{1}{1}25.000 {1665}{1724}Winter in Antarctica. {1726}{1825}The temperature has dropped|to minus 70 degrees centigrade, {1827}{1889}and winds of 120 miles an hour {1891}{1946}blow across the desolate icescape. {2028}{2121}The centre of Antarctica|is in continuous darkness. {2123}{2202}0nly its fringes see the bleak winter light. {2204}{2283}The sea freezes over for hundreds of miles, {2285}{2361}effectively doubling the size of the continent. {2391}{2477}In winter, the Antarctic is a very lonely place. {2479}{2535}As the temperature plummets {2539}{2587}and the sea ice forms, {2591}{2715}most of the wildlife that came down here|to take advantage of the brief summer season {2717}{2780}is forced to retreat north again. {2782}{2842}Practically nothing stays. {2844}{2953}To survive in the deep south|at its most bitterly hostile {2955}{3071}requires a very special animal|with very special adaptations. {3073}{3157}Such a creature is the Weddell seal. {3209}{3281}No other mammal lives throughout the year {3283}{3332}as far south as this. {3342}{3441}These seals|are just 800 miles from the pole, {3443}{3512}and they stay here winter and summer. {3516}{3560}Like all Antarctic seals, {3562}{3629}they have a thick layer of blubber|to insulate them from the cold. {3631}{3720}But the real key|to their success in surviving here {3722}{3812}is their ability to keep open holes in the ice {3814}{3898}so that they have|access to the sea the year round. {3927}{4056}These holes are the only things|that break the white monotony {4058}{4126}over hundreds of square miles of sea ice. {4130}{4206}The seals, with no escape to the open ocean, {4208}{4269}are forced to stay near the holes. {4271}{4322}Each is a gateway {4324}{4383}to and from the underwater world {4385}{4465}in which the seals hunt and find shelter. {4496}{4623}Underwater, the temperature|never drops below minus 1.8 degrees. {4627}{4724}The seals retreat down here|during the worst winter storms {4726}{4800}and so keep comparatively warm. {5061}{5116}When you dive beneath the ice, {5118}{5226}you enter, within seconds,|a totally different world. {5228}{5282}Here, within a foot or so {5286}{5366}of the gale-swept,|savagely cold wilderness above, {5368}{5482}illuminated only by the dim blue|light filtering through the ice, {5486}{5568}there is stability, peace, {5570}{5637}and an eerie, unforgettable beauty. {6616}{6682}Animals need special adaptations {6684}{6755}to live in water that is below zero centigrade. {6786}{6869}Most fish would explode|if they touched this glacier wall. {6873}{6960}Crystals would immediately form in their cells. {6962}{7089}These survive because their tissues|are loaded with anti-freeze. {7226}{7278}Life beneath the ice, {7280}{7333}compared with the white desert above, {7335}{7392}is extraordinarily rich. {7394}{7447}There are all kinds of invertebrates, {7449}{7507}including giant jellyfish. {8187}{8242}It's a very sheltered place, {8244}{8300}for the permanent sea ice overhead {8302}{8353}provides year-round protection {8355}{8401}from waves and storms. {8403}{8461}But food is scarce, {8463}{8535}and many of these creatures|have become scavengers. {8539}{8640}These starfish make a meal of seal faeces. {8739}{8860}Weddell seals can dive|to 750 metres, possibly more, {8862}{8897}in search of food. {8899}{8963}At these depths, in permanent darkness, {8965}{9064}they encounter a world|dominated by stalk sponges. {9151}{9224}Growing extremely slowly in the cold, {9226}{9330}the Antarctic invertebrates become giants. {9520}{9569}Returning from depths {9571}{9622}where a human would be crushed, {9624}{9729}seals surface suffering none|of the effects of deep diving {9731}{9794}that can cripple human swimmers. {9986}{10046}0ctober in the far south. {10048}{10181}Female Weddell seals haul out|on the sea ice to give birth. {10386}{10511}Imagine the shock of leaving a womb|at plus 37 degrees centigrade {10513}{10632}and being dropped on the ice|into a world of minus 20. {11347}{11434}The pup has to suckle|and build a layer of blubber {11436}{11472}as fast as possible. {11474}{11558}It usually doubles its weight in ten days, {11560}{11634}for Weddell milk is 60% fat, {11636}{11704}one of the richest produced by any mammal. {11747}{11791}Remarkably, after one week, {11793}{11844}the pup is ready for a swim. {11867}{11933}(M0THER L0WS T0 HER PUP) {12206}{12296}The mother is anxious to get her pup|accustomed to the water {12298}{12358}before the weather deteriorates. {12697}{12760}At this time, more than any other, {12762}{12826}breathing holes are jealously guarded. {13551}{13624}Weddells have an especially wide gape {13626}{13695}and long canine and incisor teeth, {13697}{13758}which enable them to scrape away the ice {13760}{13858}that is constantly forming|and threatens to close their breathing holes. {13872}{13962}Their teeth aren't impervious|to this wear and tear {13964}{14019}and are gradually worn down, {14021}{14081}so that eventually the seal can't eat. {14083}{14185}As a consequence,|Weddells die at about 20 years, {14187}{14266}half the age of other Antarctic seals. {14286}{14359}A male defends an underwater territory {14361}{14450}and mates with all the females|that use his breathing holes. {14452}{14514}It's an effective way of acquiring a harem, {14516}{14583}because females must have|a refuge below the ice {14585}{14646}from the extremes of the winter weather. {14754}{14813}It might seem that there could not be {14815}{14866}a more harsh existence than this, {14868}{14940}but the environment here|is comparatively constant {14942}{15009}and these seals are adapted to it - {15011}{15067}protected by a coat of dense hair {15069}{15160}and insulated by blubber|immediately beneath the skin. {15187}{15306}Indeed, Weddells do far better|than most other seals. {15310}{15356}If they are sufficiently fattened {15358}{15410}in the six weeks before they wean, {15412}{15483}95% of pups will survive. {15643}{15729}These seals,|the most southerly in the world, {15731}{15769}live in the shadow {15771}{15882}of the largest active volcano|in Antarctica - Mount Erebus. {16001}{16073}Erebus is a mountain of extremes. {16075}{16212}In the crater, molten lava bubbles|away at 600 degrees centigrade, {16214}{16254}and yet, on the summit, {16256}{16351}temperatures rarely rise|above minus 45 degrees. {16353}{16418}Even here, there is life. {16420}{16483}The heat of the volcano produces steam {16485}{16562}that rises to the rim|and melts the snow and ice, {16564}{16604}leaving bare patches of rock - {16606}{16686}home to heat-loving bacteria and algae. {16688}{16744}Another extraordinary example {16746}{16848}of how life can survive in the most|extreme conditions on Earth. {17250}{17297}Behind Mount Erebus, {17301}{17387}the trans-Antarctic mountains|stretch in a long broad band. {17411}{17487}They are the most extensive range|on the continent, {17489}{17536}running for some 2,000 miles {17540}{17629}and separating|the great east and west ice caps. {17742}{17839}Although many of the peaks|are over 4,000 metres high, {17841}{17892}most of the range is blanketed {17894}{17975}by vast glaciers which fill the valleys. {18405}{18482}Hidden among the trans-Antarctic mountains {18484}{18552}is one of the continent's greatest surprises - {18554}{18594}the dry valleys. {18596}{18726}Here is the largest area|of bare rock in Antarctica. {18756}{18849}It's so arid|that falling snow soon evaporates {18851}{18896}and never builds up. {18930}{18998}The valley below me is the driest place on Earth. {19000}{19067}It hasn't snowed or rained here for centuries. {19069}{19169}In winter, the temperature falls|to minus 52 degrees centigrade {19171}{19259}and the ground is permanently frozen|to a depth of half a mile. {19263}{19330}Conditions are so extreme {19332}{19461}that when scientists came to design|a vehicle to work on the surface of Mars, {19463}{19532}they brought it to this valley|in order to test it. {19534}{19631}A clue to the factor|that creates these conditions {19633}{19710}lies in the extraordinary shape|of these boulders. {19740}{19796}Although they are solid granite, {19798}{19928}they have been carved by savage winds|that scream down off the ice cap. {19957}{20046}These winds are so dry|that they instantly absorb {20048}{20089}any moisture in the air, {20091}{20184}and by doing so desiccate|and preserve organic tissues. {20186}{20311}This mummified crabeater seal,|70 miles from the sea, {20313}{20357}has probably been lying here {20359}{20432}for 3,000 years or more. {20465}{20503}You might suppose {20505}{20617}that a place that can freeze-dry|seals' bodies for centuries {20619}{20701}would be totally without life. {20703}{20804}But even in these extreme conditions, {20806}{20863}life does exist. {20865}{20914}Pick the right sort of rock - {20916}{20985}this is a light porous sandstone - {20987}{21037}give it a hit... {21101}{21184}...and there, a millimetre|beneath the surface, {21188}{21248}within the actual fabric of the rock, {21250}{21334}a band of green, the colour of life. {21355}{21456}It is lichen that has managed|to penetrate and colonise {21458}{21543}the microscopic spaces between|the grains of the porous rock. {21545}{21613}It's the only place where it can survive {21615}{21674}in these arid, desert-like conditions. {21754}{21800}Above the dry valleys, {21802}{21867}held back by the trans-Antarctic mountains, {21869}{21935}stretches the ice cap itself. {21937}{22002}This is the Antarctic