1 00:00:15,080 --> 00:00:20,080 I'm on a fantastic journey to look for the origins of life. 2 00:00:20,080 --> 00:00:25,120 I shall be travelling, not only around the world, but back in time, 3 00:00:25,120 --> 00:00:27,080 to try and build a picture 4 00:00:27,080 --> 00:00:30,400 of what life was like in that very early period. 5 00:00:32,040 --> 00:00:35,880 Last time I saw how, 600 million years ago, 6 00:00:35,880 --> 00:00:41,400 simple cells evolved into the first multi-cellular animals. 7 00:00:46,440 --> 00:00:51,520 In this programme, I investigate what happened next. 8 00:00:55,040 --> 00:00:56,920 I will look for evidence in both 9 00:00:56,920 --> 00:01:00,280 fossils and living creatures of what happened in that 10 00:01:00,280 --> 00:01:01,520 far, distant past, 11 00:01:01,520 --> 00:01:04,800 when the fundamental features of modern animals 12 00:01:04,800 --> 00:01:08,520 were being established for the first time. 13 00:01:08,520 --> 00:01:13,320 One group, the arthropods, were the great pioneers. 14 00:01:13,320 --> 00:01:16,000 They were the first big predators. 15 00:01:17,720 --> 00:01:20,600 They had eyes. 16 00:01:20,600 --> 00:01:22,240 Legs. 17 00:01:22,240 --> 00:01:25,040 And hard external skeletons, 18 00:01:28,240 --> 00:01:31,000 They were the first to crawl out of water 19 00:01:31,000 --> 00:01:33,840 to conquer the land and the air. 20 00:01:50,360 --> 00:01:54,600 600 million years ago, the world was very different 21 00:01:54,600 --> 00:01:56,320 from the planet we know today. 22 00:01:58,040 --> 00:02:02,800 The land was entirely without animals or plants. 23 00:02:02,800 --> 00:02:07,000 But the oceans were teeming with life. 24 00:02:12,600 --> 00:02:16,280 The first proto-animals were immobile organisms 25 00:02:16,280 --> 00:02:19,680 that lived on the sea floor and extracted their nourishment 26 00:02:19,680 --> 00:02:21,680 from the water flowing around them. 27 00:02:23,960 --> 00:02:26,800 But once animals developed mouths 28 00:02:26,800 --> 00:02:30,640 and the ability move, evolution took off. 29 00:02:46,280 --> 00:02:48,520 Canada's Rocky Mountains. 30 00:02:51,600 --> 00:02:56,040 Here we can find evidence of a sudden explosion of life 31 00:02:56,040 --> 00:02:59,920 when animals started to evolve with astonishing rapidity. 32 00:03:01,960 --> 00:03:05,440 It happened during a period called the Cambrian. 33 00:03:08,760 --> 00:03:13,680 And it began 542 million years ago. 34 00:03:18,000 --> 00:03:21,240 During the next 10-20 million years, 35 00:03:21,240 --> 00:03:28,160 animals increased in numbers, diversity and size as never before. 36 00:03:28,160 --> 00:03:31,840 And as they got bigger, so they became more complex. 37 00:03:31,840 --> 00:03:36,760 And they're preserved to an extraordinary degree of perfection 38 00:03:36,760 --> 00:03:39,520 in the rocks right below me. 39 00:03:42,600 --> 00:03:45,640 The Burgess Shales, where a rich seam of fossils 40 00:03:45,640 --> 00:03:50,240 documents this Cambrian explosion in astonishing detail. 41 00:04:00,120 --> 00:04:06,320 All this area was once the floor of a shallow sea, teeming with life. 42 00:04:06,320 --> 00:04:11,200 As sediment settled down onto the floor, so it became compressed 43 00:04:11,200 --> 00:04:15,680 and turned into mudstones and shales that you can see around me here. 44 00:04:19,120 --> 00:04:20,600 About a century ago, 45 00:04:20,600 --> 00:04:24,040 an American geologist from the Smithsonian Institution 46 00:04:24,040 --> 00:04:27,560 was making a survey of this part of the Rockies. 47 00:04:27,560 --> 00:04:32,160 And he came walking along this particular path. 48 00:04:32,160 --> 00:04:35,800 And when he got to precisely this spot, 49 00:04:35,800 --> 00:04:41,080 he noticed a tiny fossil of a kind he had never seen before. 50 00:04:41,080 --> 00:04:46,160 He bent down and picked it up and it looked like this. 51 00:04:49,320 --> 00:04:53,880 What sort of a creature could this be? 52 00:04:53,880 --> 00:04:57,120 It was only the first of the enigmatic creatures 53 00:04:57,120 --> 00:04:59,360 to come from the Burgess Shales. 54 00:04:59,360 --> 00:05:04,480 Since then over 65,000 different specimens of now extinct 55 00:05:04,480 --> 00:05:09,080 Cambrian animals have been from this one small quarry. 56 00:05:09,080 --> 00:05:12,560 Many species have never been found elsewhere. 57 00:05:12,560 --> 00:05:16,840 It seems that the Burgess Shales were deposited in a place 58 00:05:16,840 --> 00:05:20,560 where conditions for fossilisation were uniquely perfect. 59 00:05:22,120 --> 00:05:25,400 As a consequence, even bodies of animals that were soft 60 00:05:25,400 --> 00:05:30,840 and lacking any hard parts were, nonetheless, preserved. 61 00:05:30,840 --> 00:05:34,520 They survive as thin, almost imperceptible layers, 62 00:05:34,520 --> 00:05:38,000 that you only see if you get the light just right. 63 00:05:44,040 --> 00:05:48,320 It's these fossils that have transformed our understanding 64 00:05:48,320 --> 00:05:52,760 of how animals we know today have come to be the way they are. 65 00:05:55,840 --> 00:06:00,120 In some of these specimens we can glimpse shapes and forms 66 00:06:00,120 --> 00:06:02,120 that look faintly familiar. 67 00:06:05,960 --> 00:06:11,480 But many of these bizarre creatures seem like nothing we know of today. 68 00:06:16,440 --> 00:06:21,640 This is one of the more mysterious animals from the Shales. 69 00:06:21,640 --> 00:06:25,080 There are two clues as to how this creature might have lived. 70 00:06:25,080 --> 00:06:29,120 It has flaps along the side of its body, 71 00:06:29,120 --> 00:06:35,080 but no legs, and also a broad, flat tail. 72 00:06:35,080 --> 00:06:38,080 So it's reasonable to assume that they helped it swim 73 00:06:38,080 --> 00:06:41,840 and that it lived not crawling along the floor, 74 00:06:41,840 --> 00:06:43,960 but up higher in the water. 75 00:06:43,960 --> 00:06:48,360 But the really, truly mysterious thing about it is that here 76 00:06:48,360 --> 00:06:51,120 on its head it had five eyes, 77 00:06:51,120 --> 00:06:55,680 each of them like a kind of little mushroom. 78 00:06:55,680 --> 00:06:58,640 And beneath that it had a long proboscis 79 00:06:58,640 --> 00:07:00,960 with which it grabbed things. 80 00:07:00,960 --> 00:07:03,720 It's a truly primitive animal 81 00:07:03,720 --> 00:07:07,680 and one that, still, we don't fully understand. 82 00:07:09,320 --> 00:07:12,040 It's been named opabinia. 83 00:07:12,040 --> 00:07:15,720 And it seems to have been a kind of evolutionary experiment. 84 00:07:18,320 --> 00:07:21,760 It's almost as if an assortment of different body parts 85 00:07:21,760 --> 00:07:25,040 had been put together in something of a hurry. 86 00:07:25,040 --> 00:07:27,720 What other animal has five eyes? 87 00:07:30,680 --> 00:07:33,920 And opabinia wasn't the only oddball. 88 00:07:36,000 --> 00:07:41,040 Wiwaxia was once thought to be an ancestor of earthworms, 89 00:07:41,040 --> 00:07:44,280 but now is considered to be an early snail. 90 00:07:45,880 --> 00:07:48,760 Most of the Burgess Shale creatures 91 00:07:48,760 --> 00:07:51,600 are unlike anything ever discovered before. 92 00:07:53,440 --> 00:07:56,240 There were countless bizarre creatures 93 00:07:56,240 --> 00:07:59,560 living in the Cambrian Seas, 94 00:07:59,560 --> 00:08:03,720 This unprecedented surge of diversity was something 95 00:08:03,720 --> 00:08:08,280 that had never happened before and would never happen again. 