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00:05the Great Barrier Reef is huge it stretches for over 2,000 kilometers along Australia's
00:14northeast coast so vast it's clearly visible from space and it's not simply a collection
00:28of coral gardens but a network of very different habitats it means there's a complexity of life here
00:40on a scale found almost nowhere else in the world and it doesn't exist in isolation
00:49violent storms are unwelcome visitors
00:56and ocean voyagers arrive here from many parts of the globe
01:09the Great Barrier Reef is such a rich system
01:13that animals are drawn in from the vast empty spaces of the open ocean
01:17from the tiniest plankton to ocean giants
01:42it means that the Great Barrier Reef is an international hub home to some of the greatest wildlife
01:49spectacles on earth
02:10this green turtle's a summer visitor
02:16she's traveled hundreds of kilometers across the ocean
02:19and she's heading to the very beach where she was born
02:27the turtles come to lay her eggs
02:31and she's not alone
02:34out here on the edge of the reef
02:36she's joined by thousands more female turtles
02:44they're all driven by the same instinct
02:48to return home to nest
02:52it's the largest breeding population of green sea turtles in the world
03:13after her long journey she takes a few days to rest and recover
03:21butterfly fish provide a cleaning service clearing away dead skin and the parasites acquired from many
03:27many months at sea
03:44it's always exciting to see a large animal in the sea
03:50and of course the turtles are fairly iconic species in the marine world
03:54and I'm surrounded by them on this dive
03:59hundreds and hundreds of turtles in the water column above me
04:03passing over the reef crest
04:05and out in the blue water
04:15the turtles all converge on small islands
04:19made of coral rock and sand known as coral caves
04:23but not all are suitable for nesting
04:26some are sand banks exposed only at low water
04:32and many others have beaches that are swamped at high tide
04:42islands with deep sand and a covering of vegetation are more stable
04:46and one island in particular seems just right
04:52in the far north of the great barrier reef is rain island
04:58it's so wild and so special that few people are permitted to land
05:04it's one of the most protected islands on earth
05:10this speck in the ocean is barely a kilometer long
05:14yet it attracts thousands of turtles and enormous flocks of seabirds
05:23the birds have flown in from new guinea and japan to the north
05:28fiji to the east and even from the asian mainland
05:31thousands of kilometers away
05:36in summer rain islands the most crowded destination on the great barrier reef
05:43it may look chaotic but there is some order here
05:47brown boobies are everywhere but other species prefer specific nesting sites
05:57red-footed boobies hang out on branches a scarce commodity on the outer roof
06:03caspian terns from japan nest on the sand
06:10friggate birds find low-growing shrubs
06:14and red-tailed tropic birds hide amongst the limestone rocks
06:27the birds like the turtles are here to breed
06:32but the turtles unlike the birds are about to face the greatest challenge of their visit to rain island
06:45by late afternoon they move towards the prime nesting beach that surrounds the entire island
07:01all around me it's like the troops are massing
07:04the landing force is preparing itself and i can just see heads popping up
07:09and dark shapes moving in the shallows
07:12and then a glistening back will appear
07:15this is the moment of transition
07:18when they leave the weightlessness of the sea
07:25the bulk of her heavy body
07:28presses down on all her vital organs
07:33she's beautifully adapted to a life at sea
07:36but ill-equipped to move about on land
07:47her progress is slow
07:49and probably painful
08:14it's quite common for 5000 turtles to emerge in one summer evening
08:19but tonight is anything but ordinary
08:3326 000 turtles are coming up the island from all sides
08:38a world record
08:47it's going to be a long night
08:52these green turtles are only one of the many visitors to the reef
08:57another ocean voyager is heard before it's seen
09:15it's a dwarf minke whale
09:17one of the smallest of the great whales
09:21the turtles have swum from as far away as islands in the south pacific
09:25but the whales have traveled considerably further
09:28all the way from the antarctic
09:31they come to the ribbon reefs
09:34south of rain island
09:35to carve in the warm tropical waters
09:39or to mate
09:46whale watching has become a local tourist attraction
09:49but some whales turn the tables
09:52they go people watching
10:03these are adolescent whales
10:05and they're extremely inquisitive
10:17the moment of that first encounter
10:19is extraordinarily intense
10:21because you see the animal materialize beneath you
10:25first thing you see is the white stripe on the pectoral fin
10:28and then the water seems to solidify
10:31this is a big animal five or six tons
10:35and then you gradually see it turn
10:37and the eye focuses on you
10:40and you focus on the eye
10:42the animals are plainly studying you
10:45and gradually getting closer and closer
10:52you're an object of curiosity to this whale
10:55and it's a remarkable sensation
11:04by hanging on to the rope my position is predictable
11:07so the whales are quite unafraid
11:21the mechanical twang of their call is so powerful
11:24you feel it rather than hear it
11:35being on nodding terms with a minky whale is a whole new experience
11:44and to be here not on ours but on their terms is quite amazing
11:49to be in the audience of the ultimate underwater ballet
12:12the Kazakh україн gia who makes in the audience
12:12for theirwww
12:24and the oglännity
12:24so the traveling of the reef
12:31More musical sounds announce the arrival of even bigger whales.
12:43Humpbacks.
13:13They're one of ten species of whale that visits the reef each year.
13:19They were once hunted almost to extinction, but numbers here have bounced back to 15,000,
13:27about half the pre-whaling population.
13:32Like minkies, humpbacks come up from the Antarctic to mate and to calf.
13:40This mother gave birth a couple of weeks ago.
13:42On already her calf weighs over two tonnes and is more than six metres long.
13:53For the turtle mother, the final and what may turn out to be the most arduous part of her journey
13:59has only just begun.
14:04There seems to be the most arduous part of her journey that is currently living in the city
14:14There seems to be the most arduous part of her journey.
14:18They still have to be the most arduous part of her journey.
14:24There seems to be about four generations in the city.
14:25The first time she finds the most arduous part of the island of an island of an island of an
14:31island,
14:31With thousands of turtles arriving at the same time,
14:36their trails crisscross the sand like tank tracks on a battlefield.
14:49There are just too many turtles for the space available.
14:56She spends much of the night heaving her bulk back and forth across the sand
15:01searching for a vacant nest site.
15:07Such is their enthusiasm for digging,
15:10neighbours are in real danger of being buried alive.
15:16Some even dig up eggs that have already been laid.
15:43After several hours of searching, the female finds a suitable place where the sand is still moist.
15:57Her flippers may be a liability for moving on land, but now they come into their own.
16:02Using her front flippers, she first digs a protective hollow for herself.
16:12Then, with her back flippers, she delicately scoops out a deep pit.
16:36Each one of her clutch of a hundred eggs is the size of a ping pong ball.
16:44A soft shell prevents them from breaking as they drop into the hole.
16:55When she's finished, she'll cover the nest.
16:58And over the coming weeks, her eggs will incubate in the warm sand.
17:04This is a deeply private moment for this turtle.
17:07I do feel I'm rather intruding.
17:16You'll see she's flicking sand to fill in the hole.
17:20And very successfully flicking it straight in my face as well.
17:24But this is a huge physiological effort for this animal.
17:27And you'll see the turtle...
17:29Pah, good one!
17:30That was right in my eye.
17:36That was right on the button.
17:40And I think I'm going to take the subtle hint
17:43that I should just leave her alone and let her get on with it.
17:54By morning, she joins the mass evacuation of the island.
18:11Most of the exhausted turtles head back to the sea at the same time.
18:16So there's an even bigger pile-up at the water's edge than when they arrived.
18:24But quite a few stragglers are left behind.
18:30It's been an absolutely exhausting night for any of the turtles you can see behind me.
18:37In fact, you can actually make out this old girl here is absolutely shattered.
18:41She's completely spent.
18:42And she's just desperately trying to get back into the sea
18:45before the heat of the sun kicks in.
18:50It's been a long time for me.
18:51For the last to leave, it's a race against time.
18:55In a couple of hours, the temperature on the sand will soar.
19:08And on one part of the island, there's a major obstacle that wasn't there when they arrived.
19:21It's been a long time for me.
19:24Rocks exposed at low tide make the return to water anything but easy.
19:33Being reptiles, sea turtles have little control over their body temperature.
19:44There's no shade anywhere.
19:48So those left on the beach risk being cooked alive.
20:14For the unlucky few, this is the last journey they'll ever make.
20:22It's been a long time for me to go to the sea.
20:30Every turtle that leaves the sanctuary of the ocean is taking a gamble.
20:35And it's a real knife edge whether they'll live or die.
20:38And obviously for this turtle, that gamble didn't pay off.
20:41There's a number of factors that can kill them.
20:44It can be exhaustion, it could be overheating, or it could be being buried,
20:48which may have happened in this case by other turtles laying their eggs.
20:58If turtles trapped by the rock wall can make it to a pool, they might survive.
21:07The sea water cools their bodies.
21:25All they have to do is wait for the incoming tide, and whatever that will bring.
21:51Rain Island is part of the outer barrier reef, so it's right next to the open ocean.
21:59Here the mottled hues of the shallow reef meet the dark blue of deep sea.
22:10The reef wall plunges down vertically to the ocean floor a thousand metres below.
22:30It's here that reef life and creatures of the deep co-exist.
22:43For migration to the reef is not only from across the ocean, it's also up from the depths.
22:52As a diver I can only explore the first 100 metres or so.
22:57It's a very contrasting face to the gloriously kaleidoscopic world of the upper reef,
23:06and the dark cold echoing world of deeper water.
23:14So to see what's living down there we need a remotely operated vehicle, an ROV.
23:37It enters an alien world, pitch black with crushing water pressures.
23:46And extremely cold.
23:52At four degrees it's the same temperature as the sea in the Antarctic.
24:01The ROV reaches a depth of 800 metres, not quite at the bottom but not far off.
24:07A pile of coral sand at the base of the reef wall slopes gently into the abyss,
24:13and here we find signs of real deep sea creatures.
24:21Some, like this sea anemone, are familiar.
24:26Others are less well known, like this chambered Nautilus.
24:34It's an ancient relative of octopus and squid, a living fossil.
24:40The last survivor of a group of animals that dominated the world's oceans 500 million years ago.
24:49It moves around by jet propulsion, squirting water backwards in order to go forwards.
25:08It's the Nautilus' turn to migrate.
25:11It swims up towards the surface to feed on shrimps beside the reef wall, returning back down during the day.
25:23This is a baby Nautilus, the first time one's been filmed in the wild.
25:30It's no bigger than a two pound coin, yet it makes the same daily up and down journey as its
25:37plate size parents.
25:41But that pales into insignificance when compared to the daily vertical migration of these microscopic animals called zooplankton.
25:57This is a baby Nautilus' turn, which is a baby Nautilus' turn.
25:57At sunset, all of these tiny creatures swim upwards,
26:02and under cover of darkness, they graze on floating algae close to the surface.
26:25Many of them are fish larvae.
26:28In fact, almost every fish species on the Great Barrier Reef starts life in the plankton.
26:35There are billions upon billions of them making the round trip.
26:40The greatest daily migration on Earth.
26:43They all travel an extraordinary distance.
26:46Size for size, it would be like me running a marathon twice a day.
26:53That's if they're not caught on the way up.
26:58On the reef wall, at about 150 metres deep, are huge sea fans.
27:04They look like plants, but they're colonies of animals whose branching arms capture the rising plankton.
27:11Hidden amongst the branches is a pygmy seahorse.
27:15It's a tiny fish that also feeds on plankton.
27:28At little more than a centimetre long fully grown, it's one of the world's smallest fish.
27:40It's one of the most important things that we've ever seen in the world.
27:51Contrast that with this monster.
27:54A tiger shark.
28:01Like the tiniest marine life, it too rises up from the ocean's depths.
28:06But unlike the plankton, it's planning to stay a while.
28:18Tiger sharks travel over 800 kilometres to reach Rain Island.
28:23And each year they show up at exactly the same time.
28:27The time when the turtles are nesting.
28:36The time when the turtles are nesting.
28:47Turtles trapped in rock pools begin to re-float on the incoming tide.
28:59For some, it's a second chance.
29:02Now all this female must do is cross the lagoon to reach the reef edge and the safety of the
29:08open ocean.
29:14But swimming in with the incoming tide is her number one predator.
29:19It's crossed the reef and is heading towards the beach.
29:33A tiger shark could dismember this turtle and can even saw through her shell.
29:39She's on high alert.
29:45She is coming.
30:15She turns and tilts rapidly, presenting her widest profile.
30:23It's too much of a mouthful for the shark.
30:29But the tiger shark doesn't give chase.
30:41It can't be bothered.
30:43There's a much easier way to get a meal.
30:55It's been waiting for fresh turtle carcasses to float out on the rising tide.
31:01To predict such an event is an amazing thing for a shark to do.
31:10This is no mindless killer.
31:13This shark is smart.
31:14It pitches up at the peak of the turtle nesting season and simply waits for the tide to deliver its
31:22food.
31:26Oh, look at that.
31:30Oh, look at that.
31:31So distinctive.
31:32Right under the boat.
31:37Tigers have been found with all manner of interesting things in their stomachs.
31:40And as an opportunistic predator, she's come in and just had a little look at the boat and a little
31:44look at me.
31:46Just a nudge of the boat.
31:47She's using the nose, all those senses packed into the nose to try and figure out what we are and
31:52what I am.
31:53And now she's heading back to the carcass.
31:54I hope.
32:03What's this bite?
32:05Good grief.
32:07What she's doing now is soaring, using the weight of her body.
32:11These are huge, bulky animals.
32:14And you get a lot of torsion with that weight.
32:17And with that torsion, she'll clamp the jaws on to the flipper or the head and just rip from side
32:23to side.
32:24And that mechanical action and the cutting action of the teeth will tear lumps of the flesh off.
32:34Vibrations from the commotion and the odour of mashed turtle flesh are carried on the currents, attracting more sharks to
32:42the feast.
32:47But this is no feeding frenzy.
32:50Sharks of this size could do each other real damage.
32:53So instead they take it in turns, with smaller sharks deferring to the larger ones.
33:36Sharks of this size could parlay.
33:37Sharks of this size could be unified Kentucky.
33:41Sharks of this size could be mounted to buyruk.
33:42Look at these kuntake holes.
33:43Sharks is enough for those härèt Courgetus.
33:43Sharks of this structure ar230 on this side of the building on the old side ofoline.
33:44King and thelly come to the pentè·¯ is still a part of newer plastics than traveling.
33:45And with micro玩er there are so säk out there, this guy goes usually for special reasons.
33:47After all thy pretty much strad方�� — fighting, it's been a bit clear.
33:50drawn rough thought approach to thejegoman overall sound present.
33:53You'll show yourself an olikaelia keywords.
34:18Tiger sharks are generally solitary, so this gathering of
34:2316 is extremely unusual. This is the largest number of tiger sharks seen in one place at any one time.
34:38When you hunt the dead, there's no need to hurry.
34:44It means the living can slip away for now.
34:52She'll not go far, for she'll be back again up to eight times during a single breeding season,
34:58to deposit up to 100 eggs on each visit.
35:08Only then can she head back to her feeding grounds, where who knows what will happen to her.
35:18Away from the Great Barrier Reef, sea turtles are caught to eat, and sharks aren't immune either.
35:27These tiger sharks bear the scars of hooks from longline fishing.
35:35It's not surprising then, that the older sharks are conspicuous by their absence.
35:43While at Rain Island, the sharks and turtles are in a sanctuary.
35:48But even sanctuaries can come under threat, although not necessarily from us.
36:07The summer heats up the ocean, creating tropical storms that spiral in from the coral sea.
36:15In America, storms of this intensity are known as hurricanes.
36:19And in Japan, they're called typhoons.
36:21But here, they're known as cyclones.
36:30A cyclone can be over 500 kilometres across, with the wind swirling around the eye at 300 kilometres per hour.
36:40It's the most destructive force the Great Barrier Reef must face.
36:50And in February 2011, this part of the reef was hammered by the biggest storm in living memory.
37:04This is a special broadcast of Nine News, with Peter Overton, live in the cyclones...
37:11Good evening, and welcome to a special edition of Nine News, live from Airlie Beach.
37:16The cyclone Yasi bears down on North Queensland.
37:19These are the latest satellite images of the biggest cyclone Australia has experienced in more than 100 years.
37:25It's estimated to have the same intensity as Hurricane Katrina.
37:29It's a category five. You can't get anything more powerful.
37:38Daybreak exposed the ferocity of cyclone Yasi.
37:42We are expecting to wake up tomorrow morning to scenes of devastation and heartbreak
37:49that is unprecedented in not only Queensland, but Australia's history.
37:55Island resorts were destroyed.
38:02And a massive storm surge smashed into marinas, demolishing everything it touched.
38:14In the direct path of the cyclone, waves pulverised the reef.
38:21And huge swells seriously damage corals 500 kilometres from the eye of the storm.
38:30Cyclones form when humidity and air temperature build.
38:34But that's not the only time high temperatures directly affect the Great Barrier Reef.
38:41In summer, the air temperature can soar.
38:54Close to the ground, heat reflected by the sand compounds the problem.
39:03On Rain Island, the turtle eggs are incubating safely below ground.
39:08But for the seabird chicks, the quay becomes a searing furnace.
39:14Birds must find shelter wherever they can.
39:18Bizarrely, one option is to shade your head with your own rear end.
39:27But with global warming, temperatures are increasingly higher than the norm.
39:32And then an unusually high water temperature can be just as destructive as a storm.
39:38An ominous white glow along the edge of the reef indicates it's under stress.
39:47The corals have lost their colour.
39:53This bleaching occurs because corals can only live in a narrow temperature range.
39:59The corals have lost their colour from microscopic algae living in their tissues.
40:06These manufacture food for the corals by photosynthesis.
40:11But when the temperature rises just two degrees above the normal summer maximum,
40:17the algal cells are expelled because they no longer benefit the coral.
40:25The bleaching effect is the white chalky skeleton showing through the corals transparent tissues.
40:35But they're not dead, not yet.
40:38They can survive in this bleached state for several weeks.
40:44If the temperature drops, the corals acquire new algae from plankton floating by.
40:52But if the warm water persists, the coral dies.
41:05Coral bleaching hadn't been seen on the Great Barrier Reef before the 1980s.
41:13Due to global warming, bleaching is now more common.
41:17And cyclones are likely to be more frequent too.
41:22And there's something even more insidious.
41:27Temperatures are rising because more and more carbon dioxide from human activity enters the atmosphere.
41:34This dissolves in seawater, turning it weakly acidic, which can stop coral growth.
41:40If they can't build their chalky skeletons, reefs will start to crumble.
41:52With such threats, it's a wonder the reef has any future at all.
41:56But it does have a chance, for the reef has a neat way to help itself recover.
42:02And it's evident for just one week in late spring.
42:10A few days after a full moon,
42:13each hard coral species along the entire reef spawns at the same time on the same night.
42:50Where in the Mat ந si enfermed ang上 oz martinez?
42:51Welcome back to theespère farm.
42:51Eggs and sperm unite to form free-swimming larvae.
43:03Smaller than a pinhead, a coral larvae is like a space capsule.
43:13It floats away on the current and seeks a new place to grow.
43:28Some larvae travel no more than a few metres.
43:32Others drift thousands of kilometres across the ocean,
43:36depending on where the current takes them.
43:46Attracted to settle by the sounds made by reef life,
43:49like fish, shrimps or even sea urchins,
43:53the larvae searches for a spot to call home.
43:58It transforms into a coral polyp,
44:01like a miniature sea anemone anchored to the seabed.
44:09And here it starts a brand new colony of coral.
44:26This constant process of reseeding may help ailing reefs to recover,
44:32as long as the damage is not too severe or too frequent.
44:46Sunrise on Rain Island marks another mass movement of wildlife.
45:02The first light of dawn is just touching the horizon.
45:06And there's an exodus taking place from the island,
45:09with the seabirds behind me just massing prior to leaving the island
45:14and heading out to the open sea to hunt.
45:19Both parents normally take turns to search for food,
45:22but as the chicks grow and become more demanding,
45:25they both go to sea,
45:27leaving their offspring on its own.
45:35Along with other predators,
45:37the parents search far offshore for dense shoals of fish.
45:41Here sharks, tuna and seabirds are competing for a tight ball of fish
45:48that'll last just a few minutes.
46:00The birds rely on sharks and tuna to drive the smaller fish closer to the surface.
46:13Their chicks' very survival depends on their success.
46:28A hungry young booby waits patiently for its parents to return.
46:38And this time it's lucky.
46:40They've flown in with plenty of food.
46:51By late summer, Rain Island is the largest nursery on the Great Barrier Reef,
46:56with seabird chicks growing on top of the sand and turtle eggs developing underneath.
47:12But Rain is not the only island with nesting seabirds.
47:17On Heron Island, sheer water parents return not at sunset, but after dark.
47:25It's a hangover from times when these birds nested on islands with predators.
47:31Flying in and out at night was one way to avoid them.
47:43The parents find each other in the dark by their raucous calls.
47:53The pair reaffirms its bond before the returning bird enters the underground nest.
48:07Although there is a little housekeeping to be done first.
48:24Both parents share nursery duties.
48:26And they take turns to fly great distances in search of food.
48:30They may be at sea for several days.
48:50They leave as they arrived, in the dark.
49:01Well before sunrise, they line up in clearings like aircraft taxiing for takeoff.
49:28And then it's a way out to sea.
49:55Back on Rain Island, the very last birds to nest are Rufus night herons.
50:04They haven't travelled far, just out from the mainland.
50:07And they surely have one of the most unattractive chicks on the reef.
50:17They've hatched late in the season for a very good reason.
50:21Because their food is not out at sea, but is right on the doorstep.
50:31In late afternoon, the parent birds take their positions.
50:39They scan the sand alert to any movements.
50:48At sunset, the temperature change triggers the start.
50:53It's what the herons have been waiting for.
50:59The clutch of turtle eggs has been incubating under the sand for two months.
51:08At the right moment, the hatchlings all emerge together.
51:24They must reach the water in the shortest possible time.
51:56The clutching of turtle eggs is now in the back.
51:58food for baby herons. So the heron parents have timed the peak of their nesting to coincide
52:04with this mass emergence.
52:13Even ripples in the sand slow the hatchlings headlong rush to the sea.
52:18It could mean the difference between life and death.
52:33So
52:36here
52:57is
53:04But the herons have had their fill.
53:07They simply couldn't eat another baby turtle.
53:19It's been a narrow escape for this one.
53:27The first wave of hatchlings has taken the brunt of the attacks, but the sacrifice of
53:32a few hundred ensures the following thousands have a better chance to get to the sea.
53:38But some babies go the wrong way, just like their mothers.
53:52The wall of rocks, an even bigger obstacle for the hatchling than it was for the adults.
54:07And there's something even more sinister up ahead.
54:17Rock crabs, they like baby turtles, too.
54:33Their powerful pincers can tear a hatchling limb from limb.
54:41vamos a good job.
54:43I don't one.
54:47Come on.
54:53Let's go.
55:19Another lucky escape, but there's still a way to go yet.
55:26Come on little fella, keep going, keep going.
55:28It's a delicious little package of protein.
55:31It's made the difficult and dangerous journey from the dunes there and still going.
55:37And of course, this transition into the marine environment doesn't mean this hatchling is safe.
55:42It faces a whole new set of hazards as it tries to swim out over the reef top.
55:46But everything out there is waiting for these hatchlings.
55:49It's nearly there.
55:51That's a tiny, tiny little turtle.
55:54And that's a huge expanse of ocean.
56:07Exactly where this little hatchling goes is a mystery.
56:11But she'll be at sea and she'll not return to Rain Island before her 30th birthday,
56:17when she'll come back to lay eggs on the same beach that she's leaving today.
56:22That's if she survives in an uncertain and often hostile world.
56:34Rain Island has the biggest concentration of wildlife on the Barrier Reef.
56:38But many of its animals are visitors.
56:41And at departure time, they leave behind the sanctuary of one of the world's largest marine parks.
56:49The migrants cross international borders,
56:53traveling to places where animals are not protected.
56:59It means their survival is linked very much to events in other parts of the world.
57:10The Great Barrier Reef is still an amazing place.
57:16It's a magical underwater world, stunningly beautiful and a never-ending source of wonder.
57:25But how will it be when our turtles return?
57:31The reef has proved to be resilient in the past, surviving great natural changes.
57:52We've seen how the Great Barrier Reef is connected to the rest of the world in many ways.
57:59It means we're all, no matter how remote, involved in its future.
58:05Now only we can decide what that future will be.
58:09Whether it remains the glorious marine spectacle of today,
58:13one of the richest and most diverse of all environments,
58:17and the largest biological structure on the planet.
58:20Or whether it becomes something much poorer.
58:23It's a future that's entirely in our hands.
58:34Andrew Graham Dixon and Giorgio Locatelli continue their tour of Sicily here on BBC HD tomorrow.
58:41Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
58:43Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
58:45Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
58:45Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
58:47Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
58:48Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
58:49Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
58:50Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
58:52Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
58:59Sicily Unpacked is at nine.
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