Horizon - ????-2005 - HQ Widescreen (Re)Releases

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Horizon - ????-2005 - HQ Widescreen (Re)Releases

Postby Adam Cook on Sun Apr 30, 2006 4:21 am

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Horizon Website
Horizon Catalogue


Adam Cook wrote:Here I will be posting my new widescreen captures of Horizon episodes that have been repeated. I'll do them regardless of any existing versions. Filesize from now on will be 640MB; small enough to fit on a cd, big enough to fit 7 on a dvd exactly, and with the high bitrate this monument to television deserves.
Fullscreen versions (off BBC Prime, or if it's an old ep that doesn't have a ws version) I'll release in the other big horizon pre 2005 thread.


episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2005.Neanderthal.W ... DEC8304F|/
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2005.Global_Dimmin ... C18A09F4|/

episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2004.The_Hunt_for_ ... B5E49E7C|/
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2004.T_Rex,_Warrio ... 7BEA65FB|/ :yeah:
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2004.Secrets_of_th ... DA4CD953|/

episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2003.Percy_Pilcher ... 2A2F00E9|/
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2003-11-13.The_Big ... 357C7565|/ :new:
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2003.The_Secret_Li ... B0AB8926|/ :yeah:

episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2002.The_Secret_of ... A4FFDE7F|/ :yeah:
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2002.The_Day_the_E ... 14E0FDAF|/ :yeah:
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2002.The_Dinosaur_ ... 69BFAA2D|/
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2002.Death_of_the_ ... 68AA1183|/
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2002.Volcano_Hell. ... 34944F6F|/

episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2001.The_Ape_that_ ... 50FACA9F|/ :yeah:
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2001.Snowball_Eart ... BA63BD57|/
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2001.The_Mystery_o ... 36771753|/

episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2000.The_Secret_Tr ... E98612DF|/ :yeah:
episode website - ed2k://|file|Horizon.2000.The_Lost_Worl ... 35DE2B48|/ :yeah:



:new: - see below for details

:yeah: - pretty well shared

.

[ Add all 18 links to your ed2k client ]
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Postby Adam Cook on Sun Apr 30, 2006 4:24 am

.


Feel absolutely free to post any of my caps on other forums.


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The Secret Treasures of Zeugma

Postby Adam Cook on Sun Apr 30, 2006 4:58 am

Horizon - 2000-11-09 - The Secret Treasures of Zeugma


First broadcast on: BBC2, Thursday 9th November 2000, 9.00pm - 10.00pm
Recorded on: BBC2, Wednesday 10th May 2006, 10.40am - 11.30am

Website link
Transcript



ed2k://|file|Horizon.2000.The_Secret_Tr ... E98612DF|/

(new name format, felt DVBC was more clear on the source. still capped the same way)

Image

In the summer of 2000, one of the great frontier cities of the Roman Empire, the city of Zeugma, all but disappeared from the face of the Earth under the flood waters of a dam. In a bid to modernise, the Turkish government has embarked on one of the most ambitious engineering projects in the world, building a series of dams on the Euphrates over the past twenty years. Almost every dam threatens ancient remains that lie below in one of the most archaeologically rich regions of the world. The completion of the Birecik dam, featured in this film, has flooded the valley where Zeugma is buried. The city on the flat plain has entirely disappeared and the waters have now risen to cover 30% of the city on the hillside.

'Horizon' tells the story of the archaeologists' fifth and final visit, struggling to save what they could before the dam waters rose. It witnesses the uncovering of some of the most beautiful examples of Roman art ever found. The team’s discoveries at Zeugma caused an international outcry and further excavations were hurriedly put together.

Since 1995, French archaeologists Pierre Leriche and Catherine Abadie-Reynal have taken up the challenge to save what they can from the city before the dam is finished. The archaeologists have two main tasks - to uncover the history of this desperately under-excavated region of Turkey and to remove what treasures they could from the site before they were lost forever. On this, their final excavation, they had to work against the clock: they only had a permit to dig for six weeks

Zeugma was founded by one of Alexander the Great’s generals, Seleucia Nicator, and prospered under later Roman rule. It became one of the major cities of the Roman eastern frontier with a garrison of over 6,000 soldiers. The city’s bridge across the Euphrates made it one of the most critical trading cities in the region, on the silk routes to the East. The archaeologists know that the city contains vital clues to the history of the region. Previously looted exquisite mosaics have hinted at the treasures of its past that must be buried somewhere in the vast site.