96 00:08:08,280 --> 00:08:14,360 For many years, scientists excavated and scrutinised the Shales 97 00:08:14,360 --> 00:08:17,520 looking for the causes of the Cambrian explosion. 98 00:08:20,040 --> 00:08:23,000 Their first task was to try and reconstruct 99 00:08:23,000 --> 00:08:27,080 what these strange animals must have looked like when they were alive 100 00:08:27,080 --> 00:08:29,320 and that was not at all easy. 101 00:08:34,360 --> 00:08:39,160 This is one of the oddest of the fossils from Burgess Shales. 102 00:08:40,760 --> 00:08:44,240 It seems to have five legs along the bottom, 103 00:08:44,240 --> 00:08:47,880 and curious kind of lobes along the top, 104 00:08:47,880 --> 00:08:53,240 which presumably were some devices, which help it to feed. 105 00:08:55,000 --> 00:08:59,880 But what kind of animal is that with five walking legs 106 00:08:59,880 --> 00:09:02,520 and feeding lobes along the top of its back? 107 00:09:02,520 --> 00:09:06,240 It was such an extraordinary thought that the scientist 108 00:09:06,240 --> 00:09:09,160 who described it thought it was a kind of hallucination, 109 00:09:09,160 --> 00:09:11,600 and he called it "hallucigenia". 110 00:09:13,240 --> 00:09:17,920 But since then, more specimens have shown that in fact, 111 00:09:17,920 --> 00:09:22,560 this is probably the wrong way up and that it was really like that. 112 00:09:24,840 --> 00:09:28,520 The projections at the bottom are, in fact, legs. 113 00:09:28,520 --> 00:09:32,360 And those along the top are tipped with sharp spines 114 00:09:32,360 --> 00:09:34,760 that were presumably, defensive. 115 00:09:37,840 --> 00:09:40,520 Perhaps these animals evolved these strange shapes 116 00:09:40,520 --> 00:09:43,720 because they needed to protect themselves? 117 00:09:48,680 --> 00:09:50,920 But if so, from what? 118 00:09:50,920 --> 00:09:53,760 Where were the predators? 119 00:09:53,760 --> 00:09:56,720 No-one could find a likely candidate. 120 00:09:58,280 --> 00:10:02,720 And then the answer came from a couple of fossil species 121 00:10:02,720 --> 00:10:05,680 that they had known almost from the very beginning. 122 00:10:07,400 --> 00:10:11,160 One of the strangest fossils found here is this. 123 00:10:12,560 --> 00:10:15,200 It's also one of the commonest. 124 00:10:15,200 --> 00:10:17,520 But what is it? 125 00:10:17,520 --> 00:10:21,520 Well, it has what looks like legs, so you might think 126 00:10:21,520 --> 00:10:25,360 it was some kind of caterpillar, or shrimp maybe. 127 00:10:25,360 --> 00:10:28,400 But the most mysterious thing about it was that 128 00:10:28,400 --> 00:10:31,840 they never found one with a head. 129 00:10:31,840 --> 00:10:33,640 Then there was another mystery, 130 00:10:33,640 --> 00:10:38,600 not as common as the headless shrimp, 131 00:10:38,600 --> 00:10:41,440 but one that looked like a sort of jellyfish, 132 00:10:41,440 --> 00:10:45,480 with radiating lines out, and this strange hole in the middle. 133 00:10:45,480 --> 00:10:49,160 And about twenty years ago, 134 00:10:49,160 --> 00:10:54,120 it was discovered that actually, there is a link between 135 00:10:54,120 --> 00:10:57,200 this and this. 136 00:10:57,200 --> 00:11:02,480 This bit is not a separate shrimp, it's actually a claw. 137 00:11:02,480 --> 00:11:07,000 And this bit is not a jellyfish, it's a mouth. 138 00:11:08,920 --> 00:11:12,160 And in the mouth you can see something 139 00:11:12,160 --> 00:11:14,200 that looks very significant. 140 00:11:15,320 --> 00:11:17,080 Could these be teeth? 141 00:11:19,520 --> 00:11:25,000 And were these not legs but spikes, used to stab and grab prey? 142 00:11:27,120 --> 00:11:30,000 The two were, in fact, connected. 143 00:11:30,000 --> 00:11:33,640 But now we have a most perfect fossil, 144 00:11:33,640 --> 00:11:38,080 which really demonstrates that that is indeed the case. 145 00:11:38,080 --> 00:11:43,160 This, you might say, is the Mona Lisa of the Burgess Shales. 146 00:11:45,200 --> 00:11:48,960 This specimen, at last, gave scientists a picture 147 00:11:48,960 --> 00:11:51,680 of the complete animal. 148 00:11:51,680 --> 00:11:56,080 It had plates along its back, and a tail at the rear end. 149 00:11:56,080 --> 00:11:59,600 It was a swimmer. And between those two spiked claws 150 00:11:59,600 --> 00:12:01,480 at the front there was a mouth... 151 00:12:01,480 --> 00:12:03,000 with teeth. 152 00:12:05,680 --> 00:12:08,920 This was the hunter they had been looking for. 153 00:12:13,040 --> 00:12:17,280 The scientist who discovered the claws called them anomalocaris, 154 00:12:17,280 --> 00:12:19,120 meaning strange shrimp. 155 00:12:20,680 --> 00:12:25,040 That name is now used for the whole animal. 156 00:12:25,040 --> 00:12:29,240 With its large tail and flexible plates along its flanks, 157 00:12:29,240 --> 00:12:33,000 anomalocaris could propel itself through the water at speed. 158 00:12:34,960 --> 00:12:39,640 Other specimens show that it could grow to a length of nearly a metre, 159 00:12:39,640 --> 00:12:42,480 two feet or so. 160 00:12:42,480 --> 00:12:46,960 It was, as far as we know, the first big predator on Earth. 161 00:12:52,040 --> 00:12:55,240 We can get clues as to what it was like 162 00:12:55,240 --> 00:12:57,720 from an animal that is alive today. 163 00:12:59,960 --> 00:13:05,720 It's much smaller than anomalocaris, though remarkably similar. 164 00:13:05,720 --> 00:13:09,480 And it lives in Australia, here on the Great Barrier Reef. 165 00:13:15,480 --> 00:13:19,240 Professor Justin Marshall has been studying these ferocious 166 00:13:19,240 --> 00:13:23,280 and powerful hunters for over 20 years. 167 00:13:24,920 --> 00:13:28,000 You have to very cautious about the way you handle them. 168 00:13:28,000 --> 00:13:32,240 If you pick them up they can knock the ends off your fingers. 169 00:13:32,240 --> 00:13:34,680 Fishermen call them thumb splitters because 170 00:13:34,680 --> 00:13:37,120 as they handle them they get thumbs and fingers split open. 171 00:13:40,360 --> 00:13:45,520 The other, slightly more technical name for them is mantis shrimp. 172 00:13:47,680 --> 00:13:49,600 They have a very ancient ancestry. 173 00:13:49,600 --> 00:13:52,760 Fossils of almost identical creatures have been found 174 00:13:52,760 --> 00:13:56,760 that date back 400 million years. 175 00:13:56,760 --> 00:14:02,720 This animal is almost as ancient as anomalocaris itself. 176 00:14:02,720 --> 00:14:05,240 It lurks in burrows, waiting for its victims 177 00:14:05,240 --> 00:14:08,800 to swim within range of its claws. 178 00:14:40,080 --> 00:14:42,240 Looking at the fossils of anomalocaris 179 00:14:42,240 --> 00:14:44,520 and comparing them to mantis shrimps, 180 00:14:44,520 --> 00:14:47,000 one could imagine that these animals are similar. 181 00:14:47,000 --> 00:14:49,440 They both have big raptorial appendages 182 00:14:49,440 --> 00:14:52,280 that are shot out at the front to grasp prey. 183 00:14:52,280 --> 00:14:54,320 You could imagine them lurking behind a rock 184 00:14:54,320 --> 00:14:57,720 waiting for unwitting prey to come past. 185 00:14:57,720 --> 00:15:00,120 And bang! Suddenly that's dinner. 186 00:15:11,360 --> 00:15:14,960 The mantis shrimp illustrates the essential characteristics 187 00:15:14,960 --> 00:15:18,480 of this brand new predator class of animals. 188 00:15:18,480 --> 00:15:24,160 Superb vision, great speed and superior size. 189 00:15:25,840 --> 00:15:31,480 Like anomalocaris, it's considerably larger than its victims. 