National Geographic: The Explorers - A Century of Discovery (1988)

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National Geographic: The Explorers - A Century of Discovery (1988)

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In Washington, D.C.

the Trustees of

the National Geographic Society

gather to have a formal portrait taken.

The picture will help commemorate

the Society's Centennial.

In 1988 Geographic completes

one hundred years of exploration,

research, and education.

Everybody looking right at the lens.

Ready?

All right. Okay. Fine. Right here.

Nice big smile now. Come on.

Here, in 1913,

a similar photograph was taken.

Back then, the highest mountain

had yet to be climbed,

and no one knew the ocean deep,

or what fire illuminates the stars.

All this lay in the future

the greatest adventure mankind

has ever known.

The explorers have left monuments

all over the world.

One of the most meaningful,

and at the same time little-known,

is to be found high on a hilltop

in Nova Scotia.

Here, alone with the sigh of the wind,

are the graves of Alexander Graham Bell

and his wife, Mabel.

Bell called their estate here

Beinn Bhreagh,

or "beautiful mountain"

In the late 1800s Bell spent much of

his time promoting

the National Geographic Society.

It was the favorite preoccupations

of a man

whose boundless creativity

changed everyone's life forever.

Inventing the telephone made

Bell's fortune.

It also freed him to pursue

his many interests

and enjoy his growing family.

Enthusiastic, generous, and warmhearted,

Bell became a grandfather figure

to the world.

When young Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor

caught the eye

of Bell's elder daughter, Elsie,

Bell offered him a job in Washington.

The couple was married in 1900.

They set up housekeeping not far

from Grosvenor's office

at 15th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue

It was an exciting time to be alive.

Americans were thrilled

by modern innovations

and their growing political power.

Grosvenor became the first full-time

employee of National Geographic,

Which was kept going mainly

/be Bell's contributions.

In a tiny office sometimes piled high

with unsold Magazines,

Grosvenor worked to realize Bell's hope

that Geographic's journal could

somehow pay the Society's way.

From its first issue the Magazine

had been a liability.

It had been called "suitable for

diffusing geographic knowledge among

those who already had it,

/and scaring off the rest".

It often featured day,

scholarly articles not meant

for the general public.

But there were also pictures

photographs of far-away people

and places that stirred the imagination.

When be became Managing Editor in 1900

Grosvenor started publishing

more photographs,

selected according to one of

his favorite maxims:

"The mind must see

before it can believe".

A famous Geographic tradition

began in 1896 with this picture.

Grosvenor stoutly defended the policy

of showing people dressed,

or undressed,

according to the customs in their land

At the turn of the century

the eye of the camera

was capable of wondrous revelations.

In 1906 an entire issue of

National Geographic was devoted

to portraits of animals taken

in the wild.

Photographer George Shiras sneaked up

on his subjects at night

with a camera and

expl*sive flash powder.

His pictures astonished the world.

With a later technique Shiras

startled animals

with a blank g*n sh*t

and then captured them

an instant later in ghostly flight.

Geographic and its Magazine

soon prospered

and more innovations followed

Even before true color photography

was practical,

colored pictures were published

by hand tinting black-and-white prints

according to notes the photographer

had made in the field.

Purists found these pictures artificial

but readers loved them just the same.

From the beginning the most popular

Geographic authors were explorers.

The Magazine made history in 1909

when it published Robert Peary's

account of discovering the North Pole.

Peary once wrote: I shall not be

satisfied that I have done my best

until name is known from one end of

the world to the other.

Peary's closest associate

was the pioneering black explorer

Mattew Henson.

In 1908 he and Peary set out together

on their fourth polar expedition.

On March 1, 1909.

Peary set off for the pole.

According to plan,

the rest of the party turned back

as supplies ran down.

After a month only Peary, Henson,

and four Eskimos were left to press on

with the dogs.

Peary's account of the next few days

remains controversial.

He reported good weather

and excellent progress.

Later, some thought his story too

good to be true.

In any event,

Peary reported he reached the pole

on April 6, 1909.

Peary wrote in his diary:

"The Pole at last!

Linking hands with Roald Amundsen

who reached the South Pole

two years later,

Robert Peary found the fame

he had sought so long.

In 1913 he and Amundsen met

for the first time

when being honored

by the National Geographic.

