StarTalk Radio - Exploring Earth’s Oceans with Sylvia Earle and Fabien Cousteau

Episode Date: August 17, 2018

Dive deep into oceans terrestrial and celestial as Neil deGrasse Tyson chats with oceanographer Sylvia Earle, aquanaut Fabien Cousteau, co-host Scott Adsit, ocean conservationist Laure Katz, actor/env...ironmentalist Adrian Grenier, and submarine pilot Erika Bergman.NOTE: StarTalk All-Access subscribers can listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://www.startalkradio.net/all-access/exploring-earths-oceans-with-sylvia-earle-and-fabien-cousteau/Photo Credit: Amanda Meyer/USFWS. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. Welcome to the Hall of the Universe! I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist, and tonight we dive in and explore the oceans of planet Earth, featuring my interview with the legendary oceanographer, Sylvia Earle. Yes.
Starting point is 00:00:36 And not only that, we also have an interview with famed aquanaut, Fabienne Cousteau. So let's do this. Oh, yes. My comedic co-host tonight, Scott Edson. Scott, welcome back. Good evening, Fabienne Cousteau. Always good to have you.
Starting point is 00:00:54 Always good to have you. And also joining us is marine biologist and conservationist Lori Katz. All right. Thanks for having me. So what do you do? You dive all around the world? Sometimes.
Starting point is 00:01:08 And you do some conserving? That's the fun part of my job. Oh, okay. But most of the time I'm working to try to save some of the most special ocean places we have around the world. Well, we'll be tapping into your expertise throughout this entire program. Because I sat down recently with one of the great pioneers of oceanography, underwater explorer and living legend, Sylvia Earle. Let's check it out.
Starting point is 00:01:29 So Sylvia, I heard a rumor that you were born underwater. Yes. And then you had gills, and then you just had to pretend you were human and came out, and now it's just a charade when you're on dry land. I so wish that were so. My dream, my dream. So what happened to you early in life where all of a sudden being on dry land was not the priority?
Starting point is 00:02:01 Well, I got knocked over by a wave when I was a little kid on the New Jersey shore. See, that's evidence you should go away from the ocean. No. Well, that was my first thought because I couldn't breathe. And then suddenly my toes touched the bottom and my head came out, and I realized that was kind of cool. That was fun. And my mother, who was watching, mother of all mothers, instead of reaching in and grabbing me and saying,
Starting point is 00:02:22 you're never going in the ocean again, saw the big smile on my face, and she let me go back in. So she tossed you back in? Yeah. Take her, ocean. Okay, so this is a parent who sees the joy in adventure and the adventure of joy. Yeah, that's right. Yep.
Starting point is 00:02:41 I agree there's not enough parent energy supporting the experiments that children might... Well, again, I had parents... Might be victims of, even. Yeah, yeah. And it's so influential when you're a kid. But already I had fallen in love with the big craggy horseshoe crabs. I know those.
Starting point is 00:03:04 Living fossils. They look prehistoric, I mean, those things. When they go back. It's like, what is that? 300 million years. You pick it up and it's all kind of. Yeah. There's all this creepy stuff underneath and they got this tail and.
Starting point is 00:03:16 You know, I felt as if I knew more than some of the grownups who walk down the beach. They, oh, don't touch that. You'll stab you with that spiky tail. And I said, what are you thinking? These are nice little guys. You know, they never hurt anybody. And I knew as a kid, because I don't know, you just have that empathy for other forms of life.
Starting point is 00:03:37 So you were a weird kid. Just say that. Just admit it. Nothing's changed much. Yeah, so every now and then, a weird kid turns into an extraordinary adult. It's like she's got a superhero origin story, you know? It's like she was attacked by a wave, and then she devotes her life to studying her attacker.
Starting point is 00:03:58 That's exactly how that plays out. Were you attacked by a planet at some point? Yeah, no, no, no. I have no superhero powers or anything. I think everyone would disagree with that. But it'd be cool if I was attacked by a black hole and I came out with like black hole energy. And if I didn't like you, I'd just suck you into a black hole. Spaghettify. Spaghettify you, indeed. So with her weirdness turning into the adult that she is, like there's, I got to read this list of what she is. So she's a marine biologist,
Starting point is 00:04:26 National Geographic Explorer in Residence. She's logged 7,000 hours underwater and led more than 100 undersea expeditions. She's chief scientist at NOAA from 1990 to 1992. And she's
Starting point is 00:04:41 very influential in her field that so many people call her her deepness. So she has an honorific royalty title because of this. And so I was wondering, do you have an origin story with your love of the ocean, Lori? Yeah, it actually is quite similar to hers. I haven't reached her deepness status. But I had a collision with a wave as well. Although it was... How old were you? A toddler.