190 00:15:31,480 --> 00:15:34,360 It also has extremely acute vision, 191 00:15:34,360 --> 00:15:38,560 with 12 different types of colour receptors in its eyes. 192 00:15:38,560 --> 00:15:41,760 We have just three. 193 00:15:43,440 --> 00:15:46,440 And it's one of the fastest animals alive, 194 00:15:46,440 --> 00:15:49,960 some species striking with the speed of a pellet from a gun. 195 00:15:51,600 --> 00:15:56,560 It's unlikely anomalocaris was as fast, or that it saw its prey 196 00:15:56,560 --> 00:16:00,120 so clearly, but nonetheless, it was a formidable predator, 197 00:16:00,120 --> 00:16:02,320 just as the mantis shrimp is today. 198 00:16:04,400 --> 00:16:07,800 Even a glimpse of a finger through glass is enough 199 00:16:07,800 --> 00:16:10,280 to make this animal strike, 200 00:16:10,280 --> 00:16:12,920 and with alarming force. 201 00:16:21,680 --> 00:16:26,120 So why did the mantis shrimp evolve in this way? 202 00:16:26,120 --> 00:16:28,400 Well, obviously... 203 00:16:28,400 --> 00:16:30,400 in order that it could 204 00:16:30,400 --> 00:16:35,880 outfox and outmanoeuvre, and eventually catch its prey. 205 00:16:35,880 --> 00:16:39,600 It's become very fast, very powerful, 206 00:16:39,600 --> 00:16:42,280 and capable of great patience. 207 00:16:42,280 --> 00:16:46,760 And those are characteristics of predators everywhere. 208 00:16:49,000 --> 00:16:52,160 So the fossilised remains of anomalocaris 209 00:16:52,160 --> 00:16:57,440 are evidence that hunting had begun in the Cambrian. 210 00:16:57,440 --> 00:17:00,880 And as predators became bigger, faster and stronger, 211 00:17:00,880 --> 00:17:05,320 so their prey had to develop increasingly elaborate defences. 212 00:17:05,320 --> 00:17:09,200 Opabinia's five eyes helped it spot trouble. 213 00:17:16,720 --> 00:17:21,960 And Hallucigenia protected itself with those spines along its back. 214 00:17:30,520 --> 00:17:34,160 One of the world's leading experts on the Burgess Shales, 215 00:17:34,160 --> 00:17:38,160 Dr Jean-Bernard Caron, believes that it was the arrival 216 00:17:38,160 --> 00:17:41,840 of predators like anomalocaris that stimulated the great 217 00:17:41,840 --> 00:17:44,280 Cambrian explosion of diversity. 218 00:17:47,360 --> 00:17:49,240 It is during the Cambrian 219 00:17:49,240 --> 00:17:53,680 that we can start seeing animals with legs, eyes, swimming. 220 00:17:53,680 --> 00:17:58,480 This didn't exist before and this evolved very, very quickly 221 00:17:58,480 --> 00:18:00,600 at the beginning of the Cambrian. 222 00:18:00,600 --> 00:18:05,200 But once you have a big predator, presumably the rest of life, 223 00:18:05,200 --> 00:18:06,840 which it was feeding on, 224 00:18:06,840 --> 00:18:09,960 had to evolve quite fast to develop some sort of defences. 225 00:18:09,960 --> 00:18:11,760 Would that be true? 226 00:18:11,760 --> 00:18:17,040 Well, we think that this evolution occurred relatively quickly because, 227 00:18:17,040 --> 00:18:20,680 in a place like the Burgess Shale you find organisms 228 00:18:20,680 --> 00:18:24,600 that may have had some kind of defensive mechanism, 229 00:18:24,600 --> 00:18:28,600 which is thought to be a response to higher predatory levels. 230 00:18:28,600 --> 00:18:31,560 Arms race, if you want, between predators and prey. 231 00:18:33,280 --> 00:18:37,280 One result of this duel between predators and prey 232 00:18:37,280 --> 00:18:39,200 was the development of armour. 233 00:18:44,000 --> 00:18:46,920 Animals everywhere were absorbing calcium carbonate 234 00:18:46,920 --> 00:18:50,600 and other inorganic substances from the seawater 235 00:18:50,600 --> 00:18:53,280 and mineralising their bodies. 236 00:18:54,840 --> 00:18:59,080 Many of them, like wiwaxia, that early mollusc, 237 00:18:59,080 --> 00:19:01,280 and ancestors of the squid, ammonites, 238 00:19:01,280 --> 00:19:03,000 developed protective shells. 239 00:19:04,760 --> 00:19:07,840 But one group, the arthropods, which had jointed legs, 240 00:19:07,840 --> 00:19:12,960 encased their entire bodies with hard armour plating. 241 00:19:18,880 --> 00:19:24,440 And what began as defensive armour, necessary for survival, 242 00:19:24,440 --> 00:19:26,680 brought with it another great advantage. 243 00:19:28,440 --> 00:19:31,800 Hard parts can be used not only to give protection, 244 00:19:31,800 --> 00:19:35,000 but to provide support for a body. 245 00:19:37,000 --> 00:19:38,600 Ha-ha! 246 00:19:38,600 --> 00:19:43,040 This spider crab is a crustacean. 247 00:19:43,040 --> 00:19:46,240 And it secretes chitin from its body, 248 00:19:46,240 --> 00:19:50,640 which it then strengthens with calcium carbonate. 249 00:19:50,640 --> 00:19:52,920 And a whole range of creatures 250 00:19:52,920 --> 00:19:55,920 have skeletons like this, based on chitin. 251 00:19:58,720 --> 00:20:02,520 Arthropods today include shrimps, lobsters and crabs, 252 00:20:02,520 --> 00:20:04,680 as well as land-living creatures, 253 00:20:04,680 --> 00:20:07,520 such as millipedes, scorpions and insects. 254 00:20:07,520 --> 00:20:12,600 But the ancestors of all of them first appeared in the Cambrian Seas. 255 00:20:16,880 --> 00:20:19,640 Over 50% of fossils in the Burgess Shales 256 00:20:19,640 --> 00:20:23,160 are arthropods of one kind or another. 257 00:20:23,160 --> 00:20:27,800 But one family was particularly abundant and varied. 258 00:20:29,880 --> 00:20:32,200 Just across the valley from the quarry, 259 00:20:32,200 --> 00:20:34,560 near the summit of Mount Stephen, 260 00:20:34,560 --> 00:20:38,440 almost every rock you turn over contains their remains. 261 00:20:40,240 --> 00:20:43,520 Here, they are found all over the place. 262 00:20:43,520 --> 00:20:45,520 They're called trilobites. 263 00:20:45,520 --> 00:20:49,800 Trilobites because their bodies were in three sections. 264 00:20:49,800 --> 00:20:53,000 Here on this slab there are several of them. 265 00:20:53,000 --> 00:20:55,160 That's the head. 266 00:20:55,160 --> 00:20:58,680 There's the middle bit. And there's the tail. 267 00:20:58,680 --> 00:21:02,560 One, two, three trilobites. 268 00:21:02,560 --> 00:21:04,920 Trilobites, at this particular time, 269 00:21:04,920 --> 00:21:07,440 right at the beginning of the Cambrian, 270 00:21:07,440 --> 00:21:11,720 began to proliferate into all sorts of forms. 271 00:21:11,720 --> 00:21:16,400 These creatures, for the next 250 million years, 272 00:21:16,400 --> 00:21:21,240 were probably the most advanced forms of life on this planet. 273 00:21:23,720 --> 00:21:27,920 To see how advanced the trilobites eventually became, 274 00:21:27,920 --> 00:21:29,720 I'm going to North Africa. 275 00:21:29,720 --> 00:21:34,960 In Morocco, on the southern flanks of the Atlas Mountains, 276 00:21:34,960 --> 00:21:37,920 the hills contain an amazing variety of them. 277 00:21:42,400 --> 00:21:44,840 They were only discovered a few years ago, 278 00:21:44,840 --> 00:21:47,360 but now the demand for them is so great 279 00:21:47,360 --> 00:21:50,800 that digging them out has become a major industry. 280 00:21:57,360 --> 00:22:02,280 These rocks, which were laid down about 150 million years after 281 00:22:02,280 --> 00:22:06,400 the Burgess Shale, also contain trilobites. 282 00:22:06,400 --> 00:22:08,960 The trouble is, the rock is very hard 283 00:22:08,960 --> 00:22:11,600 and the trilobites are quite rare. 284 00:22:11,600 --> 00:22:13,760 But when these people find them, 285 00:22:13,760 --> 00:22:17,600 their specimens are absolutely extraordinary. 