1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:25,000 © anoXmous @ http://thepiratebay.sx/user/Zen_Bud 1 00:00:33,610 --> 00:00:37,900 Only 3 percent of the water on our planet is fresh. 2 00:00:40,410 --> 00:00:44,490 Yet these precious waters are rich with surprise. 3 00:00:57,670 --> 00:01:03,220 All life on land is ultimately dependent upon fresh water. 4 00:01:34,460 --> 00:01:38,630 The mysterious tepuis of Venezuela - 5 00:01:39,760 --> 00:01:44,510 isolated mountain plateaus rising high above the jungle. 6 00:01:54,270 --> 00:01:59,360 This was the inspiration for Arthur Conan Doyle's 'Lost World,' 7 00:01:59,400 --> 00:02:02,610 an imagined prehistoric land. 8 00:02:09,000 --> 00:02:13,880 Here, strange towers of sandstone have been sculptured over the millennia 9 00:02:13,960 --> 00:02:17,250 by battering wind and torrential rain. 10 00:02:30,560 --> 00:02:34,730 Moisture rising as water vapour from the surface of the sea 11 00:02:34,770 --> 00:02:37,860 is blown inland by wind. 12 00:02:50,080 --> 00:02:54,210 On reaching mountains, the moisture is forced upwards 13 00:02:54,290 --> 00:02:59,760 and as it cools, it condenses into cloud and finally rain - 14 00:02:59,840 --> 00:03:03,090 the source of all fresh water. 15 00:03:13,480 --> 00:03:18,610 There is a tropical downpour here almost every day of the year. 16 00:03:30,200 --> 00:03:35,330 Fresh water's journey starts here, high in the mountains. 17 00:03:52,140 --> 00:03:55,440 Growing from humble streams to mighty rivers 18 00:03:55,520 --> 00:03:59,270 it will travel hundreds of miles to the sea. 19 00:04:37,600 --> 00:04:42,190 Angel Falls, the highest waterfall in the world. 20 00:04:56,660 --> 00:05:01,920 Its waters drop unbroken for almost a thousand metres. 21 00:05:11,220 --> 00:05:13,310 Such is the height of these falls 22 00:05:13,390 --> 00:05:17,890 that long before the water reaches the base in the Devil's Canyon 23 00:05:17,930 --> 00:05:21,230 it's blown away as a fine mist. 24 00:05:53,600 --> 00:05:55,260 In their upper reaches, 25 00:05:55,350 --> 00:05:58,850 mountain streams are full of energy. 26 00:06:01,560 --> 00:06:04,610 Streams join to form rivers, 27 00:06:04,690 --> 00:06:06,190 building in power, 28 00:06:06,270 --> 00:06:08,190 creating rapids. 29 00:06:18,410 --> 00:06:20,580 The water here is cold. 30 00:06:20,660 --> 00:06:24,250 Low in nutrients, but high in oxygen. 31 00:06:28,050 --> 00:06:30,380 The few creatures that live in the torrent 32 00:06:30,470 --> 00:06:33,260 have to hang on for dear life. 33 00:06:35,390 --> 00:06:38,600 Invertebrates dominate these upper reaches. 34 00:06:38,680 --> 00:06:42,480 The hellgrammite, its body flattened to reduce drag, 35 00:06:42,600 --> 00:06:47,020 has bushy gills to extract oxygen from the current. 36 00:06:51,320 --> 00:06:55,990 Black fly larvae anchor themselves with the ring of hooks, 37 00:06:59,370 --> 00:07:01,410 but if these become unstuck, 38 00:07:01,500 --> 00:07:05,210 they're still held by a silicon safety line. 39 00:07:18,600 --> 00:07:22,390 There are advantages to life in the fast stream - 40 00:07:22,480 --> 00:07:26,520 bamboo shrimps can just sit and sift out passing particles 41 00:07:26,610 --> 00:07:28,940 with their fan-like forearms. 42 00:07:48,540 --> 00:07:52,630 Usually, these mountain streams only provide enough food 43 00:07:52,710 --> 00:07:55,550 for small animals to survive. 44 00:07:55,720 --> 00:07:59,010 But with the spring melt here in Japan 45 00:07:59,100 --> 00:08:02,600 monsters stir in their dens. 46 00:08:10,730 --> 00:08:15,240 Giant salamanders, world's largest amphibian, 47 00:08:15,320 --> 00:08:18,120 almost two metres long. 48 00:08:21,240 --> 00:08:25,750 They're the only large predator in these icy waters. 