Museum Secrets (2011–…): Season 1, Episode 5 - Inside the Natural History Museum - full transcript
(pensive music)
- [Narrator] London, a city
of commoners and kings,
and at its heart, a museum
with secrets dark and strange,
tales of espionage,
(explosion booming)
pickled creatures in hidden spaces,
a cursed gemstone--
(person gasping)
- I won't touch it.
- [Narrator] And Britain's
barbaric beginnings.
(men grunting)
Secrets hidden in plain sight
inside the Natural History Museum.
(tense dramatic music)
The Natural History
Museum in London, England.
It's a cathedral of nature,
housing over 70 million specimens.
During the day, thousands of
visitors tour the galleries
but at night when they've all gone home,
this place seems to come alive
with unforgettable stories
about where we came from
and where we're going.
(eerie music)
The galleries and dark
passageways invite those who dare
to venture behind the
scenes, take a closer look,
and discover secrets that are disturbing
and sometimes brutal.
- Well, we've got
material from Gough's Cave
in Cheddar Gorge in Somerset,
and this is some of the material we dug up
in the late 1980s from
our excavations there
in really just a small area of the cave.
They're important because
they represent people
near the end of the
last ice age in Britain,
so they're the best
sample we have of people
from Britain at that time.
- [Narrator] 15,000 years ago,
Northwestern Europe was a desolate,
uninhabitable polar desert.
But somewhere around 13,000 BC,
the Earth began to warm up rapidly,
revealing a massive land
bridge connecting Britain
to continental Europe,
a gateway for early nomadic man.
- These people arrived
really quite rapidly,
probably following herds of
animals migrating into Britain.
We think that life was
quite hard for these people.
(men grunting)
When we were excavating,
we obviously found not
just these human remains.
There were remains of a
number of individuals.
On this skull, which is an adult skull,
we can see here cut marks
running across this region here.
There are also marks on the frontal bone,
suggesting that perhaps
the skin has been removed.
On this jawbone, we've got
a series of cut marks here
where the jaw was
disarticulated from the skull.
So the material has been
pretty extensively worked over
by humans and obviously there
are many different reasons
why that might have happened.
May have been an act of desperation,
because, of course, we know cases today
when there had been a crisis.
People have been stranded somewhere.
An airplane has crashed in the mountains
and people, in the end, are
forced to eat other people.
(men grunting)
(somber music)
- [Narrator] British
cannibals, could this be true?
If so, these bones offer evidence
of what some of the very first Englishmen
may have been eating
for dinner, each other.
(solemn music)
(water dripping)
To investigate the mystery,
we go to Cheddar Gorge
where paleontologists from
the Natural History Museum
discovered the puzzling bones.
- Here we are in Gough's
Cave, Cheddar in Somerset.
The floor level would once
have been really quite high.
This is the site of our excavation.
Essentially, it's the area that
was protected by this rock.
This is where all of our finds came from.
We found very large numbers
of broken human bones
all jumbled up with the remains of animals
like horses and red deer,
and we noticed quite early on
that the horses and red
deer had been butchered
for food and thrown away,
and the human remains
appear to have been treated
in exactly the same way.
People have suggested pretty
complex ritual explanations.
Archeologists use the word ritual
when they don't know what's going on.
- [Narrator] For more than 20 years,
these bones have been locked away
in a back room of the museum's
paleontology department,
the source of the curious
cut marks left unknown.
But recent advances in
three-dimensional imaging
may provide Doctor Silvia
Bello the clues she needs
to solve this ancient mystery.
- Now the image is being
scanned three-dimensionally
and you can notice that
this series of cut mark
is being reproduced by the scan image.
We can turn our image
and have a proper look at the cut marks
according which angle we prefer.
This is a clear cut mark.
These specific models tell
me, well, first of all,
it's a series of marks
one next to the other
so the movement, it was a
constant sort of fileting
in this case of the mandible.
The angle in this case is quite acute
which means that it
was not a cutting angle
but it was more of a
deflection angle in this sense.
- [Narrator] The next step is
a trip to the town of Cheddar.
Butcher Jim Baker will cut
up a pig using replicas
of sharpened stones or
flints found at Gough's Cave.
Silvia wants to see how
close the cut marks come
to the cuts found on the
fossilized human bones.
- These are the sort of tool
that were probably found in Gough's Cave.
- Well, I'm gonna start with this one
'cause this looks like--
- [Silvia] Very sharp.
Are you actually using
more strength in this case?
- Not really at the moment.
You can feel that you're
right on top of the bone
and there's a scraping
motion on the bone, so yeah.
I think it'll get the cartilage out.
(tense eerie music)
- [Silvia] So the cutting
is not really a problem
through the meat.
- Through the meat's
not a problem at all, no.
It's very, lots of sharp
little cutting motions
rather than with a knife, it's a much more
sweeping action, yeah.
- One single.
(tense eerie music)
- You can hear it on the bone,
can't you, yeah, yeah.
- On the bone.
- It's certainly not--
- It's coming gently.
- It is, it's coming in small pieces,
but, and again, there's that.
(tense eerie music)
That surprised me how
easy it was, actually.
Ta-da, there we go.
- Wow, yeah.
- Just curious to see if there are--
- Yeah, well, it would be--
- Any cuts left.
Think there's something.
- There's definitely cut marks
down through there.
- Yeah, so it'd be very interesting
just to see is it exactly reproduction
of what we have on fossil
which we can prove that they
were using the same technique
and possibly the same
tool that we have here.
(tense eerie music)
- [Narrator] The pig bones
from the butcher shop
are cleaned, dried,
and ready to go under Silvia's microscope.
This is quite interesting
because the location of
the cut marks in here
are exactly the same,
so this is the one that has
been butchered by the butcher
and there is all this
series of cut marks almost--
- Oh, I can see it from here.
- Perpendicular,
and you can see exactly the same,
the same orientation, the same location
on the fossil in Gough's Cave.
There's also, you can see
all the internal striation
which is the indication--
- Oh, that's fabulous.
- That it's
produced by a stone tool.
- [Andrew] Yeah.
- [Silvia] This one, kinda
see the same kinda twisty,
the forking at the end.
Microstriation over there and over here,
so they are very similar.
- So we're looking animal remains--
- There will be no doubt.
- It'd be butchering.
- For human, we can't be
100% sure it was cannibalism
but with this evidence, I am 99% sure.
(tense eerie music)
- [Narrator] It's a startling glimpse
into Britain's dark past,
leaving little doubt some
of the first Englishmen
were indeed eating each other.
(men grunting)
The Natural History Museum is home
to some odd and disturbing artifacts,
but what can be found in its extensive
and impressive galleries is
only the tip of the iceberg.
Behind the scenes, the
collections stretch for miles,
and tucked away in the
bowels of the museum
is one of the most extraordinary
and bizarre rooms in the world.
(dramatic music)
(pensive music)
The Natural History
Museum in London, England
is probably most famous for its connection
to the legendary British
naturalist Charles Darwin.
His statue graces the main gallery,
a tribute to the scientist who,
in the mid 19th century, changed the world
with his revolutionary
theory of evolution.
Today, only a fraction of
Darwin's specimens are on display.
The rest are hidden away in
vast storage rooms like this one
where the museum's collections line more
than 27 kilometers of shelving,
including their vast spirit collection.
This is the tank room.
Here, thousands of
specimens pickled in alcohol
and formaldehyde stare
from jars lining the walls.
It's one of the biggest
collections of its kind,
and it keeps getting bigger.
(eerie music)
Carrying on the Darwin tradition
is head curator, Oliver Crimmen.
For nearly 40 years he's
been adding unique specimens
for future research.
- This is why we call it the tank room.
The larger specimens are here in tanks.
We like our Victorian glass bottles,
but for some of the bigger things,
it's not practical to have a glass jar.
This is an arapaima from the Amazon River.
This one is a particular
old favorite of mine.
I used to watch it swimming around
in the London Zoo Aquarium
when I was younger
and years later, I found
my old friend again
in the museum tank when I
got a job at the museum,
so I've known this fish for some years.