286 00:22:25,480 --> 00:22:29,520 Some species have features that are so delicate 287 00:22:29,520 --> 00:22:33,040 that it can take days, sometimes weeks, 288 00:22:33,040 --> 00:22:35,600 to fully prepare a specimen. 289 00:22:35,600 --> 00:22:38,600 Skilled technicians use dentists' drills 290 00:22:38,600 --> 00:22:40,560 to get down to the finest detail. 291 00:22:44,560 --> 00:22:47,720 Every particle of rock must be carefully removed, 292 00:22:47,720 --> 00:22:51,960 with enormous patience and absolute precision. 293 00:22:56,920 --> 00:22:59,360 The end results reveal that trilobites 294 00:22:59,360 --> 00:23:02,000 moulded their external skeletons 295 00:23:02,000 --> 00:23:05,440 into an almost unbelievable variety of shapes. 296 00:23:22,280 --> 00:23:27,600 And that enabled them to colonise a great variety of habitats, 297 00:23:27,600 --> 00:23:30,760 just as modern arthropods still do today. 298 00:23:36,560 --> 00:23:41,680 There were about 50,000 different trilobite species that we know of, 299 00:23:41,680 --> 00:23:45,040 and doubtless there are still many more to be discovered. 300 00:23:51,840 --> 00:23:53,400 Their hard exoskeletons 301 00:23:53,400 --> 00:23:56,880 not only ensured their abundance in the fossil record, 302 00:23:56,880 --> 00:24:00,960 they also tell us a lot about their owners' lives. 303 00:24:03,560 --> 00:24:07,680 Many of the trilobites that are found in these cliffs 304 00:24:07,680 --> 00:24:10,680 are curled up like this one. 305 00:24:10,680 --> 00:24:12,960 Sometimes even more tightly than this is, 306 00:24:12,960 --> 00:24:16,400 with their tail tucked underneath their heads. 307 00:24:16,400 --> 00:24:19,600 And it's clear that this was some kind of protective posture, 308 00:24:19,600 --> 00:24:22,440 just as it is for some kinds of woodlice 309 00:24:22,440 --> 00:24:25,240 that you find in the garden today. 310 00:24:25,240 --> 00:24:28,560 That protected them against their enemies. 311 00:24:28,560 --> 00:24:32,200 But there are so many that are curled in these deposits, 312 00:24:32,200 --> 00:24:35,480 together with others that have their backs arched upwards 313 00:24:35,480 --> 00:24:37,680 and others in other strange postures, 314 00:24:37,680 --> 00:24:43,160 that it seems that they are the victim of some kind of catastrophe. 315 00:24:43,160 --> 00:24:46,680 The sea floor, it seems, was quite steep. 316 00:24:46,680 --> 00:24:48,640 And every now and again, 317 00:24:48,640 --> 00:24:51,720 the mud that accumulated on the bottom slipped down 318 00:24:51,720 --> 00:24:53,600 in a submarine avalanche, 319 00:24:53,600 --> 00:24:56,880 carrying the animals that lived in it and on it, 320 00:24:56,880 --> 00:25:00,600 higgledy-piggeldy, and burying them alive. 321 00:25:09,960 --> 00:25:14,000 Moroccan trilobites are big business these days. 322 00:25:14,000 --> 00:25:19,080 Particularly rare species sell for thousands of pounds. 323 00:25:21,960 --> 00:25:25,000 The world's leading trilobite experts, 324 00:25:25,000 --> 00:25:27,240 such as Professor Richard Fortey, 325 00:25:27,240 --> 00:25:30,400 come here to study these extraordinary animals. 326 00:25:34,480 --> 00:25:37,120 He believes that their external skeleton 327 00:25:37,120 --> 00:25:40,160 was the key to their success. 328 00:25:40,160 --> 00:25:42,480 The trilobites did almost everything 329 00:25:42,480 --> 00:25:46,520 you possibly can do with an exoskeleton. 330 00:25:46,520 --> 00:25:50,920 I think that skeleton was what gave them an advantage. 331 00:25:50,920 --> 00:25:55,240 They were protected. They could do all kinds of interesting things. 332 00:25:55,240 --> 00:25:57,280 They could grow spines. 333 00:25:57,280 --> 00:26:00,360 They could get flat, like pancakes. 334 00:26:00,360 --> 00:26:03,200 They could protect themselves by getting thick exoskeleton 335 00:26:03,200 --> 00:26:04,440 with pobbles all over it. 336 00:26:04,440 --> 00:26:08,280 It was a great advantage to them, just as it is to crabs and lobsters 337 00:26:08,280 --> 00:26:10,920 living today, which of course weren't around 338 00:26:10,920 --> 00:26:12,760 at the time of the trilobites. 339 00:26:12,760 --> 00:26:17,400 So they utilised the virtues of having a tough exoskeleton, 340 00:26:17,400 --> 00:26:20,640 to radiate into all kinds of ecological niches. 341 00:26:25,440 --> 00:26:29,000 You can see one of the most comprehensive collections 342 00:26:29,000 --> 00:26:30,640 of trilobite fossils 343 00:26:30,640 --> 00:26:35,080 just a few miles from where they're quarried, at Erfoud Museum. 344 00:26:39,160 --> 00:26:42,120 The collection here reveals just how varied 345 00:26:42,120 --> 00:26:44,600 the trilobite skeleton could be. 346 00:26:48,080 --> 00:26:50,880 There is no question that an exoskeleton 347 00:26:50,880 --> 00:26:53,280 gave the trilobites protection. 348 00:26:53,280 --> 00:26:57,400 But it also gave them something else of great value. 349 00:26:59,480 --> 00:27:03,080 There must have been many reasons why trilobites were so successful. 350 00:27:03,080 --> 00:27:07,760 But one of them, unquestionably, was their power of sight. 351 00:27:07,760 --> 00:27:09,000 They had eyes. 352 00:27:09,000 --> 00:27:11,640 not just eyespots that could tell the difference 353 00:27:11,640 --> 00:27:13,280 between light and dark, 354 00:27:13,280 --> 00:27:16,840 but complex eyes that could form detailed pictures 355 00:27:16,840 --> 00:27:20,760 of their surroundings, for the first time in the history of life. 356 00:27:20,760 --> 00:27:24,240 Eyes like these. 357 00:27:24,240 --> 00:27:29,920 Most animals on Earth today have eyes of one kind of another. 358 00:27:29,920 --> 00:27:33,760 Most are made of soft tissue, as ours our. 359 00:27:33,760 --> 00:27:36,640 But trilobite eyes are unique. 360 00:27:36,640 --> 00:27:41,680 Their lenses are derived from their mineralised external skeleton. 361 00:27:41,680 --> 00:27:43,120 They're made of rock. 362 00:27:45,360 --> 00:27:48,600 Each one of these little dots is a lens. 363 00:27:48,600 --> 00:27:50,800 And each is made from calcite, 364 00:27:50,800 --> 00:27:53,880 a crystalline form of chalk. 365 00:27:53,880 --> 00:27:56,400 Trilobites were the only organisms 366 00:27:56,400 --> 00:28:02,440 ever really to use this stuff as their lens material. 367 00:28:02,440 --> 00:28:06,960 And in doing so they evolved very sophisticated vision indeed. 368 00:28:06,960 --> 00:28:13,000 For example, these sorts of trilobites had very large lenses. 369 00:28:13,000 --> 00:28:16,800 And each lens is readily visible with the naked eye 370 00:28:16,800 --> 00:28:19,080 and each one is biconvex. 371 00:28:19,080 --> 00:28:23,920 And it's been proven that individual lenses have little bowls inside them 372 00:28:23,920 --> 00:28:26,400 to help them focus more precisely. 373 00:28:26,400 --> 00:28:29,000 These creatures were among the first, 374 00:28:29,000 --> 00:28:31,960 certainly, to actually focus a picture, weren't they? 375 00:28:31,960 --> 00:28:35,040 It wasn't just a question of telling light from dark, 376 00:28:35,040 --> 00:28:36,720 they could do better than that? 377 00:28:36,720 --> 00:28:39,520 On no, these, these had really sophisticated vision. 378 00:28:41,040 --> 00:28:44,760 The kind of trilobites that have these eyes were probably hunters. 379 00:28:44,760 --> 00:28:49,280 Some people have claimed that they could form stereoscopic images, 380 00:28:49,280 --> 00:28:52,720 using both eyes, so they could really home in on the prey. 381 00:28:55,440 --> 00:28:59,080 May predators today, including ourselves, 382 00:28:59,080 --> 00:29:02,480 have 3D, or stereoscopic vision. 