Australia: Life Explodes

Fossils reveal how life's explosion in the ocean was recreated on dry land. Airing July 23, 2014 at 9 pm on PBS Aired July 23, 2014 on PBS

  • Originally aired 04.17.13

Program Description

(Program not available for streaming.) How did life storm the beaches and dominate planet Earth? Ancient Australian fossils offer clues in "Life Explodes." Half a billion years ago, Australia was still part of the super-continent Gondwana. The oceans were teeming with weird and wonderful animals, but the world above the waves remained an almost lifeless wasteland. All that was about to change, though. Host Richard Smith introduces Earth's forgotten pioneers: the scuttling arthropod armies that invaded the shores and the waves of green revolutionaries whose battle for the light pushed plant life across the face of a barren continent. Evolution continued underwater as well, with armor-plated fish experimenting with teeth, jaws, sex, and lungs. NOVA's prehistoric adventure continues with four-legged animals walking onto dry land—and the planet poised for disaster.

Transcript

Australia: Life Explodes

PBS Airdate: April 17, 2013

RICHARD SMITH (Biologist): Over four-billion years in the making, an island adrift in southern seas: it's Australia, the giant down under; a young nation with all the gifts of the modern age, but move beyond the cities and an ancient land awaits, one nearly as old as the earth itself.

Australia is a puzzle, put together in prehistoric times. And the clues that unlock the mystery can be found scattered across Australia's sunburnt face.

I'm Richard Smith, and this is an amazing country. I'll show you that every rock has a history, every creature a tale of survival against the odds. Join me on an epic journey across a mighty continent and far back in time.

Of all continents on Earth, none preserve the great saga of our planet and the evolution of life quite like this one. Nowhere else can you so simply jump in a car and travel back to the dawn of time.

In this episode: the world above water has sat silent and lifeless, but now armies storm the beaches, and biology conquers the world. It's the battle for life on Earth, the struggle for legs and lungs, sunlight and shelter, even the quest for sex. From Australia's ancient stones comes the story of our world: Australia's First 4 Billion Years: Life Explodes, right now, on NOVA.

If Australia seems a little tired and worn, it's because she's seen a lot happen over the course of her long life. In the last episode, our journey down the road of time began with the earth's fiery birth, four-and-a-half-billion years ago. We passed the first fumbles of life in the waters skirting Australia's ancient shoreline. Along the way, we've seen the planet change from poisonous to pleasant and the first animals begin to swim in the seas. Yet, save for a thin smear of slime and bacteria along the soggiest of margins, all the continents themselves had lain bare for over four-billion-years. In terms of the lifetime of a continent, Australia, and the world around it, is still an infant, still attached to its motherland—the great supercontinent Gondwana—and still a blank canvas on land.

GPS DIGITAL VOICE: Your destination is the Paleozoic.

RICHARD SMITH: Now, with 90 percent of Earth history behind us, it's time for conquest. The tremendous explosion of life that began in the oceans of the Cambrian was still going strong at the dawn of the Ordovician, the second of the six great periods that make up the Paleozoic. And it was in Ordovician oceans that a second wave of animal experimentation began, as well, one that ultimately would lead to the first Australians coming ashore. With the seas now crowded with life, the first tentative footsteps onto land were not far away.

Now, at the time, Australia was just one of an exotic collection of lands, including India, Africa, South America and Antarctica, that, today, we call the supercontinent Gondwana. Australia's position was just about here, right on the tip, just north of the equator and mostly under water.

Oceans were rising around the planet, and seawater flooded in across parts of central Australia. At the time, the sea of sand we know today as the Simpson Desert was slap bang in the middle of the Larapinta Seaway, a tongue of warm ocean water that licked right across the country. Back then, this bouncy drive would have been a bumpy boat crossing. As the rising waters swept in, they carried a rich bloom of plankton, food for some of the earliest fish to swim in the sea. And they swam right here, right above me.

The last vestiges of the old Larapinta sea floor lie tumbling from the top of the mesa-shaped hills of the Simpson Desert. Even in the best of seasons, like this, the Simpson is a harsh unforgiving landscape. Now, you probably wouldn't expect to find the world's earliest fish in the dead center of the driest inhabited continent on the planet, today. But it was on the side of this hill in the Simpson Desert that the fossil of Arandaspis lay, waiting to be discovered.