The collection goes
back hundreds of years.
That means that we have
Captain Cook's specimens
in the collection, Charles
Darwin's specimens.
You can think of it as
a sort of Noah's ark
in a sense that specimens here
that are no longer available in the wild.
One of my favorites is
the deep sea relative
of the angler fish.
That mouth is full of sharp fangs
and on the head, there is
the fantastic luminous organ.
All you would see of it is
the little luminous spots,
probably like a little
crowd of luminous shrimps,
and coming to investigate that,
you'd be unaware of the
mouth waiting below.
- [Narrator] They may look
like your worst nightmare
but to scientists around the world,
there's endless potential
for new discoveries
in these pickled treasures.
- This is the head of a basking shark.
It's one of the giant sharks in the world.
It's too big to go chasing
around after big prey
so it's swimming along with
its cavernous mouth open,
mopping up little shrimps in the sea.
The hydrodynamic trick
that sharks have learned
of having little teeth all over their skin
has been very useful to a shark
that's on the move all of its life.
(dramatic music)
- [Narrator] All along a shark's skin
are V-shaped teeth or denticles.
These denticles direct
the flow of water away
from the shark's skin,
greatly reducing the
forces of drag on its body.
- Very important if you're a massive fish
moving through water.
Water's 800 times as dense as air,
so it's hard work making a living
moving forwards through water,
and that's why these teeth
are so important to sharks.
Now the Speedo company wanted to see
if they could imitate that
on an Olympic swimsuit.
- [Narrator] In a sport
where the difference
between winning and losing is measured
in hundredths of a second,
Speedo needed innovative new technology
to give their swimsuits the edge.
By studying the denticles
on the skin of the basking shark,
they were able to develop the Fastskin,
a high-performance swimsuit
that mimics the drag reduction abilities
of the shark's skin.
The Fastskin first proved its worth
at the Sydney Olympics in 2000
where swimmers wearing
them won 83% of the medals,
a triumph in the pool that
may not have been possible
without Oliver Crimmen's
lovingly tended specimens.
- This is a good example of the usefulness
of specimens in the collection.
You can't tell what they will
reveal to us in the future.
They are the subject
matter of endless research.
As time goes on, the collection
becomes more valuable
and more important.
(case whirring)
(case thudding)
(menacing music)
- [Narrator] Two floors
above the tank room
in the public galleries of
the mineralogy department
is a vault full of rare
and priceless gems.
It's sealed by a heavy steel door,
a door meant to lock thieves out
(metal clanging)
and keep a deadly curse in.
(dramatic music)
(inquisitive music)
The Natural History Museum in London
is a mineralogist's dream,
containing more than 300,000
samples of the Earth's riches.
The most valuable of these
are locked away in a vault,
including a Martian meteorite,
a rare crystallized gold nugget,
and one of the largest
uncut emeralds in the world.
They are priceless and
irreplaceable treasures.
There's one gem in this collection though
that's renowned not for its beauty
but rather for its dark side.
(tense music)
The purple sapphire is feared.
It was stolen during the
Indian Mutiny of 1857
from the Temple of Indra.
Misfortune, sorrow, misery,
and even death is said
to befall those who dare touch it.
Many still believe the curse is real,
but not mineralogist Alan Hart.
- Well, this is the blasted amethyst
or cursed amethyst, as it was well-known.
It's a magnificent gemstone,
a beautiful amethyst crystal.
This is a very large size
but what's fantastic about this stone
is that it had this great story with it.
- [Narrator] The purple sapphire was given
to the Natural History Museum in 1944
by scientist Edward Heron-Allen.
He was so afraid of the curse
that he placed it in no
fewer than seven boxes,
one inside the other, and with the stone,
he enclosed something
else: a written warning.
- We do have the actual letter here.
He says here, "To whomsoever
"shall be the future possessor of this--
- [Alan And Edward] "Amethyst.
"These lines are addressed in warning
"before he or she shall
assume the responsibility
"of owning it."
(menacing music)
- [Edward] "The stone
is cursed and is stained
"with the blood and dishonor
"of everyone who has ever owned it.
(men shouting)
"It was looted
"from the treasure of the temple
"of the god Indra at Cawnpore
(gunshots booming)
"and brought to this country
"by Colonel W. Ferris
of the Bengal Cavalry.
"From the day he possessed
it, he was unfortunate
"and lost both his health and money.
"His son who had it after
his death gave it to a friend
"who shortly afterwards committed suicide
"and left it back to him by will.
"Colonel Ferris's distraught
son then gave the stone
"to the eccentric Heron-Allen in 1890."
- Heron-Allen was a very
interesting gentleman.
They called him a polymath.
He was into absolutely everything
like Persian literature,
history of the violin.
I think he was just
interested in everything
and that would've involved the afterlife,
the occult, supernatural,
and so on and so forth,
and I think this is one of the reasons
why the purple sapphire
he took so seriously
and the possible curse.
(eerie occult music)
He belonged to a secret
society of mystics,
the Rosicrucians, and
believed he could harness
the forces of the afterworld
to neutralize the curse
of the purple sapphire.
- [Edward] "From the moment I had it,
"misfortunes attacked me.
"Until I had it bound around
with a double-headed snake,
"looped up with Zodiacal plaques
"and neutralized between
Heydon's magic Tau--
- [Edward And Alan] "And
two amethyst scaraboei
"of Queen Hatasu's period
brought from Thebes."
- So interestingly, as a
scientist and a mineralogist,
I'm not sure what that means,
so I find it quite interesting
that the stone is mounted
in the silver described
such as Heron-Allen has
and I'd like to know what
that actually does mean.
Is this designed to keep
the curse into the stone?
(eerie spiritual music)
- [Narrator] Nehebkau,
the double-headed snake,
is an Egyptian god of the underworld
and fighter against evil.
The tau cross, sacred in ancient Egypt
and early Christianity,
invokes the life-giving power of the sun.
And so do the scarabs.
More than 3,000 years old,
these tiny carved stones
are symbols of Khepri,
the Egyptian sun god.
Clearly Heron-Allen was desperate
to contain the sapphire's curse,
but still it was not enough.
- [Edward] "In 1903 after
another great misfortune
"fallen on me, I threw
it in the Regent's Canal.
"Three months afterwards,
it was brought back to me
"by the Wardour Street dealer
"who had bought it from the dredger.
"Then I gave it back to a friend
"who was a singer at her earnest wish.
"The next time she tried to sing,
"her voice was dead and gone.
"I feel that it's exerting
a baleful influence
"over my newborn daughter
(baby crying)
"and I am now packing it in seven boxes
"with directions that it is
not to see the light again
"until I have been dead by 30 years."
- [Edward And Alan]
"Whoever shall open this
"shall first read the warning
"and then do so as he
pleases with the jewel.
"My advice for him-- "
- "Is to cast it into the sea.
"I'm forbidden by the
Rosicrucian Oath to do this
"or I would have done it long ago."
So rather than cast it into the sea,
what we've done is cast it
into our mineral collection.
Do I believe in the curse?
Well, obviously, I don't
believe in the curse
or else I wouldn't be handling
it like this. (laughs)
(eerie music)
- [Narrator] But the legend of the curse
still holds its power over many,
including Heron-Allen's family.
Ivor Jones, grandson of the former owner,
hasn't seen the purple sapphire in decades
and isn't sure he wants to now.
- [Alan] Here we have the item itself.
- [Ivor] Yes.
- [Alan] The cursed amethyst.
- [Ivor] Blasted amethyst.
- The blasted amethyst,
yes, and there it is.
- Yes, we don't want it back.
My mother gave it to the museum
and it was an outright
gift, no strings or anything
and what to do, she
said, it was up to you.
My personal opinion is
that we ought to find out
which Hindu god it was stolen from
and it ought to be returned.
(men shouting)
(gunfire booming)
- [Alan] So Ivor, before we
put this back into the vault
on display in the museum,
would you like to hold
it for one last time?