Hardly less pleased were Dr. Bell

and his son-in-law Gilbert Grosvenor.

National Geographic was a going concern

and Bell was delighted to have it

all in the family.

Grosvenor's decorum veiled his daring

and ambition.

He took quite literally Bell's

expansive admonition that

"the world and all that is

in it is our theme".

Some four years after

the sensation over Peary,

another explorer became

a household name.

Hiram Bingham was a professor

of Latin American history at Yale.

In search of a fabled lost city,

he traveled to Peru.

So he found Machu Picchu,

Abandoned by the Incas 450 years ago,

The first National Geographic

archeological grant

was made to help clear

and map the colossal ruins.

It took more than $20,000 and months

of labor to reveal them all.

In 1917 one of the first

National Geographic expeditions

to be documented in motion pictures

explored a rare freak of nature

the Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes

in Alaska.

This bizarre landscape was

the aftermath

of a gigantic volcanic expl*si*n

several years before.

In this nightmare world,

superheated steam hissed

from millions of vents

and often, it seemed,

the ground itself was alive

Scientists attempted to explore

the larger fissures,

but barely escaped being boiled alive.

More than half a million members

now shared in the exploration

of such natural wonders.

And the home of Alexander Graham Bell

had become the unofficial summer

headquarter of the National Geographic

On holidays the hard-pressed Grosvenor

set up his office in a tent

on the lawn of Beinn Bhreagh.

On these visits the

Grosvenor children enchanted

their legendary Grandfather Bell.

The great inventor was over 60,

but still a bold explorer.

He astonished and sometimes alarmed

his Nova Scotia neighbors

with his odd inventions.

Giant kites made up of tetrahedral

cells were Bell's obsession.

They taught him much about aeronautics

and some were large enough

to life a man.

Bell's avid interest in aviation

culminated in 1909

with the first flight in Canada

by a powered airplane.

One of Bell's last experiments was

a hydrofoil speedboat called the HD-4.

It worked perfectly.

It went 71 miles an hour for years

the fastest thing on water.

World w*r I was over.

And people who had fought to save the

world for democracy were more curious

about the world than ever.

Six-hundred-and-fifty-six thousand

of them had joined National Geographic

and received its Magazine,

the pride of 400 employees.

Society headquarters was Hubbard Hall,

named for Gardiner Greene Hubbard,

Bell's father-in-law and

the Society's first president.

Geographic's Magazine combined

education and adventure

in the form of first-person reports

from explorers in the field.

Some of the most colorful accounts

came from a botanist, Joseph Rock.

Daring, arrogant, and difficult,

Rock had a talent for getting into

trouble and living to tell the tale.

On his travels in China and Tibet.

He was often menaced by bandits

and warlords.

Roch always escaped them

and sometimes even got their pictures

for the Magazine.

One of Rock's classic articles told of

his visit to the tiny kingdom of Muli.

Deep in the mountains of Szechuan,

Muli was ruled by a king

who had the power of life

or death over his 22,000 subjects.

Like Shangri-la,

Muli knew little of the outside world.

Rock was told he was

the first American ever to come here.

Summoning Rock to his place,

the King of Muli politely

asked the explorer

if the could ride horseback

to Washington.

He treated Rock kindly,

offering him delicacies

like ancient yak cheese

and mutton crawling with maggots.

By the 1920s the unexplored parts

of the world were rapidly shrinking.

But man's past was like

a hidden continent.

And in 1922 the entrance to

a royal Egyptian tomb was found.

Archeologist Howard Carter and

his sponsor, Lord Carnarvon,

Announced they would open the burial

chamber officially on February 18, 1923

"Can you see anything?"

Lord Carnarvon had asked Carter

when he first looked inside

the tomb three months earlier.

"Yes", Carter had replied.

"I see wonderful things".

It was the tomb of Tutahkhamun.

Nothing like it had been found before

or since a time capsule 3300 years old.

By the end of the 1920s,

National Geographic was prepared

to sponsor major expeditions.

It subscribed $50,000 toward

Richard Byrd's attempt

to fly to the South Pole.

Byrd's ship left New Zealand

in December 1928,

still summer in the Antarctic.

According to Byrd's elaborate plan,

the party would land in Antarctica

and dig in for the winter.

