An uninhabited ant mega-city was discovered by scientists after they pumped 10 tons of concrete into a hill.
If there was nothing you loved more than snuggling down and watching a bit of Bugs Life when you were younger then prepare for the movie to feel like you're actually living in it.
Documentary Ants! Nature's Secret Power - available to watch on Amazon Prime - saw a group of scientists take to an abandoned ant hill across a period of three days to pump it full of concrete.
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Why? To get a mould of an ant mega-city they discovered in the hill.
However, little did they know just how impressive the structure really was until weeks of careful digging work to get the mould out.
The whole thing was 50 square metres in size and went down eight metres underground, creating a giant interconnected series of tunnels and chambers with different rooms for different purposes.
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For ants wanting to get around while dodging most of their colleagues there were even side roads for the insects to scuttle around in.
All of this might make you think it was constructed by one mind with a particular goal of how the mega-city should look, but it was instead constructed by 'the collective will of the ant colony'.
Right beneath the ground we walk on thousands of little creatures were toiling together in the dark to scrabble out an incredibly complex construction.
Even more incredibly, while it took 10 tons of concrete to fill out the abandoned mega-city experts estimated that the ants shifted a whopping 40 tons of dirt to clear out space for their home.
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You might be wondering just how they managed to do that and the answer is that ants are incredibly strong, able to carry between 10 and 50 times their own weight.
Their neck joints in particular can withstand pressure of up to 5,000 times the creature's own weight before giving way.
A big amount of dirt to shift requires a big workforce and with thousands of ants as a construction team this colony was able to construct themselves a mega-city.
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However, with the experts discovering the place abandoned your next question might be why ants abandon a perfectly good anthill.
The most common reasons for a colony of ants to skedaddle from their carefully constructed mega-city beneath the ground is the danger posed either by predators or damaging disasters.
Anthills can be invaded by other ants or creatures that want to break in and feed on the insects larvae, while weather conditions can risk flooding the nest and rendering it unsafe.
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If people mess with anthills the colony of insects inside can also get the message that they're not in a safe location, resulting in them upping sticks and moving.
Topics: Animals, Science, World News, Nature, Insects