(tense eerie music)
- I won't touch it.
- [Alan] Right, yes, yeah, sure.
- And nor would any of
my brothers or sisters.
Call me superstitious but I'd rather not.
- [Narrator] Some stories from
the Natural History Museum
like the curse of the purple sapphire
are sinister and mysterious.
(air raid sirens wailing)
But others explode with violence,
(explosions booming)
taking us back to the early
days of the Second World War
(explosions booming)
(planes droning)
(explosions booming)
when Nazi bombs fell on London
and the museum played a crucial role
in the Allied war effort
when it was a supply center
for Allied spies and saboteurs.
(men chattering faintly)
- Three, two, one.
(explosion booming)
(metal clattering)
(dramatic music)
(explosion booming)
- [Narrator] With the
fall of France in 1940,
the Allies were driven
out of continental Europe
by the Nazis
(people chattering faintly)
but the beleaguered British fought back,
forming a top-secret unit,
the Special Operations
Executive, the fabled SOE.
Their mission, set Europe ablaze
with acts of sabotage behind enemy lines.
(explosion booming)
The Natural History Museum
became one of their bases.
(machine beeping)
This was where spies and
saboteurs were outfitted
with weapons, explosives,
and other lethal tools of their trade.
Wartime spy Ian Fleming spent time here
and later created the
gadget-loving character Q
for his James Bond novels.
- The idea was if you were a field agent,
you would be brought here to show
what the SOE could supply you
in terms of weapons and explosives.
(tense music)
So basically it was sort of like a shop.
We're now walking into the marine gallery.
There was a diver standing
here in diving gear
and he was the pilot of a
small miniature submarine
that was displayed here.
And here was a workshop.
It was from here that they
used to make the molds
or the plaster casts of
the coal and the logs
and they were hollowed out
and you could hide things in them
and you would put them in your lorry
and if the Germans looked,
it just looked like coal.
(explosion booming)
- [Narrator] The camouflage
unit was responsible
for some of the most ingenious
and effective explosive devices conceived
during the Second World War.
(explosion booming)
Few of these lethal gadgets remain
but there are blueprints and photographs,
enabling Sidney Alford
to reconstruct the past
and discover how they worked.
- I'm weighing out about 200 grams
of plastic explosive called PE4.
I have a certain available volume,
space for the explosive.
I'm going to put it
inside a skin of a rat.
I'm replicating a particular type
of what nowadays would be described
as an improvised explosive device, a bomb.
It was to be used particularly
by Special Operations Executive.
I'll just trim the cottons.
I don't think you'd notice
that this chap has got insides
that he wasn't born with.
(tense percussive music)
We've made here a
representation of a boiler.
The essential is that it
has a furnace as part of it.
See, it is quite substantial.
It's made in steel.
Here we have a plain detonator
with safety fuse coming out of it.
I do believe that that detonator
is now inside the body of explosive.
Wherever there was a boiler,
these would be thrown in the path of coal
in those countries
occupied by the Germans.
When the stoker comes along,
he would not like the
rat to be lying around
in his place of work
so he'd pick it up by
its tail or on a shovel
and throw it in the fire.
(tense music)
(explosion booming)
Wow.
Well, it certainly did the job.
I can understand why anyone
who's done the experiment
would be scared of rats
lying around boiler houses.
(somber music)
- [Narrator] These vintage
improvised explosive devices
caused havoc in Nazi-occupied Europe.
Eventually, some of this SOE technology
fell into the hands of
the German resistance
(explosion booming)
who were plotting to assassinate Hitler.
- For the attempted
assassination of Hitler,
they decided they would try to insinuate
onto his aircraft some
of these type C bombs
and it contains the explosive
which was a mixture of TNT and tetryl.
The purpose of this is to
insert means of initiation
which in this case was
intended to be a time pencil.
- [Narrator] The time pencil
is an acid-activated spring fuse.
When the copper end is crimped,
it breaks a vial of acid
which slowly dissolves a wire
holding a high-tension spring.
When the spring is released,
it drives a firing pin into a detonator,
setting off an explosion.
(explosion booming)
Now, somebody had the bright idea
that if you take a pair of
these, and I made some mock-ups
for the purpose and put them together,
they have very proximately
the same dimensions
to a bottle of the
French liquor Cointreau,
which was no doubt quite a luxury
in Germany during the war.
Quite like it myself.
- [Narrator] March 1943.
After visiting the Eastern Front,
Hitler prepares to fly back to Germany
and the conspirators make their move.
The detonator is inserted
and the entire package is wrapped
to look like two bottles of Cointreau.
(car engine rumbling)
At the airfield, one of the conspirators
presses the outside of the package,
breaking the vial of acid.
He hands it to one of Hitler's staff,
telling him it's a gift.
The bomb is set to explode in 30 minutes.
That afternoon, Hitler's plane takes off.
- Here we have a
representation of the bomb.
Out of historic interest,
what I'm going to use is an
equivalent amount of explosive.
This is just cartridges of
standard plastic explosive,
the British military PE4.
Given a little more time,
I might've been able to arrange
a suitable plane to blow up,
but we're using this van,
which, after all, is
well-constructed and in steel.
That's a pretty good
equivalent to an airplane.
I'm now going to put the
detonator into the explosive.
(tense menacing music)
Three, two, one.
(explosion booming)
(metal clattering)
Mm, well, that was a bit
more than I had expected,
I must admit.
Seems to have reduced it
to its large sheet metal components.
There's the top.
It's inevitable that it
would have blasted a hole
where I put the charge,
and imagine that that were an airplane.
There would be the floor of the airplane,
of the fuselage, flying through the air
pretty well by itself.
It could not conceivably
remain aerodynamic.
(explosion booming)
The question arises, therefore,
why didn't the bomb go off?
(dramatic music)
- [Narrator] Less than
two hours after takeoff,
Hitler's plane arrived safely.
Some historians believe
that a faulty detonator cap
or cold temperatures caused
the bomb to malfunction,
but Sidney Alford has a new theory
about why the conspirator
who packaged the bomb
missed his big chance at changing history.
- I rather suspect that he forgot,
I would guess, that
that was a safety device
and you have to remove it
before the thing could work.
He must have been in
rather nervous condition
when he was getting ready
this bomb to prepare Hitler.
The consequences of his
being caught in the act
would've been horrendous for him.
If he had not made that mistake,
what the implications on
history would've been,
Hitler dead in 1943.
Think about that.
(plane droning)
(explosion booming)
(pensive music)
- [Narrator] The vast collections
at the Natural History Museum
hold mysteries from all eras
including savage tales from a
dark time in British history
when wild animals fought to the death
for the entertainment
of kings and princes.
(animal snarling)
(dramatic music)
(pensive music)
The Zoology Department at
the Natural History Museum
houses one of the most
extensive collections
of mammal skeletons in the world,
including a few specimens that
reveal a story of violence,
(animal roars)
cruelty,
(animal roars)
and extinction.
(animal roars)
(dog barks)
- These are two skulls that were excavated
from the moat of the Tower
of London back in 1937.
They were actually
examined by my predecessors
who made the identification
that these two specimens
were actually lions.
(lion roaring)
The two skulls were
found to be Barbary lion
and for the Natural
History Museum, of course,
that was very, very exciting
because up to that point,
we didn't have any identified specimens
of Barbary lion in the collection.
Now, the carbon date range that came back
for this one was late
13th, early 14th century.
They're the first two lion
skulls to be discovered
in England since the
end of the last ice age.
- [Narrator] But why were the bones
of the Moroccan lions found
at the Tower of London?
There's a clue in other bones
that were found with them in the moat.
- But apart from the lions,
we have these wonderful examples here
of dog skulls found in the moat.
So this one in particular
is of great interest to us
because you can actually
see on the left-hand side
a puncture wound to the cranium.
What we assume has happened here
is that this specimen, this dog,
has been involved possibly in bear-baiting
and that this is a fatal
canine puncture wound.
It speaks volumes, I think,
for what was going on in the Tower.