When weather improved in the spring,

he'd attempt the 800mile flight to the

pole over largely unknown territory.

An advance party prepared to travel

overland more than halfway to the pole

They would make geological studies

and stand by to rescue Byrd

if his plane was forced down.

The expedition not only survived

the winter, it prospered.

There were nearly 100 dogs

when the sun set in April.

By August there were many more.

The six men in

the Geological Party departed.

They would be gone almost three months

Byrd planned to drop an American flag

to mark the spot

when he reached the pole.

On November 28, 1929,

a full year after leaving New Zealand,

Byrd decided to go.

A film camera went along and

months later audiences in Washington

would see this movie

of Byrd's adventure.

There they are at the South Pole.

The observations click.

It is 1:25 in the morning

of November 29th, 1929.

d*ck takes out the flag,

weighted with a stone

from Floyd Bennett's grave.

It is the symbol and the monument

of a supreme accomplishment.

Through the trap door the flag

and stone drop together.

There they go down, down forever

at the very bottom of the world.

A nation plunging into

the Great Depression

still gave Richard Byrd

a glorious welcome home.

He received his second

National Geographic modal

at the White house

from President Herbert Hoover.

Your contribution to exploration

and scientific research has done honor

to this country.

Your daring and courage have

thrilled each one of us individually

because they have proved anew the

worth and the glory of the qualities

which we believe are latent

in the American people.

Africa long regarded as

the Dark Continent

and the natural habitat

of the great explorer.

Leading huge safaris deep

into the bush,

Martin Johnson typified a new breed

of showman-explorer.

His wife, Osa, was equally famous

and equally skilled with g*ns

and their many cameras.

Together the Johnson made a series of

films that brought both the realities

and the clichs of African adventure

vividly to life on the screen.

Scenes of African wildlife thrilled

standing-room-only audiences

at the Johnson's early films

and lectures.

Technology, it seemed,

made anything possible.

Pioneering scientists like

William Beebe were going

where no one had ever been before.

Off Bermuda Beebe tried out

his so-called bathysphere,

lowering the two-ton steel ball-to

a depth of 3,000 feet.

On one test dive the unoccupied

sphere sprang a leak.

Water was trapped inside

at deep-sea pressure.

Releasing it showed what could happen

to a person trapped inside.

Unperturbed, Beebe and his companion,

Otis Barton,

made repairs and then committed

themselves to fate.

Bolted in, dangling on the end

of a steel cable less

than an inch in diameter,

they would be helpless

if anything went wrong.

Descending past 2,000 feet,

Beebe peered out into

the eternal darkness

and glimpsed creatures no one had

ever seen before.

Painted by an artist working from

Beebe's descriptions,

these were like creatures from

another planet,

alien and bizarre.

Another ocean lay above.

Earth's great canopy of air challenged

the explorers.

In 1934, with a hydrogen-filled balloon

National Geographic

and the U.S. Army Air Corps

joined forces to probe

the stratosphere.

A launch site was readied near

Rapid City, South Dakota.

The balloon was launched

on July 28, 1934.

It carried three Air Corps officers

and was called Explorer.

All went well as Explorer soared

above 60,000 feet.

Then, the three men in the gondola

heard ominous sounds and,

seconds later,

realized that the balloon

was tearing open.

Fearing the thin air and

cold at high altitude,

the balloonists dared not use their

parachutes until the last moment.

They escaped just in time.

Explorer shattered on impact.

Almost immediately it was decided

to try again.

A second balloon, Explorer II,

was constructed.

The largest balloon in the world,

it would stand more than 300 feet high

when fully inflated.

In November 1935 Explorer II soared

into the stratosphere,

reaching nearly 14 miles,

a new world record.

After eight hours aloft,

the balloon touched down

in a farmer's pasture.

Casual heroes, wearing helmets borrowed

from a local high-school football team

The crew basked in the admiration

of a crowd that appeared out of

nowhere on the plains of South Dakota.

When World w*r II began,

Washington changed forever as it

became a wartime boom town.

But the National Geographic

remained much the same.

The Magazine had become a fixture in

school libraries and doctor's offices.

Society members wrote to editors as

if they were old friends.

And almost all collected the Magazine

because they couldn't bear

to throw it away.

