MÉDIA CENTER => Documentários => Filmes => TVRip => Tópico iniciado por: erector em 30 de Agosto de 2014, 23:35
Título: [HDTV 720p] Alien Deep with Bob Ballard (2012) *erector*
Enviado por: erector em 30 de Agosto de 2014, 23:35
Alien Deep with Bob Ballard (2012) 720p HDTV x264 AC3 *erector*
(http://i.imgur.com/JrJVw3J.jpg)
:imdb: (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2399098)
:info:
Título Original: Alien Deep with Bob Ballard Realização: National Geographic Lançamento: 2012 Género: Documentário Duração: ± 45 mins / Episódio Extensão: mkv Vídeo: H264 | 1280 x 720 | 25.000 fps Áudio: AC3 | 48000 Hz | Taxa de Bits: Variável Idioma: Inglês Legendas: PT Tamanho: ± 950 Mb Ripper/Uploader: erector
:sinopse:
The Alien Deep. It’s a place in the sea, thousands of feet beneath the surface, far from the first crack of light, where the planet’s last and greatest secrets hide in the cold darkness of endless night. In this five-part series, Dr. Robert Ballard, famed explorer who found the Titanic at its final resting place, takes viewers into these underwater worlds where no man has gone before.
Episode 1: Fires of Creation Dr Bob Ballard, discoverer of the Titanic, is going on an underwater odyssey to the base of Hawaii’s volcanoes, coming face-to-face with the extraordinary creatures who call the ocean floor home.
Episode 2: Wrecks of The Abyss Titanic discoverer, Dr Bob Ballard, is on the hunt for the world’s oldest shipwrecks in the Mediterranean Sea, hoping to uncover the lost history of the ancient world.
Episode 3: It's Alive Will Bob Ballard find clues to the origins of life in the columns of smoke emanating from mysterious volcanic formations in the dark, chill waters of the ocean floor?
Episode 4: Ocean's Fury Talking to the fishermen, surfers and oceanographers who live by the ocean’s movements, Bob Ballard is out to prove rogue waves and the ocean’s force is growing ever more dangerous by the day.
Episode 5: Inner vs. Outer Space Bob Ballard challenges Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin’s long-held belief that space colonies will save Earth, arguing we should be looking to the oceans for mankind’s future.