383 00:29:02,480 --> 00:29:06,360 It makes it possible for a hunter to accurately judge the distance 384 00:29:06,360 --> 00:29:08,960 between itself and its prey. 385 00:29:18,040 --> 00:29:21,640 But not all trilobites were predators. 386 00:29:21,640 --> 00:29:25,080 Some were inoffensive creatures that lived by munching mud. 387 00:29:25,080 --> 00:29:27,760 But sight must have been valuable 388 00:29:27,760 --> 00:29:31,600 for them too, enabling them to spot enemies in time to escape. 389 00:29:31,600 --> 00:29:34,240 There are trilobite eyes with more than 5,000 lenses. 390 00:29:34,240 --> 00:29:37,280 5,000? More than 5,000 lenses. 391 00:29:37,280 --> 00:29:39,720 Now each of those, does it have an image? 392 00:29:39,720 --> 00:29:43,000 Each doesn't have an image, but if they go for lots of tiny lenses, 393 00:29:43,000 --> 00:29:45,200 they're particularly sensitive to movement, 394 00:29:45,200 --> 00:29:49,240 i.e. something changing between one lens and the next. 395 00:29:50,960 --> 00:29:55,120 This trilobite's eyes are so big they extend right round its head 396 00:29:55,120 --> 00:29:57,240 and meet in the middle. 397 00:29:57,240 --> 00:30:01,480 And that suggests that the animal swam high above the sea floor 398 00:30:01,480 --> 00:30:05,640 and had a 360-degree view of the scene below. 399 00:30:07,160 --> 00:30:10,400 With each lens capable of detecting movement, 400 00:30:10,400 --> 00:30:14,640 its owner must have been able to see an enemy coming from any direction. 401 00:30:17,120 --> 00:30:20,760 But the shape of a trilobite's eyes can reveal more than the 402 00:30:20,760 --> 00:30:22,760 kind of image they produced. 403 00:30:24,920 --> 00:30:31,120 Eyes can tell us a surprising amount about how and where an animal lived. 404 00:30:31,120 --> 00:30:37,240 This one with its eyes on turrets probably lived in the sea where it 405 00:30:37,240 --> 00:30:41,440 was gloomy, but nonetheless there was enough light for the animal to 406 00:30:41,440 --> 00:30:44,760 be able to see on either side of it. 407 00:30:44,760 --> 00:30:50,000 This one, on the other hand, has eyes also on turrets, but at the top 408 00:30:50,000 --> 00:30:53,040 it has flanges, like sun shades. 409 00:30:53,040 --> 00:30:57,120 So it's, er, likely that it lived in the shallow, sunlit sea 410 00:30:57,120 --> 00:31:01,800 and valued shades above its eyes so it didn't get dazzled. 411 00:31:01,800 --> 00:31:06,720 This one, however, has very reduced eyes, and it may well be 412 00:31:06,720 --> 00:31:09,480 that it skated along the mud along the bottom, 413 00:31:09,480 --> 00:31:12,760 where it was gloomy anyway and there wasn't much to see, 414 00:31:12,760 --> 00:31:17,200 so like an animal living in a cave, it slowly lost the use of its eyes. 415 00:31:17,200 --> 00:31:20,480 And finally there's this creature, 416 00:31:20,480 --> 00:31:24,080 and this is the one I think is particularly delightful. 417 00:31:24,080 --> 00:31:27,960 This one has its eyes on stalks. 418 00:31:27,960 --> 00:31:30,840 And probably lived under the mud, 419 00:31:30,840 --> 00:31:34,080 gobbling up food there with its, just its eyes 420 00:31:34,080 --> 00:31:38,120 peeking out of the top, to see whether there was danger around. 421 00:31:40,080 --> 00:31:44,960 So trilobites were the first animals to see clearly. 422 00:31:44,960 --> 00:31:48,080 But they had other senses as well, perhaps some 423 00:31:48,080 --> 00:31:50,400 we don't even know about. 424 00:31:50,400 --> 00:31:55,840 Take this species with this bizarre trident structure on its nose. 425 00:31:55,840 --> 00:31:59,200 What was it for? Some kind of motion sensor? 426 00:31:59,200 --> 00:32:02,280 Prehistoric radar, perhaps? 427 00:32:03,880 --> 00:32:06,240 Trilobites were, without question, 428 00:32:06,240 --> 00:32:09,440 the most successful animals of their time. 429 00:32:09,440 --> 00:32:12,640 They flourished in all parts of the ocean. 430 00:32:12,640 --> 00:32:15,160 Indeed, they could be counted as one 431 00:32:15,160 --> 00:32:19,160 of the most successful kinds of animals in the entire history of life. 432 00:32:21,160 --> 00:32:25,880 Most trilobites are quite small, rather like beetles are today. 433 00:32:25,880 --> 00:32:31,160 But the biggest living beetle is about that big, the goliath beetle. 434 00:32:31,160 --> 00:32:36,280 Trilobites, on the other hand, grew very big indeed. Like this one. 435 00:32:36,280 --> 00:32:38,160 And this is by no means the biggest. 436 00:32:38,160 --> 00:32:42,160 The biggest known is nearly a metre, nearly three feet long. 437 00:32:42,160 --> 00:32:46,000 And it's thought that these really big ones grew to this size 438 00:32:46,000 --> 00:32:50,840 because they lived in cold waters, and that's a tendency of animals 439 00:32:50,840 --> 00:32:52,640 in cold, to grow large. 440 00:32:52,640 --> 00:32:56,800 And at the time that these rocks were laid down, Africa, 441 00:32:56,800 --> 00:32:59,560 where we are now, and where these are found, 442 00:32:59,560 --> 00:33:01,240 was down by the South Pole. 443 00:33:04,640 --> 00:33:07,120 Spectacular though these are, 444 00:33:07,120 --> 00:33:11,800 they were by no means the largest arthropods in the ocean at the time. 445 00:33:11,800 --> 00:33:17,080 The trilobites had remote cousins, also arthropods, that had grown 446 00:33:17,080 --> 00:33:19,720 into monsters. 447 00:33:19,720 --> 00:33:22,760 Their remains are much rarer, and often fragmentary, 448 00:33:22,760 --> 00:33:26,800 but some of the most complete have been found in Scotland. 449 00:33:33,600 --> 00:33:35,720 ALARM SOUNDS 450 00:33:39,840 --> 00:33:42,040 One of the best is held in the vaults 451 00:33:42,040 --> 00:33:44,200 of Edinburgh's National Museum. 452 00:34:03,680 --> 00:34:06,040 Gosh! 453 00:34:06,040 --> 00:34:13,280 Well, this is a magnificent example of just how big an animal can grow 454 00:34:13,280 --> 00:34:16,200 if it has an external skeleton. 455 00:34:16,200 --> 00:34:20,400 This is a creature called the Eurypterid, or a sea scorpion. 456 00:34:20,400 --> 00:34:22,680 And it was a hunter. 457 00:34:22,680 --> 00:34:27,520 It had a pair of powerful pincers at the top, just behind its head. 458 00:34:27,520 --> 00:34:31,920 It was obviously a monster, a terror of the seas. 459 00:34:31,920 --> 00:34:36,880 And this is by no means the biggest of the eurypterids. 460 00:34:39,760 --> 00:34:44,200 Sea scorpions were the top predators of their day. 461 00:34:44,200 --> 00:34:47,240 As far as we know, they were the biggest arthropod 462 00:34:47,240 --> 00:34:49,040 that has ever existed. 463 00:34:50,760 --> 00:34:54,880 The discovery of a large fossilised claw suggests 464 00:34:54,880 --> 00:34:58,800 that they could grow up to two and a half metres, eight feet in length. 465 00:35:07,520 --> 00:35:10,200 So arthropods of one kind or another 466 00:35:10,200 --> 00:35:15,440 were certainly dominant 420 million years ago. 467 00:35:15,440 --> 00:35:18,320 The seas were full of life. 468 00:35:18,320 --> 00:35:21,840 From huge complex animals like this sea scorpion 469 00:35:21,840 --> 00:35:23,320 creeping along the bottom, 470 00:35:23,320 --> 00:35:27,520 to simple creatures, like jellyfish, floating on the surface waters. 471 00:35:27,520 --> 00:35:33,360 But the land was barren and without animals of any kind. 472 00:35:35,000 --> 00:35:40,160 But there was food up there, simple plants, 473 00:35:40,160 --> 00:35:46,040 and that tempted some animals to venture out of the water. 