Techniques of color reproduction were

by now far advanced.

And no one published more

or finer color photographs

than National Geographic.

There could only be one subject

for the first color cover,

published the w*r.

But not until 1959 did a picture on

the cover become a regular feature.

Wherever w*r did not reach,

explorers carried on.

A number of expeditions to Mexico,

led by Dr. Matthew Stirling,

revealed a mysterious pre-Columbian

culture called the Olmec.

A series of dramatic discoveries

included the excavation

of a gigantic stone head

weighing 25 tons.

The work pushed the existence of

pre-Columbian civilization in America

further into antiquity and carried on

a Geographic tradition of leadership

in New World archeology.

The w*r had barely ended when,

on the coast of France,

a new species of man appeared.

Led by Jacques-Yves Cousteau,

these creatures, awkward on land,

were originally called "fish men".

Co-inventor of the Aqua-Lung Cousteau

revolutionized undersea exploration.

National Geographic photographer

Luis Marden eagerly followed Cousteau

into a dazzling new world.

Cousteau once remarked:

when we are invited to

live on this earth.

There is no reason we should not

visit the basement.

But unlike some explorers before him,

Cousteau sought not to conquer

but to cherish the creatures of the sea.

By the 1950s there were

few places on earth

that did not bear the mark of man.

One of them was the summit

of Mount Everest, 29,028 feet high,

the last great prize of

the classic explorer.

An era came to an end with

this National Geographic article

and when President Dwight Eisenhower

gave the Society's Hubbard Medal

to the British Everest

Expedition leader,

Sir John Hunt,

and climber Sir Edmund Hillary.

But there would be new adventures

and new ways to share them.

The first National Geographic

TV Special documented the

American expedition to Everest,

led by Norman Dyhrenfurth.

The climbing team of 19 Americans

and 32 Nepaless Sherpas

made the attempt.

And, on television, tens of millions

would later share the adventure.

And on the morning of May 1st,

the peak is boiling in

its plume of snow.

Those below were sure that there

would be no summit attempt that day.

But they were wrong.

Big Jim and Gombu decide to

make their try,

and for hour after hour inch up the

battlements of the Southeast Ridge.

For a while Norman Dyhrenfurth and

Ang Dawa climb after them.

But the cold is too bitter,

the wind too fierce.

Filmmaking is all but impossible.

At last Norman and Ang Dawa turn back.

Jim and Gombu go on alone.

At last...

They are there

on top of the world.

Jim Whittaker and Nawang Gombu.

At one o'clock on the afternoon

of May first,

Whittaker planted the American

flag on the summit,

and with it the flag of

the National Geographic Society.

These are the first moving pictures

ever taken from the summit of Everest.

Some one-and-a-half

million photographs more than

forty thousand rolls of film are

turned in here in Washington each year.

It's a staggering task merely to

catalog and store them.

All the elements are there.

Nice lady with her family.

The world, and all that is in it that

was Alexander Graham Bell's modest

description of the Society's mission.

So editors, writers,

and researchers try valiantly

to do the impossible in books

and other publications, maps and films

as well as the 12 annual

issues of the Magazine.

A typical mind-boggling

Geographic statistic:

the press run of one Magazine issue

would make a stack 53 miles high.

The original vision of Gilbert

Grosvenor had been far exceeded

by the time of his death in 1966.

Leadership has passed to his son,

Melville Bell Grosvenor,

Editor of the Magazine for

ten brilliant years.

Now Gilbert M. Grosvenor is

President of the Society,

continuing family traditions that

have taken him all over the world,

and even to the North Pole.

I think it all started when my

grandfather flew over the North Pole.

And this was, I guess, in about maybe

the 50s early 50s

because I was still in college.

And he sent us a little postcard.

It had the North Pole

and it had the lines of

longitude and latitude

and where they all met.

And he signed it and said,

I flew over the footsteps of Robert E.

And then my father he

flew over the North Pole,

and he did the same thing.

He sent me a postcard.

And I was kind of getting tired of this.

Gilbert Grosvenor's visit the

pole had a new twist.

Accompanied by underwater

photographer Al Giddings

and Canadian explorer Joe MacInnis,

he would join the select few

who have ventured under

the ice at 90 North.

