Qantas

Places of the Heart

Brian Cox’s passion for the planet, from Africa to the Arctic

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2009 | Ethiopia ADDIS ABABA

Ethiopia lies in East Africa’s Great Rift Valley, where humans first evolved – it’s the origin of humanity. When you’re there, you can almost sense the ghosts behind you; an unbroken line of ancestors stretching back to the birth of our species 200,000 years ago. It’s a beautiful feeling.

The capital, Addis Ababa, is a typical big African city, full of people and markets. And the nightclubs and bars are so vibrant. At one I visited, they played a piece of music from a region of Ethiopia and a table of people got up and did one of their traditiona­l dances. Then they played music from another region and another table got up. It reminded me of what we do with football [in the United Kingdom]. There’s this celebratio­n of different cultures and I love it.

2014 | Norway SVALBARD

This archipelag­o is as far north as you can go in terms of civil aviation; you can’t get any closer to the North Pole. I was there in August when the sun doesn’t rise and set; it just goes around the horizon so you get this bizarre sense that you’re on top of the world. Then in winter, it’s 24 hours of darkness.

There are more polar bears than people and when the wind blows from the Arctic, it’s quite cold. The bears can come into town so it’s pretty wild but there are some fantastic restaurant­s and a wonderful hotel. One of the great wine cellars of Northern Europe is at a restaurant there and it’s duty-free; the whole island [Spitsberge­n] is tax-free.

You’ve got to be unusual to spend your time in 24 hours of darkness and 24 hours of light but that’s the way people live there.

2017 | New South Wales COONABARAB­RAN

If you live in Sydney, you might not know that you have one of the world’s best observator­ies, Siding Spring, about six hours’ drive away. We filmed Stargazing

Live there this year for the ABC. Siding Spring Observator­y has some of the greatest telescopes on Earth. Colour photograph­y of the universe – the beautiful pictures I grew up with in the 1980s – was pioneered by the observator­y’s Anglo-Australian Telescope. You forget that before the ’80s we couldn’t do those colour pictures.

It’s an utterly spectacula­r place. To get there, you can go across and through the Blue Mountains, the last big range before Australia becomes flat in the middle. The observator­y is on an extinct supervolca­no that rises out of the plain. This great mountain is flat, which is why the telescope is there. You can look through the telescopes. It’s brilliant.

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