The mysterious world of underwater caves Jill Heinerth

I’m an underwater explorer,

more specifically a cave diver.

I wanted to be an astronaut
when I was a little kid,

but growing up in Canada as a young girl,
that wasn’t really available to me.

But as it turns out,
we know a lot more about space

than we do about the underground waterways
coursing through our planet,

the very lifeblood of Mother Earth.

So I decided to do something
that was even more remarkable.

Instead of exploring outer space,

I wanted to explore
the wonders of inner space.

Now, a lot of people will tell you

that cave diving is perhaps
one of the most dangerous endeavors.

I mean, imagine yourself
here in this room,

if you were suddenly
plunged into blackness,

with your only job to find the exit,

sometimes swimming
through these large spaces,

and at other times
crawling beneath the seats,

following a thin guideline,

just waiting for the life support
to provide your very next breath.

Well, that’s my workplace.

But what I want to teach you today

is that our world
is not one big solid rock.

It’s a whole lot more like a sponge.

I can swim through a lot of the pores
in our earth’s sponge,

but where I can’t,

other life-forms and other materials
can make that journey without me.

And my voice is the one
that’s going to teach you

about the inside of Mother Earth.

There was no guidebook available to me

when I decided to be the first person
to cave dive inside Antarctic icebergs.

In 2000, this was the largest
moving object on the planet.

It calved off the Ross Ice Shelf,

and we went down there
to explore ice edge ecology

and search for life-forms beneath the ice.

We use a technology called rebreathers.

It’s an awful lot like the same technology
that is used for space walks.

This technology enables us to go deeper

than we could’ve imagined
even 10 years ago.

We use exotic gases,

and we can make missions
even up to 20 hours long underwater.

I work with biologists.

It turns out that caves
are repositories of amazing life-forms,

species that we never knew existed before.

Many of these life-forms
live in unusual ways.

They have no pigment
and no eyes in many cases,

and these animals
are also extremely long-lived.

In fact, animals swimming
in these caves today

are identical in the fossil record

that predates the extinction
of the dinosaurs.

So imagine that: these are
like little swimming dinosaurs.

What can they teach us
about evolution and survival?

When we look at an animal
like this remipede swimming in the jar,

he has giant fangs with venom.

He can actually attack something
40 times his size and kill it.

If he were the size of a cat,

he’d be the most dangerous
thing on our planet.

And these animals live
in remarkably beautiful places,

and in some cases,
caves like this, that are very young,

yet the animals are ancient.

How did they get there?

I also work with physicists,

and they’re interested oftentimes
in global climate change.

They can take rocks within the caves,

and they can slice them
and look at the layers within with rocks,

much like the rings of a tree,

and they can count back in history

and learn about the climate on our planet
at very different times.

The red that you see in this photograph

is actually dust from the Sahara Desert.

So it’s been picked up by wind,
blown across the Atlantic Ocean.

It’s rained down in this case
on the island of Abaco in the Bahamas.

It soaks in through the ground

and deposits itself
in the rocks within these caves.

And when we look back in the layers
of these rocks, we can find times

when the climate
was very, very dry on earth,

and we can go back
many hundreds of thousands of years.

Paleoclimatologists are also interested

in where the sea level stands were
at other times on earth.

Here in Bermuda, my team and I embarked

on the deepest manned dives
ever conducted in the region,

and we were looking for places

where the sea level
used to lap up against the shoreline,

many hundreds of feet
below current levels.

I also get to work with paleontologists
and archaeologists.

In places like Mexico,
in the Bahamas, and even in Cuba,

we’re looking at cultural remains
and also human remains in caves,

and they tell us a lot

about some of the earliest
inhabitants of these regions.

But my very favorite project of all
was over 15 years ago,

when I was a part of the team
that made the very first

accurate, three-dimensional map
of a subterranean surface.

This device that I’m
driving through the cave

was actually creating
a three-dimensional model as we drove it.

We also used ultra low frequency radio

to broadcast back to the surface
our exact position within the cave.

So I swam under houses and businesses
and bowling alleys and golf courses,

and even under a Sonny’s BBQ Restaurant,

Pretty remarkable, and what that taught me

was that everything we do
on the surface of our earth

will be returned to us to drink.

Our water planet is not just
rivers, lakes and oceans,

but it’s this vast network of groundwater
that knits us all together.

It’s a shared resource
from which we all drink.

And when we can understand
our human connections with our groundwater

and all of our water resources
on this planet,

then we’ll be working on the problem

that’s probably the most important
issue of this century.

So I never got to be that astronaut
that I always wanted to be,

but this mapping device,
designed by Dr. Bill Stone, will be.

It’s actually morphed.

It’s now a self-swimming autonomous robot,

artificially intelligent,

and its ultimate goal
is to go to Jupiter’s moon Europa

and explore oceans beneath
the frozen surface of that body.

And that’s pretty amazing.

