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Discovery Channel - Planet of Life (1995)

Posted By: Polik88
Discovery Channel - Planet of Life (1995)

Discovery Channel - Planet of Life (1995)
DVDRip | English | AVI/DIVX 29.970 fps 2464 Kbps | 720x544 | AC3 256 Kbps 48.0 khz | 7x45mn | 7x895 MB
Genre: Documentary

Earthquakes, volcanoes, ice ages, landslides, floods, life evolution, plate motions—all of these phenomena have interacted over the vast expanses of deep time to sculpt the dynamic planet that we live on today. This Emmy award-winning Discovery Channel series traces the four-billion-year evolutionary history of the world covering the origin and evolution of life on Earth. Each episode covers a separate chapter in the biography of the world, the geological, physical and chemical conditions in which life might arise. Examine the birth, development, and destiny of earth. Series is narrated by Stacy Keach, and produced in conjunction with NHK network.

Part 1: The Birth of Earth
The series begins in The Birth of Earth, with a Mars-sized asteroid hitting Earth's primordial oceans, and we trace the progression of lipidlike molecules to DNA, blue-green algae, and amoebas. From the simplest microorganism to the complex species that is humankind, the evolutionary development of every living creature has been marked by life and death struggles. Now this epic story is chronicled in Planet of Life. Explore the primordial planet and find out how life emerged from a sea of toxins in the Birth of Earth.

Part 2: Ancient Oceans
Imagine a five-eyed lobsterlike creature hovering above the ocean floor, bringing food to its mouth through a long, wormlike trunk tipped with spines. Is this on Mars? No, it's an Opabinia regalis, an ancient creature whose discovery originally caused paleobiologists to laugh, and just one of dozens of 3-D computer-animation and life-size models in the series. This episode examines the history of oceans, which are thought to be the cradle of life on earth. Descend into the deep of Earth's Ancient Oceans to witness the explosion of life preserved today in the British Columbia's Burgess Shale as bizarre Cambrian fossils and their fascinating reconstructions , and how life may have moved from water to land.

Part 3: When Dinosaurs Ruled
Ancient creatures from sea and river blaze a new evolutionary trail with their first pioneering steps on land in this exciting chapter in the story of life. Plants lure tetrapods onto land and herbivorous dinosaurs like berosaurus and triceratops evolve. Travel to a time zone millions of years old-the era when the largest creatures to walk the planet dominated the landscape-in When Dinosaurs Ruled.

Part 4: Creatures of the Skies
This episode looks at the first reptiles to discover and make use of flight. Creatures of the Skies traces the angiosperm revolution and flight adaptations from pterosaurs to archeopteryx to modern birds and butterflies. Soar through the atmosphere with pterosaurs, the first flying vertebrates, and unravel the mysterious origins of birds. We look how these creatures eventually evolved into birds in Creatures of the Skies.

Part 5: The Insect World
The Insect World looks at special adaptations, such as the compound eye, and bee language is explained. Why do some life forms thrive on planet Earth while others vanish to extinction? Discover the survival strategies and unique adaptations developed by one of Earth's most successful species in The Insect World.

Part 6: Apes to Man
This episode examines the evolution of humans using computer animation. One group of primates moved onto the plains where they evolved the ability to stand upright, in order to survive. These anthropoids may be modern humans' direct ancestors. Climb our family tree in Apes to Man to find out how the unpredictable forces of evolution shaped our primate ancestors and Earth's first hominids.

Part 7: Evolution's Next Step
In little more than a few generations, humankind has altered the balance of of Earth's fragile ecosystems-polluting waters, ransacking natural resources, and overpopulating the landscape. Can the human species survive on Earth? If not, where do we go from here? In Evolution's Next Step scientists study a man-made biosphere to explore alternatives for the distant future-perhaps even making other planets habitable for human life.
General
Complete name : DC.Planet.of.Life.1of7.The.Birth.of.Earth.avi
Format : AVI
Format/Info : Audio Video Interleave
File size : 895 MiB
Duration : 45mn 48s
Overall bit rate : 2 731 Kbps

Video
ID : 0
Format : MPEG-4 Visual
Format profile : Advanced Simple@L5
Format settings, BVOP : 1
Format settings, QPel : No
Format settings, GMC : No warppoints
Format settings, Matrix : Default (MPEG)
Codec ID : DX50
Codec ID/Hint : DivX 5
Duration : 45mn 48s
Bit rate : 2 464 Kbps
Width : 720 pixels
Height : 544 pixels
Display aspect ratio : 4:3
Frame rate : 29.970 fps
Color space : YUV
Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0
Bit depth : 8 bits
Scan type : Progressive
Compression mode : Lossy
Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.210
Stream size : 807 MiB (90%)
Writing library : XviD 1.2.1 (UTC 2008-12-04)

Audio
ID : 1
Format : AC-3
Format/Info : Audio Coding 3
Mode extension : CM (complete main)
Format settings, Endianness : Big
Codec ID : 2000
Duration : 45mn 48s
Source duration : 45mn 48s
Bit rate mode : Constant
Bit rate : 256 Kbps
Channel(s) : 2 channels
Channel positions : Front: L R
Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz
Bit depth : 16 bits
Compression mode : Lossy
Stream size : 83.9 MiB (9%)
Alignment : Aligned on interleaves
Interleave, duration : 33 ms (1.00 video frame)

Screenshots

Discovery Channel - Planet of Life (1995)

Discovery Channel - Planet of Life (1995)

Discovery Channel - Planet of Life (1995)

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Discovery Channel - Planet of Life (1995)