ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Frans Lanting - Nature photographer
Frans Lanting is one of the greatest nature photographers of our time. His work has been featured in National Geographic, Audubon andTime, as well as numerous award-winning books. Lanting's recent exhibition, The LIFE Project, offers a lyrical interpretation of the history of life on Earth.

Why you should listen

In the pursuit of his work, Frans Lanting has lived in the trees with wild macaws, camped with giant tortoises inside a volcanic crater, and documented never-before-photographed wildlife and tribal traditions in Madagascar. The Dutch-born, California-based photographer has traveled to Botswana's Okavango Delta, the rain forests of Borneo and the home of emperor penguins in Antarctica.

The resulting photographs -- staggering in their beauty, startling in their originality -- have brought much-needed attention to endangered species and ecological crises throughout the world. In 2001, HRH Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands inducted Lanting as a Knight in the Royal Order of the Golden Ark, the country's highest conservation honor -- just one of many honors he has received throughout his illustrious career.

More profile about the speaker
Frans Lanting | Speaker | TED.com
TED2005

Frans Lanting: The story of life in photographs

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In this stunning slideshow, celebrated nature photographer Frans Lanting presents The LIFE Project, a poetic collection of photographs that tell the story of our planet, from its eruptive beginnings to its present diversity. Soundtrack by Philip Glass.
- Nature photographer
Frans Lanting is one of the greatest nature photographers of our time. His work has been featured in National Geographic, Audubon andTime, as well as numerous award-winning books. Lanting's recent exhibition, The LIFE Project, offers a lyrical interpretation of the history of life on Earth. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

