dinosaurs.

Or so it seemed.

[music fades]

Against the odds, another group of animals

had also clung on

[suspenseful music playing]

protected by their very own

life-support capsules.

Remarkably, inside them

was a type of dinosaur.

[chirping]

[chirping]

More specifically, an avian dinosaur

[chirping]

otherwise known as the birds.

Before the apocalypse,

there had been hundreds of ancient species

living in the trees,

all wiped out when the forests b*rned.

[chirping]

But a handful of ground-dwelling birds

did make it through.

These survivors

were kept warm by feathers

and were self-sufficient

from their first breath

able to live on insects and seeds

and capable of walking within hours.

Sixty-six million years ago,

birds had become the last remaining branch

of the dinosaur family tree.

[chirping]

From such humble creatures,

a great dynasty would rise.

But their incredible story first began

long, long before the asteroid.

The Jurassic.

[bellows]

An era of giants.

[bellowing]

But this lost world of vertical cliffs

was shaping a smaller breed of creature.

- [tense music playing]

- It lived in a dangerous realm.

[low growling]

To survive, it had evolved

in an extraordinary new way.

[squawks]

This is Anchiornis.

[squawks]

She's a small, feathered dinosaur

[squawks]

with needle-sharp teeth

for hunting insects.

[squawking]

But she, too, is being hunted.

[ominous music playing]

[snorting]

A juvenile Sinraptor.

[snorts]

[squawking]

And he's hungry.

[squawks]

[ominous music intensifies]

[squawks]

[grunts]

[squawks]

[dramatic music playing]

[screeching]

Anchiornis is slow and clumsy.

[snarling]

[Sinraptor snarling]

The Sinraptor has her cornered.

- [squawks]

- [Sinraptor snarling]

But Anchiornis

[Sinraptor snarling]

has run here for a reason.

[tense music playing]

[snarling]

- [screeches]

- [roars]

[stirring music playing]

She can fly.

One small step for a dinosaur,

but one giant leap for life on Earth.

With these early gliders,

a new dynasty was born.

[screeching]

And it was flight that would help

their descendants stay alive

in the era after the asteroid.

[ominous music playing]

Today, there's a place where we can see

how that story may have played out.

It's a harsh, desolate world.

Four thousand meters up,

the Altiplano desert in Chile

a landscape where almost nothing can live.

But one group of animals

has found a way to survive here.

The birds.

Like those that evolved

after the asteroid

[trilling]

flamingos have taken the gliding skills

of the first avian dinosaurs

[graceful music playing]

and created a new kind of flight.

[trilling]

A revolution in the air.

Wings that have been modified to flap.

This is powered flight,

and it allows flamingos

to travel in search of food

just as birds did millions of years ago.

Feathers, that first evolved

to keep dinosaurs warm,

have become specialized

for aerial mastery.

And that's not the only change.

Teeth have been replaced by beaks

[trilling]

that allow them to feed on new diets.

But advances in feeding and flight alone

were not enough

to ensure the future of the birds.

They also drew on a rather flamboyant

ancient behavior,

a behavior that ensures

the survival of the fittest.

[lively music playing]

- [trilling]

- Courtship.

For the flamingos,

that means a dance-off

and it's taken very seriously.

The judges are extremely fussy.

[lively music continues]

And they need to be

to choose the best mates.

Birds had almost been wiped out

with the rest of the dinosaurs.

Instead, thanks to their feathery talents,

they'd have a chance to rise.

[trilling]

[music fades]

But their path would not be easy.

[wind howling]

In the aftermath of the asteroid,

global temperatures plunged

by a staggering 25 degrees.

But thanks to their ability

to survive the cold,

just a few million years after the impact,

the pine forests had returned.

[poignant music playing]

Seeds ensured that the giant conifers

from the days of the dinosaurs

made it through.

The greatest of them all,

reaching over 100 meters into the air,

were the redwoods.

[slow, majestic music playing]

Sheltered beneath the forests

was a group of warm-blooded animals

that had long hidden in the shadows.

