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Transcripts for BBCNEWS Extreme Conservation 20240604 16:49:00

and as a physicist, i thought, you know, can we use this? sarah dole is sri lankan, but has been living in the maldives for over a decade, and has dedicated herself to studying this natural shift of sand to find a way to create islands sustainably. so first of all, you know, we had to study the fundamentals. so at mit, they are studying the fundamental physics and engineering of it. so, like, trying to understand, how does a sandbank actually form? and that, we ve done through satellite imagery and drone footage and, you know, talking to other locals around here, trying to understand the historical data of how sandbanks appear and disappear. five years ago, sarah partnered up with the scientists from the self assembly lab at mit, the massachusetts institute of technology in the us. the growing islands project is about naturally accumulating sand

Physicist
Maldives
Way
Islands
Wall
Pumping-sand
Sarah-dole
Shift
Physics
Fundamentals
Mit
Sri-lankan

Transcripts for BBCNEWS Extreme Conservation 20240604 02:52:00

and that, we ve done through satellite imagery and drone footage and, you know, talking to other locals around here, trying to understand the historical data of how sandbanks appear and disappear. five years ago, sarah partnered up with the scientists from the self assembly lab at mit, the massachusetts institute of technology in the us. the growing islands project is about naturally accumulating sand in the ocean without sculpting or pumping sand, but letting the ocean accumulate it on its own and guiding it, or collaborating with the ocean to promote the accumulation in certain areas where you want it or need it. skylar tibbits and his team simulate the conditions of the pacific ocean and the movement of the sand. they place different shaped objects in the environment to see which is the best at sand gathering. our hypothesis is that the reason sand accumulates

Locals
Sandbanks
Data
Footage
Satellite-imagery
Drone
Islands
The-ocean
Pumping-sand
Scientists
Project
Sarah-dole

Transcripts for BBCNEWS Extreme Conservation 20240604 02:51:00

that the locals have really made the most of this particular idyllic paradise. so we have two seasons predominantly in the maldives. one is the south east and the north west monsoons. and, you know, literally, during these seasons, we say we see sand shifting and we see sand eroding from one end and then building up on another end. and as a physicist, i thought, you know, can we use this? sarah dole is sri lankan, but has been living in the maldives for over a decade, and has dedicated herself to studying this natural shift of sand to find a way to create islands sustainably. so first of all, you know, we had to study the fundamentals. so at mit, they are studying the fundamental physics and engineering of it. so, like, trying to understand, how does a sandbank actually form?

Maldives
Most
Locals
Paradise
One
Seasons
South-east
Monsoons
Two
Sarah-dole
End
Sand-shifting

Transcripts for BBCNEWS Extreme Conservation 20240604 02:52:00

so at mit, they are studying the fundamental physics and engineering of it. so, like, trying to understand, how does a sandbank actually form? and that, we ve done through satellite imagery and drone footage and, you know, talking to other locals around here, trying to understand the historical data of how sandbanks appear and disappear. five years ago, sarah partnered up with the scientists from the self assembly lab at mit, the massachusetts institute of technology in the us. the growing islands project is about naturally accumulating sand in the ocean without sculpting or pumping sand, but letting the ocean accumulate it on its own and guiding it, or collaborating with the ocean to promote the accumulation in certain areas where you want it or need it. skylar tibbits and his team simulate the conditions

Locals
Sandbank
Engineering
Physics
Footage
Drone
Satellite-imagery
Mit
Scientists
Sarah-dole
Sandbanks
Self-assembly-lab

Transcripts for BBCNEWS Extreme Conservation 20240604 02:51:00

to the seasons and the ocean s forces. and that really influences the way that the people live and adapt. in fact, you can see that the locals have really made the most of this particular idyllic paradise. so we have two seasons predominantly in the maldives. one is the southeast and the northwest monsoons. and, you know, literally, during these seasons, we say we see sand shifting and we see sand eroding from one end and then building up on another end. and as a physicist, i thought, you know, can we use this? sarah dole is sri lankan, but has been living in the maldives for over a decade, and has dedicated herself to studying this natural shift of sand to find a way to create islands sustainably. so first of all, you know, we had to study the fundamentals.

Way
People
The-ocean
Locals
Forces
Most
Seasons
Fact
Adapt
Maldives
One
Southeast

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