Under six feet of ice, in 29 water,

human life hangs by

the slenderest of threads.

As fragile as the flame

of a single candle,

the human spirit trembles here,

Even as it did in the time of Peary.

Have you ever?

Have you ever?

Seventy years ago this flag came to

the North Pole with Robert E. Peary.

Terrific.

And it's a great pleasure

to bring it back.

We say we have explored the earth.

But there are still regions almost as

remote as the surface of the moon.

Most dramatically,

seven-tenths of the earth's surface

is covered with water,

and we have only a hazy idea of what

is hidden beneath the waves.

You ready for me?

This is "Project Beebe",

a pioneering study of

life in the deep ocean.

The remarkable Dr. Eugenie Clark,

University of Maryland zoologist

and shark expert,

is the principal scientist.

I don't know about that laser the

laser-sighted Canon on the front.

The project is the brainchild

of Emory Kristof,

A National Geographic photographer

who is an expert on deep-sea

exploration and photography.

Aboard the research submersible

Pisces VI,

Dr. Clark will descend several thousand

feet to the ocean floor

and remain there up to 12 hours.

She'll use the submersible as a

deep-sea observation post,

attracting marine animals with bait.

Here off Bermuda, William Beebe made

his epic dives 50 years ago.

And the curiosity that drove him

now inspires Dr. Clark.

Never though I'd be doing this.

You know, as a child, I worshipped

Beebe and read all his books

and wanted to go down in the

bathysphere the way he did.

Never really though I'd do it,

but I wanted to.

This one is huge. This one is big.

Oh, my gosh!

Within minutes deep-sea sharks appear.

Up to 20 feet long,

these six gill sharks have only rarely

been seen alive.

Yeah, it really is exciting.

Wow! You ought to see the

size of this one.

We've got the biggest one so far.

He's right outside the window now.

It will take generations to fully

explore this mysterious deep frontier.

And no one can say what strange

creatures we may someday discover here.

Off the Mediterranean coast of Turkey,

National Geographic has helped

explore an ancient ship

that was wrecked here 3,400 years ago.

Now a word about

what we're doing today.

We're working in the upper part of the

wreck and finding it

just thick with amphoras and

ingots and so forth.

And so I want you to

just to hand-fan down...

George Bass is from

Texas A & M University.

One of the world's leading

nautical archeologists,

He has been completely absorbed

by a small plot of seabed

some 150 feet down.

Slowly, the evidence mounts up.

Bass and his team have

gained unprecedented knowledge

of such an ancient ship.

It was about 50 feet long

and carried goods of at

least seven different cultures,

including pottery, ivory, tin,

and the oldest glass ingots ever found.

But the principal cargo was copper

some 200 ingots,

each weighing about 60 pounds.

When combined with tin,

such ingots make bronze,

and the wreck did prove to be of

the Late Bronze Age

the oldest shipwreck known.

In 1986 an expedition from Woods Hole,

Massachusetts,

sought to explore the most celebrated

shipwreck of modern times

A luxury liner that sank in 1912

with a loss of more than 1,500 lives.

For years the grave of the Titanic has

fascinated Dr. Robert Ballard.

Now he has pinpointed the wreck

and hear echoes of tragedy.

Here lies Titanic, seen again by human

eyes after 74 dark and silent years.

Ballard leached Titanic with Alvin,

a manned submersible

designed for deep-sea research.

Knowing that Titanic could be

desecrated by salvagers,

Dr. Ballard felt it necessary

to leave a plaque here asking

that she be left intact.

But only a year passed before a rival

expedition reached the wreck

and took objects from Titanic.

Someday we may see beneath the waves

with godlike ease

and penetrate countless mysteries.

There is a great void

in the story of early man.

And this tantalized a scientist named

Louis Leakey

are lured him to a place in Africa

called Olduvai Gorge.

And now I'm down

at the bottom of the gorge.

My feet are resting on the black

lava which formed

the old land surface on

which these lake beds formed.

And here behind me are the earliest

part of the Olduvai series,

deposits that were formed just

nearly two million years ago.

It was here that, in 1931,

we first found examples of

simple tools like this,

Just a water-worn pebble with a jagged

cutting edge stone tools

that go back to a very,

very remote past in time,

nearly three times as old as

anything previously found.