Starting point is 00:05:08 But instead of being knocked over, it was being thrown into the waves actually by my dad. So like Sylvia's mom, I had a parent who encouraged me to love and respect the ocean, but not to fear it. Wait, wait, wait. Your dad threw you into the ocean? Yeah. This is to teach you to respect the ocean? Well, to love it. So at that point he... But not to respect your family. So he would throw me into the ocean
Starting point is 00:05:36 and my mom's friends thought he was absolutely insane that this three-year-old was being thrown into the ocean. Crazy dad stuff. Absolutely. But every single time I'd pop up giggling my head off, and so pretty soon they thought I was the crazy one. So she mentioned the horseshoe crab, which is completely creepy. And so is there a point where it's hard for a human to feel empathy for sea creatures
Starting point is 00:05:59 if they're not furry and cuddly? Well, I think it's hard for people to have empathy for anything that's different from them or far away. But if you experience marine life, it's hard not to have empathy for them. Even if they're creepy and weird? Yeah, so let me give you an example. I was recently diving on a reef, and I saw a cuttlefish, which is a relative of squid and octopus. So not particularly cuddly. Isn't that the thing that can like as big suckers on
Starting point is 00:06:25 the front exactly and what i watched it do is take those big suckers as tentacles and reach it down into each branch of coral and i looked in close and it was actually caressing and turning each of its eggs and it's hard not to have empathy for a loving mom. Yeah, but it still doesn't have the face. It doesn't have the emotional stuff that we can relate to. It doesn't have a vertebrate face. Faces are very vertebrate things, aren't they? It has eyes and it has personality. You're special, I think, because we, I think, I need something I can relate to, something I can recognize of myself in,
Starting point is 00:07:04 and I very seldom will turn my eggs with my sucker face. And so I think that's why fish get kind of a bum deal, because they don't have a face you can look at and adore because you don't see yourself in it so much. Well, you know, I disagree. So manta rays are considered to be one of the smartest fish in the ocean, and they are so smart that they actually can recognize individual humans and divers. And the way that they recognize you is by your eyes.
Starting point is 00:07:32 So they will come and they will swim and they will look you in the eye and they'll know who you are. Well, they know more than I do when I look at a fish then. I think that there's a way to make connection with all of these animals. So this is the first sort of retinal test? Retinal ID? Yeah, they'll form relationships with people, and unless you actually cover up a diver's eyes, they'll know who you are.
Starting point is 00:07:58 So don't harass them. So if you want to get away from one of them, you can just do that and they won't know you. They'll no longer recognize you. It's like the old-fashioned photos where you're not supposed to recognize the person. They put a little black strip across their eyes. Like, you don't recognize the body or the hair or anything else.
Starting point is 00:08:15 You know, that was how they used to do that. Yeah. But not anymore. I think fish would really be advantaged by having a more expressive face. So you want fish to have eyebrows? That's the secret. That's all I'm asking, yes. So, is that so hard? Is that so wrong? Can you do that, please?
Starting point is 00:08:33 I'll work on it. Thank you. That'll be your next big genetic project. Yeah, indeed. It's just for their advantage. I mean, look at that. Well, Sylvia Earle loves every fish in the sea, no matter what, with or without eyebrows. And I asked her about her love of the ocean.
Starting point is 00:08:48 Just tell me. Speak the love. And let's see what she says. When I think of people who love the ocean, many of them just like sailing the ocean. Yeah, or surfing. Surfing, right. Or swimming. So the ocean to them is a surface.
Starting point is 00:09:02 I know. And to you, it's a three-dimensional... The ocean is the wet part. Universe. The wet part? Really? It's not the top. Well, it is the top.
Starting point is 00:09:11 Yeah, yeah. It is the bottom. But it's... Boat people, the ocean is a surface. Right? No, it's a juicy part in the middle. It's this part. That's...