plateau, {22004}{22053}3,000 metres high. {22265}{22410}There can be no more forbidding,|hostile, desolate places to be {22412}{22492}than up here on the Antarctic plateau. {22494}{22606}It's not just that human life|here seems insignificant - {22609}{22660}it seems totally irrelevant. {22703}{22827}A few spots of lichens|may grow on boulders {22829}{22911}to within 200 miles of the South Pole, {22913}{22954}and, in the summer, {22956}{23059}maybe one or two|particularly adventurous snow petrels {23061}{23140}will come up here to try and nest. {23142}{23195}But come the winter, {23197}{23268}absolutely nothing living {23270}{23373}moves up here on the Antarctic plateau. {23480}{23560}Even in summer, it is always winter here, {23562}{23628}with temperatures averaging minus 30. {23637}{23702}1.5 times the size of Australia, {23704}{23808}this is the largest area|of lifeless wilderness in the world. {23830}{23920}Snow petrels,|brief visitors here in summer, {23922}{23989}are forced to spend the winter|hundreds of miles {23991}{24077}to the warmer north,|at the edge of the frozen sea. {24233}{24321}This is the frontier|between life in the ocean {24323}{24411}and a desert of ice|where almost no animals dare go. {24413}{24479}But one creature has to cross it - {24481}{24516}the Emperor penguin. {24824}{24929}In May, when the freezing waters|and cold winter temperatures {24931}{25021}force other animals|to retreat to the warmer north, {25023}{25103}Emperor penguins head south. {25406}{25513}They make their way to a number|of traditional nesting sites. {25515}{25625}In this one alone, there may be 25,000 birds. {25714}{25774}Emperors are unique. {25776}{25869}They are the only birds|to lay their eggs directly on ice. {26167}{26268}Just hours after the female|has produced her single egg, {26274}{26325}the male takes it over. {26327}{26370}The transfer has to be quick {26372}{26429}if the egg is not to freeze. {26489}{26544}The male manoeuvres it {26546}{26615}into a brood pouch lined with blood vessels {26617}{26712}that keep the egg 80 degrees|warmer than the outside temperature. {26714}{26777}There, under a flap of skin, {26779}{26837}it's sealed away for the winter. {26971}{27044}When the egg is safely|inside the male's pouch, {27046}{27096}the females are free to go, {27098}{27206}and they start the long trek back|across the sea ice, to the open ocean, {27208}{27312}leaving their partners to face|the coldest conditions on Earth. {27744}{27815}With temperatures of 70 below, {27817}{27860}and in terrible storms, {27862}{27933}the penguins huddle tightly together for warmth. {27935}{28026}No other adult penguins|are so tolerant of one another, {28028}{28112}but for Emperors this is the key to survival. {28257}{28313}The co-operation is not random. {28317}{28399}Those most exposed on the windward side {28401}{28495}move around the huddle|to the more sheltered side. {28497}{28597}So every bird gets a fair share|of the warmth in the middle {28599}{28743}and takes its turn in enduring|the brunt of the Antarctic weather. {29005}{29060}As midwinter approaches, {29064}{29123}the sun disappears below the horizon {29125}{29168}for the last time this season. {29170}{29265}A month of total darkness lies ahead. {29465}{29538}Above the huddle, the Southern Lights - {29540}{29586}the Aurora Australis - {29588}{29644}blaze across the winter sky. {29685}{29765}These spectacular displays occur {29767}{29835}as subatomic particles,|travelling through space, {29839}{29904}enter the Earth's magnetic field. {30436}{30525}As winter recedes,|the huddles begin to break up, {30527}{30634}and heat that was trapped|within them for so long escapes. {30636}{30752}These males,|who have not eaten for 115 days, {30754}{30825}are close to death by starvation. {30883}{30958}(SQUAWKING) {31174}{31254}As the sun returns|to the southern hemisphere, {31258}{31293}the female Emperors, {31295}{31368}sleek and fat from months of feeding at sea, {31370}{31425}begin the long march back to the rookery. {31443}{31523}The sea ice is now at its fullest extent, {31525}{31610}and they may have to walk 100 miles|to reach their colony. {31861}{31919}By now the eggs have hatched {31923}{32002}and the tiny chicks|are awaiting their first feed. {32062}{32119}Each female times her return {32121}{32181}to coincide with the hatching of her chick. {32183}{32239}A male, having starved for so long, {32243}{32297}can give the chick only one meal - {32301}{32381}no more than a milky secretion|from his gut wall. {32383}{32428}If his partner doesn't return {32430}{32479}within ten days of the chick hatching, {32481}{32598}he will have to abandon it and head|to the sea to find food for himself. {32817}{32886}(TREMEND0US DIN) {32970}{33032}It's a noisy