Who were the men who made these tools?

Where did they live

and how did they live?

And that was the problem

that Mary and I went out to look for.

We wanted the answer: Who these men?

In 1959 Leakey and his wife, Mary,

found the fossil jaw of Zinjanthropus,

a primitive form of ape-man

who lived one-and-three-quarter

million years ago.

The find stunned the scientific world.

For 30 years the Leakeys had

faced skepticism and ridicule.

Now at last they found support

as National Geographic

underwrote their research.

Melville Bell Grosvenor made a

commitment to the Leakey's work

that would endure for a

quarter of a century.

Leakey's son Richard

also became a leading scientist.

In 1984 a team led by Richard Leakey

found the nearly complete skeleton

of an early human

one-and-a-half

million years old.

The Leakey legacy endures

the now accepted ideas

that man evolved in Africa,

That he is far older

than we once thought,

and that more than one kind

of man-like creature

lived at the same time.

Louis Leakey's interest in human

origins took fascinating turns.

As his urging

Jane Goodall began her epic study

of chimpanzee behavior in the wild.

Goodall's study led to a

new appreciation of the

similarities between

chimpanzees and man.

The chimps form distinct family groups

They use tools and

sometimes even wage w*r.

And over the years Jane Goodall came

to regard many of them as friends.

Another of Leakey's disciples

sought to study

the mountain gorilla in Rwanda.

With extraordinary patience,

Dian Fossey at last succeeded

in winning the trust of these powerful

but extremely shy creatures.

At such moments of contact

Dian was deeply moved

by the gorillas gentleness and trust.

One of her favorites was "Digit",

so-called because of his twisted,

broken finger.

In December 1977 Digit was

k*lled by poachers,

probably to sell his hands as souvenirs.

Later, other mountain gorillas in Dian's

study group were also slaughtered.

Finally, Dian herself was m*rder*d by

persons unknown,

quite possibly poachers.

As much as any recent event,

her death foreshadowed a desperate

new era in the age of ecology.

We are led to ask:

If we cannot protect wild creatures,

can we save ourselves?

In the remote highlands of

Papua New Guinea

there lives a group

of endangered people.

They call themselves the "Hagahai".

Until a few years ago no outsiders

knew of their existence.

And they have been so isolated

they have not developed antibodies

to protect them against

common diseases.

Dr. Carol Jenkins is a

medical anthropologist.

She first came here to document

the Hagahais decline.

She returned to try to save them.

As part of a medical team,

Jenkins is fighting a desperate

battle against her own grim statistics

This baby is special because it's

the only one that's lived this year.

There have been eight babies born

since '87 began.

There have been eight babies is about

two months old

and it's the only living baby.

The Hagahai are so vulnerable,

only the most wrenching

changes can help them.

Trained to observe such cultures,

Carol Jenkins finds herself helping

to profoundly alter this one.

As tropical rain forests give way

to human demands,

there is danger on every hand.

This is the richest,

most complex ecosystem on earth.

From it have come many of our dr*gs,

our food plants, our useful chemicals.

Can we survive without this

blessing of diversity?

As the century of

discovery comes to an end,

a century of destruction

could be beginning.

And of all living creatures

only man has the power to decide

what the future holds

for the planet Earth.

Often quietly and in

unspectacular ways,

the task of discovery goes on.

And technology can make

explorers of us all.

A few years ago Jean Mueller

was a librarian.

Seeking a new challenge,

she went to work for

Palomar Observatory in California.

Jean works on the

Second Palomar Sky Survey,

a project partially sponsored by

National Geographic.

Its goal is to make a photographic

map of the heavens

that shows more detail

than we have ever seen before.

On a mountaintop in the dead of night,

Jean often sees what no one

has ever seen before

an image on a newly developed

glass plate 14 inches square.

Each pinpoint on the plate is a star,

possibly a galaxy

worlds upon worlds so numerous that

we cannot comprehend them.

The scale of this vision is staggering

Every plate contains

millions of pinpoints,

And it will take 894 separate plates

to scan the skies over Palomar.

And this represents the

Northern Hemisphere alone.

To explore this, much less

understand it, seems incredible.

But what wonders have we seen

in these last hundred years.

And in the next hundred, what more?
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