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مسلسل Pole to Pole مترجم - Episode 1
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00:03You
00:30This is your captain speaking from the region.
00:33North Pole is just ahead of us.
00:41I ain't no professional diver,
00:43but this don't seem like dive weather.
00:49Hey, so how many people have you taken out
00:52to dive in this kind of weather?
00:54Oh, you got the first one.
00:56Oh, I'm the first one.
00:58There's no way this is a good idea.
01:15Okay, let's go.
01:24Come on, Will.
01:26Come on.
01:38We got one shot at this.
01:40We got one shot at this.
02:03For 100 days, I'm going to cross the seven continents.
02:11And seek out some of the most extreme places on Earth.
02:19To see our planet as it's never been seen before.
02:25That's insane.
02:28I'll sail the high seas, trek vast deserts, and scale towering forests.
02:40I'll reach new frontiers, discover new species, and embrace new ways of living.
02:56To truly understand our planet.
02:59To truly understand our planet, I'm stepping into the unknown.
03:02A journey to the edges of our world.
03:06To see it from pole to pole.
03:10To see it from pole to pole.
03:16To see it from pole to pole.
03:25To see it from pole to pole.
03:25To虹.
03:28Toh.
03:52There it is, Antarctica, look at that down there.
03:58No trees, no birds, like nothing.
04:04Just snow and ice.
04:12It is a frozen continent and nobody lives down there.
04:18Except for a few explorers and scientists.
04:22This is about to be crazy.
04:25When I was a little boy, I always wanted to be an explorer.
04:31I had a mentor named Dr. Alan Counter.
04:35He was a brilliant scientist and fearless explorer.
04:39I called him the Black Indiana Jones.
04:42And he was always going on these amazing adventures and he would invite me to go along.
04:49But I never went.
04:51I'd always tell him, hey, I'll catch you on the next one.
04:54He used to say, the answers to everything important are out there at the edges of our world.
05:04He passed away a few years ago.
05:07Ever since, I've wondered what was out there that he wanted me to discover.
05:15I've decided to go see for myself.
05:18I'm going to begin my journey by trying to touch the absolute farthest extreme.
05:24The very bottom of the planet.
05:26The South Pole.
05:34Dr. Counter, this one's for you.
05:37The South Pole.
05:57Hey.
05:59Oh.
06:01What's up, man?
06:03Jeez.
06:07Richard.
06:07Well, awesome to meet you.
06:09Pleasure, man.
06:10Pleasure.
06:10Welcome to the seventh continent.
06:13Dude.
06:15It's freezing.
06:18And you brought good weather with you as well.
06:19Yeah, this is good weather.
06:21Okay, cool.
06:22Let's head up to base camp.
06:26My name's Richard Parks.
06:28I'm a polar athlete.
06:31Over the last decade, I've skied more solo,
06:35unsupported and unassisted miles in Antarctica than anyone else in history.
06:40And very proudly, I'm the first person of color to ski solo to the Geographical South Pole.
06:48It's arguably one of the toughest human endeavors on the planet.
06:56The environment doesn't support life.
07:00I've experienced winds in excess of 70 miles an hour and temperatures minus 52.
07:08Any exposed flesh will be susceptible to frostbite.
07:14One of the most painful injuries I've ever had.
07:18It's a very dangerous place.
07:21So, my job with Will is to keep him alive.
07:28Welcome to base camp.
07:29As you can see, we've got a bit of a thing for maps here.
07:32Man, this is cool.
07:34One of the most critical things when you do a map scene is how you place your hands.
07:39Okay.
07:44This isn't happening fast enough.
07:46We need to get those people out of there.
07:50Seriously, though, Will, this is the most hostile environment on the planet.
07:55The risk to life is really serious.
07:58There is very little margin for error.
08:01So, we're going to have to look after each other and be absolutely dialed on everything we do.
08:05All right.
08:07So, I'm going to stop fooling around.
08:09Okay.
08:11We're in West Antarctica at the moment.
08:12And we're nestled in the Heritage Range, part of the Ellsworth Mountains.
08:17Mm-hmm.
08:18And this little cross here marks the geographical South Pole.
08:23And out there, that is the very, very bottom of our planet.
08:28And how far is that?
08:30About 700 miles from here.
08:33Wow.
08:35That will be as far from anything and everything I will have ever been in my life.
08:41Yeah.
08:42Yeah.
08:48Antarctica is bigger than America.
08:51And the South Pole sits in the center of it.
08:55So, first, we begin with a trek through the Ellsworth Mountains to a remote air base.
