Non c'è nient'altro di simile. Chris Packham svela l'epica storia, lunga 4,5 miliardi di anni, della nostra casa, dalla drammatica creazione all'arrivo della vita umana, e tutto ciò che succ... Leggi tuttoNon c'è nient'altro di simile. Chris Packham svela l'epica storia, lunga 4,5 miliardi di anni, della nostra casa, dalla drammatica creazione all'arrivo della vita umana, e tutto ciò che succederà dopo.Non c'è nient'altro di simile. Chris Packham svela l'epica storia, lunga 4,5 miliardi di anni, della nostra casa, dalla drammatica creazione all'arrivo della vita umana, e tutto ciò che succederà dopo.
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Chris Packham is a genius, I think he is the natural successor to David Attenborough, this programme is full of facts, some easy to understand others not so easy, so people may now better understand the 'stop oil' activists (they are fighting for us) when he explains how unique and fragile our Earth actually is.
No one should be in doubt how passionate and determined Chris Packham and the other activists are and will not let Earth or us die without a fight.
From beginning to end crammed full of non-stop interesting facts presented in a straightforward honest matter of fact way, thank you Sir Chris.
No one should be in doubt how passionate and determined Chris Packham and the other activists are and will not let Earth or us die without a fight.
From beginning to end crammed full of non-stop interesting facts presented in a straightforward honest matter of fact way, thank you Sir Chris.
A series that tries to condense approximately 4.6 billion years of history into five hours, is inevitably going to be highly selective about what to include. The astromological impacts, the changing geology, and the consequential impacts on the atmosphere, were fascinating. The origins of plant and animal life and their subsequent developments were also interesting. The part I found wanting, was an exlanation for the origins and devlopment of fungi. Whilst plant life was demonstrated to have evolved from the sea, when it hit land it developed a symbiosis with fungi, according to the program, resulting in the origin of lichen. But there was no expalnation of where the fungi originated. Furthermore, some early species of fungi were apparently enormous, towering over everything else that grew at the time. Yet, how these enormous structures came to exist, when according to the program the world was still made of bare rock with little or no organic material, was not explained.
The series could have been longer and more detailed, but it is in my view, one of the most important natural history series in a long time. It clearly demonstrates how major and sometimes minor changes to the environment can produce dynamic and sometimes unexpected and profound changes to the ability of life to maintain itself.
In these present times of uncertain climatic forces, this is a very timely series.
The series could have been longer and more detailed, but it is in my view, one of the most important natural history series in a long time. It clearly demonstrates how major and sometimes minor changes to the environment can produce dynamic and sometimes unexpected and profound changes to the ability of life to maintain itself.
In these present times of uncertain climatic forces, this is a very timely series.
Chris Packham does a fantastic job of explaining our planet's deep history and how fleeting we are but also how resilient life is.
Thoroughly engaging and immersive.
Great visuals and story telling. The places he visits really help put the different pieces of the geological jigsaw together.
The science behind the story telling is highly credible and Chris uses easy to understand language that makes this series accessible to all.
I have been an avid science documentary watcher, and the BBC have added another masterpiece to their already extensive list of other documentaries such as Planet Earth. This is up there!
Brilliant.
Thoroughly engaging and immersive.
Great visuals and story telling. The places he visits really help put the different pieces of the geological jigsaw together.
The science behind the story telling is highly credible and Chris uses easy to understand language that makes this series accessible to all.
I have been an avid science documentary watcher, and the BBC have added another masterpiece to their already extensive list of other documentaries such as Planet Earth. This is up there!
Brilliant.
This was all over the place, if you're after a decent version of our Earths history, that's in layman's terms for us dumb a**es, this isn't in, half the sentences in this show made little sense in correlation to what was actually on screen.
Apparently, primates learnt to walk because of the huge new distances between trees (due to asteroid impact) and that's why gorillas & chimps can't get about without swinging from tress, because they were not met with this issue...excuse me! What! I'm no expert on primates, but I'm pretty certain I've seen both gorillas and Chimps roaming the flats without the need of a branch.
Apparently, primates learnt to walk because of the huge new distances between trees (due to asteroid impact) and that's why gorillas & chimps can't get about without swinging from tress, because they were not met with this issue...excuse me! What! I'm no expert on primates, but I'm pretty certain I've seen both gorillas and Chimps roaming the flats without the need of a branch.
Beautiful, awe-inspiring and emotional. It tells an amazing story and, in more places than is usual for this kind of show, actually explains the evidence for the statements.
Chris Packham surprised me at being able to hold a bombastic show like this together. His shows are usually much smaller and more informal. He even sounds like Attenborough on occasions!
But the glaring problem? The script keeps using the language of creationism around evolution. It implies evolution had purpose, that organisms chose to evolve, that the Earth created conditions specifically to allow humans to exist. None of this is true. Evolution has no direction or purpose. It is just "whoever had the most grandchildren, their traits will spread through natural selection". I get that it makes for flowery prose, but it is misleading at a time where we need to be literate about this stuff.
The message it gives? Don't worry about climate change. The Earth chose to save us before and will eventually do it again (with volcanoes probably) so don't sweat it. We might even choose to evolve to cope with it. We need to understand the opposite.
Chris Packham surprised me at being able to hold a bombastic show like this together. His shows are usually much smaller and more informal. He even sounds like Attenborough on occasions!
But the glaring problem? The script keeps using the language of creationism around evolution. It implies evolution had purpose, that organisms chose to evolve, that the Earth created conditions specifically to allow humans to exist. None of this is true. Evolution has no direction or purpose. It is just "whoever had the most grandchildren, their traits will spread through natural selection". I get that it makes for flowery prose, but it is misleading at a time where we need to be literate about this stuff.
The message it gives? Don't worry about climate change. The Earth chose to save us before and will eventually do it again (with volcanoes probably) so don't sweat it. We might even choose to evolve to cope with it. We need to understand the opposite.
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