Starting point is 00:09:19 And it's alive. That's the thing that... If people think of the ocean, they think rocks and water. And, you know, a place to sail or swim. or to dump things or to take things out of the ocean. But no, the ocean is a living system. So, Laurie, first, remind us what it means for the ocean to be a living system. Because to most people, it's just water. And it contains living things. But to think of it as a living system, Because to most people, it's just water and it contains living things, but to think
Starting point is 00:09:47 of it as a living system, take us there. So in the same way that a forest with birds and trees and bugs that are all interacting is a living system, the ocean's the same way. It's not only full of life, but it's all interacting together in a connected way that kind of keeps it all functioning. Isn't it just big fish eat little fish? That's part of it, but there's a whole complex food web there that most people just don't see and take into consideration. Well, I know, I mean, I study the universe and I happen to know for sure that what happens on Earth's surface has really no effect on anything else in the universe. They're separate things. But for marine scientists like Sylvia Earle, like yourself,
Starting point is 00:10:34 human activity can have a significant influence on what's going on in the center of your research topic. So I just asked her about that. Let's check it out. If you start out as a scientist interested in the ocean and then learn that human activity is changing what the ocean is, does that turn you into a conservationist? Does that alter you? Well, it alters what I have available to see. You know, 90% of the fish have been taken out of the ocean, not just since when I began exploring the ocean,
Starting point is 00:11:12 but really mostly in the last 30 years. We're really good at catching and marketing wildlife from the sea. Half the coral reefs since 1980, since 1980, half the coral reefs since 1980, since 1980, have either become seriously damaged or they're gone. In the Caribbean, I love the Caribbean, the Gulf of Mexico, it's closer to 90%. Some places are more stressed than others, and it's partly because, yes, the planet is warming,
Starting point is 00:11:41 but also we're changing the chemistry of the ocean with acidification also owing to what we're putting into the sky, carbon dioxide, methane, CO2. The ocean is a great buffer and has absorbed much of the carbon dioxide. But beyond a certain point, it becomes carbonic acid. And we've seen a great uptick in the... And even if you don't know what carbonic acid is, it doesn't sound good.
Starting point is 00:12:07 It's acid, acid, acid, acid. Think... Carbonic acid. It just sounds bad. Well, it is bad. And the thought that the ocean is so big, so vast, so resilient, it's too big to fail, right? But now we know it is failing. What does she mean that the ocean is failing? It's too big to fail, right? But now we know it is failing.
Starting point is 00:12:27 What does she mean that the ocean is failing? It's an ocean. So, like she said, for most of history, we thought of the ocean as this inexhaustible space. Inexhaustible. Inexhaustible, and it's... Throw your garbage there. It turns out it's not. We are taking way more life out of the ocean than can be replenished,
Starting point is 00:12:46 and we're putting way more pollution into the ocean than can be absorbed. So you're saying we're killing the ocean? Well, it's not dead yet, but it's certainly, its health is certainly failing. And this carbonic acid problem, how bad is it? It's pretty bad. So what she's talking about there is a process called ocean acidification. And the oceans absorb about a third of the carbon dioxide that humans are putting into the atmosphere, about 22 million tons every day. Every day?
Starting point is 00:13:17 Every day. So it's funny. We think of carbon dioxide as a gas, and gas we think of as light and low density. And now you're telling me 22 million tons of this gas is being absorbed by the ocean. And once it's in the ocean, as she said, it's turning into carbonic acid. So in the last 200 years alone, we've increased the acidity of the ocean by 30%. That's faster than any time in the last 50 million years. And that's bad for marine life. It's bad for a couple of reasons. The first is that in those acidic conditions, we're actually eroding the shells and the skeleton of critical
Starting point is 00:14:02 animals like oysters, mussels, and most importantly, coral reefs. And then the second is that that process actually takes up the chemical building blocks that those animals need to grow. To grow their shells. To grow their shells. And, you know, you might ask, why does that even matter? But a billion people rely on coral reefs for food and livelihoods. And so if those reefs... We say food, they're fishes that live in and only in coral reefs. At least for part of their lifetime or life history. And so if the coral reefs erode,
Starting point is 00:14:37 how are we going to feed them? You know, it's even worse from what I understand is something that's also... I worry every time you look at your cards here. Oh, no, no. Something's going to pop out. I did some research. There's something that's even worse than carbonic acid. What's that?
Starting point is 00:14:52 That's filling our oceans called dihydrogen monoxide. Now, this is a colorless, odorless chemical compound. It contributes to the greenhouse effect. It is a major ingredient in acid rain. And if you inhale it, you die. You can. You can die. And I happen to have some right
Starting point is 00:15:14 here. This is dihydrogen monoxide. What does it taste like? No, no, no. No, no, no. Don't. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Don't... Oh, my God!
Starting point is 00:15:30 Dihydrogen monoxide. H2O. Okay, no. Welcome back to StarTalk. We are talking about ocean exploration and conservation. Live right now by video call is actor and activist Adrian Grenier. He was the star of the HBO series Entourage, remember that? And he's an ocean conservation advocate. Yeah, I'm here.
Starting point is 00:16:16 Hey, man. Hey, Neil. How's it going? Excellent. So, I'm old enough to remember when straws were made of paper. And if they got too wet, they would collapse. And I was kind of quite happy when plastic straws came around. If you succeed and you get rid of plastic straws, how are we going to drink our sodas?