49 00:08:29,840 --> 00:08:32,750 They begin their hunt at night. 50 00:08:47,850 --> 00:08:52,400 These salamanders have an exceptionally slow metabolism. 51 00:08:52,480 --> 00:08:56,740 Living up to 80 years they grow into giants. 52 00:09:13,840 --> 00:09:16,670 The fish they hunt are scarce 53 00:09:16,760 --> 00:09:19,970 and salamanders have poor eyesight. 54 00:09:22,850 --> 00:09:25,770 But sensory nodes on their head and body 55 00:09:25,810 --> 00:09:29,640 detect the slightest changes in water pressure. 56 00:09:41,070 --> 00:09:43,030 Free from competition, 57 00:09:43,120 --> 00:09:46,450 these giants can dine alone. 58 00:10:00,010 --> 00:10:03,720 Pickings are usually thin for the salamanders, 59 00:10:03,850 --> 00:10:06,720 but every year some of the world's high rivers 60 00:10:06,810 --> 00:10:10,440 are crowded by millions of visitors. 61 00:10:17,730 --> 00:10:20,400 The salmon have arrived. 62 00:10:28,040 --> 00:10:32,830 This is the world's largest fresh water fish migration. 63 00:10:36,920 --> 00:10:38,670 Across the northern hemisphere 64 00:10:38,760 --> 00:10:42,510 salmon, returning from the ocean to their spawning grounds, 65 00:10:42,590 --> 00:10:46,300 battle their way for hundreds of miles upstream. 66 00:10:51,310 --> 00:10:56,270 Up here, there are fewer predators to eat their eggs and fry. 67 00:11:24,470 --> 00:11:27,100 A grizzly bear. 68 00:11:29,140 --> 00:11:31,220 From famine to feast - 69 00:11:31,390 --> 00:11:33,440 he's spoilt for choice. 70 00:11:40,530 --> 00:11:43,240 This Canadian bear is very special - 71 00:11:43,320 --> 00:11:46,620 he's learnt to dive for his dinner. 72 00:12:01,550 --> 00:12:05,550 But catching salmon in deep water is not that easy 73 00:12:05,630 --> 00:12:08,470 and the cubs have lots to learn. 74 00:12:46,300 --> 00:12:48,970 The annual arrival of spawning salmon 75 00:12:49,050 --> 00:12:52,640 brings huge quantities of food into these high rivers 76 00:12:52,720 --> 00:12:55,850 that normally struggle to support much life. 77 00:13:09,200 --> 00:13:11,320 Although relatively lifeless, 78 00:13:11,410 --> 00:13:14,700 the power of the upland rivers to shape the landscape 79 00:13:14,790 --> 00:13:18,830 is greater than any other stage in a river's life. 80 00:13:20,920 --> 00:13:22,460 Driven by gravity, 81 00:13:22,500 --> 00:13:26,210 they're the most erosive forces on the planet. 82 00:13:30,390 --> 00:13:33,260 For the past 5 million years 83 00:13:33,350 --> 00:13:38,270 Arizona's Colorado river has eaten away at the desert's sandstone 84 00:13:38,310 --> 00:13:41,440 to create a gigantic canyon. 85 00:13:52,320 --> 00:13:54,530 It's over a mile deep 86 00:13:54,580 --> 00:13:59,330 and at its widest it's 17 miles across. 87 00:14:12,840 --> 00:14:14,850 The Grand Canyon. 88 00:14:35,030 --> 00:14:39,910 This river has cut the world's longest canyon system - 89 00:14:39,960 --> 00:14:45,210 a 1,000 mile scar clearly visible from space. 90 00:15:11,740 --> 00:15:14,490 As rivers leave the mountains behind, 91 00:15:14,530 --> 00:15:19,620 they gradually warm and begin to support more life. 92 00:15:28,130 --> 00:15:33,430 Indian rivers are home to the world's most social otter - 93 00:15:34,220 --> 00:15:39,720 smooth-coated otters form family groups up to 17 strong. 94 00:15:50,940 --> 00:15:54,780 Group rubbing not only refreshes their coats, 95 00:15:54,820 --> 00:15:57,950 but strengthens social bonds. 96 00:16:07,580 --> 00:16:09,250 When it comes to fishing 97 00:16:09,290 --> 00:16:12,670 there is real strength in numbers. 