《地球造人》是一部由Matthew Gyve调土举s执导,Iain Stewart苏此耐烧仅动例得名主演的BBC纪录百执受又径呀爱破片。该片讲述地球的力量是如何改变了人类的历史来自。影片于2010年1月1360百科9日在英国首播 。
- 中文名称 地球造人
- 外文名称 How Earth Made Us
- 别名 地球创世纪
- 类型 纪录片
- 导演 Matthew Gyves
基础信息
- 年代:2010
- 字幕:中英双字
- IMDB评分:8.0/10 29 votes
- 文件格式:RMVB
- 视频尺寸:1024 x 5种方分副给切东76
- 文件大小:5CD
- 背景音乐 Look Beyond
- 主演:Iain Stewart ... Himself - Presenter (3 episodes, 2010)
剧情简介
BBC最新纪录片,讲述地球的力量如何改来自变了人类的历史。2010年1月19日首播,共播出了5集:'Water','De360百科ep Earth','Wind','Fire','Human Planet'。节目中,Iain Stewart教授带领观众探究几个世纪以来,地质学、地理学和气候是如何影响人类生活的。
我们的星球拥有惊人的力量,但却很少在教科书中被提起。这个系列节目第一次通过电视展现地球的神奇力量对人类发展的影响。节目将历史故事的讲述和炫目的摄影镜头紧密结合,给我们呈现一幅原汁原味的人类历史图景。
英文介绍
Iain Stewart tells the epic story of how the planet has shaped our h来自istory. With spectacular images, surprising stories and a compelling narrative, the ser道流问ies disco社声vers the central role played in human history by four different planetary forces.
Episode 1: Water
360百科Professor Iain Stewart continues his epic exploration 术停高of how the planet has shaped human history. This time he explores our complex relationship with water. Visiting spectacular locat区临陈耐临类指ions in Iceland, the Middle East and Indi未济呢风汽推a, Iain shows 器钢妈倍史伤烈联大how control over water has been central to human existence. He takes a precarious flight in a motorised paraglider to experience the cycle of freshwat越伟易er that we depend on, discove宪己特整爱甲门rs how villagers in the foothills of the Himalayas have bui职lt a living bridge to cope with the monsoon, and visits Egypt to reveal the secret of the pharaohs' success. Throughout history, su化武拉宽专界传音培钱ccess has depended on our ability to adapt to and control constantly shifting sources of water.
Episode 2: Deep E基规长某晚虽客亲们听arth
Iain Stewart tells the epic story of how the planet has shaped our history. With s验常pectacular images, surprising stories and a compelling narrative, the series discovers the c复鲁采entral role played in human history by four different planetary forces. In thi功服校弦误头又s first episode, Iain explores the relationship between the deep Earth and the development of 干生胜独器绝倒命human civilisation. He visits an extraordi称技破会新nary crystal cave in Mexico, drops down a hole in the Iranian desert and crawls through 盟那友括并字多seven-thousand-year-old tunnels i又提应n Israel. His exploration reveals that throughout history, our ancestors were strangely drawn to fault lines, areas which connect the surface with the deep interior of the planet. These fault lines gave access to important resources, but also brought with them great danger.
Episode 3: Wind
Professor Iain Stewart continues his epic exploration of how the planet has shaped human history. Iain sets sail on one of the fastest racing boats ever built to explore the story of our turbulent relationship with the wind. Travelling to iconic locations including the Sahara desert, the coast of West Africa and the South Pacific, Iain discovers how people have exploited the power of the wind for thousands of years. The wind is a force which at first sight appears chaotic. But the patterns that lie within the atmosphere have shaped the destiny of continents, and lie at the heart of some of the greatest turning points in human history.
Episode 4: Fire
Professor Iain Stewart continues his epic exploration of how the planet has shaped human history. Iain explores man's relationship with fire. He begins by embarking on an extraordinary encounter with this terrifying force of nature - a walk right through the heart of a raging fire. Fire has long been our main source of energy and Iain shows how this meant that the planet played a crucial role in Britain's industrial revolution, whilst holding China's development back. Along the way he dives in a mysterious lake in Oregon, climbs a glacier of salt, crawls through an extraordinary cave in Iran and takes a therapeutic bath in crude oil.
Episode 5: Human Planet
Series in which Professor Iain Stewart looks at how four geological forces have shaped human history. He explores the most recently established force, humans. It's easy to think of the human impact on the planet as a negative one, but as Iain discovers, this isn't always the case. It is clear that humans have unprecedented control over many of the planet's geological cycles; the question is, how will the human race use this power?