474 00:35:46,040 --> 00:35:50,040 Surviving on land, however, was a problem for them. 475 00:35:50,040 --> 00:35:52,240 Coming from the sea, they had to evolve ways 476 00:35:52,240 --> 00:35:55,200 of preventing their bodies from drying out. 477 00:35:55,200 --> 00:36:01,400 And even more difficult, they had to develop a method of breathing air. 478 00:36:01,400 --> 00:36:04,000 The very first animals had simply absorbed 479 00:36:04,000 --> 00:36:06,120 dissolved oxygen from the water 480 00:36:06,120 --> 00:36:09,320 through the skins of their soft bodies. 481 00:36:09,320 --> 00:36:12,480 As they began to move and grow bigger, they needed more energy, 482 00:36:12,480 --> 00:36:15,480 more quickly. 483 00:36:15,480 --> 00:36:17,240 And that meant 484 00:36:17,240 --> 00:36:21,200 they had to improve their method of collecting dissolved oxygen. 485 00:36:25,600 --> 00:36:29,600 Bigger, more complex animals, 486 00:36:29,600 --> 00:36:32,360 like for example, this lobster, 487 00:36:32,360 --> 00:36:35,920 have to have specialised devices, which are called gills. 488 00:36:35,920 --> 00:36:40,680 Here in the lobster they are these flaps underneath its abdomen, 489 00:36:40,680 --> 00:36:42,440 which is flaps forwards 490 00:36:42,440 --> 00:36:47,480 and backwards to increase the flow of oxygenated water over them. 491 00:36:47,480 --> 00:36:52,200 But the trouble with gills is that they only work when they're wet. 492 00:36:52,200 --> 00:36:56,000 In the dry, they do not absorb oxygen. 493 00:36:56,000 --> 00:36:58,800 So if animals are to live on land, 494 00:36:58,800 --> 00:37:03,560 they had have to have a new way of breathing. 495 00:37:08,800 --> 00:37:10,320 The Burgess Shales, 496 00:37:10,320 --> 00:37:14,480 that astonishingly rich treasury of Cambrian fossils, 497 00:37:14,480 --> 00:37:16,760 contain the remains of just one 498 00:37:16,760 --> 00:37:21,400 particularly rare species that may well have been the very first animal 499 00:37:21,400 --> 00:37:24,240 to make that move onto land. 500 00:37:24,240 --> 00:37:27,920 It was not, as you might think, an amphibian, it was not even 501 00:37:27,920 --> 00:37:31,440 a true arthropod, but one of their far distant cousins. 502 00:37:36,840 --> 00:37:39,200 This little creature, 503 00:37:39,200 --> 00:37:44,920 from the Burgess Shale seas, is thought to be the ancestor 504 00:37:44,920 --> 00:37:50,800 of the very first creature that went on to land. It's called Aysheaia. 505 00:37:50,800 --> 00:37:54,400 And we don't have to imagine what it was like in life, 506 00:37:54,400 --> 00:37:59,360 because there's a creature, that seems to be almost identical, 507 00:37:59,360 --> 00:38:01,040 that is alive today. 508 00:38:03,520 --> 00:38:08,320 It lives in many parts of the tropics, including the rainforest, 509 00:38:08,320 --> 00:38:11,200 here in Queensland, Australia. 510 00:38:17,800 --> 00:38:21,040 It's nocturnal and seldom seen. 511 00:38:25,400 --> 00:38:31,040 It spends most of its time hidden away inside rotten logs. 512 00:38:32,720 --> 00:38:35,400 Ah, it's nice and wet! 513 00:38:35,400 --> 00:38:38,480 Certainly, er, perfect for what we're looking for. 514 00:38:38,480 --> 00:38:42,240 You need local expertise to find one. 515 00:38:44,320 --> 00:38:47,120 I generally find that it's just from the outside 516 00:38:47,120 --> 00:38:48,720 of the, er, core of the tree. 517 00:38:51,000 --> 00:38:54,760 All nice and... Oh! What is that? Ooh, look at that. 518 00:38:55,080 --> 00:38:59,520 And this enchanting little creature 519 00:38:59,520 --> 00:39:01,320 is what we were looking for. 520 00:39:06,280 --> 00:39:10,320 Sometimes called a velvet worm, 521 00:39:10,320 --> 00:39:13,920 or to give it its scientific name, Peripatus. 522 00:39:15,800 --> 00:39:20,120 If there is such a thing as a living fossil, 523 00:39:20,120 --> 00:39:22,920 this surely must be one of them. 524 00:39:22,920 --> 00:39:26,720 Because it seems to be almost identical 525 00:39:26,720 --> 00:39:33,240 with that fossil, Aysheaia, which we saw in the Burgess Shales. 526 00:39:33,240 --> 00:39:38,560 It looks at first sight like a worm. 527 00:39:38,560 --> 00:39:43,560 But of course no worm has legs. In fact, 528 00:39:43,560 --> 00:39:46,880 it seems to be halfway 529 00:39:46,880 --> 00:39:49,600 between a worm 530 00:39:49,600 --> 00:39:51,520 and an insect. 531 00:39:53,040 --> 00:39:57,360 Aysheaia, of course, lived in the sea. 532 00:39:57,360 --> 00:40:01,200 But this little creature lives on land. 533 00:40:01,200 --> 00:40:03,920 And it has one further attribute, 534 00:40:03,920 --> 00:40:09,000 which Aysheaia could not have had. 535 00:40:09,000 --> 00:40:12,640 It has tiny little holes all along its flanks, 536 00:40:12,640 --> 00:40:15,520 which enable it to breathe air. 537 00:40:15,520 --> 00:40:20,560 So this is one of the first creatures 538 00:40:20,560 --> 00:40:22,800 that moved on to land, 539 00:40:22,800 --> 00:40:26,520 540 million years ago. 540 00:40:44,720 --> 00:40:48,600 Velvet worms may have been the first animals to set foot on land, 541 00:40:48,600 --> 00:40:53,480 but they have hardly changed during the following half-billion years. 542 00:40:55,080 --> 00:40:57,560 Why? 543 00:40:57,560 --> 00:41:00,160 Well, unlike true arthropods, their bodies are covered, 544 00:41:00,160 --> 00:41:06,480 not by an exoskeleton, but by soft, permeable skin. 545 00:41:06,480 --> 00:41:11,280 That lack of an external skeleton means that their bodies, 546 00:41:11,280 --> 00:41:13,400 unsupported by water, can't grow any bigger. 547 00:41:13,400 --> 00:41:19,080 It also means that in order to prevent themselves from drying out, 548 00:41:19,080 --> 00:41:23,520 they have to stay in damp environments. 549 00:41:23,520 --> 00:41:25,360 True arthropods, like this scorpion, 550 00:41:25,360 --> 00:41:30,440 a descendent of those giant sea scorpions, were not so restricted. 551 00:41:30,440 --> 00:41:32,760 They had external skeletons. 552 00:41:34,320 --> 00:41:39,000 That meant that not only were their bodies protected from drying out, 553 00:41:39,000 --> 00:41:42,440 but they were strong and rigid enough to allow them to grow bigger 554 00:41:42,440 --> 00:41:45,560 and get around without the support of water. 555 00:41:54,040 --> 00:41:57,640 So how and when did true arthropods with exoskeletons 556 00:41:57,640 --> 00:41:59,680 draw their first breath of air? 557 00:42:05,360 --> 00:42:08,160 The answer can be found in this. 558 00:42:08,160 --> 00:42:13,080 It is perhaps the smallest and most fragmentary fossil I've seen so far, 559 00:42:13,080 --> 00:42:16,360 but don't be fooled by appearances. 560 00:42:16,360 --> 00:42:19,960 It's almost certainly one of the most significant. 561 00:42:26,120 --> 00:42:33,720 This specimen was collected in Cowie Harbour, here in Scotland, in 2004. 562 00:42:33,720 --> 00:42:38,720 Even though it's so small, under the microscope you can see 563 00:42:38,720 --> 00:42:41,120 extraordinary detail. 564 00:42:41,120 --> 00:42:47,160 This is the main body of the animal with its segments. 565 00:42:47,160 --> 00:42:51,000 And here are its legs. 566 00:42:51,000 --> 00:42:55,760 But above each there is a tiny hole. 567 00:42:57,720 --> 00:43:03,040 That is a spiracle, through which the animal was able to breathe air 568 00:43:03,040 --> 00:43:06,120 just as insects do today. 569 00:43:06,120 --> 00:43:10,160 And since it breathed air, if it had gone into the water 570 00:43:10,160 --> 00:43:11,680 it would have drowned. 