[00:00.35] |
These turtles navigate their way across 1,000 miles of featureless ocean |
[00:04.89] |
to reach these tiny, isolated islands. |
[00:08.95] |
Perhaps they use their super-charged sense of smell |
[00:11.89] |
to detect the traces of land in the ocean currents. |
[00:15.21] |
Or maybe, like the seabirds, |
[00:17.42] |
they too have an internal magnetic compass. |
[00:20.67] |
But however they do it, |
[00:21.98] |
when they're ready to nest, |
[00:23.57] |
females return to the very same beach on which they were born. |
[00:28.24] |
Just as she arrives, |
[00:29.91] |
others are preparing to leave. |
[00:32.42] |
These seven-month-old black-footed albatross chicks |
[00:35.57] |
have recently been abandoned by their parents. |
[00:38.34] |
And now, driven by hunger, |
[00:40.56] |
it's their time to get airborne. |
[00:43.26] |
Unfortunately, with space at a premium, |
[00:45.42] |
there is little room for manoeuvre, |
[00:47.40] |
and they must make their maiden flights over water. |
[00:51.02] |
But this is no place for a paddle. |
[00:52.85] |
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