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1-37 of 37
- Colorized historical footage in ascending order of World War 1. Not only the relatively known Flanders and France battles, but also the generally unknown Italian-Austrian, German-Polish-Russian, Japanese-German, Ottoman Empire- Allied and African German Colonies, and other unknown or forgotten fronts and battles. Original French production retold in English for National Geographic channel as: World War 1: The Apocalypse
- The Real War Of Thrones, is a historical television program tracing the history of Europe from the Hundred Years War to the middle of the 18th century.
- "The war was over. But it wasn't over. We just didn't know it." Stefan Zweig.
- The history of the longstanding American comic book company that launched such legendary superhero characters such as Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman.
- This 10-part mini-series is a sweeping account of the rise of Earth's continents. They are the product of a grand waltz of plate tectonics and the continual evolution of the earth's crust, assembling and separating.
- TV Series
- Is the north magnetic pole about to flip? Will the Earth's magnetosphere be able to protect us from solar winds and cosmic rays? Follow scientists as they try to understand, measure and explain the consequences of a pole inversion.
- HUMAN+ The Future of Our Senses brings viewers into the enigmatic world of scientists, researchers, and entrepreneurs who are revolutionizing the way people see, touch, taste, hear, and smell. Each episode delves into the awe-inspiring and emotional stories of people whose lives are being transformed through some of the most cutting-edge advances in technology of the five senses: touch, sight, hearing, taste and smell.
- A surprising series on relationships, emotional well-being, and our lives within society. A brilliant mixture of docu-fiction, the programs reach out to viewers, bringing a particular viewpoint to sensitive issues of contemporary life.
- A perfect blend of information and entertainment, serious science and humor, each of the 102 magazine-format/docudrama programs deals with six different subjects relating to the health and lifestyles of children, adults and seniors.
- Neanderthals weren't brutish or dim-witted. New discoveries reveal they were more human than we ever thought.
- 2012–20158.3 (10)TV EpisodeAustralia is the most stable continent on earth. That makes it an ideal location for scientists to study the early earth with 4.4 billion year old zircons and 2.6 billion year old stromatolites and thrombolites that created our oxygen atmosphere. But now the Australian Tectonic Plate is colliding with the Pacific Plate joining the ring of fire. In the north the collision created the Vanuatu Archipelago of 80 volcanic islands. In the east the collision is raising New Zealnd causing some 14,000 earthquakes each year.
- 2012–201551m8.2 (10)TV EpisodeAsia was involved in two of the greatest mass extinctions on earth. 251 million years ago the Siberian traps erupted in a massive two million year long volcanic eruption. Scientist speculate that life on land may have survived this cataclysm only because and large island, now south China, drifted apart from Gandwana. More recently India passed over a hot spot opening up the Deccan traps, another major eruption that occurred the same time the dinosaurs went extinct.
- 2012–201551m8.2 (10)TV EpisodeScientists examine geological formations of Asia to understand their impact on the people living there. The collision of India with Asia is squeezing the Tibetan Plateau between two mountain ranges and pushing China to the east creating faults leading to severe earthquakes that have cost many lives in Tibet and Sichuan Province. After breaking off from Asia Japan now sits at the collision point of three tectonic plates making it prone to volcanoes, powerful earthquakes and tsunamis. And Indonesia has a large collection of volcanoes.
- 2012–201551m8.4 (12)TV EpisodeEurope is a continent of mountain ranges. Multiple collisions with other tectonic plates created multiple mountain ranges covering much of this relatively small continent, Some are so large they extend to other continents. One range, the Alps, is still being created by the collision with the African Techtonic Plate. The rest, due to erosion, are past their prime and one has almost completed eroded away.
- Africa's on again off again dance with Europe causes dramatic changes in the Medeterranean region and ongoing dangers from earthquakes, volcanoes and tsunamis. In the not so distant past the sea was cut off from Earths oceans causing it to evaporate before being refilled when the Strait of Gibraltar reopened.
