Earth Story (BBC, 1998)

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Earth Story (BBC, 1998)

Postby MyK on Tue Jan 02, 2007 12:08 am

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IMDB | TVFactual | BBC Press Office

Author/Presenter: Simon Lamb & David Sington

When and how was the Earth formed? What is the link between earthquakes, volcanoes and the creation of the continents? How do mountains affect our climate? What triggers Ice Ages? This book and the accompanying television series answer these and many other questions, telling the amazing story of our planet and its constantly changing nature.
Two centuries ago, scientists began to investigate the history of the Earth by examining the rocks beneath its surface and thus began to formulate the astonishing concept of geological time. Using this discovery as their starting point, the authors of Earth Story unravel the fascinating history of the Earth from its earliest beginnings to the dawn of human civilisation.
Two themes emerge as this compelling story unfolds. Firstly, from its molten core to the outermost reaches of its atmosphere, our planet operates as one vast interlinked system. Aspects of our landscape and climate that seem at first quite distinct - such as earthquakes, volcanoes, glaciers and monsoons - are in fact intimately related to each other. Secondly, the active geology of our world has been vital to the origin of life and the progress of evolution. The authors tackle these ideas, using full-colour illustrations, stunning photography and the latest scientific thinking. By describing the remarkable forces that formed and shape our ever-changing world, Earth Story gives us a new understanding of the planet and our place within its evolution.

Episode 1: The Time Travellers
Geologists, who study the Earth, seek to understand the processes that have shaped our planet throughout its history, creating the world we see around us. To do so, they must reconstruct the Earth's past. Yet how can we tell what happened in distant epochs when there were no witnesses to record events? Around 200 years ago scientists first began to realize that clues to the past lay all around them, in the rocks that make up the Earth's surface. as they learnt how to read these rocks, they began a journey back through time which geologists continue to this day.
ed2k link: ed2k: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep1.The.Time.Travellers.DivX.AC3.avi  [699.47 Mb] [Stats]

Episode 2: The Deep
A curious feature of our planet's surface is that it has two distinct levels: the dry land on the continents, on average a few hundred metres above sea level, and the ocean floor, making up two-thirds of the Earth's surface, several kilometres below sea level. Only in the past fifty years have scientists begun to explore in detail this vast region, revealing beneath the waves a landscape quite unlike the world we are used to. They have discovered a vast mountain range which encircles the entire globe. Here new sea floor is being continuously formed as the Earth's surface splits apart.
ed2k link: ed2k: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep2.The.Deep.DivX.AC3.avi  [699.71 Mb] [Stats]

Episode 3: Ring of Fire
The Pacific Ocean is rimmed by a chain of active volcanoes, arranged in a series of graceful arcs and extending 30,000 kilometres from New Zealand through Fiji, New Guinea, the Philippines, Japan, the Aleutian Islands, and down the west coast of the Americas to Patagonia. This necklace of volcanoes, continually rocked by earthquakes, has been christened the 'Ring of Fire'. Scientists exploring the link between the Pacific Ocean and the earthquakes and volcanoes which surround it have formulated a remarkable theory, plate tectonics, which explains not only how the outer part of the Earth works, but how the continents themselves, and the mineral wealth they contain, were first formed and continue to grow.
ed2k link: ed2k: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep3.Ring.of.Fire.DivX.AC3.avi  [699.69 Mb] [Stats]

Episode 4: Journey to the Centre of the Earth
What drives the tectonic plates as they glide over the Earth's surface? Searching for an answer, scientists have probed our planet to its core. In this realm of unimaginably high temperatures and pressures, matter takes on new forms, and solid rock can behave like a fluid. As vast masses of rock flow slowly within the Earth, so the surface moves and changes. Gigantic plumes of hot material can well up from the depths, triggering huge volcanic eruptions and causing the crust to bulge and break. The result may be the splitting of a continent and the creation of a new ocean basin.
ed2k link: ed2k: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep4.Journey.to.the.Centre.of.the.Earth.DivX.AC3.avi  [699.60 Mb] [Stats]