We only know Arandaspis from the bony head plates and body scales it left behind, enough to tell that this was a fish with a simple tail and no real fins. Nor did fish like Arandaspis have jaws or even teeth. They probably just slurped in whatever morsels they could find.

But don't underestimate the significance of this fish. This was an animal with a backbone. It's one of the first vertebrates, so we can all trace our ancestry back to an animal like this.

But giant invertebrates ruled these Ordovician seas, and to them Arandaspis was just a bite-sized snack.

While the first fish took to swimming out of danger, their invertebrate foes would soon be flexing their leg muscles in a different way; time to put the foot down and head for the seaside in the Silurian.

On a remote stretch of the Western Australian coast, the 21st century Indian Ocean eats away at an ancient Silurian shoreline. Wind and water have exposed the burrows of long-gone animals in the sandy coastal cliffs.

The original inhabitants of the burrows remain a mystery, but not the predators attracted by such rich pickings along the prehistoric shoreline. Clues to their identity are revealed in the rocks of nearby Murchison Gorge. Here, the river has sliced deep into the Silurian past.

The Murchison Gorge, back in the Silurian, wasn't a gorge at all, of course. It was a vast estuarine flood plain, with rivers winding down from the hills in the distance, carrying sand into the sea. But for the first time in the history of the planet, those Silurian shorelines down there were alive with animal activity.

This may not have been a good time to take the kids to the beach. Armies of sea scorpions were massing in the shallows. Known to paleontologists as eurypterids, some of these intimidating arthropods grew as long as a man is tall, and they bristled with armored legs and fearsome claws.

Far less threatening was this bloke. Kalbarria was probably an ancestor of modern crustaceans and grew about as long as a king prawn. Whether in search of food, a safe place to mate or simply to avoid the nasty neighbors, Kalbarria clambered ashore, and left clear imprints of its many tiny feet in the rocks.

A descent into Murchison Gorge takes you back to those ancient Silurian shorelines.

Down here, it soon becomes clear that the sea scorpions followed Kalbarria ashore.

MICHAEL PAXMAN (Kalbarri National Park): This is what we call track central.

RICHARD SMITH: I can see why. Yeah, there are tracks everywhere.

MICHAEL PAXMAN: This is probably the best site in the park to look at these eurypterid tracks.

Our animal's come through here.

RICHARD SMITH: So, in shallow water.

MICHAEL PAXMAN: Shallow water.

RICHARD SMITH: Okay, been slipping and sliding a bit as it comes around the corner.

MICHAEL PAXMAN: That's exactly right.

RICHARD SMITH: But here, I mean, I can see clearly it's a kind of sloppy-looking track here. But once you come over here, you start seeing really discrete footprints, clear graphic demonstration of a creature walking out of the water and onto dry land.

MICHAEL PAXMAN: And where we are, here, in the depth of the gorge, we're in the oldest of the Silurian sediments in the, in this area.

RICHARD SMITH: Quite an historic little spot you've got here.

MICHAEL PAXMAN: Very. Very.

RICHARD SMITH: These trackways offer some of the oldest evidence for animals on land. And even though these formidable beasts could not stray far from the water's edge, a beachhead had been established. So, this seems to be how the animal invasion of the land began, with a scary assortment of arthropods with attitude slinking and scuttling ashore onto the wet sands of a new frontier.

But this wasn't just a continent to exploit; there was a whole planet for the taking. Waiting beyond the breakers were all the wide brown lands of Earth.

Australia, already under animal assault found itself center-stage for the waves of invasion and conquest that would follow.

But animals were not going to get far inland without help from plants. They, too, came out of the sea: first as slime, then as low-spreading things that clung to dampness. Seaweeds captured the shoreline, then tiny forests of lichens, liverworts and mosses pioneered the move inland.

Today, we take for granted the plants around us. It's their oxygen we breathe, their food we eat, but the land can be a tough, dry place to live, and any plant going to make it big out here needed a thick skin and a little internal fortitude. Just such a plant first took root somewhere around here.

If you thought that this was just another ordinary roadside cutting, on a pretty, but ordinary, country road, well, of course, you'd be dead wrong. It was here, near Yea, in Victoria, that fossils of some of the world's earliest land plants were found. Indeed, these rocks contain the first signs of the greening of Gondwana.

Just amazing.

This is Baragwanathia, possibly the oldest true land plant in the world.