The mammals.

At first, they were small creatures,

similar to voles.

With the dinosaurs gone,

they were free to come out in the open.

[ominous music playing]

But just five million years

after the asteroid,

the pine forest became home

to a new breed of creature.

[ominous music continues]

And they still haunt our forests today.

[squeaks]

The owls.

[dramatic music playing]

Birds had turned from mere survivors

into predators.

This is the great gray owl.

She's armed with razor-sharp claws

and even sharper eyesight

making her deadly on the wing.

[music fades]

Able to fly in near silence,

she listens for prey.

[tense music playing]

For tiny mammals, nowhere is safe.

[music fades]

[vole squeaking]

[squeaking]

- [crunching]

- [squeaking]

While the first owls were menacing

the northern pine forests,

elsewhere, another important habitat

was emerging.

[poignant music playing]

The asteroid had wiped out three-quarters

of all Earth's plant and animal species.

[rumbling]

In the tropics, it took six million years,

but life did eventually return.

However, this time,

it was totally different.

[slow, uplifting music playing]

The revival was powered

by a huge increase

in the diversity of flowering plants.

[uplifting music intensifies]

Richer than anything that had gone before

[chirping]

[croaking]

the tropical rainforests.

This thriving habitat

was built on the close relationship

between flowers

and their insect pollinators.

[buzzing]

But there was a new arrival

[humming]

who muscled in on the insect's domain.

[lively music playing]

Using incredible flying skills,

they could navigate

the complex world of the jungle.

They'd become miniature,

granting them access

to the flower's sweet nectar.

And their descendants

are still at it today.

The hummingbirds.

[humming]

To plunder the nectar,

they've evolved

to hover just like insects

[birds tweeting]

b*ating wings at 80 times a second.

Elongated beaks allow them to feed

on a kaleidoscope of different flowers.

The hummingbirds outmaneuver

many of their insect rivals.

But all this activity

comes with a huge thirst for energy.

So the best flowers

are worth fighting for.

[loud humming]

Beaks double as weapons.

But one species of hummingbird

has no need to battle.

It has an extraordinary adaptation

that leaves the competition standing.

Enter the swordbill.

[lively music playing]

He boasts an impressively long appendage.

His beak is like a key in a lock,

so only he can enjoy

the hard-to-reach nectar

of the angel trumpet flower.

In the ages following the apocalypse,

giant dinosaurs may have no longer

roamed the forest,

but their tiny cousins

had recolonized them

in a completely new way.

[humming]

[music ends]

But becoming small wouldn't work

in every part of the planet.

The death of the dinosaurs

had left many of Earth's great habitats

free for the taking.

[animals calling]

None more so than the plains.

And in early South America,

46 million years after the asteroid,

ground-dwelling birds

had the space to evolve

into the deadliest predator

[shrieking]

since Tyrannosaurus rex.

Stalking among the glades of palms

[shrieking]

it has inherited

the most aggressive traits

from its ancient bloodline.

[shrieking]

[mewling]

[lowing]

In the clearing,

a herd of early mammals graze.

[bleats]

Theosodon, about the size

of a modern-day llama.

An adult female keeps a keen watch.

But she hasn't seen

the terror bird.

[sinister music playing]

With a head like a pickaxe

and standing two and a half meters tall,

it sacrificed flight for raw power.

[whimpers]

She senses something is wrong.

But the terror bird moves in near silence.

[herd lowing]

[lowing]

[lowing]

[suspenseful music playing]

[trilling]

The hunt is on.

Able to rapidly accelerate

to 50 kilometers an hour

he's picked out a youngster

trailing behind.

[trilling]

[terror bird trilling]

Using the weight of his giant head,

he's a master at changing direction.

[dramatic music playing]

[herd screeching]

[trilling]

[music fades]

[Theosodon squealing]

[bleats]

[braying]

Time to deliver the final blow.

[screeching]

The savage terror birds

now dominated the plains of South America.