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Nature's my muse and it's been my passion.
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As a photographer for National Geographic, I've portrayed it for many.
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But five years ago, I went on a personal journey.
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I wanted to visualize the story of life.
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It's the hardest thing I've ever attempted,
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and there have been plenty of times when I felt like backing out.
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But there were also revelations.
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And one of those I'd like to share with you today.
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I went down to a remote lagoon in Australia, hoping to see the Earth
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the way it was three billion years ago,
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back before the sky turned blue.
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There's stromatolites down there --
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the first living things to capture photosynthesis --
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and it's the only place they still occur today.
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Going down there was like entering a time capsule,
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and I came out with a different sense of myself in time.
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The oxygen exhaled by those stromatolites
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is what we all breathe today.
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Stromatolites are the heroes in my story.
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I hope it's a story that has some resonance for our time.
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It's a story about you and me, nature and science.
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And with that said, I'd like to invite you for
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a short, brief journey of life through time.
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Our journey starts in space, where matter condenses into spheres over time ...
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solidifying into surface, molded by fire.
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The fire gave way, Earth emerged -- but this was an alien planet.
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The moon was closer; things were different.
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Heat from within made geysers erupt -- that is how the oceans were born.
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Water froze around the poles and shaped the edges of the Earth.
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Water is the key to life, but in frozen form, it is a latent force.
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And when it vanishes, Earth becomes Mars.
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But this planet is different -- it's roiling inside.
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And where that energy touches water, something new emerges: life.
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It arises around cracks in the Earth.
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Mud and minerals become substrate; there are bacteria.
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Learn to multiply, thickening in places ...
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Growing living structures under an alien sky ...
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Stromatolites were the first to exhale oxygen.
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And they changed the atmosphere.
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A breath that's fossilized now as iron.
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Meteorites delivered chemistry, and perhaps membranes, too.
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Life needs a membrane to contain itself
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so it can replicate and mutate.
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These are diatoms, single-celled phytoplankton
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with skeletons of silicon ...
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circuit boards of the future.
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Shallow seas nurtured life early on, and that's where it morphed
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into more complex forms.
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It grew as light and oxygen increased.
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Life hardened and became defensive.
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It learned to move and began to see. The first eyes grew on trilobites.
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Vision was refined in horseshoe crabs,
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among the first to leave the sea.
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They still do what they've done for ages, their enemies long gone.
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Scorpions follow prey out of the sea. Slugs became snails.
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Fish tried amphibian life. Frogs adapted to deserts.
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Lichens arose as a co-op. Fungi married algae ...
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clinging to rock, and eating it too ... transforming barren land.
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True land plants arose, leafless at first.
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Once they learn how to stay upright, they grew in size and shape.
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The fundamental forms of ferns followed,
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to bear spores that foreshadowed seeds.
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Life flourished in swamps.
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On land, life turned a corner. Jaws formed first; teeth came later.
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Leatherbacks and tuataras are echoes from that era.
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It took time for life to break away from water,
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and it still beckons all the time.
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Life turned hard so it could venture inland.
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And the dragons that arose are still among us today.
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Jurassic Park still shimmers in part of Madagascar,
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and the center of Brazil,
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where plants called "cycads" remain rock hard.
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Forests arose and nurtured things with wings.
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One early form left an imprint, like it died only yesterday.
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And others fly today like echoes of the past.
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In birds, life gained new mobility.
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Flamingos covered continents. Migrations got underway.
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Birds witnessed the emergence of flowering plants.
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Water lilies were among the first.
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Plants began to diversify and grew, turning into trees.
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In Australia, a lily turned into a grass tree,
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and in Hawaii, a daisy became a silver sword.
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In Africa, Gondwana molded Proteas.
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But when that ancient continent broke up, life got lusher.
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Tropical rainforests arose, sparking new layers of interdependence.
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Fungi multiplied. Orchids emerged, genitalia shaped to lure insects ...
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a trick shared by the largest flower on Earth.
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Co-evolution entwined insects and birds and plants forever.
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When birds can't fly, they become vulnerable.
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Kiwis are, and so are these hawks trapped near Antarctica.
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Extinction can come slowly, but sometimes it arrives fast.
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An asteroid hits, and the world went down in flames.
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But there were witnesses, survivors in the dark.
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When the skies cleared, a new world was born.
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A world fit for mammals. From tiny shrews [came]
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tenrecs, accustomed to the dark.
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New forms became bats. Civets.
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New predators, hyenas, getting faster and faster still.
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Grasslands created opportunities.
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Herd safety came with sharpened senses.
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Growing big was another answer, but size always comes at a price.
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Some mammals turned back to water.
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Walruses adapted with layers of fat. Sea lions got sleek.
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And cetaceans moved into a world without bounds.
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There are many ways to be a mammal. A 'roo hops in Oz;
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a horse runs in Asia; and a wolf evolves stilt legs in Brazil.
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Primates emerge from jungles, as tarsiers first,
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becoming lemurs not much later.
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Learning became reinforced. Bands of apes ventured into the open.
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And forests dried out once more. Going upright became a lifestyle.
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So who are we? Brothers of masculine chimps,
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sisters of feminine bonobos? We are all of them, and more.
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We're molded by the same life force.
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The blood veins in our hands
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echoed a course of water traces on the Earth.
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And our brains -- our celebrated brains --
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reflect a drainage of a tidal marsh.
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Life is a force in its own right. It is a new element.
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And it has altered the Earth. It covers Earth like a skin.
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And where it doesn't, as in Greenland in winter,
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Mars is still not very far.
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But that likelihood fades as long as ice melts again.
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And where water is liquid, it becomes a womb
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for cells green with chlorophyll -- and that molecular marvel
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is what's made a difference -- it powers everything.
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The whole animal world today lives on a stockpile
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of bacterial oxygen that is cycled constantly
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through plants and algae, and their waste is our breath,
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and vice versa.
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This Earth is alive, and it's made its own membrane.
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We call it "atmosphere." This is the icon of our journey.
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And you all here today can imagine and will shape where we go next.
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(Applause)
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Thank you. Thank you.
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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Frans Lanting - Nature photographer
Frans Lanting is one of the greatest nature photographers of our time. His work has been featured in National Geographic, Audubon andTime, as well as numerous award-winning books. Lanting's recent exhibition, The LIFE Project, offers a lyrical interpretation of the history of life on Earth.

Why you should listen

In the pursuit of his work, Frans Lanting has lived in the trees with wild macaws, camped with giant tortoises inside a volcanic crater, and documented never-before-photographed wildlife and tribal traditions in Madagascar. The Dutch-born, California-based photographer has traveled to Botswana's Okavango Delta, the rain forests of Borneo and the home of emperor penguins in Antarctica.

The resulting photographs -- staggering in their beauty, startling in their originality -- have brought much-needed attention to endangered species and ecological crises throughout the world. In 2001, HRH Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands inducted Lanting as a Knight in the Royal Order of the Golden Ark, the country's highest conservation honor -- just one of many honors he has received throughout his illustrious career.

More profile about the speaker
Frans Lanting | Speaker | TED.com