The part of the old city on the Euphrates flood plain, Apamea, was the first to go. But the archaeologists didn’t stand a chance of excavating it in such a short amount of time. So using a technology originally developed for finding oil and mineral deposits, they instead generated a picture of the buried city just as it lies below ground. They discovered a preserved ancient Greek city, laid out in a perfect grid. Meanwhile, in the remains of a Roman villa across the river, the archaeologists had an extraordinary stroke of luck.

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With only five days left on the excavation permit, Catherine Abadie-Reynal unearthed a masterpiece: a beautiful Roman mosaic floor. The discovery caused an international outcry and hit the headlines across the world. The archaeologists were granted more days to excavate, but they could not stem the tide of the dam project.

With time running out, they uncovered more stunning mosaics in the villa. They were dug out from the site and sent to a local museum at Gaziantep - just in time. By mid June 2000, the newly uncovered fourteen room villa disappeared underwater. By October, the level of the water finally settled to form a vast, still lake in the valley. All excavations at the site ceased.

There's recently been a move by the Turkish government to declare Zeugma a site of special archaeological interest. The remainder of the ancient city on the hillside could, in theory, still be explored.

The dam will not only erase much of Zeugma from history. It will also displace 30,000 people, mostly Kurds, from the villages they have lived in for generations. For many, the loss of Zeugma is a tragedy.

BBC Catalogue link

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Language.....: English

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Postby Claud1o on Sun Apr 30, 2006 10:11 am

Thank you for your effort, much appreciated! Click^3

Cheers,
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Never do tomorrow what you can put off today
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The Lost World of Lake Vostok

Postby Adam Cook on Tue May 02, 2006 6:50 pm

Horizon - 2000-10-26 - The Lost World of Lake Vostok

do 26-10-2000

First broadcast: Thursday 26th October 2001, 21:02-21:51, BBC2
Recorded: April 2006


Episode link @ BBC
Transcript @ BBC




ed2k://|file|Horizon.2000.The_Lost_Worl ... 35DE2B48|/






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Language.....: English

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The Ape that Took Over the World

Postby Adam Cook on Fri May 05, 2006 5:00 pm

Horizon - 2001-10-04 - The Ape that Took Over the World


First broadcast: Thursday 4th October 2001, 21:02-21:51, BBC2
Recorded: May 2006


Episode link @ BBC
Transcript @ BBC




ed2k://|file|Horizon.2001.The_Ape_that_ ... 50FACA9F|/


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Language.....: English

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Horizon - 2001-02-22 - Snowball Earth

Postby Adam Cook on Sat May 06, 2006 2:59 am

Horizon - 2001-02-22 - Snowball Earth

First broadcast: Thursday 22nd February 2001, 21:02-21:51, BBC2
Recorded: Wednesday 17th May 2006, 10.40 - 11.30, BBC2


Episode link @ BBC
Transcript @ BBC



ed2k://|file|Horizon.2001.Snowball_Eart ... BA63BD57|/



There is a controversial theory that for millions of years the Earth was entirely smothered in ice, up to one kilometre thick. The temperature hovers around -40ºC everywhere, even in the tropics and the equator. If it did, then virtually nothing could survive this ferocious climate. There are some tantalising geological clues that show this theory may be true but the problem is, the clues and the Snowball Earth theory defy the laws of nature.

For over fifty years a group of scientists has been trying to prove this incredible period of Earth history. Struggling against scepticism and disbelief, now finally the many mysteries have been solved and the scientific community is slowly coming around to the extraordinary idea not just of the dramatic freeze, but of an equally dramatic thaw. Scientists across the world are starting to believe that in the past the Earth froze over completely for ten million years... then warmed up rapidly about 600 million years ago. Almost all life was wiped out. But out of the freeze emerged the first complex creatures on Earth. Scientists now believe that the so-called Snowball Earth theory could hold the key to the evolution of complex life on this planet.