Starting point is 00:16:41 Well, you know, I sip with my lips. My mama didn't give me these beautiful things for nothing. For drinking and kissing, right, right, right. But listen, you know, I think we need to re-innovate, right? The plastic straw and other plastic materials were a great innovation. We just need to step it up again, you know. We need to renew a vision of the future that does not have plastic in our oceans. We're leaching almost 10 million tons of plastic into the ocean every year. And at that
Starting point is 00:17:14 trajectory in 25 years, there's going to be more plastic in the ocean than fish themselves. So I'm just curious, you're a well-known actor and how do actors become activists? What is that transition? Do you go through some activist school? Because all y'all come out protesting something on the other side.
Starting point is 00:17:38 So what actually goes on in Los Angeles? I think we're very blessed in a lot of ways, yeah, I think we're very blessed in a lot of ways. At least I am. And at a certain point, you start to realize that we got to give back.
Starting point is 00:17:52 We got to find that balance. I've lived a great life. I've gotten a lot of the spoils of success. And now it's time for me to do my job as a citizen, as a human, and help do my part. Well, that's a beautiful thing. And it's time for me to do my job as a citizen, as a human, and help do my part. Well, that's a beautiful thing, and it's a message that we are folding into this show. I wish I could be there. I live in Brooklyn, but I'm in LA right now. Right now. Okay. Well, great to see you. Maybe you can come by and visit when you come back
Starting point is 00:18:18 to town. I would love that. All right, Adrian, thanks for calling in. All right. So, clearly, it's hard to get people to care about something that they don't know anything about. So, so much of this exercise is awareness. And so I asked oceanographer Sylvia Earle how much we know about the ocean today, because that could impact how much we end up carrying tomorrow. Let's check it out. Only about 10% of the ocean has been seen at all, let alone seen or mapped,
Starting point is 00:19:00 with the same degree of accuracy that we have for the Moon, Mars, Jupiter, Mercury, you know, we've gotten pretty good. Maybe space is just easier. There's only one atmospheric pressure difference between the surface of the Earth and the vacuum of space. Right. So, what you're dealing with, what's the pressure down at the Marianas Trench? 16,000 pounds per square inch.
Starting point is 00:19:26 But we know how to solve that problem. It was solved in 1960. So, what are we waiting for? Maybe it doesn't have the romance of the sky and the universe. I beg your pardon? Said it to the wrong person. Okay. I said it to the wrong person.
Starting point is 00:19:42 Okay. So, Lori, why are ocean people so sure that the ocean is more romantic than the cosmos? Well, I've got to agree with Sylvia on this one, and I'll... Yeah, of course you're going to agree with Sylvia on this one, okay? See if I can convince you. Yeah, it's going to be hard hard but go on try bring it on i'll take the bait uh-huh well for me i think about the most romantic dives that i've ever had and experiences under the water that's a phrase romantic dive oh i think so okay go on go on so the one that speaks to me the most
Starting point is 00:20:25 was a time in Turks and Caicos in the Caribbean. Imagine diving over a beautiful coral reef and then all of a sudden the reef disappeared. I went over the edge and was above a thousand feet of blue water, just blue everywhere. Like your cosmos, just vast open blue. But out of it came a school of eagle rays, and they came right up out of the blue, right to me, swam by making eye contact, gazing into my eyes, and then swam back out into the blue.
Starting point is 00:21:03 So I don't know about you, but to me, the only thing more romantic than the mystery of finding unknown life is getting to encounter it right here. You need to feed that. Feed that. All right. All right, it's not bad. Not bad. You can outdo me. Not bad, but I don't know if you're ready for my rebuttal. No, I don not bad. Not bad. It's not bad. I don't know if you're ready for my rebuttal.
Starting point is 00:21:27 No, I don't know. I don't know if you can. No, it's coming. I don't know if you can handle it. Are you ready? Try. Try. I get you.
Starting point is 00:21:43 There's romance in the ocean. We came from the ocean. Yes, we did. But before we came from the ocean, we came from the sky. We came from the universe. Our atoms, our molecules are traceable to the crucibles and the centers of stars
Starting point is 00:22:03 across the galaxy that exploded, gave up their lives, scattering that enrichment across gas clouds hither and yon, from which life emerged. That's where I came from first, and the ocean is where I came from second. That was like a nerdy Barry White. So, Laurie, let me ask you. Sylvia is correct. We know more about the surface of the moon and Venus and Mars and Mercury and Jupiter and Saturn than we do of our own oceans. So, up next, we will take a deep dive into Earth's oceans with a submarine shaped like a shark
Starting point is 00:23:01 when StarTalk returns. This is StarTalk. Welcome back to the American Museum of Natural History, right here in New York City. I sat down recently with aquanaut Fabian Cousteau. This is the grandson of the legendary Jacques Cousteau we all remember. And I asked him about carrying on that great family legacy. So let's check it out. So were you kind of obligated to be interested in the ocean?