98 00:16:25,480 --> 00:16:30,480 Fishing practice begins when the cubs are four months old. 99 00:16:49,290 --> 00:16:55,420 Only the adults have the speed and agility needed to make a catch. 100 00:17:33,920 --> 00:17:38,550 Adults share their catches with their squabbling cubs. 101 00:17:49,600 --> 00:17:51,900 Most otters are solitary, 102 00:17:52,020 --> 00:17:57,280 but these rich warm waters can support large family groups 103 00:17:57,690 --> 00:18:00,200 and even bigger predators. 104 00:18:19,760 --> 00:18:25,890 Mugger crocodiles, four metres long, could easily take a single otter. 105 00:18:51,790 --> 00:18:54,420 But, confident in their gangs, 106 00:18:54,460 --> 00:18:58,960 the otters will actively harass these great reptiles. 107 00:19:16,730 --> 00:19:19,610 Team play wins the day. 108 00:19:30,450 --> 00:19:32,080 The Mara river, 109 00:19:32,160 --> 00:19:35,830 snaking across the plains of East Africa. 110 00:19:37,790 --> 00:19:39,550 As the land flattens out 111 00:19:39,630 --> 00:19:43,380 rivers slow down and lose their destructive power. 112 00:19:44,180 --> 00:19:47,720 Now they are carrying heavy loads of sediment 113 00:19:47,760 --> 00:19:50,390 that stains their waters brown. 114 00:20:03,610 --> 00:20:07,370 Lines of wildebeest are on their march. 115 00:20:12,160 --> 00:20:17,670 Each year nearly two million animals migrate across the Serengeti plains 116 00:20:17,710 --> 00:20:21,050 in search of fresh green pastures. 117 00:20:21,130 --> 00:20:22,880 For these thirsty herds 118 00:20:22,960 --> 00:20:26,510 the rivers are not only a vital source of drinking water, 119 00:20:26,590 --> 00:20:29,760 but also dangerous obstacles. 120 00:20:49,450 --> 00:20:55,620 This is one of the largest concentrations of Nile crocodiles in Africa, 121 00:20:55,870 --> 00:20:59,670 giants that grow over five metres long. 122 00:21:16,100 --> 00:21:19,810 From memory, the wildebeest are coming 123 00:21:19,900 --> 00:21:22,690 and gather in anticipation. 124 00:22:27,590 --> 00:22:31,970 The crocodile's jaws snap tight like a steel trap - 125 00:22:32,010 --> 00:22:34,970 once they have a hold, they never let go. 126 00:22:47,940 --> 00:22:52,660 It took over an hour to drown this full-grown bull. 127 00:23:00,870 --> 00:23:02,870 To surprise their prey 128 00:23:02,960 --> 00:23:07,170 crocodiles must strike with lightning speed. 129 00:23:32,280 --> 00:23:39,370 Here, only the narrowest line separates life from death. 130 00:24:15,530 --> 00:24:18,280 Most rivers drain into the sea, 131 00:24:18,370 --> 00:24:22,830 but some end their journey in vast lakes. 132 00:24:25,710 --> 00:24:32,300 Worldwide lakes hold twenty times more fresh water than all the rivers. 133 00:24:34,340 --> 00:24:39,470 The East African Rift Valley holds three of the world's largest: 134 00:24:39,510 --> 00:24:43,980 Malawi, Tanganyika, and Victoria. 135 00:24:45,690 --> 00:24:48,520 Lake Malawi, the smallest of the three, 136 00:24:48,560 --> 00:24:51,110 is still bigger than Wales. 137 00:25:04,290 --> 00:25:08,210 Its tropical waters teem with more fish species 138 00:25:08,290 --> 00:25:10,130 than any other lake. 139 00:25:10,840 --> 00:25:14,380 There are 850 different cichlids alone, 140 00:25:14,420 --> 00:25:18,050 all of which evolved from just one single ancestor 141 00:25:18,090 --> 00:25:21,560 isolated here thousands of years ago. 142 00:25:36,190 --> 00:25:41,160 These two-metre wide craters are fish-made. 143 00:25:50,630 --> 00:25:53,550 Fastidiously maintained by the males, 144 00:25:53,590 --> 00:25:56,720 these bowls are courtship arenas. 