09:01Then fly to the vast ice sheet called the Polar Plateau, where we'll continue on skis to the South Pole.
09:11Apparently, this frozen continent holds some of the planet's deepest secrets.
09:19Why couldn't they just be in the Bahamas?
09:24I know that you're keen to meet the scientists that do pioneering research in Antarctica.
09:30So, before we get to the Pole, we're going to stop here at a tiny research outpost called Cryosphere-1.
09:38So, who's out there?
09:40There are three Brazilian scientists out there who are some of the most remote people in the whole world.
09:46And they're out there by themselves?
09:48Yeah.
09:50All right.
09:51So, they might be a little crazy.
09:52And we need to be prepared for that, too.
09:55All right.
10:01So, when was the last time you skied well?
10:03Uh, about a decade ago.
10:07Okay.
10:08Wow.
10:09You know what they say.
10:11Yeah, just like riding a bike.
10:17Hey, I got a joke for you.
10:19How do you find Will Smith in Antarctica?
10:23You follow the Fresh Prince.
10:28First time on the continent of Antarctica, I am now officially a polar explorer.
10:37That's right.
10:38Y'all know what it is.
10:40Where are you headed, buddy?
10:42Up.
10:44I think everyone on the continent should go through essential training.
10:49Are you feeling well?
10:52So, the first leg was a chance to put Will through his paces.
10:56I do sure hope we're going around that mountain.
11:00Oh, jeez.
11:03Everything in Antarctica is working against you.
11:06Oh!
11:07And even the simplest of functions, like breathing, is a challenge in Antarctica.
11:14So, the air is incredibly dry out there.
11:18So, just breathing means that we're dehydrating.
11:26Stop and have something to drink?
11:27Oh, yeah.
11:29You know, hydration is so important out here.
11:32You know, Antarctica holds like 60% of the world's fresh water.
11:37Mm-hmm.
11:37Um, yeah, it's the world's largest desert.
11:42So, this is a desert?
11:46Yep.
11:47It's nuts, isn't it?
11:49I don't feel like I'm in a desert right now.
11:51Different to what we imagine, isn't it?
11:53In your mind, when you see snow, you assume water.
11:57Yeah, yeah.
11:57A snow desert, that's amazing.
12:02When I think of a desert, I think of golden sands.
12:10Intense heat.
12:13Sun beating down.
12:17But deserts are defined by how dry they are.
12:21And Antarctica gets less rainfall than the Sahara.
12:37The snow almost never melts.
12:40So, it's both the coldest and the driest place on Earth.
12:47What do you think, Will?
12:49Oh, man.
12:50This is spectacular.
12:53It's big, isn't it?
12:54This is spectacular.
13:06You know, most of the time I'm out here, I'm on my own.
13:09I know, that's crazy.
13:11No, so, it's so nice to have someone to talk to.
13:13I know.
13:14It's real.
13:14I want to know, how did you do this by yourself for almost a month for 12 hours a day?
13:28Like, how?
13:2916, actually, Will.
13:30Oh, 16 hours.
13:33The biggest challenge for me has always been the kind of emotional state.
13:38Some days would be easy.
13:39Some days would be a real grind.
13:41Yeah, yeah, yeah.
13:42And for me, it was music that got me through that, you know, helped me regulate.
13:46Oh, wow.
13:49So, you have an Antarctic playlist.
13:52I do.
13:54Actually, I've got it right here if you want to listen to it.
13:57Oh, absolutely.
13:58There you go.
14:00What you got?
14:00Let's see what you got.
14:01Wow.
14:02Hit me.
14:03Okay.
14:06Okay.
14:09Ah, there you go.
14:12Ah.
14:16There you go.
14:24Ah.
14:25Break it down.
14:27Ah.
14:28Ah.
14:29Oh.
14:30You know, they say dance like no one's watching.
14:34Oh.
14:35No one's watching.
14:37Ah, I'm back.
14:41See how easy it is, though, to feel so happy?
14:44Yeah, man.
14:52Antarctica is unlike anything I have ever seen.
14:57The beauty and sheer ferocity of the landscape.
15:01It's otherworldly.
15:03You can be walking on ice that's like three miles thick.
15:10The snowflakes sparkle like diamonds.
15:17And in places, it feels like the ground could just swallow you up whole.
15:34Oh, my God.
15:39It's impressive, isn't it?
15:45Wow.
15:46Wow.
15:47Yeah.
15:49We're going to rendezvous with the plane, the other side of those mountains.
15:53But first, we've got to climb this ice wall.
15:56Really?
15:56Yeah.
