Deep ocean mysteries and wonders David Gallo

You know, I had a real rough time
in school with ADD,

and I have a PhD.

I earned a PhD, but …
tough to pay attention –

biology, geology, physics,
chemistry – really tough for me.

Only one thing grabbed my attention,

and it’s that planet called Earth.

But in this picture here,
you’ll see that Earth is mostly water.

That’s the Pacific.

Seventy percent of Earth
is covered with water.

You can say, “Hey,
I know Earth. I live here.”

You don’t know Earth.

You don’t know this planet,
because most of it’s covered with that –

average depth, two miles.

And when you go outside

and look up at the Empire State
Building, Chrysler Building,

the average depth of the ocean
is 15 of those on top of one another.

We’ve explored about five percent
of what’s in that water.

“Explored,” meaning, for the first time,
go peek and see what’s there.

So what I want to do today
is show you some things

about this planet, about the oceans.

I want to take you from shallow water
down to the deep water,

and hopefully, like me,
you’ll see some things

that get you hooked
on exploring planet Earth.

You know things like corals;
you’ve seen plenty of corals,

those of you who’ve been
to the beach, snorkeling,

know corals are an amazing place
to go – full of life,

some big animals, small animals,
some nice, some dangerous,

sharks, whales, all that stuff.

They need to be protected from humanity.

They’re great places.

But what you probably don’t know
is in the very deep part of the ocean,

we have volcanic eruptions.

Most volcanoes on Earth
are at the bottom of the sea –

more than 80 percent.

And we actually have fire,

fire deep inside the ocean,
going on right now.

All over the world – in the Pacific,
the Atlantic, the Indian Ocean.

In this place, the ocean floor,
the rocks actually turn to liquid.

So you actually have waves
on the ocean floor.

You’d say nothing could live there,
but when we look in detail,

even there, in the deepest,
darkest places on Earth, we find life,

which tells us that life
really wants to happen.

So, pretty amazing stuff.

Every time we go to the bottom of the sea,

we explore with our submarines,
with our robots,

we see something
that’s usually surprising,

sometimes it’s startling
and sometimes revolutionary.

You see that puddle
of water sitting there.

And all around the water
there’s a little cliff,

there’s a little white sandy beach.

We’ll get closer, you’ll see
the beach a little bit better,

some of the waves
in that water, down there.

The thing that’s special about this water

is that it’s at the bottom
of the Gulf of Mexico.

So you’re sitting inside a submarine,

looking out the window
at a little pond of water beneath the sea.

We see ponds, we see
lakes, we see rivers –

in fact, right here is a river
at the bottom of the ocean

going from the lower
left to the upper right.

Water is actually flowing through there.

This totally blew our minds.

How can you have this at the bottom?

You’re in the ocean looking at more water.

And there’s animals
that only live in that water.

So, the bottom of the ocean –

I love this map, because it shows
in the middle of the ocean,

there’s a mountain range.

It’s the greatest mountain range
on Earth, called the mid-ocean ridge –

50,000 miles long,
and we’ve hardly had a peek at it.

Hardly had a peek at it.

We find valleys,
many thousands of valleys,

larger, wider, deeper
than the Grand Canyon.

We find, as I said, underwater
lakes, rivers, waterfalls.

The largest waterfall on the planet

is actually under the ocean,
up near Iceland.

All that stuff is in that five percent
that we’ve explored.

So the deal about the ocean
is that to explore it,

you’ve got to have technology.

Not only technology,
but it’s not just Dave Gallo

or one person exploring,
it’s a team of people.

You’ve got to have the talent, the team.

You’ve got to have the technology.

In this case, it’s our ship, Atlantis,
and the submarine, Alvin.

Inside that submarine –
this is an Alvin launch –

there’s three people.

They’re being wheeled out onto deck.

There’s 47 other people,

the teamwork on that ship,
making sure that these people are okay.

Everybody in that submarine
is thinking one thing right now:

Should I have gone
to the bathroom one more time?

Because you’re in there for 10 hours –

10 hours in that little sphere.

Three of you together
and nobody is going to be around you.

You go into the water
and once you hit the water, it’s amazing.

There’s a lovely color blue
that penetrates right inside you.

You don’t hear the surface ship anymore,

you hear that pinging of a sonar.

If you’ve got an iPhone
you’ve got sonar on there –

it’s that same pinging that goes
down to the bottom and comes back up.