(Applause)

我是一名水下探险家,

更具体地说是一名洞穴潜水员。

当我还是个小孩的时候,我想成为一名宇航员,

但作为一个年轻女孩在加拿大长大,
这对我来说真的没有。

但事实证明,
我们对太空的了解

远多于对流经我们星球的地下水道——

地球母亲的命脉——的了解。

所以我决定做
一些更了不起的事情。 我不想

探索外太空,

而是想探索
内太空的奇观。

现在,很多人会告诉你

,洞穴潜水可能
是最危险的活动之一。

我的意思是,想象一下你
自己在这个房间里,

如果你突然
陷入黑暗

,你唯一的工作就是找到出口,

有时
在这些大空间里游泳

,有时
在座位下爬行,

遵循一条细细的指引,

只是等待 为
您提供下一次呼吸的生命支持。

嗯,那是我的工作场所。

但我今天想教你的

是,我们的世界
不是一块坚固的岩石。

它更像是一块海绵。

我可以游过
地球海绵中的许多孔隙,

但在我不能游过的地方,

其他生命形式和其他材料
可以在没有我的情况下完成那段旅程。

我的
声音将教你

关于地球母亲的内部。

当我决定成为第一个
在南极冰山内进行洞穴潜水的人时,没有任何指南可供我使用。

2000 年,这是地球上最大的
移动物体。

它从罗斯冰架上脱落

下来,我们去
那里探索冰缘生态

并寻找冰下的生命形式。

我们使用一种称为循环呼吸器的技术。

这与
用于太空行走的技术非常相似。

这项技术使

我们能够比我们
10 年前想象的更深入。

我们使用奇异气体

,我们
甚至可以在水下执行长达 20 小时的任务。

我和生物学家一起工作。

事实证明,洞穴
是惊人生命形式的储存库

,我们以前从未知道存在的物种。

许多这些生命形式
以不同寻常的方式生活。

在很多情况下,它们没有色素,也没有眼睛,

而且这些动物
的寿命也非常长。

事实上,
今天在这些洞穴中游泳的动物在恐龙灭绝之前

的化石记录中是相同

的。

所以想象一下:这些
就像游泳的小恐龙。

他们能教给我们什么
关于进化和生存的知识?

当我们看到
像这种在罐子里游泳的动物时,它

有巨大的毒牙。

他实际上可以攻击
40倍于他的东西并杀死它。

如果他有猫那么大,

他将是我们这个星球上最危险的
东西。

这些动物生活
在非常美丽的地方

,在某些情况下,
像这样的洞穴,它们非常年轻,

但动物却很古老。

他们是怎么到那里的?

我还与物理学家一起工作

,他们经常
对全球气候变化感兴趣。

他们可以在洞穴中取出岩石

,他们可以切片
并观察岩石层,

就像一棵树的年轮一样

,他们可以追溯历史

并了解我们星球
在不同时期的气候。

你在这张照片中看到的红色

实际上是撒哈拉沙漠的尘埃。

所以它被风卷起,
吹过大西洋。

在这种情况下
,巴哈马的阿巴科岛上下起了雨。

它渗入地下

并沉积
在这些洞穴内的岩石中。

当我们回顾
这些岩石的层层时,我们可以发现

地球上气候非常非常干燥的时期

,我们可以追溯到
数十万年前。

古气候学家也

对地球上其他时间的海平面位置感兴趣。

在百慕大,我和我的团队开始

了该地区有史以来最深的载人潜水

,我们正在寻找

海平面
曾经与海岸线重叠的地方,

比当前水平低数百英尺。

我还与古生物学家
和考古学家一起工作。

在墨西哥
、巴哈马甚至古巴等地,

我们正在研究文化遗迹
和洞穴中的人类遗骸

,它们告诉我们很多

关于这些地区最早的
居民的信息。

但我最喜欢的项目
是在 15 年前,

当时我
是制作第一张

地下表面精确三维地图的团队的一员。


开车穿过洞穴

的这个装置实际上是
在我们驾驶它时创建一个 3D 模型。

我们还使用超低频无线电

向地表广播
我们在洞穴内的确切位置。

所以我在房子、企业
、保龄球馆和高尔夫球场下游泳,

甚至在桑尼的烧烤餐厅下游泳,

非常了不起,这教会我的

是,我们在地球表面所做的一切

都会归还给我们喝。

我们的水星球不仅仅是
河流、湖泊和海洋,

而是这个庞大的地下水网络将
我们凝聚在一起。

这是
我们所有人都可以饮用的共享资源。

当我们能够
理解人类与我们的地下水

和地球上所有水资源的联系

,我们将致力于解决

可能是本世纪最重要的
问题。

所以我永远无法成为我一直想成为的那个宇航员

但这个
由比尔·斯通博士设计的测绘设备将会成为。

它实际上是变形的。

它现在是一个自动游泳的自主机器人,具有

人工智能

,其最终目标
是前往木星的卫星欧罗巴

并探索
该物体冰冻表面下的海洋。

这真是太神奇了。

(掌声)