[roars]

- [trilling]

- [howling]

But on the other side of the world,

the ever-shifting continents

were writing a new chapter

in the story of life.

[ethereal vocalizing]

Australia had been heading north

for millions of years.

As it did so,

it created a vast shallow sea.

A new cradle of life.

[ethereal ambient music playing]

Part plant

part animal

these are the corals.

Using energy from the Sun,

they formed the largest living structure

our planet has ever seen

the tropical reefs.

[ethereal music playing]

Fifteen million years ago,

these giant marine cities

offered opportunity

to a wealth of survivors.

From the depths came the sharks.

The reefs also drew in some

of the last remaining marine reptiles

the turtles.

Within this underwater paradise,

countless new kinds of fish also evolved.

The growing abundance

soon spilled out to the wider ocean

filling it with life.

And this had not gone unnoticed

by one relentless dynasty.

[music fades]

[squawking]

Yet again, the birds.

More specifically, seabirds.

[squawking]

Millions of years ago,

they found a spectacular way

to plunder the ocean's bounty

[majestic music playing]

with an aerial invasion.

[squawking]

And it's still happening today.

The greatest invaders of them all

[squawking]

are the gannets.

Their keen vision means they can spot

a ball of fish a mile away.

[energetic music playing]

Diving from altitude,

they pierce the surface

at close to 90 kilometers an hour.

A specially adapted skull

and retractable wings

turn them into living missiles.

What's more,

gannets can hold their breath

for more than 40 seconds.

These ancient seabirds are master hunters.

Their aerial as*ault

allows them to compete

with the ocean's greatest predators,

the sharks.

Feeding frenzies like these are still

some of nature's grandest spectacles,

just as they were 15 million years ago.

Dinosaurs never conquered the oceans,

but their avian descendants

finally found a way.

[music fades]

[squawking]

Their conquest of the seas

was so successful,

seabirds established vast colonies

across the planet

now some of the most incredible gatherings

of life on Earth.

But the birds' triumph over the oceans

was not quite complete.

Their crowning achievement

can best be seen in a world lost in time.

[ominous music playing]

The Galápagos Islands.

These are marine iguanas,

descendants of lizards

that survived the asteroid.

Like most reptiles,

they must bask in the sun to warm up.

But they're not the only sunbathers here.

They're joined by an extraordinary bird.

The penguin.

[squawks]

And this is the Galápagos penguin.

Over tens of millions of years,

its ancestors repurposed their wings,

fine-tuning them

to no longer fly in the air,

but to pull off something remarkable

beneath the waves.

[serene music playing]

Underwater flight.

Penguins have sublime buoyancy control

and one of the most streamlined bodies

of any animal,

making them

the world's greatest swimming birds.

Scanning for fish,

it hovers like a hummingbird

with perfect poise.

In contrast, the cold-blooded iguanas

are slow and sluggish

restricted to feeding on low-energy kelp

at the whim of the currents.

The warm-blooded penguins

couldn't be more different

with their speed and agility

chasing down fish with ease.

Underwater flight

allowed the penguins to exploit the seas

like never before.

Their strategy has been so successful,

they've colonized all the continents

of the Southern Hemisphere

[chattering]

evolving into the 18 different species

we know today.

The final epic chapter for the birds,

a dynasty that was almost wiped out.

But thanks to the few survivors

of the dinosaur family tree,

birds rose from the ashes.

Over 66 million years,

they've reinvented themselves

into a myriad of forms.

[chirping]

Today, 10,000 species strong,

they've found a way to thrive

in almost every corner of the planet.

But they are not the only ones

to have conquered the world.

Not so long ago,

the Americas were still at the mercy

of the terror birds.

[roaring]

But these apex predators

would soon become the prey.

[roaring]

Other survivors of the asteroid

had also been evolving.

No longer in the shadow of the dinosaurs

[roaring]

they'd grown bigger and more dangerous.

[snarling]

[screeching]

- [growling]

- [screeching]

It was time for the rise

of the mammals.

[snarling]

[roars]

[rousing music playing]
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