571 00:43:11,680 --> 00:43:17,160 So this is a truly land-living animal and what is more, 572 00:43:17,160 --> 00:43:19,920 it's the first and oldest that we know. 573 00:43:19,920 --> 00:43:24,280 It's 428 million years old. 574 00:43:28,000 --> 00:43:32,920 But what kind of creatures were these early land-dwelling arthropods 575 00:43:39,000 --> 00:43:42,960 Animals very like them are still quite common 576 00:43:42,960 --> 00:43:44,520 in many parts of the world. 577 00:43:44,520 --> 00:43:48,360 There are certainly plenty of them in those Australian rainforests. 578 00:43:51,360 --> 00:43:54,000 One sort are millipedes, 579 00:43:54,000 --> 00:43:59,400 which today grow as long as that and live on vegetation 580 00:43:59,400 --> 00:44:02,080 and rotting wood, harmless vegetarians. 581 00:44:02,080 --> 00:44:07,440 But there's also another multi-leg creature, which is a much more 582 00:44:07,440 --> 00:44:09,080 difficult customer. 583 00:44:11,320 --> 00:44:13,360 This is one of them. 584 00:44:13,360 --> 00:44:19,120 A centipede. A very formidable hunter, with a powerful bite, 585 00:44:19,120 --> 00:44:23,640 and some centipedes have bites that are lethal to human beings. 586 00:44:23,640 --> 00:44:26,920 What kind of a bite this one has, 587 00:44:26,920 --> 00:44:29,160 I don't know. 588 00:44:29,160 --> 00:44:31,120 But when I let him out I shall do so 589 00:44:31,120 --> 00:44:36,480 very carefully, because I don't propose to find out. 590 00:44:36,480 --> 00:44:38,440 Come on. 591 00:44:45,840 --> 00:44:50,720 So multi-legged arthropods invaded the land and became 592 00:44:50,720 --> 00:44:52,520 more successful than ever. 593 00:44:59,640 --> 00:45:01,200 Back in Scotland, 594 00:45:01,200 --> 00:45:06,320 there is impressive evidence of just how successful they became. 595 00:45:08,520 --> 00:45:11,600 This is a small fishing village 596 00:45:11,600 --> 00:45:15,200 on the East Coast of Scotland called Crail. 597 00:45:15,200 --> 00:45:18,760 Nothing particularly strange about it, you might think... 598 00:45:18,760 --> 00:45:22,640 until, that is, you go down to the shore. 599 00:45:22,640 --> 00:45:26,880 And then you can see something that is really extraordinary. 600 00:45:31,760 --> 00:45:34,800 Standing here and there on the beach are fossils, 601 00:45:34,800 --> 00:45:38,160 not of animals, but of plants. 602 00:45:40,520 --> 00:45:46,600 This huge circular stump looks just like the base of a tree. 603 00:45:46,600 --> 00:45:49,800 And indeed that is what it is, or rather, 604 00:45:49,800 --> 00:45:54,320 what it was, 335 million years ago. 605 00:45:54,320 --> 00:45:57,360 But it wasn't a tree like trees we know today. 606 00:45:57,360 --> 00:45:59,200 It was related 607 00:45:59,200 --> 00:46:02,600 to the small plants that are alive today called horsetails. 608 00:46:02,600 --> 00:46:07,080 But this tree grew to 90 feet. 609 00:46:07,080 --> 00:46:08,800 It was immense. 610 00:46:12,000 --> 00:46:15,680 When they were alive, during a period called the Carboniferous, 611 00:46:15,680 --> 00:46:17,640 long after the Cambrian, 612 00:46:17,640 --> 00:46:19,640 this whole area was very different 613 00:46:19,640 --> 00:46:22,200 from the windswept coastline of today. 614 00:46:24,800 --> 00:46:28,960 This was a time when the continents of the world were grouped together 615 00:46:28,960 --> 00:46:31,240 and forests were widespread. 616 00:46:34,520 --> 00:46:37,560 So much plant life was pumping out oxygen 617 00:46:37,560 --> 00:46:41,440 that the composition of the atmosphere began to change. 618 00:46:45,720 --> 00:46:49,720 This had a profound effect on animal life. 619 00:46:54,800 --> 00:46:58,480 In the forest that was growing near Crail, the ancient trees 620 00:46:58,480 --> 00:47:01,360 were rooted in a sandy swamp. 621 00:47:01,360 --> 00:47:06,160 And on the expanses of sand that stretched between those huge trees, 622 00:47:06,160 --> 00:47:09,480 sand that's now turned to this sandstone, 623 00:47:09,480 --> 00:47:11,320 there are tracks. 624 00:47:11,320 --> 00:47:15,560 Tracks that come in pairs, there's one pair that goes up there. 625 00:47:15,560 --> 00:47:19,240 There's another pair that goes up here. 626 00:47:19,240 --> 00:47:22,000 And when you look at them in detail, you can see, 627 00:47:22,000 --> 00:47:26,920 particularly on this pair, that each track has a number of dimples in it. 628 00:47:29,400 --> 00:47:34,320 And those are the imprints of individual feet. 629 00:47:34,320 --> 00:47:37,160 So this animal had a lot of feet. 630 00:47:37,160 --> 00:47:41,320 It's thought to have been a giant millipede. 631 00:47:41,320 --> 00:47:43,600 It was about... 632 00:47:43,600 --> 00:47:46,600 four and a half feet long, one and a half metres. 633 00:47:46,600 --> 00:47:50,280 And it had 26 or 28 segments. 634 00:47:50,280 --> 00:47:53,120 A magnificent beast. 635 00:48:10,160 --> 00:48:11,720 Arthropleura. 636 00:48:14,160 --> 00:48:16,240 A giant millipede, 637 00:48:16,240 --> 00:48:21,600 probably the biggest terrestrial arthropod that has ever existed. 638 00:48:21,600 --> 00:48:26,440 The largest specimen discovered so far was nearly as long as a car... 639 00:48:26,440 --> 00:48:28,040 two and a half metres. 640 00:48:30,280 --> 00:48:34,760 The Carboniferous was the golden age for the arthropods, 641 00:48:34,760 --> 00:48:38,520 for the air was now particularly rich in oxygen. 642 00:48:38,520 --> 00:48:43,280 Today the atmosphere contains around 21% oxygen. 643 00:48:43,280 --> 00:48:45,160 Back in the Carboniferous, 644 00:48:45,160 --> 00:48:50,800 it was around 35% and that enabled animals to grow very big indeed. 645 00:48:53,480 --> 00:48:57,840 But growing large was not their only success. 646 00:48:57,840 --> 00:49:01,840 Some other arthropods in these carboniferous rainforests 647 00:49:01,840 --> 00:49:04,040 were evolving in a different way. 648 00:49:04,040 --> 00:49:07,320 Instead of becoming huge and ponderous, 649 00:49:07,320 --> 00:49:09,520 they became agile and speedy. 650 00:49:09,520 --> 00:49:13,960 To do that it's better to be short rather than long, and some 651 00:49:13,960 --> 00:49:17,840 reduced their segments and ran around on just three pairs of legs, 652 00:49:17,840 --> 00:49:20,680 as silverfish and bristletails do today. 653 00:49:25,560 --> 00:49:29,720 These early insects then made another dramatic move... 654 00:49:29,720 --> 00:49:35,600 they developed wings and became the first animals of any kind to fly. 655 00:49:41,000 --> 00:49:44,640 Truly the invertebrates had colonised 656 00:49:44,640 --> 00:49:46,320 not only the land, but the air. 657 00:49:48,200 --> 00:49:51,360 And in an atmosphere so rich in oxygen, 658 00:49:51,360 --> 00:49:54,440 they did so in a truly dramatic way. 659 00:49:56,200 --> 00:49:58,480 This giant dragonfly, 660 00:49:58,480 --> 00:50:03,920 the biggest flying insect that has ever existed, is called Meganeura. 661 00:50:12,520 --> 00:50:15,760 Its wings were nearly three feet across. 662 00:50:21,440 --> 00:50:28,120 But the golden age of the giant arthropods was not to last. 663 00:50:28,120 --> 00:50:33,120 The rainforest died back, and oxygen in the atmosphere dropped. 664 00:50:35,280 --> 00:50:40,280 Giant insects are no longer alive today and that may be 665 00:50:40,280 --> 00:50:44,600 because the proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere is very much lower. 