(lion roaring)
(dog snarling)
(dramatic music)
(choir vocalizing)
- [Narrator] The Tower of London
where English kings sent traitors to die
was infamous for torture and execution.
(crowd chattering faintly)
But there was another very
different kind of cruelty
that took place here.
- This is the main western
entrance to the Tower of London
and this is where the Royal Menagerie was
from the 13th century right
up until the 19th century,
and here, lots of exotic animals were kept
and we can see the drawbridge
you would've crossed to come in.
You would've had to walk through a tower
which isn't there any longer.
(eerie music)
(lion snarling)
And you could imagine
approaching this amazing,
very impressive, very threatening castle.
You've got the lions roaring at you.
Really is the royal presence, if you like.
(drum beating)
(lion snarling)
There would've been a huge range
of animals in the menagerie.
(elephant trumpeting)
There was an African elephant
which was a gift from the king of France.
The Hudson Bay Company give
the Tower of London a grizzly bear.
Initially, the animals are
here really as status symbols
but by the 17th century,
it's officially an area
that's being used for lion-baiting.
They've got dogs and bears
and different animal fighting, really,
that people are betting on.
The king, King James, is very keen on this
and has a special platform constructed
so it's kinda like an auditorium
and people can come and watch.
(crowd chattering faintly)
(lion snarling)
(dog growling)
- [Narrator] In the 1930s,
hundreds of years after the
Royal Menagerie had been closed,
archeologists made a startling discovery
in the Tower's moat.
- The lion skulls are extraordinary
because they have been
dated to the medieval period
and they're also, as I understand it,
a breed of lion which is now extinct.
(somber music)
- [Narrator] But this breed of lion
may not be extinct after all
and the museum lion skulls
could help prove it.
Conservationist Doctor
Simon Black believes
the descendants of Barbary lions
may still be alive and well.
(lion roars)
And living in zoos around the world.
(drum beating)
- Here we have the Moroccan royal lions
which is the animals descended
from the royal palace collection
of the king of Morocco.
One of the most notable
features is this lovely mane
that goes round his head, round his body,
and down under his belly.
And then if you look at his eyes,
you've got very pale eyes
and this appears to be a
characteristic of Barbary lions
and seems to be consistently found
in animals that are from the
Moroccan king's collection.
We believe that since they've
been kept in captivity,
it's offered us a chance, maybe,
to rediscover Barbary lion
or lions that at least
have some of that ancestry,
and this is where these guys come in.
(brooding music)
- [Narrator] The plan is ambitious,
take DNA samples from
lions across the planet
and compare them with the
DNA of Moroccan royal lions.
- And when we compare
the Moroccan royal lion
with a lion from Southern Africa,
we see that most of these pairs match up
but as we go through, we
find areas such as here
where there is a mismatch.
And if we compare again
with another set of lions,
this one from Ethiopia,
again, going across,
a lot of commonality between
all three lion populations
but then differences starting to appear
as we go across this small sequence.
So far with the few tools and data
that we do have available,
we are starting to find
that there are tantalizing differences
between the Moroccan royal lions
and lions from other populations.
- [Narrator] This suggests that
they are a separate species
not related to other lions,
but the question remains,
are they true descendants of
the once majestic Barbary lion?
- There's a pool of data there
from the bones of those museum specimens
and it can tell us a little
bit about this jigsaw of DNA,
what it looks like in Barbary lions,
and we can go back, check that DNA data,
and then match it with
the Moroccan royal lion
and say, "Is there a good match?"
If these animals are
shown to be authentic,
then effectively you are
resurrecting an animal
that so far has been considered extinct
and we'd be showing evidence
that there's a subspecies of lion
which we haven't been able to talk about
for best part of 100 years.
(lion yawns)
- [Narrator] Research remains to be done.
But these 700-year-old skulls
have brought scientists
one step closer to
rediscovering a lost species
and a dream of one day returning
the Barbary lion to the wild.
There's another specimen at
the Natural History Museum,
perhaps the best known
of all extinct creatures,
holding clues that might help save
another species from extinction,
(tense music)
our own.
(dramatic music)
(pensive music)
Venture into the bird gallery
of the Natural History Museum
and we find an incredible replica
of one of the most well-known
birds in history, the dodo.
It's an animal famous for
one thing, being extinct.
(gunshot booms)
(bird squawks)
The dodo was obliterated with such speed
that the example still resonates today.
The expression dead as a dodo
evokes the grim concept
of total annihilation
and the bird entered history
as one of Mother Nature's biggest losers,
a weak, lazy, fat failure.
But at the Natural History Museum,
they believe the poor dodo
has been getting a bum wrap.
To finally set the record straight,
researchers at the museum
are looking for answers
deep within the dodo's
centuries-old bones.
(machine whirring)
- Well, this is a thin section.
It's a slice through the
thigh bone of the dodo,
and it's been cut and ground down
to about 30 to 50 thousandths
of a millimeter thick.
It's thin enough to let
light go through it.
This area here in yellow
is an area of bone fibers
that are running in a circular fashion
around the diameter of the bone,
and that is a characteristic
of fast-growing bone
and this shows us that
the dodo was able to grow
from a chick to an adult
without any interruptions in its growth.
So this does tell us something
about the ecology of Mauritius
before humans arrived.
(relaxed percussive music)
- [Narrator] Mauritius is
an isolated volcanic island
in the Indian Ocean and
was the home of the dodo.
The bird's ancestors looked
like large flying pigeons
and migrated to this small
island millions of years ago,
finding plenty to eat and no
predators, a dodo paradise.
Doctor Julian Hume is a
world expert on the dodo.
For years, he's been
trying to piece together
what life was like for this elusive bird.
(gentle music)
The myth that the dodo
was an inadequate species
doomed to extinction, fat,
vulnerable, is totally wrong.
(insects chirping)
(bird squawks)
This bird was perfectly fine-tuned.
It wasn't this slow waddling thing
that wandered around its island home.
It was actually a very active species.
It actually took the
equivalent of a large mammal,
so it became a cow, if you
like, of the Mauritian forest.
It would've eaten the fruits on the ground
and everything about the
bird's ecology evolved
to being on the ground,
and that's a key thing in why
the dodo became flightless.
It's very expensive in terms
of energy for a bird to fly,
and nature always works
in a conservative way.
If you don't need those energy
sources, get rid of them.
The breast muscles, the
muscles that reduce flight,
are attached here to a
bone called the sternum
and this usually has a big keel on it
on which those muscles were attached.
Well, the dodo didn't need them,
and so the keel has disappeared
and the muscles would've
become very small.
And as you can see from
the wings just here
how small those wings are compared
with the rest of the bird.
Being perfectly adapted
to its Mauritian home,
there is a price to pay.
If it was left alone,
the dodos would still be
happily walking around Mauritius
right to this present day.
(tense music)
(gunshot booms)
(bird squawks)
- [Narrator] But in the 1600s,
European settlers arrived
and mistook the gentle spirit
and fearlessness of the flightless bird
for signs of stupidity.
They dubbed it dodo, meaning
crazy or fool in Portuguese.
The label stuck.
(pigs snorting)
The Europeans also brought
new animals to the island.
Rats, dogs, and pigs attacked
the dodos and their nests,
feasting on the eggs.
The dodo had evolved in perfect harmony
with its forest home
for millions of years.
Suddenly it was faced
with all this onslaught
of introduced animals
and it could not cope.
So after that first
mention of dodos in 1599,
just 80 years later, it
was gone from this world.
It was totally extinct.
And what can we learn from that?
Well, here we are as human
beings on this planet
thinking we're above nature
and we are probably just as
vulnerable in the long run
if dramatic changes take
place on this planet
and we may well indeed
follow the way of the dodo
if we're not careful.
(somber music)
(moves into pensive music)
- [Narrator] Every
skeleton, every specimen,
every hidden space in the
museum has a story to tell.
We've explored a few.
Many more remain, because the
Natural History Museum is home
to millions of treasures.
Seeing behind the glass,
taking a closer look,
we can discover other
extraordinary museum secrets.