Not much to look at perhaps, but with green leaves and a stem to carry sap internally and to support its weight, the world above water was its oyster. In life, it would have looked much like this. This is a lycopod, or club moss, as was Baragwanathia, rising out of the water in a coastal bog in Queensland, today.

These are the direct descendants of the green revolutionaries who changed the face of the planet. If you look closely, you can see many of these Silurian-type plants still clinging on in damp corners around the country: here a rainforest Selaginella, a tropical tassel fern; a club moss in Tasmania; even a Psilotum in Sydney.

Plant life had, by now, engineered a solution to the ultraviolet radiation that had been sterilizing the earth's surface, an ozone layer built from excess oxygen. The low-spreading thickets provided the perfect humid cover for other arthropod forms, like millipedes, centipedes and mites, to make the transition to land complete. Some mollusks even brought their own homes, because it was still not a very welcoming place.

While life was exploring the fringes, most of the Gondwanan supercontinent was dry, probably still quite bare, and almost certainly windy. The Larapinta Seaway had receded, leaving much of what is now central Australia resembling the Sahara Desert.

And that desert became mountains. Titanic tectonic forces, operating over a span of 150-million years, buckled the earth and pushed great folds of rock into the air. In their heyday, central Australia's MacDonnell Ranges would have been a mountaineer's dream, as high, it's thought, as any on Earth today. But Australia would never experience mountain-building on this scale again.

After a near-eternity of erosion, the diminished remnants of the MacDonnell Ranges still run in long, jagged wrinkles across the heart of Australia. From the air, they protrude into this ancient landscape like the bony skeleton over which the dry skin of a tired continent is draped.

All other continents boast mighty mountain ranges—the Rockies, the Alps, the Andes, the Himalayas—but they're all relative newcomers and mostly still growing. What sets Australia's landscape apart is its venerable antiquity and its great flatness.

LISA WORRALL (Zeus Resources Limited): Australia is actually quite remarkably flat, and when you look at it from space, it's not just flat but it's apparently saucer-shaped.

RICHARD SMITH: It's a saucer that holds many secrets for geologist Lisa Worrall.

Her interest is not so much the bedrock of the Outback, but the story of all its eroded remnants, accumulated over a vast gulf of time.

LISA WORRALL: We know parts of Australia have been exposed for millions, if not billions, of years. We're partway through an ongoing geological story. The rivers that, in Australia, mostly drain inland are actually losing or have lost the ability to carry sediments out and down into the seas, so inland Australia is filling up with sediments.

RICHARD SMITH: Outback Australia is drowning in sand. Head towards the coast, in any direction from the red center, and you cross oceans of these old weathered sediments. It's the sort of landscape you should expect from the flattest continent on the globe.

Travelling northwest, it's 700 miles before you reach the next significant patch of high rocky ground: the Kimberley. While mountains were still pushing skywards in the continent's heart, up here, in Purnululu National Park, others were already wearing down to nothing.

Epic tales of erosion and recycling lie behind most geological features in the Australian landscape. The sands and gravels that make the Bungle Bungle Ranges started arriving here about 375-million years ago, dumped by rivers that wore away highlands far older and now long gone.

This landscape was already secondhand, long before the rocks began eroding away into the famous striped beehive domes we see today. The distinctive striping of the rocks here is a dead giveaway to how the Bungle Bungles were formed, layer by layer, as mighty rivers washed sediment from distant mountain ranges to fill the basin. This unfolding landscape is a two-toned testament to change, left as a parting gift, by rivers that ran down into a Devonian tropical sea.

Three-hundred dusty miles to the west of the Bungle Bungles and you can run down to that same ancient sea, once home to some of the most spectacular tropical reefs on the planet.

Surprisingly, you can still visit these reefs today.

I'm standing at the base of the great Devonian Barrier Reef. These towering limestone cliffs were once towers of life, rising into the clear sunlit waters of a colossal reef system that once circled the Kimberley.

In both size and significance, the Devonian reef rivaled modern Australia's Great Barrier Reef. Its limestone ramparts were once festooned with crinoids and corals, sponges and sea squirts, and many other creatures still found clinging on in tropical waters. That Devonian life is gone, but the great reef walls still stand to this day.

It's easier to see from the air.

In the same way that the Great Barrier Reef fringes the Queensland coast today, the Great Devonian Reef skirted in a sweeping curve around the Kimberley hinterland, for perhaps 600 miles. Reef after reef line up across the landscape, as if a giant bathplug had been pulled.