Starting point is 00:23:34 Would you have been excommunicated? You carry some serious name weight. Yeah, well, it's a double-edged sword. No, I was never obligated in the family, or it was never expected of me in the family to carry on. That's what I was wondering, because you would say, oh, I'm in the family business. You know, it sometimes feels like a business. We're always struggling with connecting people with the value of our life support system, this planet. I want to hear you say that again, that the planet is our life support system.
Starting point is 00:24:05 Give me that sentence again. The planet is our life support system. Spoken from someone who's been underwater who needs life support. There you go. There are correlations. I'm thinking Earth is just here and I do what I want and it's not supporting. I don't think that way.
Starting point is 00:24:21 But we take it for granted. I mean, you're born, you go through your lifetime doing the basic necessities that you need to do to survive, to pay your bills, da-da-da-da-da. But you never think about where your breath is coming from. Lori, where's our breath coming from? Well, the oceans, of course. But that's not what we're taught in school.
Starting point is 00:24:40 In school, we say, oh, the leaves and the plants and it's very land-based teaching. They contribute, but the oceans produce over 50% of the oxygen that we breathe. Most of which is from little plants microscopic that live in the water column. How much does
Starting point is 00:24:57 space generate for us? Yeah, see? Please go on. Why, thank you. So, I mean, I think it's a good example of all the ways that we take for granted what the planet and oceans do for us. They don't just give us the breath that we, the oxygen that we breathe. They regulate our climate. Three out of seven people on the planet rely on seafood for protein every day. Three out of seven? Three out of seven people on the planet rely on seafood for protein every day.
Starting point is 00:25:26 Three out of seven? Three out of seven. And the oceans generate $2.5 trillion for our global economy each year. From fishing, I guess. From fishing, from shipping, from all sorts of different industries. And so we often overlook it, but it's really the blue in our blue planet that makes everything else possible, including us. So Jacques Cousteau, I mean, he was an explorer, a scientist, a filmmaker.
Starting point is 00:25:54 Would you count him as a real-life ocean hero? Yeah, absolutely. He invented scuba, which makes my life a whole lot happier, so I'll call him a superhero. So I didn't know that. And so that's a pretty big shadow for this guy to grow up under. But I think Fabien has done all right for himself. And, you know, he learned to scuba at age four. How do you like that?
Starting point is 00:26:20 I thought I was pretty young. I did it at 12, but he got me beat there. So I'm told he's officially an aquanaut. So that has definition to it? Because it just seems like an astronaut, you go into space. We got that. So an aquanaut, that's not just somebody who goes underwater? No, it's somebody who goes underwater and stays there long enough
Starting point is 00:26:43 that they actually reach an equilibrium with the pressure underwater and the gases in their system. Oh. It takes about 24 hours typically, but I think he's far surpassed that. So, just so I understand, so on land there's one atmospheric pressure. We inhale that, so all the gases in our body recognize and are in balance with one atmospheric pressure. Now you go underwater. Yep. Two atmospheres, three atmospheres, five atmospheres, ten atmospheres.
Starting point is 00:27:09 Yep. Now you breathe air that's under ten atmospheres of pressure. Now your body has to absorb that in a ten atmospheric way, and that takes about 24 hours. Is this the ten atmospheric way? I'm just feeling it. Right, right, right. All right. So that's why you can't come back out too quickly.
Starting point is 00:27:27 Right. Because then 10 atmospheric pressure will bust out of your body. That can't be fun. Right. So you have all of this gas that's been absorbed into your system. Think about it almost like a Coke that you've shaken. And it's got carbonation. It's got all this gas inside of it.
Starting point is 00:27:41 If you open that too fast, the pressure changes. And all of that bubbles out of your system. So as long as it's in your bloodstream, it's liquid and it's fine and you don't feel it at all. But if you pop to the surface, you don't want that gas bubbling out. So this acclimation takes about a day, you say? Okay. So I understand that Fabian Cousteau accomplished this inside an underwater research station where he stayed for 31 days. And Fabien had another recent underwater adventure that I had to ask him about.
Starting point is 00:28:11 Let's check it out. I couldn't believe what I read, but now I have you here to confirm or deny that you have a submarine that looks like a shark. Just tell me that's not true. Just tell me that was a cartoon I saw or something on SpongeBob. You're right on both accounts, by the way. It wasn't a cartoon. It was in a comic book
Starting point is 00:28:33 called Tintin. I remember Tintin. That's always stuck in the back of my mind. It's such a cool idea. But imagination, expression of dreams is what makes things possible. Space exploration is based on that. So is inner space exploration. But still, you made a submarine that looked like a shark. Well, the reason was simple.