(smooth music)
- [Narrator] London, a city
of commoners and kings,
and at its heart, a museum
with secrets dark and strange,
tales of espionage,
(explosion booming)
pickled creatures in hidden spaces,
a cursed gemstone--
(person gasping)
- I won't touch it.
- [Narrator] And Britain's
barbaric beginnings.
(men grunting)
Secrets hidden in plain sight
inside the Natural History Museum.
(tense dramatic music)
The Natural History
Museum in London, England.
It's a cathedral of nature,
housing over 70 million specimens.
During the day, thousands of
visitors tour the galleries
but at night when they've all gone home,
this place seems to come alive
with unforgettable stories
about where we came from
and where we're going.
(eerie music)
The galleries and dark
passageways invite those who dare
to venture behind the
scenes, take a closer look,
and discover secrets that are disturbing
and sometimes brutal.
- Well, we've got
material from Gough's Cave
in Cheddar Gorge in Somerset,
and this is some of the material we dug up
in the late 1980s from
our excavations there
in really just a small area of the cave.
They're important because
they represent people
near the end of the
last ice age in Britain,
so they're the best
sample we have of people
from Britain at that time.
- [Narrator] 15,000 years ago,
Northwestern Europe was a desolate,
uninhabitable polar desert.
But somewhere around 13,000 BC,
the Earth began to warm up rapidly,
revealing a massive land
bridge connecting Britain
to continental Europe,
a gateway for early nomadic man.
- These people arrived
really quite rapidly,
probably following herds of
animals migrating into Britain.
We think that life was
quite hard for these people.
(men grunting)
When we were excavating,
we obviously found not
just these human remains.
There were remains of a
number of individuals.
On this skull, which is an adult skull,
we can see here cut marks
running across this region here.
There are also marks on the frontal bone,
suggesting that perhaps
the skin has been removed.
On this jawbone, we've got
a series of cut marks here
where the jaw was
disarticulated from the skull.
So the material has been
pretty extensively worked over
by humans and obviously there
are many different reasons
why that might have happened.
May have been an act of desperation,
because, of course, we know cases today
when there had been a crisis.
People have been stranded somewhere.
An airplane has crashed in the mountains
and people, in the end, are
forced to eat other people.
(men grunting)
(somber music)
- [Narrator] British
cannibals, could this be true?
If so, these bones offer evidence
of what some of the very first Englishmen
may have been eating
for dinner, each other.
(solemn music)
(water dripping)
To investigate the mystery,
we go to Cheddar Gorge
where paleontologists from
the Natural History Museum
discovered the puzzling bones.
- Here we are in Gough's
Cave, Cheddar in Somerset.
The floor level would once
have been really quite high.
This is the site of our excavation.
Essentially, it's the area that
was protected by this rock.
This is where all of our finds came from.
We found very large numbers
of broken human bones
all jumbled up with the remains of animals
like horses and red deer,
and we noticed quite early on
that the horses and red
deer had been butchered
for food and thrown away,
and the human remains
appear to have been treated
in exactly the same way.
People have suggested pretty
complex ritual explanations.
Archeologists use the word ritual
when they don't know what's going on.
- [Narrator] For more than 20 years,
these bones have been locked away
in a back room of the museum's
paleontology department,
the source of the curious
cut marks left unknown.
But recent advances in
three-dimensional imaging
may provide Doctor Silvia
Bello the clues she needs
to solve this ancient mystery.
- Now the image is being
scanned three-dimensionally
and you can notice that
this series of cut mark
is being reproduced by the scan image.
We can turn our image
and have a proper look at the cut marks
according which angle we prefer.
This is a clear cut mark.
These specific models tell
me, well, first of all,
it's a series of marks
one next to the other
so the movement, it was a
constant sort of fileting
in this case of the mandible.
The angle in this case is quite acute
which means that it
was not a cutting angle
but it was more of a
deflection angle in this sense.
- [Narrator] The next step is
a trip to the town of Cheddar.
Butcher Jim Baker will cut
up a pig using replicas
of sharpened stones or
flints found at Gough's Cave.
Silvia wants to see how
close the cut marks come
to the cuts found on the
fossilized human bones.
- These are the sort of tool
that were probably found in Gough's Cave.
- Well, I'm gonna start with this one
'cause this looks like--
- [Silvia] Very sharp.
Are you actually using
more strength in this case?
- Not really at the moment.
You can feel that you're
right on top of the bone
and there's a scraping
motion on the bone, so yeah.
I think it'll get the cartilage out.
(tense eerie music)
- [Silvia] So the cutting
is not really a problem
through the meat.
- Through the meat's
not a problem at all, no.
It's very, lots of sharp
little cutting motions
rather than with a knife, it's a much more
sweeping action, yeah.
- One single.
(tense eerie music)
- You can hear it on the bone,
can't you, yeah, yeah.
- On the bone.
- It's certainly not--
- It's coming gently.
- It is, it's coming in small pieces,
but, and again, there's that.
(tense eerie music)
That surprised me how
easy it was, actually.
Ta-da, there we go.
- Wow, yeah.
- Just curious to see if there are--
- Yeah, well, it would be--
- Any cuts left.
Think there's something.
- There's definitely cut marks
down through there.
- Yeah, so it'd be very interesting
just to see is it exactly reproduction
of what we have on fossil
which we can prove that they
were using the same technique
and possibly the same
tool that we have here.
(tense eerie music)
- [Narrator] The pig bones
from the butcher shop
are cleaned, dried,
and ready to go under Silvia's microscope.
This is quite interesting
because the location of
the cut marks in here
are exactly the same,
so this is the one that has
been butchered by the butcher
and there is all this
series of cut marks almost--
- Oh, I can see it from here.
- Perpendicular,
and you can see exactly the same,
the same orientation, the same location
on the fossil in Gough's Cave.
There's also, you can see
all the internal striation
which is the indication--
- Oh, that's fabulous.
- That it's
produced by a stone tool.
- [Andrew] Yeah.
- [Silvia] This one, kinda
see the same kinda twisty,
the forking at the end.
Microstriation over there and over here,
so they are very similar.
- So we're looking animal remains--
- There will be no doubt.
- It'd be butchering.
- For human, we can't be
100% sure it was cannibalism
but with this evidence, I am 99% sure.
(tense eerie music)
- [Narrator] It's a startling glimpse
into Britain's dark past,
leaving little doubt some
of the first Englishmen
were indeed eating each other.
(men grunting)
The Natural History Museum is home
to some odd and disturbing artifacts,
but what can be found in its extensive
and impressive galleries is
only the tip of the iceberg.
Behind the scenes, the
collections stretch for miles,
and tucked away in the
bowels of the museum
is one of the most extraordinary
and bizarre rooms in the world.
(dramatic music)
(pensive music)
The Natural History
Museum in London, England
is probably most famous for its connection
to the legendary British
naturalist Charles Darwin.
His statue graces the main gallery,
a tribute to the scientist who,
in the mid 19th century, changed the world
with his revolutionary
theory of evolution.
Today, only a fraction of
Darwin's specimens are on display.
The rest are hidden away in
vast storage rooms like this one
where the museum's collections line more
than 27 kilometers of shelving,
including their vast spirit collection.
This is the tank room.
Here, thousands of
specimens pickled in alcohol
and formaldehyde stare
from jars lining the walls.
It's one of the biggest
collections of its kind,
and it keeps getting bigger.
(eerie music)
Carrying on the Darwin tradition
is head curator, Oliver Crimmen.
For nearly 40 years he's
been adding unique specimens
for future research.
- This is why we call it the tank room.
The larger specimens are here in tanks.
We like our Victorian glass bottles,
but for some of the bigger things,
it's not practical to have a glass jar.
This is an arapaima from the Amazon River.
This one is a particular
old favorite of mine.
I used to watch it swimming around
in the London Zoo Aquarium
when I was younger
and years later, I found
my old friend again
in the museum tank when I
got a job at the museum,
so I've known this fish for some years.