At Tunnel Creek, one such stream has carved its way right through the Devonian limestone range. It's a deliciously cool change from the sweltering heat outside and offers dark access to the very heart of the reef itself.

A whole suite of reef-building organisms built this great Devonian Reef above me. You can see a lot of their ghostly remains in the rocks, still: sponges, stromatolites, corals, strange extinct things called "stromatoporoids." But the real stars of the show, here, weren't the things that made the reef, but the things that swam around outside it, things with fins, because this was the great "Age of the Fishes..

It was in the Devonian that, for the first time, fish filled the oceans; fish of all shapes and sizes, just not quite the shapes and sizes we see today.

Like the reefs themselves, the fish of the Devonian northwest are amazingly well-preserved, protected in limestone nodules scattered across nearby Gogo Station.

You don't get a lot of bites around here. About one nodule in every thousand yields a good fossil strike. But whenever you catch a Gogo fish, it's always something special.

GAVIN YOUNG (Australian National University): Oh, wow.

KATE TRINAJSTIC (Curtin University): That's a lot of bone.

GAVIN YOUNG: That's all bone, there; some very large plates.

KATE TRINAJSTIC: So, what do you think that is, Gavin.

GAVIN YOUNG: It's clearly a large placoderm, probably a big arthrodire.

RICHARD SMITH: Kings of the Devonian seas were the placoderms. Fish had moved on since the days of Arandaspis. Now they had jaws, fins and teeth to go with their bony head plates.

GAVIN YOUNG: The front part of the body was covered in these bony plates, and then the tail would be pretty much shark-like. They were, in fact, very agile, successful predators, and they had a highly developed sensory system.

Some of them had electrosensory perception, like modern sharks and rays.

RICHARD SMITH: Many of these fossil features have been preserved in fabulous 3D.

KATE TRINAJSTIC: Oh, look. There's some ridging.

RICHARD SMITH: The Gogo nodules have protected the fossils from being crushed.

KATE TRINAJSTIC: Do you think it might be a Holonema.

A nice bath in acid's going to clear it up.

GAVIN YOUNG: Even soak it in some water and scrub it with a toothbrush.

KATE TRINAJSTIC: If I'm not getting a shower at night, this fish certainly isn't.

RICHARD SMITH: It's only once the limestone nodule is dissolved away, in acid in the lab, that the fossilized fish within come back to life in astonishing detail: scales, teeth, eye sockets, brain cases, bones and fin rays. The fish are all so fabulously well-preserved for their age, that even soft body bits can be made out.

In more ways than one these are pretty sexy fossils.

KATE TRINAJSTIC: Well, this one, here's particularly interesting, because it's one of the few male fossils that we have. And we can tell that because it has this clasper.

RICHARD SMITH: Like in a shark.

KATE TRINAJSTIC: Very much like a shark.

RICHARD SMITH: This bony tube structure is the oldest confirmed male appendage, a fishy private part for impregnating a female.

The Devonian was an important time for vertebrate life, with many biological experiments underway, including the all-important vertebrate sex. Even today, sex in the sea can be a bit of a hit or miss affair, a tradeoff between precision and plenty. Without coupling and live birth, vulnerable progeny sink or swim on their own, not a strategy destined for success on land.

This is a portrait of the world's oldest preserved mother with child, and we have the fossil to prove it.

KATE TRINAJSTIC: This is perhaps our most famous discovery, to date. This is the mother fish, and this is the real, kind of, clincher we had that you could have live birth. And it's this little structure here, right around the bottom, and that is the umbilical cord, which is attaching the mother to her unborn embryo.

RICHARD SMITH: My goodness, that's the world's earliest umbilical cord we know of.

KATE TRINAJSTIC: It is. It is the world's earliest evidence of live birth, in any vertebrate.

RICHARD SMITH: Our backboned ancestors were making all the right moves, already on the road to becoming social, smart and sexy. And they were everywhere.

As rain fell on Australia's newly constructed east, rivers ran back down towards the sea, filling the freshwater lakes and backwaters of the new coastal landscape. Throw a line into one of those Devonian rivers and you would have caught plenty of fish that looked almost identical to this.

Whoa, hi, big guy. Oh, look at you! Aren't you something special.

Now this is something truly special, a living link to our fossil past. It's the Queensland lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, and I'm trying to hold him, I hope. Now, he is the most primitive of the handful of lungfish that still swim on Planet Earth. Think about it for a moment. These guys were already ancient history a hundred-million years before the first dinosaurs walked the earth. And if you're worried about that "fish out of water" thing, these guys are called lungfish for a reason: they're built for it.