Divers check out the sub to make
sure the outside is okay,

and then they say “Go,”

and down you go to the bottom
of the ocean and it’s an amazing trip.

So for two and a half hours,
you sink down to the bottom.

And two hours of it
is totally pitch black.

We thought that nothing
could live inside that world

at the bottom of the ocean.

And when we look,
we find some amazing things.

All the way down –
we call it the mid-water –

from the top of the ocean
down to the bottom, we find life.

Whenever we stop and look, we find life.

I’m going to show you some jellies.

They’re absolutely some
of the coolest creatures on Earth.

Look at that thing,
just flailing his arms around.

That’s like a little lobster.

That one is like all these animals
with their mouths hooked together,

the colonial animals.

Some animals are tiny,
some can be longer than this stage.

Just amazing animals.

And you can’t collect them with a net –

we have to go with our cameras
and take a look at them.

So every time we go, new species of life.

The ocean is full of life.

And yet the deepest part of the ocean –

when we go to that mountain range,
we find hot springs.

Now we were sure –
because this is poisonous water,

because it’s so deep
it would crush the Titanic

the same way you crush
an empty cup in your hand –

we were sure there would be
no life there at all.

Instead, we find more life
and diversity and density

than in the tropical rainforest.

So, in one instance, in one peek
out the window of the sub,

we discover something

that revolutionizes the way
we think about life on Earth;

and that is, you don’t always
have to have sunlight

to get life going.

There’s big animals down there too,
some that look familiar.

That guy’s called Dumbo.
I love him. Dumbo’s great.

This guy – oh man,
I wish I had more footage of this.

We’re trying to get an expedition
together to go look at this

and maybe in a year we’ll have that.

Go online and look.

Vampyroteuthis infernalis.
The vampire squid.

Incredibly cool.

In the darkness of the deep sea,
he’s got glowing tentacles,

so if I’m coming at you like him,
I put my arms out in the darkness

so all you see are little
glowing things over here.

Meanwhile, I’m coming at you.

When he wants to escape,

he’s got these glowing pods
on his butt that look like eyes.

Glowing eyes on his butt.
How cool is that?

Just an amazing animal.

(Laughter)

“Vampire” squid,
because when it gets protective,

it pulls this black cape
over its whole body,

and curls up into a ball.

Outrageous animal.

This ship, “The Ship of Dreams” –

a hundred years ago this coming April,

this ship was supposed
to show up in New York.

It’s the Titanic.

I co-led an expedition
out there last year.

We are learning so much about that ship.

The Titanic is an interesting
place for biology,

because animals are moving
in to live on the Titanic.

Microbes are actually
eating the hull of the Titanic.

That’s where Jack was king of the world
there on the bow of the Titanic.

So we’re doing real good.

And what’s exciting to me
is that we’re making a virtual Titanic,

so you can sit there at home
with your joystick and your headset on,

and you can actually explore
the Titanic for yourself.

That’s what we want to do,
make these virtual worlds,

so it’s not Dave Gallo or someone else
exploring the world; it’s you.

You explore it for yourself.

So here’s the bottom line:

The oceans are unexplored

and I can’t begin to tell
you how important that is,

because they’re important to us.

Seven billion people live on this planet

and all of us are impacted by the sea,

because the oceans control the air
you breathe, the water you drink,

the food you eat.

All those are controlled
in some way by the ocean,

and this is a thing
that we haven’t even explored –

five percent.

The thing I want to leave you with is,

in that five percent,
I showed you some cool stuff.

There’s a lot more cool stuff –

every dive we go on in the ocean,
we find something new about the sea.

So what’s in that other 95 percent?

Did we get the exciting stuff
or is there more out there?

And I’m here to tell you
that the ocean is full of surprises.

There’s a quote I love by Marcel Proust:

“The true voyage of exploration
is not so much in seeking new landscapes,”

which we do,

“but in having new eyes.”

And so I hope today,
by showing you some of this,

it’s given you some new eyes
about this planet,

and for the first time,
I want you to think about it differently.

Thank you very much. Thank you.

