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1-34 of 34
- Four Navy SEAL veterans visit the site of the bloodiest day in U.S. Naval Special Warfare history. Following in the bootsteps of their forefathers, they pay homage to the fallen as they attempt to better understand the events of June 6, 1944. What do the sacrifices made here say about their own service? How does it inform their lives and the legacy they hope to leave?
- A reality YouTube series that uploads new episodes daily and talks about non fiction topics, historical facts, urban legends, unsolved mysteries, unsolved disappearances, haunted places, scientific facts, evil cults, and more.
- The Juno probe is the most recent visitor to Jupiter. Orbiting and examining Jupiter with a variety of instruments it provided new understanding of the storms on the planet and Jupiter's interior. New simulations examine the impact of Jupiter on the evolution of the Solar System.
- It showcases the twisted motivations and origins of the SS (the Schutzstaffel), which was Nazi Germany's paramilitary unit that was a key architect of the Holocaust.
- A combination of hurricane-force winds and the snapping of an electrical pole starts the Honda Canyon Fire on Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, early in the morning of December 20, 1977. Over a thousand people consisting of professional firemen and military personnel fight the fire. Outlier winds would increase to over a hundred miles per hour, making the firefight almost impossible. In the course of events, a conflict of cultures emerged. Military commanders, fearful of the Base's cold war secrets being compromised, attempted to control the protocols and procedures of the civilian fire fighters called upon to battle the enormous blaze, offering up their own untrained personnel to fight a conflagration that, for all intents and purposes, should have never been fought and couldn't be beaten. Four fatalities and sixty-five injuries result. Almost ten thousand acres burn, resulting in significant damage to the military installation infrastructure. Ironically and fortuitously, the fire will be out, a little more than 30 hours later, due to an incoming Pacific rain storm. The Air Force quickly declares it a victory, a battle won by its brave Airmen. However, those who were there will tell you a different story. Firestorm '77 recounts the confusion and chaos of December 1977 as told by those that were there on the front lines.
- Their names are legend in small towns and rural hamlets of America. Though none of these creatures have ever been confirmed, they stalk the imaginations believers in the weird and strange side of life.
- After years of negotiations, Michaël Sztanke and Julien Alric secured a visa to get into North Korea. After being censored the first time, they returned to get the answers they had originally sought: How do North Korean people live?
- In Mideval Europe castles were the ultimate symbol of dominance. But they also had to serve several different functions; power projection, defense of the realm, and not in the least, a glorious home for the castle's master. These three functions are examined in turn as the history unfolds of how castles evolved over the centuries to a adapt to changing demands.
- 1993– 1h 28m6.7 (59)TV EpisodeAn extraordinary documentary about the impressive unity of difficult patients in a psychiatric hospital. We take you behind the doors of the facility that takes care of the most dangerous patients suffering from heavy mental disorders needing 24 hours surveillance.
- In November 1922, Howard Carter uncovered the tomb of Tutankhamen, an obscure pharaoh of the 18th Egyptian dynasty. The extreme wealth of the tomb reveals the munificence of this young king, who died before his 20th birthday. A century later, specialists are once again looking at the treasure. Combining 3D reconstructions, access to objects and expert insights, this document provides an overview of the discoveries being made.
- An informative and exciting series, using treasure exhumed from the world's oceans to learn about the technologies and science of lost civilizations and periods of historical interest. The series showcases five dramatic stories set at sea, the clues to which are buried deep beneath the waves: ancient Egyptian boats, lost World War II planes, sunken cities and shipwreck treasure.
- This investigative documentary sheds light on the baffling 2012 cold-blooded slaying of a British family and local cyclist in the French Alps.
- In the darkest hours of World War II, thousands of men from Burma gave their lives fighting a brutal war for Britain against the Japanese, and to carry out the most successful guerrilla campaign of the war. But after the Allied victory, Burma sank into isolation, dictatorship and civil war, and Britain forgot the bravery of these men. Now only a handful of veterans remain - will they get the recognition they deserve before it's too late? One determined band of Brits are in a battle against time to make sure they do.
- Since the most recent and historic flooding tragedies in Southeast Asia (in 2004 and 2011), researchers around the world are mobilized to study the complex mechanics of tsunamis.
- She was young, strong, and very courageous, but she met an untimely demise in the summer of 1370 BC. Many were saddened by her death and devastated by the loss of this Nordic Bronze-Age Girl. Age 16 to 18, she was buried with bracelets, an ox-hide, and a small child at her feet. For the first time since her discovery in 1921, scientists are able to glimpse her life in the mountains of Scandinavia.
- Though generally perceived as slow turtles can be lightning fast hunters or endlessly patient. The many species have a great variety of adaptations that enable the to survive in almost any environment over the past 250 million years. Shown here are the behaviors that enable turtles to reproduce, survive and thrive.
- Paleontologists, notably Michael Voorhies, have uncovered fossils of hundreds of mammal species in Nebraska. For millions of years recurring super volcano eruptions doomed entire populations of animals. Then, over that past few thousand years, rivers had eroded the volcanic ash revealing the ancient fossil beds that now tell the stories of the evolution of many mammal families.
- Plot under wraps.
- This film explores a growing threat. We investigate storm causes, why they occur frequently and severely in several parts of the world, how to predict them, and what can be done to lessen their impact. Follow NASA's satellites observing dust in the atmosphere, the science behind the Early Warning system, and how it could work.
- An informative and exciting series, using treasure exhumed from the world's oceans to learn about the technologies and science of lost civilizations and periods of historical interest. The series showcases five dramatic stories set at sea, the clues to which are buried deep beneath the waves: ancient Egyptian boats, lost World War II planes, sunken cities and shipwreck treasure.
- Marine biologist and cameraman Rick Rosenthal has been filming in the ocean for decades, but one spectacle has eluded him and other filmmakers, until now. It is a vast "vertical migration" that happens every night, in which billions of animals rise up from the depths. Rosenthal captures the often bizarre and still uncharted life forms that make up the largest animal migration on the planet.
- When you stand next to a reconstructed boat of an ancient Pharaoh, you truly see that these men were worshiped as Gods on Earth. The boats' incredible and complex designs rival that of the pyramids themselves.
- When you stand next to a reconstructed boat of an ancient Pharaoh, you truly see that these men were worshiped as Gods on Earth. The boats' incredible and complex designs rival that of the pyramids themselves.