There you go, matey. Off you go. Thank you.

When lungfish moved from the sea into fresh water, in the Devonian, they brought with them the ability to breath with or without gills when the going got tough. It's a skill that still stands these remarkable living fossils in good stead. They live on in just a few river systems in South East Queensland. And when oxygen levels fall, they can switch to gulping air from the surface. It's a strategy that has doubtless allowed them to struggle through more than one Australian drought.

Not all fish have been so lucky.

As far as we can tell, drought is a problem that has plagued the country for at least 360-million years. We know this because, in 1955, the local council sent a bulldozer to smooth out a bad bend on the Canowindra to Gooloogong Road. Well, the bad bend in the Canowindra to Gooloogong Road is still here, and you wouldn't know it to look at it, but I've just parked right on top of one of the most spectacular Devonian freshwater fish sites in the world.

The road works inadvertently lifted the lid on Australians' oldest known Outback waterhole. When a paleontological team returned to open the site, thousands of fish tumbled out. They were lying on the slabs, just as they had been the day they all died together, when their water hole dried up.

Like their saltwater Gogo cousins, many were armor-plated placoderms. There were lungfish here, as well, and another, related, group of fishes with four-lobed fins, that we humans should be very thankful for.

Of the 4,000 or more fish uncovered on these Canowindra slabs, this one is special. It's been given the name "Canowindra grossi," after the town, of course, but its real claim to fame are the features that it shares with those fish-like animals that were leaving the water behind. A single pair of external nostrils suggests it, too, could breathe with both lungs and gills, and it was one of the lobe-finned fish, a group with four limb-like fins with a bony internal structure we can recognize in our own arms and legs.

It's not hard to imagine that somewhere in the drying Devonian waterhole at Canowindra, at least one of those fish might have got away by walking onto land. And this is why: hard evidence, in the form of fossilized four-legged footprints, of about the same age, and found near the Genoa River, in Victoria.

It was a different Genoa river, but these early fish-like tetrapods, about three feet long, were among the first animals on Earth to feel the sand between their toes.

It's not hard to see how the evolution of walking limbs might have come about. Many Australian fish species today are still testing out ways of getting about without swimming. This is the aptly-named "handfish," hopping and skipping its way along the Derwent Estuary in Tasmania; and this, that master of the tropical mangrove, the "mudskipper..

However they managed it in the first place, amphibians soon walked out into the botanical wonderland of the Carboniferous. The Carboniferous saw all sorts of new plants putting down roots and pumping out oxygen, at levels the planet had never seen before. Huge forests, especially in the northern hemisphere, helped push up oxygen levels in the atmosphere, perhaps 50 percent higher than today.

The extra oxygen saw some invertebrates grow to enormous sizes. It allowed millipedes the size of snakes to scuttle across the land and insects as large as seagulls to take to the air.

The rich insect pickings on offer must have favored the spread of the amphibians, now moving through the landscape. But like their froggy descendants today, these ancestral four-legged animals needed to return to water to reproduce.

Sometime in the Carboniferous, the first reptiles overcame this limitation. Wrapping their eggs in a membrane blanket with a hard outer shell, reptiles could take a watery egg with them on their travels. It was a solution so successful that it allowed the many contemporary "Lizards of Oz" to still claim the arid Australian Outback as their own.

There was yet another Carboniferous legacy left out here. The greening of the earth began to at least partly turn Australia red. The highly oxygenated atmosphere began to rust the iron rich soils and rocks of the Outback. And some rocks out here are bigger than others.

It's very impressive.

LISA WORRALL: It's a fabulous monolith isn't it? It's justly famous for being the biggest rock, the largest bit of rock, lump of rock in the world. And it's just gorgeous.

RICHARD SMITH: And it's very red, the color of weathered iron minerals, like hematite.

LISA WORRALL: Many of the rocks of Australia are rusted. We know that we had oxidizing rocks back to around the Carboniferous. That coloration in the landscape is very old and very persistent.

RICHARD SMITH: But at the end of the Carboniferous, just as world domination lay within the reptiles' grasp, the changing world threw up another great climate challenge. The drift of Gondwana saw Australia heading south and getting colder. It was more than just the location; the earth had slipped into another ice age, and Australia was covered in more ice than it would ever see again.