The collection goes
back hundreds of years.
That means that we have
Captain Cook's specimens
in the collection, Charles
Darwin's specimens.
You can think of it as
a sort of Noah's ark
in a sense that specimens here
that are no longer available in the wild.
One of my favorites is
the deep sea relative
of the angler fish.
That mouth is full of sharp fangs
and on the head, there is
the fantastic luminous organ.
All you would see of it is
the little luminous spots,
probably like a little
crowd of luminous shrimps,
and coming to investigate that,
you'd be unaware of the
mouth waiting below.
- [Narrator] They may look
like your worst nightmare
but to scientists around the world,
there's endless potential
for new discoveries
in these pickled treasures.
- This is the head of a basking shark.
It's one of the giant sharks in the world.
It's too big to go chasing
around after big prey
so it's swimming along with
its cavernous mouth open,
mopping up little shrimps in the sea.
The hydrodynamic trick
that sharks have learned
of having little teeth all over their skin
has been very useful to a shark
that's on the move all of its life.
(dramatic music)
- [Narrator] All along a shark's skin
are V-shaped teeth or denticles.
These denticles direct
the flow of water away
from the shark's skin,
greatly reducing the
forces of drag on its body.
- Very important if you're a massive fish
moving through water.
Water's 800 times as dense as air,
so it's hard work making a living
moving forwards through water,
and that's why these teeth
are so important to sharks.
Now the Speedo company wanted to see
if they could imitate that
on an Olympic swimsuit.
- [Narrator] In a sport
where the difference
between winning and losing is measured
in hundredths of a second,
Speedo needed innovative new technology
to give their swimsuits the edge.
By studying the denticles
on the skin of the basking shark,
they were able to develop the Fastskin,
a high-performance swimsuit
that mimics the drag reduction abilities
of the shark's skin.
The Fastskin first proved its worth
at the Sydney Olympics in 2000
where swimmers wearing
them won 83% of the medals,
a triumph in the pool that
may not have been possible
without Oliver Crimmen's
lovingly tended specimens.
- This is a good example of the usefulness
of specimens in the collection.
You can't tell what they will
reveal to us in the future.
They are the subject
matter of endless research.
As time goes on, the collection
becomes more valuable
and more important.
(case whirring)
(case thudding)
(menacing music)
- [Narrator] Two floors
above the tank room
in the public galleries of
the mineralogy department
is a vault full of rare
and priceless gems.
It's sealed by a heavy steel door,
a door meant to lock thieves out
(metal clanging)
and keep a deadly curse in.
(dramatic music)
(inquisitive music)
The Natural History Museum in London
is a mineralogist's dream,
containing more than 300,000
samples of the Earth's riches.
The most valuable of these
are locked away in a vault,
including a Martian meteorite,
a rare crystallized gold nugget,
and one of the largest
uncut emeralds in the world.
They are priceless and
irreplaceable treasures.
There's one gem in this collection though
that's renowned not for its beauty
but rather for its dark side.
(tense music)
The purple sapphire is feared.
It was stolen during the
Indian Mutiny of 1857
from the Temple of Indra.
Misfortune, sorrow, misery,
and even death is said
to befall those who dare touch it.
Many still believe the curse is real,
but not mineralogist Alan Hart.
- Well, this is the blasted amethyst
or cursed amethyst, as it was well-known.
It's a magnificent gemstone,
a beautiful amethyst crystal.
This is a very large size
but what's fantastic about this stone
is that it had this great story with it.
- [Narrator] The purple sapphire was given
to the Natural History Museum in 1944
by scientist Edward Heron-Allen.
He was so afraid of the curse
that he placed it in no
fewer than seven boxes,
one inside the other, and with the stone,
he enclosed something
else: a written warning.
- We do have the actual letter here.
He says here, "To whomsoever
"shall be the future possessor of this--
- [Alan And Edward] "Amethyst.
"These lines are addressed in warning
"before he or she shall
assume the responsibility
"of owning it."
(menacing music)
- [Edward] "The stone
is cursed and is stained
"with the blood and dishonor
"of everyone who has ever owned it.
(men shouting)
"It was looted
"from the treasure of the temple
"of the god Indra at Cawnpore
(gunshots booming)
"and brought to this country
"by Colonel W. Ferris
of the Bengal Cavalry.
"From the day he possessed
it, he was unfortunate
"and lost both his health and money.
"His son who had it after
his death gave it to a friend
"who shortly afterwards committed suicide
"and left it back to him by will.
"Colonel Ferris's distraught
son then gave the stone
"to the eccentric Heron-Allen in 1890."
- Heron-Allen was a very
interesting gentleman.
They called him a polymath.
He was into absolutely everything
like Persian literature,
history of the violin.
I think he was just
interested in everything
and that would've involved the afterlife,
the occult, supernatural,
and so on and so forth,
and I think this is one of the reasons
why the purple sapphire
he took so seriously
and the possible curse.
(eerie occult music)
He belonged to a secret
society of mystics,
the Rosicrucians, and
believed he could harness
the forces of the afterworld
to neutralize the curse
of the purple sapphire.
- [Edward] "From the moment I had it,
"misfortunes attacked me.
"Until I had it bound around
with a double-headed snake,
"looped up with Zodiacal plaques
"and neutralized between
Heydon's magic Tau--
- [Edward And Alan] "And
two amethyst scaraboei
"of Queen Hatasu's period
brought from Thebes."
- So interestingly, as a
scientist and a mineralogist,
I'm not sure what that means,
so I find it quite interesting
that the stone is mounted
in the silver described
such as Heron-Allen has
and I'd like to know what
that actually does mean.
Is this designed to keep
the curse into the stone?
(eerie spiritual music)
- [Narrator] Nehebkau,
the double-headed snake,
is an Egyptian god of the underworld
and fighter against evil.
The tau cross, sacred in ancient Egypt
and early Christianity,
invokes the life-giving power of the sun.
And so do the scarabs.
More than 3,000 years old,
these tiny carved stones
are symbols of Khepri,
the Egyptian sun god.
Clearly Heron-Allen was desperate
to contain the sapphire's curse,
but still it was not enough.
- [Edward] "In 1903 after
another great misfortune
"fallen on me, I threw
it in the Regent's Canal.
"Three months afterwards,
it was brought back to me
"by the Wardour Street dealer
"who had bought it from the dredger.
"Then I gave it back to a friend
"who was a singer at her earnest wish.
"The next time she tried to sing,
"her voice was dead and gone.
"I feel that it's exerting
a baleful influence
"over my newborn daughter
(baby crying)
"and I am now packing it in seven boxes
"with directions that it is
not to see the light again
"until I have been dead by 30 years."
- [Edward And Alan]
"Whoever shall open this
"shall first read the warning
"and then do so as he
pleases with the jewel.
"My advice for him-- "
- "Is to cast it into the sea.
"I'm forbidden by the
Rosicrucian Oath to do this
"or I would have done it long ago."
So rather than cast it into the sea,
what we've done is cast it
into our mineral collection.
Do I believe in the curse?
Well, obviously, I don't
believe in the curse
or else I wouldn't be handling
it like this. (laughs)
(eerie music)
- [Narrator] But the legend of the curse
still holds its power over many,
including Heron-Allen's family.
Ivor Jones, grandson of the former owner,
hasn't seen the purple sapphire in decades
and isn't sure he wants to now.
- [Alan] Here we have the item itself.
- [Ivor] Yes.
- [Alan] The cursed amethyst.
- [Ivor] Blasted amethyst.
- The blasted amethyst,
yes, and there it is.
- Yes, we don't want it back.
My mother gave it to the museum
and it was an outright
gift, no strings or anything
and what to do, she
said, it was up to you.
My personal opinion is
that we ought to find out
which Hindu god it was stolen from
and it ought to be returned.
(men shouting)
(gunfire booming)
- [Alan] So Ivor, before we
put this back into the vault
on display in the museum,
would you like to hold
it for one last time?
(tense eerie music)
- I won't touch it.