15:58That's tall.
16:00Yeah, it's big.
16:02We're going to climb it.
16:04Straight up there.
16:07What are you thinking?
16:09Yeah, I'm thinking I don't like that at all.
16:11I want to test you, Will.
16:13Mm-hmm.
16:13I want you going into the next stage of this expedition, hardened and ready.
16:19Okay.
16:21It'll be scary, though.
16:22Show me the way.
16:24Awesome.
16:26See you at the top.
16:27All right.
16:30All right.
16:36The climb is about 300 vertical feet of hard ice.
16:41And that's quite scary.
16:43Because you know you're on a slippery slope.
16:49There you go, Rich.
16:50Good job.
16:52Thanks, Will.
16:54Whoa.
16:55You don't want to take a fall off a 300-foot ice wall.
17:01Woo!
17:07I'm sorry.
17:08I didn't hear you.
17:11Okay.
17:14We had had virtually no wind, bluebird skies, but the weather can be unpredictable and incredibly
17:22volatile.
17:26And things can escalate and go wrong very, very quickly.
17:42Will!
17:44Will!
17:45Let's get moving, mate!
17:49You know the wind is blowing now, though, right?
17:53There was no wind when you went, Rich!
17:58Everybody knows the wind blows in the afternoon.
18:02I'm coming!
18:16Will!
18:19The wind's picking up!
18:26Oh, my God.
18:32It's like a freaking hurricane!
18:42Oh, gee.
19:04I'll go soon now for a couple minutes.
19:06The wind is blowing in my face.
19:10I don't quit a lot.
19:13I generally don't, you know, give up.
19:20The wind is, is, it's, it's cutting like a knife.
19:25I really can't feel my left.
19:28But in Antarctica, you have that moment, you're like, ooh, Mother Nature's actually in charge.
19:43Ah!
19:53Ah!
19:55Ah!
19:58Ah!
19:59Ah!
20:16I don't know.
20:32Ah!
20:34My guy!
20:35Awesome work!
20:38Yeah, awesome work!
20:41Before we got deeper into the continent, I needed something to push Will.
20:47It was terrible down there, but I loved that!
20:51And Will's reaction to it was more than I expected.
20:58Do I have ExploreBeer?
20:59I feel like I have ExploreBeer a little bit.
21:15It's a rough environment out there.
21:21I just keep asking myself, like, how did you end up here?
21:28It's hard out here.
21:32You know, the self-doubt that goes through your mind is torturous, right?
21:44There's always a moment where you get asked a deeper question.
21:54And you just get asked the question, you know, what is your will to continue?
22:08Um...
22:12Are you sorry?
22:14Um...
22:15I felt like you were about to go someplace and you decided not to.
22:20Um...
22:24As a younger man, I used to be a professional athlete.
22:27I played rugby for a living.
22:31Played for Wales.
22:33Won trophies with Ponipri, the Leeds.
22:38But I injured my shoulder.
22:44Basically tore the cartilage out of my right shoulder.
22:47And, um...
22:48Doctor said that I would never play again.
22:54And it sent me into a period of depression and, you know, I...
23:00I still find it difficult to talk about, but I...
23:03I thought the worst thoughts.
23:14Ah...
23:16Maybe you should have put something stronger in there.
23:18Maybe you should have...
23:26From the moment I set foot on this continent, it...
23:29It...
23:30It took hold of me.
23:32It was my way out of a dark hole.
23:35I deeply understand that.
23:39I've had different types of experience to lead me to that place
23:45where you're in the center of the storm.
23:51Hmm.
23:52I've had a couple of really big storms this past, you know, couple of years.
23:58And people feel like they will be destroyed by the storm.
24:03It's in those moments of adversity that we kind of find out who we are.
24:11The key is keep moving.
24:13Mm-hmm.
24:14Just keep moving forward into it.
24:25Richard has walked a journey that most of us will never venture.
24:35He's earned his wisdom through adversity.
24:42And...
24:43It made me wonder...
24:45What's out there waiting for me to discover?
24:55Oh, Father, tell me...
24:59Do we get what we deserve?
25:05Oh, we get what we deserve.
25:13Oh, we get what we deserve.
25:18Oh, we get what we deserve.
25:23Oh, we get what we deserve.
25:24Oh, we get what we deserve.
25:24How much farther?
25:26We're not far now.
25:29How are you doing?
25:31No, I'm good, I'm good.
25:32Oh.
25:32We get what we deserve.
25:37Oh, we get what we deserve.
25:38There it is.
25:39Oh, you let your food from where,
25:43Oh,
25:45My mentor, Dr. Counter, used to say,
25:49to truly understand our world,
25:52we must be willing to step into the unknown.
25:57Well, you can't get more out there than where we're going next.
26:02To meet three scientists
26:06who are some of the most remote people on Earth.
26:13I think we've just floated to airspace over the Polar Plateau.
26:17It looks infinite.
26:20It just goes on forever.
26:23It's incredible, y'all. Man.
26:26The Polar Plateau, this huge glacial ice sheet,
26:30as big as Australia,
26:32it's where the coldest temperature on the planet
26:34has been recorded, close to minus 100 degrees Celsius.
26:38But that's ice on the inside of the window.
26:44Richard, he didn't write anything on his window.
26:48Because he's mature.
26:50Landing lights are on.
26:51We're good to go.
26:53All right, here we go.
27:10There you go, Will.
27:12Yeah.
27:13Have you seen that?
27:17A lot of what you're looking at
27:19has probably never been touched by a human.
27:24Oh, my God.
27:26This feels like landing on another planet.
27:30There's nothing.
27:31I know. It's wild.
27:34What kind of secrets are going to be out here?
27:42What's our evacuation plan if they start tripping?
27:46You're okay. Yeah.
27:47All right.
27:53There's, uh...
27:54Nobody.
27:59Nothing.
28:02It's a full horror movie set up.
28:05It's the black dude in the horror movie.
28:07That's exactly what's about to happen.
28:19Brasilia.
28:22All right.
28:25All right.
28:26There it is.
28:28Cryos for a one.
28:31This dude better have some real secrets.
28:34His name better be
28:35Obi-Wan Yoda
28:38Morpheus
28:39Gandalf Oracle III.
28:41This is crazy.
28:43I can put
28:45a foot on the ladder.
28:47And then
28:47another foot on there.
28:54Hello.
28:55Jeez.
28:55Where are you, sir?
28:57Yeah, great.
28:58Oh, man.
28:59Oh, my God.
29:00Oh, my God.
29:01Oh, my God.
29:02Oh, my God.
29:02Oh, my God.
29:02Sir, Hator, absolute pleasure.
29:05Good that you have come.
29:06I'm very happy to be here.
29:06Welcome to Cryosphere 1.
29:17So, what is this place?
29:19This is Cryosphere 1, a research station.
29:22We are researching the climate of Antarctica.
29:26We measure the atmosphere.
29:28Why all the way out here?
29:31Like, there's nothing for a long way.
29:37It is very important to understand what is going on here.
29:40Yeah.
29:41Because everything that happens globally produces a trace that comes to Antarctica.
29:48Wow.
29:52Gases produced naturally and by humans make their way to Antarctica through the atmosphere.
30:00And the amazing thing is traces of those gases are captured in the ice as it forms over time.
30:09And in the ice, we found a record of the history of this planet for the last nearly one million
30:18years.
30:18All right, so, this looks crazy, so you can track global history through the layers of snow and ice.
30:29That's true.
30:30How do you do it, though?
30:35You have to look to see the secrets of nature, where it is not easy to find.
30:421
30:51That contains samples of the Earth's atmosphere going back nearly a million years.
31:01and the deeper you dig through the layers of ice the further you look back in time
31:09we can tell when a volcano erupted when humans started to farm the earth
31:17and even when we detonated the first atomic bomb
31:26so it's like the rings of a tree it's like a layer cake yeah you could see when the internal
31:32combustion engine came on you can see the proliferation of coal yeah for sure there is
31:38all the imprints there wow antarctica is a book a history book if we studied the climate of the
31:47path we could understand better what will happen in the future that's beautiful
31:54all this time i was seeing the ice as the obstacle something to ski across climb conquer
32:05but it turns out right under my feet was the history of our planet frozen in time the ice
32:16is the hard drive of the earth and of us
32:29so how many years have you been doing this uh i've been working in antarctica for 35 years
32:35how do you do it though like all the way out here um detached from the the entire world
32:44we have a very hard days yeah it is not simple we just try to do our best
32:53i grew up in the suburbs of rio janeiro
32:58when i arrived in antarctica had never seen snow before
33:07and the wind was absolutely freezing but the hardest part it is not the climate for me it is the
33:18people
33:18that you leave behind
33:20i have two sons
33:26my mother she is 99 years old
33:31so it is very hard to be away from them
33:37but we know that we are doing something good for everybody
34:00thank you
34:02thank you
34:11you know i just think that we should all work together
34:26so i get how antarctica can help you study the past
34:31but you mentioned the future what have you discovered what has come out of the research
34:37project well um we have some evidence there is a very interesting phenomena