By the time we reached the Permian, a deep chill had settled in. Ice carved its calling card on the country, nowhere more clearly than the Fleurieu Peninsula in South Australia.

The bedrock here was scoured by glaciers. All of these long scratches and grooves in this smooth surface were gouged by rocks and debris being dragged along on the bottom of an ice sheet flowing in this direction.

What these rocks are telling us is that, clearly, if you look to the south of Australia, back in the Permian, you wouldn't have seen the open ocean we see today. If you looked back that way, you would have seen the mountains of Antarctica.

It's incredible to think that if you travelled to Australia in the early Permian, the landscape probably looked much like this, over at least the southern half of the continent. Evidence for ice can be found stretching across the country, from the Kimberly to the coast of Tasmania. But this cold landscape was not frozen solid like Antarctica; it was seasonally cold, more like a northern Alaska or Canada.

Well, Permian Australia might have been freezing cold, but it was far from lifeless. These remarkable rocks on Maria Island, are just stuffed to the gunnels with shellfish. And nearly every one of the animals in the rocks here and in the rocks behind me and in the cliffs in the distance, belong to one species of clam: this one, called "Eurydesma..

What Australia's Permian ocean lacked in diversity it made up for with abundance. Life crowded the sea floor.

It was the same story on land. And the proof can be found hidden underneath Australia's moist eastern seaboard, much of it right under modern Sydney. Beneath the Eucalypt forests that surround the city of Sydney today, lie cool-climate forests far more ancient.

ELEVATOR OPERATOR: Welcome underground, gentlemen.

RICHARD SMITH: Ground floor: the Permian.

I'm heading deep into a coal mine, at Helensburgh, on Sydney's southern outskirts. The seams of rich black coal here have been mined for longer than any other in the country.

What you are looking at, here, is the exhumation, half a kilometer underground, of the dead black graveyard of a vast swampy forest that once stretched right across the Sydney basin. It's hard, messy, noisy work, but there's treasure in this coal, the raw energy of fossilized sunlight.

Half the energy used to light Australian homes, fuel industry, cool beer and power this program comes from Permian plants, buried faster than they decomposed, over a quarter-of-a-billion years ago. When scientists looked closely at these coal seams, they found something not seen in the Australian forest growing so far above me, today. The fossil leaves they encountered were found in alternating, repeated layers. Every autumn, it seems, these now blackened Permian coal forests were once a riot of color.

One tree above all others dominated the Permian forests: Glossopteris. Glossopteris had solved another part of the problem of reproducing on dry land, by encasing its embryo in a protective seedy shell, so successfully, it turns out, that fossilized Glossopteris leaves are the botanical signature of all Gondwanan lands.

The planet had come of age in the Permian. Here was a world with great oxygen-producing forests, inhabited by animals with four legs; insects had taken to the skies; and the seas were brimming with animals.

Life on Earth was going swimmingly well, and then, suddenly, everything went diabolically wrong.

Well, the Permian came to a sudden and very sticky end, right here at the greatest extinction boundary in the planet's history. Now, this black coal is the last coal to have been deposited anywhere on Earth, in the Permian, the last of the great Gondwanan Glossopteris swamps. But it also marks the bitter end for over 80 percent of all species alive on the planet, at the time. This truly was the world's greatest cataclysm. This figure is conservative. Some estimates have 95 percent of all species dead and gone, wiped out in a geological blink.

The trigger, it seems, did not come from outer space but from underground. It's now thought massive volcanic eruptions in Siberia pushed CO2 levels sky-high, and the planet into a runaway greenhouse crisis. These were the days when our living earth nearly died. Acidified and stagnant, great swathes of the ocean festered; toxic bacteria took over from plankton; and deadly hydrogen sulfide spilled into the skies.

But with change, even of the calamitous kind, comes opportunity, and the earth would soon echo to the thunder of giants.

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An Essential Media and Entertainment Film Production for NOVA/WGBH in association with Eden. Developed and produced in association with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Co-financed by Screen Queensland, Principal Investor Screen Australia.

© 2013 Essential Media and Entertainment and WGBH Educational Foundation.
All rights reserved

Image

(Edicaran)
© Essential Media and Entertainment

Participants

Michael Paxman
Kalbarri National Park
Richard Smith
Biologist
Kate Trinajstic
Curtin University
Lisa Worrall
Zeus Resources Ltd.
Gavin Young
Australian National University

Preview | 00:30

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