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Water.
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You might not see it, but this is probably the strangest thing in the universe.
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Here's why.
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Every molecule of water on the Earth and inside you or any other living thing has existed for billions of years.
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After it came to Earth, that water has been cycling through rocks, air, animals, plants and back again.
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Each molecule has been on an incredible voyage before coming to you.
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At some point, the water inside you would have been inside dinosaurs, bacteria, the oceans, storm clouds, the polar ice caps and much more.
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All of the water on Earth is alien.
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They might be a familiar part of our world, but our oceans formed hundreds of millions of years after our planet took shape.
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The water arrived on asteroids and comets from space, objects from the edge of our solar system.
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They were leftovers of the vast clouds of dust and rocks that didn't quite make it into planets.
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This is the origin of all the water you can see on the Earth.
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Water doesn't follow the normal rules of chemistry.
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For a start, it shouldn't really be a liquid on our planet.
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A water molecule is made from two very light atoms, hydrogen and oxygen.
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And at the temperatures and pressures on the surface of the Earth, rules of chemistry say that water should be a gas.
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And, unlike any other chemical, when water freezes it expands.
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And so ice floats on water.
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Now you see this every day, but take a moment to think about how weird that is.
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Over time, this odd behaviour has been very useful.
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By insulating the water underneath, floating ice has enabled complex life to survive and evolve on our planet, despite the many ice ages that have frozen the Earth's surface solid.
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And the strangeness just goes on and on.
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Did you know that hot water freezes faster than cold?
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Yes, really.
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No one knows why.
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Water molecules can float upwards, against the force of gravity.
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That's because they love to stick to each other.
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They're so good at it that they can actually pull each other up through tiny channels, such as the tiny blood vessels in your body.
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That's how oxygen and nutrients reach the edges of your brain.
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The same process, called capillary action, allows plants to move water from deep below the ground to nourish the leaves and branches that grow in the sunshine.
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Our solar system is drowning in water.
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Once upon a time, we thought that we were alone on Earth with so much water, but in fact it's the second most common molecule in the universe.
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We now know there's water on the moon, on Mars, Pluto.
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In fact there's H2O on almost every object in our solar system.
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And where there's water, there could be life.
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So pour yourself a glass of water now, and take a good look at this colourless, featureless and tasteless material.
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It's actually remarkable.
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It breaks so many rules of chemistry that scientists struggle to understand it.
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But without its rebel behaviour, none of us, nor our world, would exist.
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You're only here watching this video because water is so strange.