This stingless bee had already collected resin from the algarrobo tree and secured it on its hind legs before it somehow got entombed, beginning an epochal journey. |
Today on Far Future Horizons we join host David Attenborough on a twenty million year odyssey as
he tries to reconstruct a prehistoric world frozen in time inside a piece of
amber.
The Amber Time Machine is a BBC documentary written
and presented by David Attenborough. It was first transmitted in 2004 and later
became part of the Attenborough in Paradise
and Other Personal Voyages collection of seven documentaries.
Like a creature out of a horror film, a resin bug looms over its intended victim, a stingless bee. In the end, both succumbed to the sticky resin. |
The documentary shows Attenborough searching
for the identities of preserved creatures inside a piece of Baltic amber that
was given to him by his adoptive sister when he was twelve years old. It then
shows how a group of scientists can reconstruct an entire twenty million year
old ecosystem through pieces of Dominican amber. Examples include a tadpole
preserved in amber after falling from a Bromeliad.
A scene from the motion picture Jurassic Park with from left to right; Richard Attenborough as John Hammond, Laura Dern as Dr. Ellie Sattler and Sam Neill as Dr. Alan Grant |
Attenborough then discusses the scientific
feasibility of DNA being preserved in amber, and the science behind the 1993
hit techno-thriller Jurassic Park, in which David's brother, Richard
Attenborough starred as John Hammond. Several attempts were tried, with DNA
eventually being recovered from a weevil that was several million years older
than Tyrannosaurus rex. Attenborough reasons that a few old, rare pieces of amber
may contain DNA.
The Amber Time Machine is part of Attenborough in Paradise and Other Personal Voyages collection of
seven documentaries which is
available from Amazon Books.
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