666 00:50:44,600 --> 00:50:48,160 But nonetheless, insects have managed to find a way 667 00:50:48,160 --> 00:50:51,040 of overcoming the problems of size. 668 00:50:51,040 --> 00:50:53,200 They've become colonial. 669 00:50:54,720 --> 00:50:58,200 Just as in the far distant, remote past, 670 00:50:58,200 --> 00:51:02,840 individual cells clubbed together to form a larger organism, 671 00:51:02,840 --> 00:51:04,160 such as a sponge, 672 00:51:04,160 --> 00:51:08,720 so hundreds of thousands of individual insects, termites, 673 00:51:08,720 --> 00:51:11,800 have cooperated to build this nest. 674 00:51:11,800 --> 00:51:15,080 And a colony like this can crop as much vegetation 675 00:51:15,080 --> 00:51:20,080 from the surroundings as a bigger animal like an antelope. 676 00:51:33,760 --> 00:51:36,360 So by living in vast colonies like this, 677 00:51:36,360 --> 00:51:39,800 arthropods can still dominate their surroundings. 678 00:51:41,520 --> 00:51:44,120 They've become super-organisms... 679 00:51:44,120 --> 00:51:48,680 hundreds of thousands of individuals all descended from the same female, 680 00:51:48,680 --> 00:51:51,160 working and behaving as one. 681 00:51:58,280 --> 00:52:00,560 So arthropods remain 682 00:52:00,560 --> 00:52:03,600 one of the most successful groups of animals on the planet. 683 00:52:08,040 --> 00:52:11,680 They've spread to all its corners. 684 00:52:15,800 --> 00:52:21,960 Insects alone make up at least 80% of all animal species. 685 00:52:25,040 --> 00:52:29,360 But arthropods weren't the only ones to make this move on to land. 686 00:52:33,920 --> 00:52:35,880 The Burgess Shales - 687 00:52:35,880 --> 00:52:40,080 the place where the beginnings of all this proliferation of life 688 00:52:40,080 --> 00:52:43,760 in the Cambrian period are recorded in unparalleled detail. 689 00:52:47,520 --> 00:52:51,520 Among the ancestors of all the insects, 690 00:52:51,520 --> 00:52:56,920 spiders, the scorpions, the shellfish, the crustaceans, 691 00:52:56,920 --> 00:52:59,440 the shrimps, the sponges, 692 00:52:59,440 --> 00:53:04,520 there's just one tiny little creature, very insignificant, 693 00:53:04,520 --> 00:53:10,600 which we human beings might think is perhaps the most important of all. 694 00:53:10,600 --> 00:53:11,840 Because this... 695 00:53:11,840 --> 00:53:16,720 is the first creature to have the sign of a backbone, 696 00:53:16,720 --> 00:53:22,040 and thus, therefore, is probably the ancestor of us all. 697 00:53:25,480 --> 00:53:29,600 It's a tiny, worm-like creature called Pikaia. 698 00:53:32,360 --> 00:53:34,800 It was not a fearsome hunter. 699 00:53:34,800 --> 00:53:41,480 It had no teeth for attack and no external skeleton for defence. 700 00:53:41,480 --> 00:53:44,400 But Pikaia did have something new. 701 00:53:46,960 --> 00:53:49,800 Instead of an external skeleton, 702 00:53:49,800 --> 00:53:53,240 it had an internal one, a thin gristly rod... 703 00:53:53,240 --> 00:53:55,600 the beginnings of a backbone. 704 00:53:55,600 --> 00:53:59,760 It, or something very like it, was the ancestor of all vertebrates. 705 00:54:01,800 --> 00:54:06,160 From such a creature as this, the first fish evolved. 706 00:54:06,160 --> 00:54:10,360 Some of them, living in swamps, started to gulp air and wriggled up 707 00:54:10,360 --> 00:54:17,240 onto the land. They gave rise to moist-skinned amphibians. 708 00:54:17,240 --> 00:54:21,440 Some of them developed scaly, impermeable skins that enabled them 709 00:54:21,440 --> 00:54:23,200 to colonise the driest places... 710 00:54:23,200 --> 00:54:24,960 they were the reptiles. 711 00:54:24,960 --> 00:54:28,000 And from them came the birds. 712 00:54:31,040 --> 00:54:32,640 And the mammals. 713 00:54:35,680 --> 00:54:38,800 Today mammals, like this rhinoceros, 714 00:54:38,800 --> 00:54:41,600 are the biggest of all living animals. 715 00:54:43,840 --> 00:54:47,080 Hello, old boy. How are you? 716 00:54:47,080 --> 00:54:49,160 How are you? 717 00:54:49,160 --> 00:54:53,440 'All mammals, including ourselves, extract oxygen from the air with 718 00:54:53,440 --> 00:54:57,000 'the end of internal lungs, and distribute it through our bodies 719 00:54:57,000 --> 00:54:58,120 'in our blood.' 720 00:54:58,120 --> 00:55:00,960 There we are. There's a good lad. 721 00:55:00,960 --> 00:55:05,280 'But we also owe our success, and our size, 722 00:55:05,280 --> 00:55:07,600 'to the nature of our skeletons.' 723 00:55:09,200 --> 00:55:14,320 Animals with an internal skeleton, like this rhinoceros, 724 00:55:14,320 --> 00:55:21,080 have a huge advantage over animals whose skeleton is external. 725 00:55:21,080 --> 00:55:24,480 A white rhinoceros, like this, 726 00:55:24,480 --> 00:55:28,600 is one of the biggest land animals alive today. 727 00:55:28,600 --> 00:55:31,240 Compare him 728 00:55:31,240 --> 00:55:34,120 with him... a rhinoceros beetle. 729 00:55:35,640 --> 00:55:38,920 Its skeleton is external. 730 00:55:38,920 --> 00:55:41,640 It's very powerful. 731 00:55:41,640 --> 00:55:44,800 It can carry 850 times its own weight. 732 00:55:44,800 --> 00:55:49,480 But it can't grow much bigger. Because the only way it can grow is 733 00:55:49,480 --> 00:55:52,120 by shedding its skeleton and growing a new one. 734 00:55:52,120 --> 00:55:58,000 And while its skeleton is not there, its body is unsupported. 735 00:55:58,000 --> 00:56:05,080 And after a certain size, the body will collapse under its own weight. 736 00:56:05,080 --> 00:56:06,000 Here. 737 00:56:08,680 --> 00:56:11,880 Here we are, come on boy. Come on boy. 738 00:56:11,880 --> 00:56:15,960 Despite these differences, it's no coincidence that 739 00:56:15,960 --> 00:56:21,520 backboned animals evolved many of the same features as the arthropods. 740 00:56:21,520 --> 00:56:23,640 Teeth. 741 00:56:23,640 --> 00:56:26,200 Legs. 742 00:56:26,200 --> 00:56:30,280 Shells. Eyes. 743 00:56:30,280 --> 00:56:31,520 And wings. 744 00:56:31,520 --> 00:56:34,560 Any animal group needs such things if they are to colonise 745 00:56:34,560 --> 00:56:38,080 all the Earth's varied habitats. 746 00:56:45,120 --> 00:56:49,880 A journey that began for me near my boyhood home in Charnwood Forest 747 00:56:49,880 --> 00:56:54,520 has taken me around the world and through 600 million years 748 00:56:54,520 --> 00:56:55,640 of evolutionary history. 749 00:56:57,200 --> 00:57:00,280 I've seen evidence of how single-celled life 750 00:57:00,280 --> 00:57:03,000 dominated the planet for billions of years, 751 00:57:03,000 --> 00:57:08,240 until a global ice age triggered the emergence of the first animals. 752 00:57:11,520 --> 00:57:14,560 Many animal groups lasted millions of years. 753 00:57:14,560 --> 00:57:18,400 But eventually their time ran out and they disappeared. 754 00:57:29,280 --> 00:57:31,600 But others endured. 755 00:57:35,280 --> 00:57:37,720 And between them they evolved 756 00:57:37,720 --> 00:57:42,560 into the wondrous variety of life that inhabits this planet today. 757 00:57:44,760 --> 00:57:48,080 Life originated in the oceans. 758 00:57:48,080 --> 00:57:53,800 After an immense period of time, some creatures managed to crawl up 759 00:57:53,800 --> 00:57:55,600 onto the land. 760 00:57:55,600 --> 00:57:59,080 Those animals may seem to us to be very remote, 761 00:57:59,080 --> 00:58:01,720 strange, even fantastic. 762 00:58:01,720 --> 00:58:07,480 But all of us alive today owe our very existence to them. 763 00:58:30,080 --> 00:58:32,120 Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd 764 00:58:32,120 --> 00:58:34,160 E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk