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tv   Documentary  RT  July 12, 2020 1:30am-2:00am EDT

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9 decided it needed somewhere with no weapons no laws no belinda's own exploitation of human by human. an ideal community of free people only ever engaged in peaceful activities. play. dates that an amazing place for amazing people. but the people who come here are really quite often. cut it's only off they've lived here even for a short time that people become special. because this is a place that changes everyone who visits. so did this. study to see if this approach. of the food you've been able to shoot.
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it. will keep it. up for. the bush. many different languages are spoken but the people old understand each other very well. even talk to the animals and birds and commune with nature itself. the old get along.
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4th 5th of the state waters are fish served. to cure all as much o'shaughnessy there for humans for any sort of shift our relationship now might as he has for coasties machine but don't shit on a gifted list to sort yet york he. should. be only dishes can ok told me yesterday there's a. range of each choice of toast or a new dish will repeat it for him. to please spread life here might seem unbearable perishing cold a chilling wind and not a single tree bush or blade of grass to be seen nothing but a lifeless desolate wasteland. but people do live and work here. they even get married. and they all believe
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they're on a vital mission. setting humanity on a path to knowledge of self the planet and the whole universe. if. you. will make it to you that. antarctica is our southernmost continent surrounded by 3 oceans. it's a 14000000 square kilometer no man's land of polar. old the lowest temperature on
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earth 94.7 degrees celsius was recorded here. the south pole is probably the world's most inaccessible location. well almost there's also the pole of inaccessibility which is also here in antarctica. 2 even music sounds different here to anywhere else on earth. in fact everything feels different. people from more than 30 countries and cultures live together in a close friend li community. antarctica is a very international community and most definitely historically and presently there are many. the beauty of research work in antarctica that
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it is driven by sharing of resources because you cannot survive in this continent if you want to do it on your own so there is a very active. it's almost a baltar in culture of we do this for you then you help us out in another area. where wars there's greater growth because there should. more. are sure there are a few years it's as a crowd now. per record that. everyone here knows that a trauma surgeon is spending the winter at. russia's buildings house and station
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that means anyone who's injured gets sent to him. chileans have a dentist so everyone goes to freebase to have their teeth fixed. she was worse than. one of them might. discover also for what. it was of the moment because what if your. a pretty good player is going to get a job but you know if you're going to have it up with it was through a triple price. the chinese visit the russians to
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taste bush in turn the russians go to the chinese computer room because it has the fastest internet connection on the antarctic peninsula. scientific research collaboration and respect up all the turnout in antarctica that's the agreements to which the people of earth have now it headed for 60 years cooperation in antarctica is everything you know the author of the treaty has said as a place for peace and for science so is or open to everybody any scientists who want to work in antarctica is welcome to go there to corroborate with the.
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on december the 1st 959 in washington d.c. 12 countries signed the antarctic treaty that came into force on june the 23rd 961 . from that day on antarctica has belongs to no nation. military deployment and warships off and didn't beyond the 60 itself parallel. in 1980 s. and topped it was declared a nuclear free zone. making it a no go area for atomic ballad vessels on nuclear power plants. but.
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the arrival in antarctica of the research vessel academic field off can only mean one thing the shift change for russia's polar explorers. $730.00 just can't stand whatever they care that half. of it yet. after an 11 month tour of duty some will go home and others will take their place living and working on this harsh continent finale a year they sometimes jokingly call themselves and talk to kenyans what makes them tick for a year they'll work remembering home but most of all. their dreams. so
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even the medium close. community school. to shoot can you shoot you. i just. pulled up with you and you know cooper to be. spiritual. see it. pretty. well it's very. close to. you just to be. honest your life can't last. but.
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a little slow on an old. struggle surely until it's you know it all when you're. more just. chased. him your cd. issued us a person might. not take your trap read your good fear that. significance of this. you lost the preserve of humility. if you swallow it at least. somewhat she will praise what. you're about. when you.
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do you still. if you watch us don't. we when you when you go see a storm chase you need to. be great. yeah we featured shoot 1st just do it. because it's sleek granite you could fit just more if you try to get a 36 mystique the. ship is in.
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the world is driven by dream shaped and those. who dares thinks. we dare to ask. so we have inherited a brain that is constantly comparing itself to others. for a monkey we just benefit with it compares it's. to others it seems that it's weaker
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when it doesn't reach for the banana because it's afraid of getting. that it's stronger saratoga in his world and it goes for it and it feels good so we built patterns when we were young of comparing ourselves to others and making decisions about when feel one hour anyone would feel one down and it's easy to feel one down all the time if you're going to need to think that way anyway end up with this chord is all the time and absolute depression. it's hard to see what draws these people back year after year how can they stand 11 monotonous months of unchanging scenery in largely male company so far from family and friends.
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and you will easily she's. hoping it the show is just you do it. if. you can and you know that there wouldn't you say lewis. with a little bit bigger than the. 60 percent of polar explorers the 1st expedition is also with their lust for others it's the opposite they yearn to return to antarctica or again and again. why i went on dark could cry conquer man i was born with a vicious thing to grow turned darker. it was so
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good. that of course folk. will be up. in the. gulf the procedure. for. just the some of the some of them for bush to be able. to go back but they decided not to take people's lives. they don't care about experience frayed that somebody would say oh yeah i know everything better than you guys because i've been here before and so experience doesn't come.
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out of that 2. oh no it's going through a period of change and understanding which aspects of those changes are part of natural cycles and. being able to tease apart where there is a human influence is extremely valuable. then i did seismological measure men's i credit to measure men's. movement and also we have magnetic measurements that's concerning the magnetic field how it gets stronger or weaker and how it changed direction and also how the.
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fear comes under scrutiny here too they analyze its composition and record the wind speed water snow and ice are also monitored there was a. physical observatory. and then sort of the beginning of the present work started. this and sort of develop this thing to. another subject of particular interest stones. the type of the rockets are more fit and it has if you look closely. and they look like this is. the
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rock type. they also study what little soil there is but only one percent of antarctic land consists of it and to be exact that permafrost. would still be at humi chicanos the world. knows that the group was worthless lurch. also. and of course the scientists always paying close attention to antarctica's flora and fauna. the water was clear. increasing the in the term photo more than your. consequences for the penguins. and i. think. more really all
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clearly. for cooler smaller. who. knows. aleck or food or penguins and so. deep in its ice and waters antarctica holds many undiscovered truths about the past and future of our world. scientists believe that if this land ever chooses to reveal its secrets they could change our lives. very much then of the states book. which i doubt. we. keep stating.
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that no scientific research at all would be possible without one essential element . of what could that be on this remote continent. so we were. it when those didn't. sit there you as that of course that on the yes they leave winners in it's between us that way. during the summer 25 people work at the vast oxidation only 10 to 12 stay for the winter it was long ago that these buildings last saw sunlight they're totally covered in snow and the only way out is through a snow tunnel. such total isolation leaves its mark on the relationships within a team. who. did. it would
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just shift unable to go from church. you would fulfill your michigan church or used to. forge a new range would be a little bit of fish if jordan is just ridiculous. with what you push of the pundit class. the antarctic sun beats down with unbelievable strength. ultraviolet levels here are the highest on earth and magnified several times over by reflecting off the white snow without adequate protection can burn to blindness cheekbones to blisters and lips to bloodied scabs. it's all due to the
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ozone hole which is incredibly big. it was discovered here in antarctica in 1805 the breakthrough the changed everything we ever thought we knew about the atmosphere. we had thought that there was too much ozone that it was poisoning our biosphere and causing the greenhouse effect. but while working here scientists cleared all that up and calmed everyone down it appears every august to terrify humanity but in december it disappears as though it never existed when the hole is open the sun's rays easily penetrate the atmosphere and rapid heating causes giant pockets of that a whirl around antarctica. that's how severe. cyclonic storms get started.
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the research vessel academic field out of has unloaded all of its vital cargo of fuel and machinery scientific equipment and provisions. supplies for the inland optic research station will be loaded onto a huge sledge is told by track does this caterpillar sledge train will then set off on a journey. that
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. we call them never stops for a moment to cruise keep it going while one is at the wheel the other sleeps in the train or. in the most in your particular. we know that it's about that is that it was my. god it was you who. were the pseudo it was still. the drivers are on the icy road for 2 to 3 weeks the snow covered ground resembles the scene but these waves dust solid stone and the trailers rock from side to side . drivers with the skilled. navigate the terrain without waking the companions most in demand. through security but also what you. know what that's
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a little too good. to see. they're chasing. some you know that. you know they're a little. skittish emerge i think so much and she was. on this harsh and dangerous route anything can happen in these icy conditions the engines are starved of oxygen and eventually stored and breakdown repairs have to be performed on the spot in temperatures of minus 50 degrees celsius. the. only states which. goes a bore much more than they. just go and. there's no time to waste every expedition member knows that the track to train must
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keep moving no matter what if it doesn't make it no one will be able to spend the winter at bus dock and the station will die. the reason why your friends when folk out there instead of to real trouble is its capability of these bakers to carry very heavy loads you have to realise that the trouble is. there's every year between the course i've got a station in the only way to supply or the cargo that the station requires this represents about $500.00 tons of cargo where you're being transported so it's a lot of. simo she. was in the shed you know mushroom but i've never said that doesn't. are meant to be. or do you mean your argument is you know in math but it's little.
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you cannot be global with me yet you look. at nationals i also. take interest in finding. this goes a long way to traverse team your. brain a not desires you know hospital. transported to suspect james
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information and in america on the sex suspected means that they are covert she loved this prison for 44 years. in minutes sure if you guys she you and was it cannot measure. it it was. older drugs to be. the one lacking is. that it. that i know i did it almost back thing it might look others are getting me out i'm . not meaning they say i am musical when you're nice i am. the only peace on won't find movies on legs i mean i know that when you know i'm going to. be like this model. know.
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i. see is a 5th day of honor protests over the government's decision to reimpose the curfew. and the stories that shape the week aaron see the world health organization says the corona virus can remain suspended in the air. comes off the scientists also want to sweep the people no longer taking the virus seriously as a myth that. in france the point of seeing new minutes is right from women's rights groups one of the men has pretty.

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