Episode 5: The Roof of the World
Most of the dry land on Earth sits no more than a few hundred metres above sea level. But in some places mountain belts rise to heights of several kilometres.These regions are often prone to devastating earth tremors. How are mountains formed and what is the connection with earthquakes? The answer may lie in the fluid-like properties of the Earth's outer layers. According to a new theory, mountains may flow up or down when continents collide. In the process they affect the circulation of the planet's atmosphere and change the climate.
ed2k link: ed2k: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep5.The.Roof.of.the.World.DivX.AC3.avi  [699.57 Mb] [Stats]

Episode 6: The Big Freeze
In the nineteenth century geologists discovered evidence that large parts of the northern hemisphere had once been covered by gigantic ice sheets. Scientists have now learnt that the waxing and waning of these ice sheets are just one aspect of global climatic change, and that the planet has been in the past both hotter and colder than it is today.The complex interactions between variations in the Earth's orbit around the Sun, the movements of tectonic plates, the planet's atmosphere and ocean currents, can result in large and rapid swings in the Earth's climate.
ed2k link: ed2k: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep6.The.Big.Freeze.DivX.AC3.avi  [699.62 Mb] [Stats]

Episode 7: The Living Earth
Over the past 4 billion years, life has evolved from simple single-celled organisms into the tremendous variety of plants and animals that exist today. As scientists learn more about the Earth's history, they are realizing that the forces which have shaped the planet have also had a profound effect on the course of evolution. The movement of the tectonic plates has rearranged the continents, providing ever-changing conditions for living organisms, stimulating the evolution of new life-forms. Violent volcanic eruptions, meteorite impacts and drastic climatic changes have triggered mass extinctions, causing setbacks to life on Earth. But the same events have provided new opportunities for the survivors.
ed2k link: ed2k: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep7.The.Living.Earth.DivX.AC3.avi  [699.76 Mb] [Stats]

Episode 8: A World Apart
Is the Earth unique, and if so, why? To find an answer, scientists have had to explore the Solar System, searching for clues about our planet's birth. Uniquely amongst the terrestrial planets, the Earth has retained liquid water on its surface for over 4 billion years, despite a steady increase in the Sun's heat output.This water has had a profound influence on the planet's geological activity, as well as being a breeding ground for life. But living organisms may have played a crucial role in ensuring that liquid water exists on Earth, linking the planet's geology and biology tightly together.
ed2k link: ed2k: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep8.A.World.Apart.DivX.AC3.avi  [699.69 Mb] [Stats]

Sample stats:
Code: Select all
Name..............: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep1.The.Time.Travellers.Divx.AC3.avi
Filesize..........: 699 MB (or 716,254 KB or 733,444,096 bytes)
Runtime...........: 00:48:07 (72,167 fr)
Video Codec.......: DivX 5.0
Video Bitrate.....: 1645 kb/s
Video FPS.........: 25.000
Frame Size........: 544x288 (1.89:1) [=17:9]
Audio Codec.......: ac3 (0x2000) Dolby Laboratories, Inc
Audio Bitrate.....: 384 kb/s (192/ch, stereo) CBR
Audio Sample Feq..: 48000 Hz
Audio Interleave..: 4 vid frames (160 ms)  Split: Yes

Code: Select all
Name..............: BBC.Earth.Story.Ep5.The.Roof.of.the.World.DivX.AC3.avi
Filesize..........: 699 MB (or 716,360 KB or 733,552,640 bytes)
Runtime...........: 00:49:08 (73,697 fr)
Video Codec.......: DivX 5.0
Video Bitrate.....: 1603 kb/s
Video FPS.........: 25.000
Frame Size........: 480x256 (1.88:1) [=15:8]
Audio Codec.......: ac3 (0x2000) Dolby Laboratories, Inc
Audio Bitrate.....: 384 kb/s (192/ch, stereo) CBR
Audio Sample Feq..: 48000 Hz
Audio Interleave..: 4 vid frames (160 ms)  Split: Yes


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NOTES: This is quite obviously one awful TV rip. Not a single aspect of it is any good (bad crop, obviously fastest DivX encoding mode @ ~1600kb/s for 544x288 or 480x256 res, AC3 for noisy joint stereo source,...) except for the content and perhaps AR. Still, it's the only rip available ATM so I guess we should be grateful nevertheless :?

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Last edited by MyK on Mon Jan 08, 2007 3:22 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Postby Jynks on Tue Jan 02, 2007 12:34 am

sounds interesting... ta
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