34:45that is named atmospheric rivers atmospheric rivers yes you can imagine the river in the sky
34:57in south america we have been aware of the rivers in the sky for many years
35:04the rivers they are formed when huge volumes of moisture are released by the amazon forest
35:12and then it is to sport it into the atmosphere to form a fast flowing column of water vapor in
35:19the sky
35:28what does that have to do with antarctica we discovered that rivers in the sky will reach antarctica oh wow
35:35it crosses the atlantic ocean and it got to antarctica
35:47so the largest freshwater rivers on earth are actually in the sky
35:56they can be thousands of miles long and carry 15 times more than the mississippi river
36:04the ones hatar discovered are coming all the way into antarctica but when a river of warm moist air
36:15arrives in a frozen desert you can imagine you got a problem on your hands
36:34all that history in the ice
36:38dropped into the ocean and there are much bigger consequences for our planet
36:48we are going to a future of probably a collapse of the west antarctica
36:55so this is millions of people around the world that will suffer this influence of the sea level rising
37:03but here we can provide better climate models that should predict better for future generations
37:12the idea of how interconnected everything is it's landing in a way that it's never
37:20landed before the planet needs to be cared for if we want to be here yeah for sure
37:28what's really amazing to me is that haytor has worked out here for 35 years in this barren place with
37:38nobody around but what he's found is something that could benefit all of us
37:48i'm starting to understand what dr counter meant you really have to get out there to find the answers to
37:57what's important
38:01we're going to start to make our way towards the pole and it's going to be colder
38:08i don't like that
38:11but i am going to do everything i have to do to not sound weak in front of rich because
38:20he's hardcore
38:20i am so
38:53We are headed to the south pole, it is minus 37 windchill, it is freezing!
39:12Oh my goodness, a whole other planet out here.
39:18It is like the surface of the moon, the polar plateau.
39:28It is like flat and endless and there is no smells, no sounds.
39:46Only the noise that you're making.
39:48Hey Will!
39:52Everything looks exactly the same.
39:58Feels like we're going around in circles.
40:03The sensory deprivation can definitely make you go crazy.
40:12All right, Richard.
40:13How much farther?
40:17About seven miles.
40:20Okay.
40:23I'm starting to believe maybe there is no south pole.
40:40It's horrific out here.
40:43I can't feel my lips.
40:46Richard will be leaving me anyway.
40:54Damn skis.
40:56All right, Richard.
40:58Richard, where is the pole?
41:05How are you doing?
41:06Huh?
41:07How are you doing?
41:09It could be forever.
41:11This is as far away from away as I've ever been.
41:16I'm going to look after you.
41:16You're okay.
41:17You're okay.
41:18We can look after each other.
41:19All right.
41:19Yeah.
41:20I guess we're going to keep going.
41:23Let's get moving.
41:25Let's go.
41:33I guess my biggest worry in Antarctica was that I was going to die and not make it home.
41:50But Dr. Counter used to say, if you're not scared, you're not living.
41:58There it is.
42:00There it is.
42:01You made it, Will.
42:02We're here.
42:04We have arrived.
42:08Richard, you found it.
42:09You found the south pole.
42:12Oh, hell yeah.
42:13A couple hundred meters away.
42:16The south pole, baby.
42:21You know, I don't know how many times people have asked me, what do you miss on expeditions?
42:25It's never anything material.
42:28It's always people.
42:30Jada.
42:30Riri Trey.
42:33Jaden Willow.
42:35My mom, Gigi.
42:38Your baby's about to touch the south pole.
42:40Oh, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
43:10This is pole to pole.
43:12So this is just the start.
43:14So which, which way do I go for the north pole?
43:19Anywhere where you move is north right now.
43:20Oh, ha, ha, ha, that's right.
43:22Any direction, it's north.
43:38You know, when I first got here, I was thinking of it as a lifeless place, you know?
43:45But now I kind of see this ice world is central to life as we know it.
43:53I love her.
43:55I love living here.
43:58And there's so many more extreme places out there to explore.
44:05I'm going to look for secrets in the absolute opposite extreme.
44:11Hey, watch me do it, watch me do it right, hey.
44:16This bustling little town in the Andes is where I'm catching a ride to a place with
44:23more life than anywhere else on the planet, the Amazon.
44:30Hold on, hold on.
44:36Here we go.
44:41Watch me do it, watch me do it right
44:43Watch me do it, watch me do it right
45:09Over on the right, there it is
45:54Watch me do it
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