At the depths of the ocean, in freezing waters there is somehow a paradise for Octopi. Off the coast of Monterey, an extinct underwater volcano creates just the right conditions for an absurd number of octopi to breed, nest and survive despite the freezing temperatures. With water near freezing, an octopi egg would normally take 8 years to hatch, but how are they managing to survive in huge numbers?
References:
Episode 496 - Dwarf Planets and Massive collisions forming Moons
Episode 495 - Plants without sunlight and electricity from sweat
Episode 494 - Mass extinctions and recovery in our oceans
Episode 493 - Pleasant memories of sound and music relieving pain
Episode 492 - Finding hidden objects in the early universe
Episode 491 - Impacts and the messy history of the early solar system
Episode 490 - The history of fire on Earth
Episode 498 - Clean air, captured carbon and paper sensors
Episode 488 -Mysteries from the formation of our solar system
Episode 487 - Feeding the planet without damaging it
Episode 486 - Bypassing the brains defences for treatment
Episode 485 - Plants race against rising sea levels
Episode 484 - The links between the Core and the volcanos on the surface
Episode 483 - Constantly changing moons of Jupiter
Episode 482 - Nova and Micronova not quite super still immensely powerful
Episode 481 - Finding hidden life in our oceans with RNA and DNA
Episode 480 - Bacteria turning methane into electricity, and corrupting corn
Episode 479 - Fish that count and Spiders hearing with their webs
Episode 478 - Special properties of water from molecular to drinking water to deep into the earth
Episode 477 - Plants reacting and defending themselves
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