145 00:26:09,900 --> 00:26:13,730 Cichlids are caring parents. 146 00:26:17,240 --> 00:26:22,320 Brooding young in the mouth is a very effective way of protecting them. 147 00:26:23,830 --> 00:26:27,080 This lake can be a dangerous place. 148 00:26:39,630 --> 00:26:46,970 After dark, predatory dolphin fish emerge from their daytime lairs among the rocks. 149 00:26:51,600 --> 00:26:57,070 Like packs of sharks, they're on the prowl for sleeping cichlids. 150 00:27:04,240 --> 00:27:07,910 In the darkness these electric fish hunt 151 00:27:07,950 --> 00:27:13,790 by detecting distortions in the electric field they create around their bodies. 152 00:27:32,390 --> 00:27:37,020 Any cichlid that trenches out will be snapped up. 153 00:27:58,550 --> 00:28:05,050 The floor of Lake Malawi drops 700 metres into an abyss. 154 00:28:12,520 --> 00:28:14,480 Here, in this dead zone 155 00:28:14,520 --> 00:28:19,150 the larvae of lake fly midges hide out away from predators. 156 00:28:22,780 --> 00:28:25,700 In the rainy season they balloon up to the surface 157 00:28:25,780 --> 00:28:28,950 and undergo a magical transformation. 158 00:28:38,880 --> 00:28:43,670 At dawn the first adult midges start to break out. 159 00:28:47,590 --> 00:28:51,970 Soon, millions upon millions of newly hatched lake flies 160 00:28:52,020 --> 00:28:53,890 are taking to the wing. 161 00:29:04,530 --> 00:29:10,160 Early explorers told tales of lakes that smoked, as if on fire. 162 00:29:11,700 --> 00:29:15,750 But these spiralling columns hundreds if metres high 163 00:29:15,830 --> 00:29:17,920 are mating flies. 164 00:29:32,260 --> 00:29:34,100 Once the flies have mated, 165 00:29:34,180 --> 00:29:36,600 they will all drop to the water surface, 166 00:29:36,690 --> 00:29:39,860 release their eggs and die. 167 00:29:49,700 --> 00:29:52,910 Malawi may look like an inland sea, 168 00:29:52,990 --> 00:29:57,290 but it's dwarfed by the world's largest lake - 169 00:29:58,370 --> 00:30:02,000 Baikal in Eastern Siberia. 170 00:30:12,390 --> 00:30:15,600 400 miles long and over a mile deep, 171 00:30:15,680 --> 00:30:19,100 Baikal contains one fifth of all the fresh water 172 00:30:19,190 --> 00:30:22,400 found in our planet's lakes and rivers. 173 00:30:25,480 --> 00:30:31,700 For five months of the year it's sealed by an ice sheet over a metre thick. 174 00:30:47,510 --> 00:30:50,430 Baikal is the oldest lake in the world 175 00:30:50,510 --> 00:30:56,640 and, despite the harsh conditions, life flourishes here in isolation. 176 00:30:57,890 --> 00:31:01,520 80 percent of its species are found nowhere else on Earth, 177 00:31:01,560 --> 00:31:05,980 including the world's only fresh water seal. 178 00:31:12,780 --> 00:31:14,070 With this seal 179 00:31:14,120 --> 00:31:16,950 and its marine-like forests of sponges 180 00:31:16,990 --> 00:31:20,790 Baikal seems more like an ocean than a lake. 181 00:31:40,180 --> 00:31:46,650 There are shrimp-like crustaceans - giant amphipods - as large as mice. 182 00:31:52,490 --> 00:31:56,030 They are the key scavengers in this lake. 183 00:31:56,070 --> 00:32:02,370 The water here is just too cold for the bacteria that normally decompose the dead. 184 00:32:16,260 --> 00:32:19,640 Most rivers do not end in lakes 185 00:32:19,720 --> 00:32:22,560 but continue their journey to the sea. 186 00:32:27,770 --> 00:32:33,200 The planet's indisputable super-river is the Amazon. 187 00:32:34,910 --> 00:32:41,410 It carries as much water as the next top-ten biggest rivers combined. 188 00:32:44,370 --> 00:32:50,750 Rising in the Peruvian Andes, its main trunk flows eastwards across Brazil. 