- [Alan] Right, yes, yeah, sure.
- And nor would any of
my brothers or sisters.
Call me superstitious but I'd rather not.
- [Narrator] Some stories from
the Natural History Museum
like the curse of the purple sapphire
are sinister and mysterious.
(air raid sirens wailing)
But others explode with violence,
(explosions booming)
taking us back to the early
days of the Second World War
(explosions booming)
(planes droning)
(explosions booming)
when Nazi bombs fell on London
and the museum played a crucial role
in the Allied war effort
when it was a supply center
for Allied spies and saboteurs.
(men chattering faintly)
- Three, two, one.
(explosion booming)
(metal clattering)
(dramatic music)
(explosion booming)
- [Narrator] With the
fall of France in 1940,
the Allies were driven
out of continental Europe
by the Nazis
(people chattering faintly)
but the beleaguered British fought back,
forming a top-secret unit,
the Special Operations
Executive, the fabled SOE.
Their mission, set Europe ablaze
with acts of sabotage behind enemy lines.
(explosion booming)
The Natural History Museum
became one of their bases.
(machine beeping)
This was where spies and
saboteurs were outfitted
with weapons, explosives,
and other lethal tools of their trade.
Wartime spy Ian Fleming spent time here
and later created the
gadget-loving character Q
for his James Bond novels.
- The idea was if you were a field agent,
you would be brought here to show
what the SOE could supply you
in terms of weapons and explosives.
(tense music)
So basically it was sort of like a shop.
We're now walking into the marine gallery.
There was a diver standing
here in diving gear
and he was the pilot of a
small miniature submarine
that was displayed here.
And here was a workshop.
It was from here that they
used to make the molds
or the plaster casts of
the coal and the logs
and they were hollowed out
and you could hide things in them
and you would put them in your lorry
and if the Germans looked,
it just looked like coal.
(explosion booming)
- [Narrator] The camouflage
unit was responsible
for some of the most ingenious
and effective explosive devices conceived
during the Second World War.
(explosion booming)
Few of these lethal gadgets remain
but there are blueprints and photographs,
enabling Sidney Alford
to reconstruct the past
and discover how they worked.
- I'm weighing out about 200 grams
of plastic explosive called PE4.
I have a certain available volume,
space for the explosive.
I'm going to put it
inside a skin of a rat.
I'm replicating a particular type
of what nowadays would be described
as an improvised explosive device, a bomb.
It was to be used particularly
by Special Operations Executive.
I'll just trim the cottons.
I don't think you'd notice
that this chap has got insides
that he wasn't born with.
(tense percussive music)
We've made here a
representation of a boiler.
The essential is that it
has a furnace as part of it.
See, it is quite substantial.
It's made in steel.
Here we have a plain detonator
with safety fuse coming out of it.
I do believe that that detonator
is now inside the body of explosive.
Wherever there was a boiler,
these would be thrown in the path of coal
in those countries
occupied by the Germans.
When the stoker comes along,
he would not like the
rat to be lying around
in his place of work
so he'd pick it up by
its tail or on a shovel
and throw it in the fire.
(tense music)
(explosion booming)
Wow.
Well, it certainly did the job.
I can understand why anyone
who's done the experiment
would be scared of rats
lying around boiler houses.
(somber music)
- [Narrator] These vintage
improvised explosive devices
caused havoc in Nazi-occupied Europe.
Eventually, some of this SOE technology
fell into the hands of
the German resistance
(explosion booming)
who were plotting to assassinate Hitler.
- For the attempted
assassination of Hitler,
they decided they would try to insinuate
onto his aircraft some
of these type C bombs
and it contains the explosive
which was a mixture of TNT and tetryl.
The purpose of this is to
insert means of initiation
which in this case was
intended to be a time pencil.
- [Narrator] The time pencil
is an acid-activated spring fuse.
When the copper end is crimped,
it breaks a vial of acid
which slowly dissolves a wire
holding a high-tension spring.
When the spring is released,
it drives a firing pin into a detonator,
setting off an explosion.
(explosion booming)
Now, somebody had the bright idea
that if you take a pair of
these, and I made some mock-ups
for the purpose and put them together,
they have very proximately
the same dimensions
to a bottle of the
French liquor Cointreau,
which was no doubt quite a luxury
in Germany during the war.
Quite like it myself.
- [Narrator] March 1943.
After visiting the Eastern Front,
Hitler prepares to fly back to Germany
and the conspirators make their move.
The detonator is inserted
and the entire package is wrapped
to look like two bottles of Cointreau.
(car engine rumbling)
At the airfield, one of the conspirators
presses the outside of the package,
breaking the vial of acid.
He hands it to one of Hitler's staff,
telling him it's a gift.
The bomb is set to explode in 30 minutes.
That afternoon, Hitler's plane takes off.
- Here we have a
representation of the bomb.
Out of historic interest,
what I'm going to use is an
equivalent amount of explosive.
This is just cartridges of
standard plastic explosive,
the British military PE4.
Given a little more time,
I might've been able to arrange
a suitable plane to blow up,
but we're using this van,
which, after all, is
well-constructed and in steel.
That's a pretty good
equivalent to an airplane.
I'm now going to put the
detonator into the explosive.
(tense menacing music)
Three, two, one.
(explosion booming)
(metal clattering)
Mm, well, that was a bit
more than I had expected,
I must admit.
Seems to have reduced it
to its large sheet metal components.
There's the top.
It's inevitable that it
would have blasted a hole
where I put the charge,
and imagine that that were an airplane.
There would be the floor of the airplane,
of the fuselage, flying through the air
pretty well by itself.
It could not conceivably
remain aerodynamic.
(explosion booming)
The question arises, therefore,
why didn't the bomb go off?
(dramatic music)
- [Narrator] Less than
two hours after takeoff,
Hitler's plane arrived safely.
Some historians believe
that a faulty detonator cap
or cold temperatures caused
the bomb to malfunction,
but Sidney Alford has a new theory
about why the conspirator
who packaged the bomb
missed his big chance at changing history.
- I rather suspect that he forgot,
I would guess, that
that was a safety device
and you have to remove it
before the thing could work.
He must have been in
rather nervous condition
when he was getting ready
this bomb to prepare Hitler.
The consequences of his
being caught in the act
would've been horrendous for him.
If he had not made that mistake,
what the implications on
history would've been,
Hitler dead in 1943.
Think about that.
(plane droning)
(explosion booming)
(pensive music)
- [Narrator] The vast collections
at the Natural History Museum
hold mysteries from all eras
including savage tales from a
dark time in British history
when wild animals fought to the death
for the entertainment
of kings and princes.
(animal snarling)
(dramatic music)
(pensive music)
The Zoology Department at
the Natural History Museum
houses one of the most
extensive collections
of mammal skeletons in the world,
including a few specimens that
reveal a story of violence,
(animal roars)
cruelty,
(animal roars)
and extinction.
(animal roars)
(dog barks)
- These are two skulls that were excavated
from the moat of the Tower
of London back in 1937.
They were actually
examined by my predecessors
who made the identification
that these two specimens
were actually lions.
(lion roaring)
The two skulls were
found to be Barbary lion
and for the Natural
History Museum, of course,
that was very, very exciting
because up to that point,
we didn't have any identified specimens
of Barbary lion in the collection.
Now, the carbon date range that came back
for this one was late
13th, early 14th century.
They're the first two lion
skulls to be discovered
in England since the
end of the last ice age.
- [Narrator] But why were the bones
of the Moroccan lions found
at the Tower of London?
There's a clue in other bones
that were found with them in the moat.
- But apart from the lions,
we have these wonderful examples here
of dog skulls found in the moat.
So this one in particular
is of great interest to us
because you can actually
see on the left-hand side
a puncture wound to the cranium.
What we assume has happened here
is that this specimen, this dog,
has been involved possibly in bear-baiting
and that this is a fatal
canine puncture wound.
It speaks volumes, I think,
for what was going on in the Tower.