Starting point is 00:28:55 You weren't getting close enough to sharks? Well, the reason, yeah, that's exactly what it was. I looked at it, I'm like, cool idea. Okay, right now everyone's studying sharks. This was a few years ago. Everyone's studying sharks in cages and they're throwing chum at the animal and expecting natural behavior. Wait, wait.
Starting point is 00:29:09 Just to be clear, they're not studying sharks in cages. They're studying sharks from cages. Right. I'm sorry. Yes, you're absolutely correct. Okay, so the person is in the cage, and the shark is not in the cage.
Starting point is 00:29:20 Right. And we should always keep it that way. That's right. Did you know about this shark thing? I did. I haven't had the pleasure of seeing it, but I have heard about it. It's a kind of a Trojan horse where you can get close enough to the sharks and people come out. Well, you would think that, but I think they actually can probably tell that he's there. Sharks don't actually use their sense of sight very much. They more rely on their sense of smell and a special sense that they can read electric charges or the heart rates of animals. And so even though he's visually camouflaged, I would imagine that they can see him.
Starting point is 00:29:59 Well, to help us continue this conversation about undersea exploration, we have a professional submarine pilot standing by live right now on video call. So, hello. Hi. This is Erica Bergman. Hey, everybody. You're a submarine pilot? That's right. And that wouldn't happen to be your submarine behind you?
Starting point is 00:30:23 Oh, what, this old thing? So, where are you? Well, I'm in my workshop with a bunch of tools, the submarine itself, and I'll actually take you down right now. Sorry, it's hard to hold with one hand. You're doing a great job, by the way. Thank you. Yes, okay.
Starting point is 00:30:41 So this is the hatch right here, and when I close this hatch, it seals all of the water out. So it's basically the opposite of an airplane. And an airplane, when you go up, because the pressure is decreased, all of the rivets tighten down. In our case, all of the seals are the opposite direction. And when water presses in, it seals this hatch up here. There we go. It's quite heavy. So the water pressure...
Starting point is 00:31:11 I'm very strong, don't worry. The water pressure does your sealing for you. Exactly. So what's the coolest place you've been in this thing? Oh, Vancouver, BC actually has this stunning ecosystem that i never could have imagined in a million years and it is in fact 500 million years old it's called a glass sponge reef and it's the first animal life form on earth they're a single-celled organism that grow huge. They look like trumpets that have been hanging out underwater for millennia because they've been hanging out underwater for millennia.
Starting point is 00:31:53 I wonder what they say about you. Well, Erica, thank you for giving us a tour of your pride and joy. Sure, of course. My pleasure. Excellent. So coming up next, we'll explore oceans on other planets on StarTalk from the American Museum of Natural History, and we are featuring my interview with the legendary oceanographer Sylvia Earle. And back in 1970, when NASA was putting men on the moon,
Starting point is 00:32:48 Sylvia Earle and her team of all-female aquanauts were exploring deep beneath the waves. Let's check it out. There were no women involved with going in the sky at that point. But there was a team of women who were allowed to experience living underwater in isolation and to simulate in some fashion the what others would come to experience in space that was the isolation being remote and under quotes hostile circumstances i've never thought of the ocean as being particularly hostile but it is true you have to take your life support system with you. Yes, yes.
Starting point is 00:33:25 You're going to have a little house underwater, which we did, the Tektite Underwater Laboratory. And when we... So you just lived underwater? Yeah, for two weeks. Two weeks? So there are ten different teams of people over a period of a year.
Starting point is 00:33:39 And the first year that preceded that, 1969, was just four guys stayed for two months underwater. So is that the oceanic equivalent of the Mercury 7 astronauts? The first set of people just testing the limits of the equipment as well as the physiology. And the effects on the body, yeah. And behavior. On all of the Tektite missions from Tektite 1 to Tektite 2, when they had these ten teams of scientists exploring the ocean,
Starting point is 00:34:09 we were monitored, when we were inside at least, by teams of people who looked at us day and night and made little notes about what we were doing. Wow. So you were like a little underwater diorama. Yeah. So that mission was called Tektite 2. Let the record show that tektites come from space. And you're naming an underwater thing after space objects.
Starting point is 00:34:34 They are found underwater, though. Because they fell from space. I'll give you that one. So this is the longest duration that scientists have ever been continuously submerged. I was very impressed to learn about that, that that was happening contemporaneously with our missions to the moon. And I bet that's not an accident. They share a lot of challenges, right?
Starting point is 00:34:53 So you need air where there isn't any, breathable air. You can be isolated for long periods of time. They both have unflattering suits. Unflattering suits. We're trying to change that, actually. There's a whole next frontier of spacesuits that are a little bit sexy and a little bit interesting. What else? Access to food. They're both jobs that I pretend to have when trying to impress women.