189 00:32:50,880 --> 00:32:55,800 On its way the system drains a third of South America. 190 00:32:56,890 --> 00:33:00,810 Eventually, over 4,000 miles from its source, 191 00:33:00,850 --> 00:33:04,270 it empties into the Atlantic Ocean. 192 00:33:11,780 --> 00:33:16,110 The Amazon transports a billion tonnes of sediment a year, 193 00:33:16,200 --> 00:33:20,330 sediment clearly visible at the mixing of the waters 194 00:33:20,410 --> 00:33:26,000 where one massive tributary, the Rio Negro, flows into the main river. 195 00:33:32,210 --> 00:33:34,880 Its waters are wonderfully rich. 196 00:33:34,920 --> 00:33:39,390 To date over 3,000 species of their fish have been described - 197 00:33:39,430 --> 00:33:42,680 more than in the whole of the Atlantic Ocean. 198 00:34:11,290 --> 00:34:14,630 The Amazon is so large and rich in fish 199 00:34:14,670 --> 00:34:18,010 that it can support fresh water dolphins. 200 00:34:18,050 --> 00:34:23,560 These botos are huge - two and a half metres long. 201 00:34:25,430 --> 00:34:31,270 In these murky waters they rely on sonar to navigate and hunt. 202 00:34:49,000 --> 00:34:54,040 They work together to drive shoals of fish into the shallows. 203 00:35:57,650 --> 00:35:59,690 Botos are highly social 204 00:35:59,780 --> 00:36:04,660 and in the breeding season there is stiff competition for mates. 205 00:36:04,820 --> 00:36:08,490 The males hold court in a unique way. 206 00:36:19,920 --> 00:36:22,510 They pick up rocks in their jaws 207 00:36:22,590 --> 00:36:25,840 and flaunt them to their attending females. 208 00:36:30,520 --> 00:36:34,850 Maybe each male is trying to show how strong and dexterous he is 209 00:36:34,940 --> 00:36:40,320 and that he therefore is the best father a female could have for her young. 210 00:36:51,620 --> 00:36:55,790 Successful displays lead to mating. 211 00:37:10,600 --> 00:37:13,480 Even for giant rivers like the Amazon 212 00:37:13,560 --> 00:37:19,150 the journey to the sea is not always smooth or uninterrupted. 213 00:37:47,260 --> 00:37:51,760 Iguassu Falls on the border of Brazil and Argentina 214 00:37:51,850 --> 00:37:54,930 is one of the widest waterfalls in the world - 215 00:37:54,980 --> 00:37:58,060 one and a half miles across. 216 00:38:04,530 --> 00:38:10,620 In flood 30 million litres of water spill over every second. 217 00:38:58,120 --> 00:39:01,630 All the world's great broad waterfalls: 218 00:39:01,670 --> 00:39:05,590 Victoria, Niagara and here, Iguassu, 219 00:39:05,670 --> 00:39:09,680 are only found in the lower courses of their rivers. 220 00:39:17,770 --> 00:39:19,520 In their final stages 221 00:39:19,600 --> 00:39:24,560 rivers broaden and flow wearily across their flat flood plains. 222 00:39:25,480 --> 00:39:27,730 Each wet season here, in Brazil, 223 00:39:27,820 --> 00:39:30,570 the Parana river overflows its banks 224 00:39:30,610 --> 00:39:33,870 and floods an area the size of England. 225 00:39:37,540 --> 00:39:38,910 The Pantanal - 226 00:39:38,950 --> 00:39:42,040 the world's largest wetland. 227 00:39:49,130 --> 00:39:53,720 In these slow-flowing waters aquatic plants flourish 228 00:39:53,840 --> 00:39:59,060 like the Victoria giant water lily with leaves two metres across. 229 00:40:22,620 --> 00:40:27,790 These underwater forests are nursery grounds for fish. 230 00:40:29,340 --> 00:40:34,680 Over 300 species breed here, including red-bellied piranha 231 00:40:39,310 --> 00:40:43,810 and other predators, like the spectacle caiman. 232 00:41:10,710 --> 00:41:14,380 Ripening fig trees overhanging the water's edge 233 00:41:14,420 --> 00:41:18,140 provide welcome food for shoals of hungry fish. 234 00:41:25,020 --> 00:41:27,850 The commotion attracts dorado, 235 00:41:27,940 --> 00:41:31,400 known locally as the river tiger. 