(Applause)

你知道,我在学校的 ADD 度过了一段非常艰难的时光

,我拥有博士学位。

我获得了博士学位,但是……
很难关注——

生物学、地质学、物理学、
化学——对我来说真的很难。

只有一件事引起了我的注意

,那就是那个叫做地球的星球。

但在这张照片中,
你会看到地球主要是水。

那就是太平洋。

地球的百分之七十
被水覆盖。

你可以说,“嘿,
我知道地球。我住在这里。”

你不知道地球。

你不知道这个星球,
因为它的大部分都被它所覆盖——

平均深度,两英里。

当你走出去

,抬头看帝国
大厦、克莱斯勒大厦时,

海洋的平均深度
是彼此叠加的 15 倍。

我们已经探索了水中大约百分之五
的东西。

“探索”的意思是,第一次
去看看那里有什么。

所以我今天想做的
就是向你们展示一些

关于这个星球,关于海洋的事情。

我想带你从浅水
到深水

,希望你能像我一样
看到一些

让你
迷上探索地球的东西。

你知道珊瑚之类的东西;
你见过很多珊瑚,

那些
去过海滩、浮潜的人,

知道珊瑚是一个很棒的
去处——充满生机,

一些大动物,小动物,
一些漂亮,一些危险,

鲨鱼, 鲸鱼,所有这些东西。

他们需要受到保护,免受人类伤害。

他们是很棒的地方。

但你可能不知道的
是,在海洋的最深处,

我们有火山爆发。

地球上的大多数火山
都位于海底——

超过 80%。

我们实际上有火,

海洋深处的火
,现在还在继续。

全世界——太平洋
、大西洋、印度洋。

在这个地方,海底
,岩石实际上变成了液体。

所以你实际上
在海底有波浪。

你会说没有东西可以住在那里,
但是当我们仔细观察时,

即使是在那里,在地球上最深、
最黑暗的地方,我们也会发现生命,

这告诉我们生命
真的很想发生。

所以,非常了不起的东西。

每次我们下到海底,

我们用我们的潜水艇,
用我们的机器人探索,

我们看到的东西
通常是令人惊讶的,

有时是惊人的
,有时是革命性的。

你看到那
水坑坐在那里。

水的周围
有一个小悬崖,

还有一个小的白色沙滩。

我们会靠近一点,你会看到
更好的海滩

,那水中的一些波浪,在下面。

这种水的

特别之处在于它位于墨西哥湾的底部

所以你坐在一艘潜水艇里,

看着窗外
海底的一个小池塘。

我们看到池塘,我们看到
湖泊,我们看到河流

——事实上,这里
是海底的一条河流,从

左下角流向右上角。

水实际上从那里流过。

这完全让我们大吃一惊。

你怎么能把这个放在底部?

你在海洋中寻找更多的水。

有些
动物只生活在那种水中。

所以,海底——

我喜欢这张地图,因为它显示
在海洋的中央,

有一座山脉。

它是地球上最大的山脉
,被称为洋中脊——

长 50,000 英里
,我们几乎没有看过它。

几乎没有看一眼。

我们发现山谷,
成千上万的山谷,比大峡谷

更大、更宽、更深

正如我所说,我们发现了水下
湖泊、河流、瀑布。

地球上最大的瀑布

实际上
位于冰岛附近的海底。

所有这些东西都在
我们探索的那百分之五中。

所以关于海洋的交易
是要探索它,

你必须有技术。

不仅是技术,
而且不仅仅是 Dave Gallo

或一个人在探索,
而是一群人。

你必须有天赋,有团队。

你必须有技术。

在这种情况下,是我们的船亚特兰蒂斯号
和潜艇阿尔文。

那艘潜艇里面——
这是阿尔文的发射——

有三个人。

他们被推到甲板上。

还有其他 47 个人

,那艘船上的团队合作,
确保这些人没事。

那艘潜艇里的每个人现在都在
想一件事:

我应该
再去一次洗手间吗?