Starting point is 00:35:16 Is that right? Sure. Oceanographer. Astronaut. Really? Same thing. And how's that been working for you? I'm sitting here by myself. Did I tell you I'm an astronaut? Did he tell you I'm a room biologist? Is she lying? No, she's not lying. Of the two of you, she's the one not lying. So why was Tektek too important? of you she's the one not lying. So why was Tech Tech too important? Other than what she said, did it have a bigger significance in the day and for what
Starting point is 00:35:49 followed? Yeah I think I mean Sylvia has been an inspiration for a whole generation of marine biologists, myself included, who saw her open up that frontier and make it seem feasible for women to be part of this industry. You know, there's still barriers, but she definitely set the path. So we found a newspaper headline from 1970 about Sylvia Earle's mission underwater. And you know what the headline read? Beacon Hill housewife to lead a team of female aquanauts. That's the kind of stuff that went down back then.
Starting point is 00:36:29 I actually have a stack of newspapers from an alternate universe where the headlines... You have access to the multiverse? Yes. You didn't tell me that. You got to come over. Over there, their headlines treat male scientists like we treated female scientists. Really? Okay, so what do you have? I got this.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Father of three finds time to walk on the moon. How does he balance it all? Another one. Physicist shows off some leg while at beach. Writes theory. This one? Bossy astronomer won't quit nagging about Earth revolving around sun. All right, so I also chatted recently with famed underwater explorer Fabien Cousteau.
Starting point is 00:37:24 You know, I had to ask him about the idea of exploring oceans beyond Earth. Let's check it out. You may know that we're discovering oceans on moons of planets. Sign me up. I'm there. So Europa, one of the moons of Jupiter, as all evidence shows that there's a layer of ice afloat atop an ocean that may have been an ocean for billions of years. So when we astrophysicists go there, we're going to have to call one of you guys up because we don't do that. That's what you guys do.
Starting point is 00:38:00 But you have to cut through the ice. That's another kind of thing. And we'll just send you down there, and we'll just stay up top. How are you doing down there? I have no problem with that. Bring me with you. But it is a really, really intriguing part of what you're doing, what your discoveries are doing, because it has made me dream of,
Starting point is 00:38:21 wow, if what is down in our oceans is so amazing, what's over there? So, Laura, do you like this idea of alien oceans? Yeah, absolutely. So we can send you there, too. Sure, sign me up. Yeah, so we talked about Jupiter's moon, that was Europa, but also there's a moon, Enceladus, orbiting Saturn. These are moon planets, if you will,
Starting point is 00:38:45 that are kept warm deep inside because of the gravity stress that they experience in orbit around their host star. And so the surface is icy, but we have liquid water beneath. And it's not fundamentally different from cutting through polar ice and reaching the lake or whatever is the ocean below. And so it's a global subsurface ocean.
Starting point is 00:39:08 How thick is that surface? Well, we don't want it to be thick, so... because that makes it harder to cut through. But realistic estimates put it at about a kilometer. And so the hole you cut to go ice fishing has to be really deep. So we haven't really figured out how to do that. Some are imagining you can get like a radioactive heat source that just melts its way down, but then you put radioactivity down in the water supply and affect whatever life might be there. So there are issues that have to be resolved. So if we go there, you'd sign up.
Starting point is 00:39:41 Absolutely. I mean, you have no idea what you could find there. It makes me actually think about exploring here on our oceans. In the 70s, oceanographers found for the first time hydrothermal vents. They kind of assumed that they were there, modeled them there, but they finally found them and were shocked that they not only found life in these really hostile environments, but they found life that made their living an entirely different way than any other life form that they had found. They actually found life that used the chemicals coming out of these vents to create energy, a process called chemosynthesis. Rather than from the sun. Rather than from the sun. So if organisms can support themselves in a whole new way here on Earth,
Starting point is 00:40:28 I mean, think about what's possible in these other oceans. It blows it wide open. It blows it wide open. And you're discovering new species every what? Every day? Every year? Well, some of the reefs that I work on in Indonesia, it's on a weekly basis that we're discovering a new species. So around the world, definitely on a daily basis. Who needs space? Thank you. It's the world, definitely on a daily basis. Who needs space?