time in the colony. {33034}{33106}The courtship calling|that took place before winter {33108}{33156}now brings its reward. {33159}{33220}After a separation of over three months, {33222}{33306}a bird can still recognise its partner's call. {33380}{33446}(VARl0US CALLS) {33750}{33787}When they find one another, {33789}{33863}the pair perform their greeting ritual {33865}{33956}to ensure there hasn't been|a case of mistaken identity. {33958}{34054}Then the female gives their chick|its first proper meal - {34056}{34105}half-digested fish. {34347}{34419}She's very eager to take charge of the chick, {34421}{34529}but the male, having cared for it|for so long, is reluctant to give it up. {34531}{34635}She has literally to push him back|to get him to release it. {34852}{34953}The transfer is a tricky manoeuvre|that must be done fast. {34955}{35050}A chick left on the ice|for only two minutes will die. {35669}{35751}The males, after their four-month ordeal, {35753}{35839}near to starvation and desperate to feed, {35843}{35930}have to walk 100 miles or so|back to the open sea. {36008}{36078}Mothers and chicks spend the next few weeks {36080}{36129}learning each other's call {36131}{36175}and establishing a strong bond {36177}{36252}that ensures they will recognise|one another in the months ahead {36254}{36335}when she returns from feeding trips. {36577}{36674}It's early spring|and the weather is still variable. {36706}{36778}(H0WLING GALE) {36905}{36969}Severe storms are a real threat {36971}{37012}to the chick's survival. {37014}{37096}An abandoned one seeks shelter|from passing adults. {37098}{37150}0ne of them seems interested, {37152}{37251}but the vital bond between|parent and chick isn't there {37253}{37336}and eventually the adult walks off. {37440}{37544}In fact, the adults do have|a strong instinct to protect chicks. {37546}{37620}So much so that birds|that have not managed to breed {37622}{37706}will try to take possession|of a stray or abandoned chick. {37708}{37769}But this fostering never succeeds {37771}{37876}because the adult has no partner|to help in rearing the waif. {38519}{38602}These desperate unpartnered penguins {38604}{38653}will sometimes fight over a chick {38655}{38701}and crush it to death. {39076}{39142}Mortality is high. {39144}{39190}Many eggs don't hatch, {39192}{39300}and of those that do,|25% die in the first few months. {39307}{39394}Those that survive|have to grow fast and fledge {39396}{39481}before the sea ice on which they live|breaks up beneath them. {40029}{40116}These chicks take five months to rear. {40118}{40210}0nly by incubating the eggs|through the harsh winter, {40212}{40292}so that the chicks hatch|at the very beginning of the short summer, {40294}{40377}is it possible for the Emperors|to breed every year. {40422}{40517}It was to collect|an Emperor penguin's egg like this {40521}{40601}that men made the first-ever land journey {40603}{40686}in the bitter cold darkness|of the Antarctic winter. {40688}{40785}Bill Wilson, the naturalist|on Captain Scott's expedition, {40787}{40868}was fascinated|by the evolutionary origin of birds {40870}{40964}and was convinced|that the embryo in an egg like this {40966}{41036}would provide conclusive evidence of the link {41038}{41130}between the feathers of birds|and the scales of reptiles. {41132}{41229}So, on 12 June, 1911,|in the middle of winter, {41234}{41289}he and two companions {41291}{41402}left Captain Scott's hut here on Cape Evans {41407}{41519}and set out for the Emperor penguin colony|on the other side of Mount Erebus, {41521}{41563}65 miles away. {41566}{41666}It was a trip|that became known with some justice {41668}{41736}as the worst journey in the world. {41758}{41807}The weather was abominable. {41809}{41864}Their clothes and harnesses froze solid {41866}{41924}and all three suffered terrible frostbite {41926}{42014}as they hauled their sledges|over heavily-crevassed terrain. {42016}{42119}0n the return journey, they lost|their tent in a violent storm. {42121}{42243}By a miracle, they found it again|and made it back to the hut alive. {42257}{42370}They brought back three eggs|and three Emperor penguin skins, {42375}{42427}one of which is still here in Scott's hut, {42429}{42479}preserved by the Antarctic cold. {42494}{42605}Although the connection between|birds and reptiles is no longer in doubt, {42608}{42700}the eggs did not provide the evidence|that Wilson thought they would. {42702}{42810}Even so, the journey remains|one of the great epic stories {42812}{42866}in the annals of polar exploration. {42868}{42918}In the next programme, {42920}{43001}we'll look at the history|of Antarctic exploration in more detail {43003}{43118}and also see how people today|survive life in the freezer.