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- 2004–TV EpisodeJosette catapults herself into the Afro-Brazilian world of Capoeira, and gains a unique insight into Brazil's slave history and culture. Capoeira weaves fighting, music, dance, prayer, and ritual into an urgent strategy for people to struggle, celebrate and survive together. With its dynamic, acrobatic skills, captivating music and tactics of deception, Capoeira, once outlawed, is now Brazil's pride.
- 2004–TV EpisodeJosette seeks out top fighting masters to penetrate the fierce, male-dominated world of Muay Thai or Thai Boxing. Through them, she discovers a history stretching from warrior kings to contemporary champions and a fascinating mix of power, speed and endurance that makes Muay Thai one of the most devastating martial arts in the world.
- Josette travels to Okinawa, once the Ryu Kyu Kingdom, to train in the original Karate Do with its top Sensei, hoping to uncover the true meaning of Do or the Way. By choosing a kata (a choreographed form) to monitor her progress, she enters into the practice, culture and history of a martial art rooted in the Okinawans' hundreds of years of fierce resistance to foreign invaders.
- 2004–TV EpisodeJosette trains intensively with the heir to the highest-ranking Sensei in this strictly defensive art. Wading through the difficult code of Japanese etiquette while searching for Budo - the martial way - on the Samurai's path, she encounters a martial art created in the aftermath of the World War II as an answer to violence.
- Josette travels the forgotten «ruelles d'un Paris malfamé» to discover the little known French martial art Savate, and train with its top masters. Through them, she discovers a two-hundred-year-old martial tradition, and gets the chance to train along with the French SWAT team in Savate Défense and the elegant art of cane fighting known as «La Canne» with Maître Lafond.
- 2004–TV EpisodeJosette goes back to the roots of Kalaripayattu, both a martial and healing art. Traveling the coastal roads of Kerala, she seeks the true masters, the Gurukkal, of this little-known martial art. Along with combat training, she experiences the art's healing aspect, obtaining a rare glimpse into the history and practice of one of the world's first martial arts.
- Liz Bonnin joins an international team of palaeontologists in the remote badlands of Wyoming as they investigate a mysterious dinosaur graveyard. Packed with over a dozen skeletons, including predators such as the fearsome Allosaurus and iconic giants like Diplodocus, as well as fossilised plants and footprints, the site is a treasure trove that is helping to change the way we think about the Jurassic - the golden age of dinosaurs. The astonishing evidence also helps the team to answer why so many dinosaurs came here and what killed them in such great numbers 150 million years ago.
- Liz Bonnin joins an international team of palaeontologists in the remote badlands of Wyoming as they investigate a mysterious dinosaur graveyard. Packed with over a dozen skeletons, including the ferocious Allosaurus, the distant forerunner of the T-rex, the site is a treasure trove of Jurassic remains. This time, the team tries to figure out if the Jurassic's most vicious predator was involved in the deaths of super-sized beasts, like the iconic Diplodocus, that are buried at the site, helping to reveal why so many dinosaurs came here and what killed them in such great numbers 150 million years ago.
- 2016– 1h 30m5.9 (7)TV EpisodeWho were the women of prehistory? What was their daily life like? For 150 years, researchers have underestimated their role, interpreting discoveries with the preconceptions of their time. Paleolithic women became prisoners of clichés. Today, a new generation of researchers, many of them women, is overturning this model. By meeting scientists on excavation sites or in their laboratories, a new portrait of these women emerges: hunters, artists and even clan leaders.
- Dolphins have been a source of curiosity to humans and have appeared in our stories and myths for thousands of years. What is the link between our two species? Why do we seem to be so interested and curious about each other.
- Scientists around the world are asking themselves the same questions. Over the decades the focus on dolphin research has changed from asking "how intelligent are dolphins?" to "how are dolphins intelligent?" and we look at research from the world's foremost dolphin experts for the answers.