Starting point is 00:40:46 Thank you. It's the last time you're invited on this. You're supposed to have my back. Look, coming up, we assess the future of our oceans here on planet Earth. Because I sat down recently with underwater explorer and living legend, Sylvia Earle. I asked for her outlook on protecting the world's oceans,
Starting point is 00:41:06 and this is what she said. Now, I think we're at that point in time that we have been able to develop the technologies with the ability to speak to other brains on the other side of the planet, and we're connected. We have the computers to be able to crunch data to analyze these masses of information see patterns that we could not see before to give
Starting point is 00:41:33 us insight to give us some answers to who are we who are we anyway where do we come from and where are we going lori who are we and where do we come from and where are we going? Lori, who are we? And where do we come from and where are we going? And very quickly, please. That's a pretty big question, Neil. So we did come from the ocean. So we're inherently sea creatures and we're still dependent on the ocean
Starting point is 00:41:59 for our very survival. We, as of now, know of one planet that can sustain life. This one. And it can only support life as we know it with very specific conditions, very specific climatic conditions. And the ocean is what keeps the earth hospitable for us. So without the oceans, earth hospitable for us. So without the oceans, our very survival is in jeopardy. We are at a moment in time when we actually have the capacity to change that. We can reverse these trends. We have the knowledge, we have the science, we know what we need to do. The question for me is whether we're going to have the wisdom to use it.
Starting point is 00:42:44 You're bumming us out. Man. Well, Sylvia Earle. No, no, it's the truth. Sometimes the truth is a bummer. Sylvia Earle actually has an initiative to protect oceans, and it's called Mission Blue. And so I asked her about that mission.
Starting point is 00:43:01 Let's check it out. So the idea of blue parks protecting the ocean. Nobody thought we needed to protect the ocean when I was a kid. Just the ocean version of a national park. Exactly, a place that you deliberately say this place is special. But here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:43:21 It turns out that it was only 0.01% of the ocean was really safe for wildlife, protected where the fish could do their thing in peace, whatever that is. Now... Where they can eat each other in peace. They can eat each other and one another in peace, right. So, okay.
Starting point is 00:43:42 It seems it's good ideas, but not enough. My wish was to explore the ocean, to use our mighty powers to communicate, but to lead to a network of hope spots, protected areas around the world large enough to save and restore the blue heart of the planet. So what will happen is when fish achieve collective consciousness, they'll put out maps of where these hope spots are, then they'll all cluster. But I think we have time.
Starting point is 00:44:13 I think that especially in the next decade, next 10 years will shape the next 10,000 years in a magnified way because we still have 10% of the sharks. We still have half the coral reefs. So a network of hope spots for the ocean. We've developed kind of a framework where people, wherever in the world you are, to nominate a place in the ocean that you think is important or that you love,
Starting point is 00:44:40 and you say who you are, why this place matters, and what you're going to do to help take care of it. And make it so. It's knowing that is the key to caring. Maybe if you care, you'll do something. You can't care if you don't know. Hope spots, that's a good thing. Laura, are you hopeful about hope spots?
Starting point is 00:45:02 Yeah, I actually am. I think we still have time. So in my work with Conservation International, I actually get to work on blue parks or marine protected areas all around the world and see the dedication of communities and governments and businesses collaborating to make these protected areas. And we actually just reached a milestone. This requires international cooperation. Absolutely. That's why the word international is in your title. Indeed. In the company title, yes. Yeah, it's a lot of work. For everyone's benefit. So I have a hope spot myself. For me, it's a place in eastern Indonesia called the Bird's Head Seascape. and there's more species there than anywhere else in the ocean.
Starting point is 00:45:46 It's the epicenter of marine biodiversity. And I've had the privilege for almost a decade of working there with indigenous communities, governments, to help create a network of large marine parks or these blue parks. And we're now seeing that they're working. So we're now measuring fish and coral coming back. Local fisheries are rebounding. And people have more to eat. And so seeing that and those communities, that's what gives me hope. Well, that's a good note to end on, I think. Well, if I can offer some parting thoughts. I happen to love the ocean.
Starting point is 00:46:30 We went a lot as a kid. And you go to the beach, and you go to the edge, and you chase the wave, the wave chases you back. There seems to be a kind of a magnetic draw to the shoreline that is the boundary between land and water. And that forces me to wonder whether deep down within our DNA, genetically,
Starting point is 00:46:54 we have a memory of having come from the water. Because so many of us are drawn to it. So there's something about it that keeps us coming back. And I will not stand in denial of what might be a search, this genetic search for where we came from. Whether or not you knew explicitly that that was true, you feel it sitting there hearing the ocean come to the shore, watching the sunset over the water, looking at the seashells. I don't know. There's something about it.
Starting point is 00:47:33 I think it's real. And I think not enough people take that the next step and ask, what's going on down deep within and how does my life depend on it. We came from there, and we depend on it. And that is a cosmic perspective. You've been watching StarTalk. Thank you, Scott Adsit, Laurie Katz.
Starting point is 00:48:03 I've been your host, your personal astrophysicist, Neil deGrasse Tyson. And as always, I bid you to keep looking up!

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