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Jellyfish cross entire oceans feeding on whatever happens to tangle with their tentacles. The jelly-like Portuguese man-of-war can harness sail power to fish with its deadly tentacles.

Sometimes there is a brief explosion of food in this marine desert, but ocean hunters must be fast to make the best of this bonanza.

We witness super pods of up to 5, spinner dolphins racing to herd vast shoals of lanternfish, briefly caught at the surface where it is thought they spawn. Raising your young in this great wilderness is a huge challenge. The episode follows two very different ocean voyagers that show amazing care.

We get closer to solving the mystery of where the biggest fish in the sea, the whale shark, gives birth.

The pregnant females make an epic journey across the Pacific to the Galapagos Islands. Scientists now think it might be here that the pregnant females give birth to their pups in the safety of the depths. And in the freezing south Atlantic, a pair of ageing wandering albatrosses give their all to raise their very last chick. Yet even in the big blue, thousands of kilometres from land, there is evidence of human activity. An estimated eight million tons of plastic is dumped into the oceans every year.

Globe-spanning currents carry it into the heart of every ocean, often with tragic consequences. In the Atlantic waters off Europe we follow a family of pilot whales whose calf has recently died. As plastic breaks down it combines with other pollutants that are consumed by vast numbers of marine creatures. In top predators like pilot whales, the toxic chemicals can build up to lethal levels. Here sunlight powers the growth of enchanted forests of kelp, mangroves and prairies of sea grass.

They are the most abundant but fiercely competitive places in the ocean to live. The most bountiful kelp forests are found off the tip of southern Africa, where two great oceans collide. Almost a hundred different species of shark patrol these waters, driving one resident — the common octopus — to become the ultimate escape artist.

To outwit her nemesis, the pyjama shark, she uses ingenious tactics, never filmed before. Along the Pacific coast of North America stand, at 60 metres high, the largest and perhaps most diverse kelp forests in the world. In clearings, bright orange male Garibaldi fish guard territories of short turf seaweed. When spiny urchins invade and graze their crops, the Garibaldi desperately pick them off. All is not entirely lost, thanks to the return of a ravenous forest resident — sea otters.

Back in the late s, sea otters were hunted for their thick pelts to near extinction. And with them gone, urchin numbers rose, destroying many forests. Today, thanks to protection, sea otter numbers are recovering, along with the health of the forest. In a filming first, we reveal great rafts of sea otters now numbering in their hundreds.

In warmer waters another green sea takes hold. Off Western Australia, vast prairies of seagrass extend to the horizon. Here, grazing green turtles are stalked by tiger sharks. By keeping turtles on the move, tiger sharks prevent the seagrass meadows from being overgrazed. In this way, sharks have become surprising allies in the fight against climate change — as a patch of sea grass is 35 times more efficient at absorbing and storing carbon than the same area of rainforest.

Once a year, one sea meadow in Australia is overrun by an extraordinary invasion. With the first full moon of winter, strange creatures emerge from the deep — spider crabs. The army marches into the shallows and starts to pile one on top of each other, building mounds over a metre high.

They then moult. Soft-bodied and weakened, they must avoid the patrolling four-metre-long stingrays. Further along the coast, the greatest gathering of cuttlefish in the world takes place, as males battle it out for the right to mate.

A smaller, sneaky male uses subterfuge, even pretending to be a female, to confuse rivals and get his girl. Even raising your young can be tough in such a competitive place. A weedy seadragon sets out on an epic quest to give his young the very best start in life.

The richest nurseries of all are the mangrove forests. Straddling the boundary between land and sea, they provide shelter for the juvenile fish. But in the mangroves of Western Australia lives a deadly assassin — the 40cm-long zebra mantis shrimp. In a surprising story of betrayal, a male shrimp will abandon his mate of possibly 20 years, trading up for a larger female. And there is one other green sea that supports more life than all the rest combined. Unlike the mangrove forests and prairies of sea grass, its existence in the open seas is only temporary.

Microscopic algae flourish into vast blooms, providing a feast for plankton-feeding fish like billions of anchovies. In Monterey Bay, California, the giant shoals draw in thousands of dolphins, sea lions and humpback whales who all race to claim their share of the feast. On the coast, two worlds collide.

Coasts are the most dynamic and challenging habitats in the ocean — that brings great rewards but also great danger. The extraordinary animals that live here must find ingenious ways to cope with two very different worlds. This episode is a rollercoaster ride of heart-stopping action and epic drama, peopled with characters from the beautiful to the bizarre. We meet fish that live on dry land and puffins that must travel 60 miles or more for a single meal, and witness a life-and-death struggle in a technicolour rock pool.

In a secluded cove in the Galapagos, sea lions feast on 60kg tuna. It should be impossible — tuna are usually far too fast for sea lions to catch. But here the sea lions club together to herd their prey inshore. Once trapped in the shallows, these huge fish are easy pickings. As the tide recedes in Brazil, lightfoot crabs leap from rock to rock, desperately avoiding the water — their lives depend on it. Moray eels launch themselves from rock pools, jaw gaping. Then octopuses, too. Both crawl across dry rock to set their ambush.