(lion roaring)
(dog snarling)
(dramatic music)
(choir vocalizing)
- [Narrator] The Tower of London
where English kings sent traitors to die
was infamous for torture and execution.
(crowd chattering faintly)
But there was another very
different kind of cruelty
that took place here.
- This is the main western
entrance to the Tower of London
and this is where the Royal Menagerie was
from the 13th century right
up until the 19th century,
and here, lots of exotic animals were kept
and we can see the drawbridge
you would've crossed to come in.
You would've had to walk through a tower
which isn't there any longer.
(eerie music)
(lion snarling)
And you could imagine
approaching this amazing,
very impressive, very threatening castle.
You've got the lions roaring at you.
Really is the royal presence, if you like.
(drum beating)
(lion snarling)
There would've been a huge range
of animals in the menagerie.
(elephant trumpeting)
There was an African elephant
which was a gift from the king of France.
The Hudson Bay Company give
the Tower of London a grizzly bear.
Initially, the animals are
here really as status symbols
but by the 17th century,
it's officially an area
that's being used for lion-baiting.
They've got dogs and bears
and different animal fighting, really,
that people are betting on.
The king, King James, is very keen on this
and has a special platform constructed
so it's kinda like an auditorium
and people can come and watch.
(crowd chattering faintly)
(lion snarling)
(dog growling)
- [Narrator] In the 1930s,
hundreds of years after the
Royal Menagerie had been closed,
archeologists made a startling discovery
in the Tower's moat.
- The lion skulls are extraordinary
because they have been
dated to the medieval period
and they're also, as I understand it,
a breed of lion which is now extinct.
(somber music)
- [Narrator] But this breed of lion
may not be extinct after all
and the museum lion skulls
could help prove it.
Conservationist Doctor
Simon Black believes
the descendants of Barbary lions
may still be alive and well.
(lion roars)
And living in zoos around the world.
(drum beating)
- Here we have the Moroccan royal lions
which is the animals descended
from the royal palace collection
of the king of Morocco.
One of the most notable
features is this lovely mane
that goes round his head, round his body,
and down under his belly.
And then if you look at his eyes,
you've got very pale eyes
and this appears to be a
characteristic of Barbary lions
and seems to be consistently found
in animals that are from the
Moroccan king's collection.
We believe that since they've
been kept in captivity,
it's offered us a chance, maybe,
to rediscover Barbary lion
or lions that at least
have some of that ancestry,
and this is where these guys come in.
(brooding music)
- [Narrator] The plan is ambitious,
take DNA samples from
lions across the planet
and compare them with the
DNA of Moroccan royal lions.
- And when we compare
the Moroccan royal lion
with a lion from Southern Africa,
we see that most of these pairs match up
but as we go through, we
find areas such as here
where there is a mismatch.
And if we compare again
with another set of lions,
this one from Ethiopia,
again, going across,
a lot of commonality between
all three lion populations
but then differences starting to appear
as we go across this small sequence.
So far with the few tools and data
that we do have available,
we are starting to find
that there are tantalizing differences
between the Moroccan royal lions
and lions from other populations.
- [Narrator] This suggests that
they are a separate species
not related to other lions,
but the question remains,
are they true descendants of
the once majestic Barbary lion?
- There's a pool of data there
from the bones of those museum specimens
and it can tell us a little
bit about this jigsaw of DNA,
what it looks like in Barbary lions,
and we can go back, check that DNA data,
and then match it with
the Moroccan royal lion
and say, "Is there a good match?"
If these animals are
shown to be authentic,
then effectively you are
resurrecting an animal
that so far has been considered extinct
and we'd be showing evidence
that there's a subspecies of lion
which we haven't been able to talk about
for best part of 100 years.
(lion yawns)
- [Narrator] Research remains to be done.
But these 700-year-old skulls
have brought scientists
one step closer to
rediscovering a lost species
and a dream of one day returning
the Barbary lion to the wild.
There's another specimen at
the Natural History Museum,
perhaps the best known
of all extinct creatures,
holding clues that might help save
another species from extinction,
(tense music)
our own.
(dramatic music)
(pensive music)
Venture into the bird gallery
of the Natural History Museum
and we find an incredible replica
of one of the most well-known
birds in history, the dodo.
It's an animal famous for
one thing, being extinct.
(gunshot booms)
(bird squawks)
The dodo was obliterated with such speed
that the example still resonates today.
The expression dead as a dodo
evokes the grim concept
of total annihilation
and the bird entered history
as one of Mother Nature's biggest losers,
a weak, lazy, fat failure.
But at the Natural History Museum,
they believe the poor dodo
has been getting a bum wrap.
To finally set the record straight,
researchers at the museum
are looking for answers
deep within the dodo's
centuries-old bones.
(machine whirring)
- Well, this is a thin section.
It's a slice through the
thigh bone of the dodo,
and it's been cut and ground down
to about 30 to 50 thousandths
of a millimeter thick.
It's thin enough to let
light go through it.
This area here in yellow
is an area of bone fibers
that are running in a circular fashion
around the diameter of the bone,
and that is a characteristic
of fast-growing bone
and this shows us that
the dodo was able to grow
from a chick to an adult
without any interruptions in its growth.
So this does tell us something
about the ecology of Mauritius
before humans arrived.
(relaxed percussive music)
- [Narrator] Mauritius is
an isolated volcanic island
in the Indian Ocean and
was the home of the dodo.
The bird's ancestors looked
like large flying pigeons
and migrated to this small
island millions of years ago,
finding plenty to eat and no
predators, a dodo paradise.
Doctor Julian Hume is a
world expert on the dodo.
For years, he's been
trying to piece together
what life was like for this elusive bird.
(gentle music)
The myth that the dodo
was an inadequate species
doomed to extinction, fat,
vulnerable, is totally wrong.
(insects chirping)
(bird squawks)
This bird was perfectly fine-tuned.
It wasn't this slow waddling thing
that wandered around its island home.
It was actually a very active species.
It actually took the
equivalent of a large mammal,
so it became a cow, if you
like, of the Mauritian forest.
It would've eaten the fruits on the ground
and everything about the
bird's ecology evolved
to being on the ground,
and that's a key thing in why
the dodo became flightless.
It's very expensive in terms
of energy for a bird to fly,
and nature always works
in a conservative way.
If you don't need those energy
sources, get rid of them.
The breast muscles, the
muscles that reduce flight,
are attached here to a
bone called the sternum
and this usually has a big keel on it
on which those muscles were attached.
Well, the dodo didn't need them,
and so the keel has disappeared
and the muscles would've
become very small.
And as you can see from
the wings just here
how small those wings are compared
with the rest of the bird.
Being perfectly adapted
to its Mauritian home,
there is a price to pay.
If it was left alone,
the dodos would still be
happily walking around Mauritius
right to this present day.
(tense music)
(gunshot booms)
(bird squawks)
- [Narrator] But in the 1600s,
European settlers arrived
and mistook the gentle spirit
and fearlessness of the flightless bird
for signs of stupidity.
They dubbed it dodo, meaning
crazy or fool in Portuguese.
The label stuck.
(pigs snorting)
The Europeans also brought
new animals to the island.
Rats, dogs, and pigs attacked
the dodos and their nests,
feasting on the eggs.
The dodo had evolved in perfect harmony
with its forest home
for millions of years.
Suddenly it was faced
with all this onslaught
of introduced animals
and it could not cope.
So after that first
mention of dodos in 1599,
just 80 years later, it
was gone from this world.
It was totally extinct.
And what can we learn from that?
Well, here we are as human
beings on this planet
thinking we're above nature
and we are probably just as
vulnerable in the long run
if dramatic changes take
place on this planet
and we may well indeed
follow the way of the dodo
if we're not careful.
(somber music)
(moves into pensive music)
- [Narrator] Every
skeleton, every specimen,
every hidden space in the
museum has a story to tell.
We've explored a few.
Many more remain, because the
Natural History Museum is home
to millions of treasures.
Seeing behind the glass,
taking a closer look,
we can discover other
extraordinary museum secrets.
(smooth music)