236 00:41:38,990 --> 00:41:41,490 They patrol the feeding shoals, 237 00:41:41,580 --> 00:41:44,540 looking for a chance to strike. 238 00:42:22,740 --> 00:42:24,580 And waiting in the wings, 239 00:42:24,660 --> 00:42:27,540 ready to pick off any injured fish, 240 00:42:27,620 --> 00:42:29,620 are the piranhas. 241 00:42:41,850 --> 00:42:45,220 The feeding frenzy quickly develops. 242 00:43:03,330 --> 00:43:07,700 Piranha can strip a fish to the bone in minutes. 243 00:43:14,380 --> 00:43:20,760 Great numbers of fish sustain vast flocks of water birds. 244 00:43:23,680 --> 00:43:31,310 The rose-eared spoonbill is just one of the 650 bird species found in the Pantanal. 245 00:43:38,360 --> 00:43:44,120 They nest alongside wood stocks in colonies thousands strong. 246 00:44:13,020 --> 00:44:15,770 Spectacle caiman linger below, 247 00:44:15,860 --> 00:44:18,940 waiting for a meal to fall out of the sky. 248 00:45:16,710 --> 00:45:18,840 When rivers finally reach the sea 249 00:45:18,920 --> 00:45:23,760 they slow down, release their sediment and build deltas. 250 00:45:25,630 --> 00:45:29,810 In Bangladesh the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers join 251 00:45:29,850 --> 00:45:32,020 to form the world's biggest. 252 00:45:34,730 --> 00:45:39,400 Every year almost 2 thousand million tonnes of sediment 253 00:45:39,440 --> 00:45:43,440 eroded from the Himalayas is delivered to the ocean. 254 00:45:48,530 --> 00:45:53,080 At the delta's mouth - the largest mangrove forest in the world, 255 00:45:53,120 --> 00:45:55,000 the Sundarbans. 256 00:46:01,550 --> 00:46:05,880 These extraordinary forests spring up throughout the tropics 257 00:46:05,920 --> 00:46:09,510 in these tidal zones where rivers meet the sea. 258 00:46:20,060 --> 00:46:23,690 Crab-eating macaques are mangrove specials. 259 00:46:28,030 --> 00:46:35,250 In Indonesia these monkeys have adopted a unique amphibious lifestyle - 260 00:46:42,340 --> 00:46:45,210 they fish out fallen food. 261 00:47:09,110 --> 00:47:15,120 The troop also uses the waters to cool off during the heat of the day. 262 00:47:19,830 --> 00:47:25,340 But the channels are also the playground for restless young macaques. 263 00:47:31,010 --> 00:47:35,510 Some of the young have even taken to underwater swimming. 264 00:47:41,140 --> 00:47:44,190 They can stay down for more than 30 seconds 265 00:47:44,270 --> 00:47:47,400 and appear to do this just for fun. 266 00:47:59,960 --> 00:48:04,040 Yet these swimming skills acquired during play 267 00:48:04,080 --> 00:48:09,760 will certainly be useful later in life in these flooded mangrove forests. 268 00:48:18,270 --> 00:48:22,190 In cooler climes, mud, laid down in estuaries, 269 00:48:22,230 --> 00:48:25,360 is colonised by salt marsh grasses 270 00:48:25,400 --> 00:48:29,320 and form one of the most productive habitats on the planet. 271 00:48:59,560 --> 00:49:07,060 400,000 greater snow geese flock to the estuaries along the Atlantic coast of the United States 272 00:49:07,190 --> 00:49:11,690 to rest and refuel on their long migratory journeys. 273 00:49:49,060 --> 00:49:52,530 This is the end of the river's journey. 274 00:49:52,570 --> 00:49:55,360 Collectively they've worn down mountains 275 00:49:55,400 --> 00:49:57,240 and carried them to the sea. 276 00:49:57,280 --> 00:49:58,740 And all along the way, 277 00:49:58,820 --> 00:50:04,160 their fresh water has brought life and abundance to planet Earth. 220 00:50:27,302 --> 00:50:42,302 © anoXmous @ http://thepiratebay.sx/user/Zen_Bud