Elsewhere, the ever-changing tides create rock pools. But these temporary worlds are a battleground. Predatory starfish turn a magical garden into the stuff of nightmares. All around the world, immense waves pound the shore, and this episode reveals some of the largest on the planet, over 30 metres high. Over millennia these forces carve exquisite coastal sculptures and cliffs that are home to huge colonies of seabirds. Puffins fly up to 30 miles out to sea to find food for their chicks.

A father returns with one precious beakful of food… then pirates attack. Desperate dads must escape the faster and more aerobatic skuas before finally delivering a meal to their young puffling. Meanwhile, in the remote Pacific islands lives the most terrestrial fish on the planet. It lives in miniature caves above the tide lines and uses its tail like a coiled spring to jump from rock to rock. A male tries to attract a mate, but waves are a constant hindrance. These are fish that seem to hate water!

Once a year, king penguins return to the cold Antarctic shores of South Georgia for a month-long moult. First they must cross the biggest wall of blubber on the planet — thousands of gigantic elephant seals. Then they face a month with no food, before they can return to their natural home, the chilly Antarctic seas.

Just off the beaches of Miami, the largest gathering of coastal sharks on the planet can still be found. But today they must face the many challenges that come from our world too. While making Blue Planet II, we have explored parts of the ocean that nobody has been to before, encountered extraordinary animals and discovered new insights into how life thrives beneath the waves.

But we have also witnessed the profound effects of human activity. The oceans are changing faster and in more ways than at any point in human history and now, for the first time, we understand why. In this final episode, we uncover the impact that our modern lives are having on our best-loved characters from across the series, including devoted albatross parents unwittingly feeding their chicks discarded plastic and mother dolphins potentially exposing their newborn calves to pollutants through their contaminated milk.

Scientists have even discovered that increasing noise levels may stop baby clownfish finding their way home. Warmer than normal seas caused the biggest coral bleaching event in human history, killing about 90 per cent of the branching corals at Lizard Island. But the warming ocean could have an even more devastating effect.

We travel to Antarctica on a unique expedition to discover how melting polar ice sheets could one day impact the lives of hundreds of millions of people around the world. Yet, despite these devastating impacts, there is hope. Every year, billions of herring overwinter in the icy seas off Norway, but just 50 years ago they were almost wiped out by overfishing. Today, thanks to careful regulation, they have returned, creating one of the greatest spectacles in the ocean.

Hundreds of giant humpback whales and one of the greatest gatherings of orcas on the planet feast on the herring — an extraordinary story of recovery. Around the world, individuals are also making a huge difference to the future of the ocean.

In the Galapagos, one scientist has devoted much of his life to saving the largest fish in the sea — the whale shark. In the Caribbean, a community is reversing the fortune of giant leatherback turtles.

Their numbers have dropped dramatically, by up to 90 per cent in some parts of the world, but here, volunteers are risking their lives to get turtle poachers to put down their weapons and instead protect the beach where these magnificent creatures nest. Through these valiant efforts, theirs is now one of the densest leatherback nesting beaches in the world. Curating wonderful science materials for humans. Documentaries, lectures, and movies. All trade-free. The Ocean.

Instructions on how to do this can be found in this post. Here's the log file. I'm using 3. AdmiralRalwood 2 11 The Cthulhu programmer himself!

Quote from: jedi on June 12, , am. Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Codethulhu GitHub wgah'nagl fhtagn. This is a red-letter day! Does it freeze right at the start immediately after starting FSO in the launcher or when you start a mission? If it's immediately at the start then FSO shouldn't freeze but at mission start the issue described by AdmiralRalwood could happen.

Your log shows that a mission is being loaded so I guess the second possibility is what happens in which case it's more or less "expected". CecilNecros 2 1. So, I have really been enjoying the amazing campaigns Blue Planet has to offer, but upon getting to War in Heaven, Part 2, I was surprised to find a lack of voice acting. All characters speak through a hideous text to speech system.

I installed the mod through the freespace open installer. Should I try reinstalling it manually, or is there no voice acting for part 2 of War in Heaven? Aesaar 2 Part 2 has no VA, no. You can deactivate the text-to-speech in the launcher.

TBH, that thing should really be off by default. Quote from: Aesaar on September 16, , pm. So, is there no hope for there being a voice acting in the future? FrikgFeek 2 WiH part 2 isn't really the final part of the trilogy and it's unlikely to get voice acted any time soon.

Maybe in like 5 years or something, but I wouldn't hold my breath. LaineyBugsDaddy 2 7. Yeah, WiH Pt. There are only 10 kinds of people in the world; those who understand binary and those who don't. Quote from: LaineyBugsDaddy on September 20, , pm. Follow the clues. To find the truth you'll need to master military theory, cosmology, and the art of killing. All you risk losing are your friends, your loved ones, your sanity, your free will, and any hope for the future of intelligent life.

Face down ruthless, intelligent Fury AI. Fight alongside — and against — devastating warships that finally behave like titans with thousands of people aboard. Fly capital ships, command entire fleet battles, win the trust and love of your comrades, and confront a fate worse than death in the spaces of your own mind.

ART Starring fleets of next-generation warships, painstakingly balanced weapons and fighters built on cutting-edge mechanics, and a professional voice cast backed by our own community's talented and enthusiastic amateurs!

At the heart of Blue Planet is the internet's most active, intellectually challenging FreeSpace discussion. Raise theories, debate tactics, interact with the game universe, and help shape future installments. Discover other amazing campaigns. You'll make everything better.



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