因为你在那里呆了 10 个小时——

在那个小球体里呆了 10 个小时。

你们三个在一起
,没有人会在你身边。

你进入水中
,一旦你碰到水,那是惊人的。

有一种可爱的
蓝色渗透到你的内心。

你再也听不到水面舰艇的声音了,

你听到了声纳的砰砰声。

如果你有一部 iPhone,
那么你就在那里安装了声纳

——同样的 ping 信号会
下降到底部并重新出现。

潜水员检查潜艇以
确保外面没问题,

然后他们说“去”

,然后你就到
海底了,这是一次了不起的旅行。

所以两个半小时,
你沉到水底。

两个
小时完全漆黑一片。

我们认为在海底的那个世界里没有任何东西
可以生活

当我们看的时候,
我们会发现一些令人惊奇的事情。

一路向下——
我们称之为中层水——

从海洋
顶部到底部,我们找到了生命。

每当我们停下来看一看,我们就会发现生命。

我要给你看一些果冻。

它们绝对
是地球上最酷的生物之一。

看看那个东西,
只是挥舞着他的手臂。

这就像一只小龙虾。

那一只就像所有
这些嘴巴钩在一起

的动物,殖民地动物。

有些动物很小,
有些可能比这个阶段更长。

只是神奇的动物。

而且你不能用网收集它们——

我们必须带着我们的
相机去看看它们。

所以每次我们去,新的生命物种。

海洋充满生机。

然而,在海洋的最深处——

当我们走到那座山脉时,
我们会发现温泉。

现在我们确信——
因为这是有毒的水,

因为它太深了,
它会像碾碎

手中的空杯子一样碾碎泰坦尼克号——

我们确信那里根本不会
有生命。

相反,我们发现比热带雨林更多的生命
、多样性和密度

因此,在一个例子中,
从潜艇的窗户向外一瞥,

我们发现了

一些彻底改变了
我们对地球上生命的看法的东西。

也就是说,你不必总是
有阳光

才能让生活继续下去。

那里也有大动物,
有些看起来很眼熟。

那个人叫小熊。
我爱他。 嘟嘟棒棒哒

这个人——哦,伙计,
我希望我有更多的镜头。

我们正试图召集一支探险队
一起去看看这个

,也许一年后我们就会拥有那个。

上网看看。

Vampyroteuthis infernalis。
吸血鬼鱿鱼。

令人难以置信的酷。

在深海的黑暗中,
他有发光的触手,

所以如果我像他一样向你靠近,
我会在黑暗中伸出双臂,

所以你看到的只是
这里发光的小东西。

与此同时,我来找你了。

当他想逃跑时,

他的屁股上有这些发光的豆荚
,看起来像眼睛。

发光的眼睛盯着他的屁股。
多么酷啊?

简直是神奇的动物。

(笑声)

“吸血鬼”鱿鱼,
因为当它受到保护时,

它会将黑色斗篷
拉到全身,

然后蜷缩成一个球。

离谱的动物。

这艘船,“梦想之船”

——一百年前的今年四月

,这艘船
应该出现在纽约。

是泰坦尼克号。 去年

我在那里共同领导了一次
探险。

我们对那艘船有很多了解。

泰坦尼克号对生物学来说是一个有趣的
地方,

因为动物正在搬进
泰坦尼克号上生活。

微生物实际上
正在吞噬泰坦尼克号的船体。

在那里,杰克
在泰坦尼克号的船头成为了世界之王。

所以我们做得很好。

令我兴奋的
是,我们正在制作虚拟泰坦尼克号,

因此您可以坐在家里
拿着操纵杆和耳机,

亲自探索泰坦尼克号。

这就是我们想做的,
制作这些虚拟世界,

所以不是戴夫·加洛或其他人在
探索这个世界; 是你。

你自己去探索。

所以这是底线

:海洋尚未开发

,我无法开始告诉
你这有多重要,

因为它们对我们很重要。

70 亿人生活在这个星球上

,我们所有人都受到海洋的影响,

因为海洋控制着
你呼吸的空气、喝的水和

吃的食物。

所有这些都
以某种方式受到海洋的控制

,这
是我们甚至还没有探索过的东西

——5%。

我想留给你的是,

在那百分之五中,
我向你展示了一些很酷的东西。

还有很多很酷的东西——

我们在海洋中进行的每一次潜水,
我们都会发现一些关于海洋的新东西。

那么那另外的 95% 是什么?

我们得到了令人兴奋的东西
还是还有更多?

我在这里告诉你
,海洋充满了惊喜。

有一句我喜欢马塞尔·普鲁斯特的话:

“真正的
探索之旅不在于寻找新的风景,

”我们这样做,

“但在于拥有新的眼光。”

所以我希望今天,
通过向你展示其中的一些内容,

它能让你对这个星球有一些新的
认识

,而且
我希望你第一次以不同的方式思考它。

非常感谢你。 谢谢你。

(掌声)