The discovery of this theory is a classic scientific detective story. For decades there had been a growing 'X-File' of geological anomalies haunting the scientific community. Telltale signs of past glaciation have been found in places that should have been much too hot - very near the equator. Even during the most severe ice age, scientists believed that the ice only reached as far down as Northern Europe and the middle of the USA. So what could these tropical deposits mean?

Back in the 1960s one of the first climate modellers, Mikhail Budyko, stumbled on an ingenious answer. Through some simple mathematical formulae, he calculated that if the polar ice caps had spread past a crucial point, a runaway freezing process would have followed, eventually freezing over the whole of the planet. The idea fascinated scientists, but no one thought his runaway glaciation was anything more than a theoretical result. Surely it had never actually happened on planet Earth?

The idea foundered because according to the model, once the Earth was frozen there was no way out - the Earth would remain frozen forever. The big freeze would wipe out all life; we would not exist today. It seemed patently absurd. But then came a series of insights and inspirations from a geologist in California, Joe Kirschvink, who came up with a brilliant solution - that volcanoes, protruding above the frozen landscape, would have carried on pumping out carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas, even though the world had entered the deep freeze. On Snowball Earth there was no rain to wash this carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere. Instead it would have built up to higher and higher concentrations - until eventually it sparked off not just global warming but global meltdown.

From the baking landscape of Africa to ice-covered Antarctica, Horizon follows the tale of a theory which, if true, would have huge implications. Because scientists now believe this cycle of freezing and frying may have created the unique conditions needed for the evolution of complex life, including our own.

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BBC Catalogue

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The Secret Life of Caves

Postby Adam Cook on Mon May 15, 2006 2:10 am

Horizon - 2003-04-03 - The Secret Life of Caves


ed2k://|file|Horizon.2003.The_Secret_Li ... B0AB8926|/


Caves @ BBC
Transcript


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The Secret Life of Caves

Set against the back drop of awe inspiring geological beauty, a strange scientific adventure sets out to discover how a mineral clad cave network - the height of a 30 storey building and the length of six football fields - came to exist deep below the Guadalupe Mountains in North America.

But this journey soon unravels a multitude of inexplicable phenomena and obscure geological formations, leading to the discovery of extreme rock-eating microbes - a testimony from primordial Earth and a glimpse of life elsewhere in the Solar System.

Acid attack

Geologists believed that all limestone caves were formed by rain and underground water percolating through cracks in the rocks. Absorbing carbon dioxide from the soil, this water becomes weak carbonic acid, nibbling away at limestone, etching out networks of subterranean caves.

However, the intricate cave structures beneath the Guadalupe Mountains in the Carlsbad Caverns of New Mexico are coated in glistening white, gypsum-clad walls. 400m under a desert, the world's largest gypsum chandeliers adorn a cavern called Lechuguilla Cave. There, dazzling white crystals create delicate branches up to 6m in length.

Gypsum is soluble in water, so the 'water flow' theory doesn't fit here. Gypsum has been left copiously encrusting the walls, when it should have been dissolved in the cave formation process. Teams of scientists from the University of New Mexico, Portland State University and Chapman University discovered how such vast mineral coated caverns formed, and their explanation involved the work of a much stronger acid.

Life in the dark

The team visits a more active and dangerous cavern in South Mexico, searching for evidence of a cave in the act of formation. Respirators and poison-gas monitors are required for protection from the hydrogen sulphide gas and lethal sulphuric acid deep inside the Cueva de Villa Luz cave. Yet within this noxious environment life thrives. Microbes, spiders, insects, crabs, and fish all flourish in the complete darkness and caustic atmosphere. The team also discover 'snottites', mucous-like stalactites of sulphur-eating bacteria that drip sulphuric acid onto the surrounding limestone.

These so-called 'extremophiles' are organisms that thrive in conditions that we consider unusual. They live in environments devoid of sunlight or oxygen, deep below the surface of the Earth. They tolerate high and low temperatures, extreme acidity and pressures that would crush surface creatures. They can survive at temperatures of 83°C in the bubbling hot springs at Yellowstone National Park. Colonies clump together in thick mats thriving by volcanic hydrothermal vents, belching out minerals and chemicals in boiling temperatures, deep within the ocean floor.

It is these extreme microbes, feeding on oil far beneath the Carlsbad caves, or reacting in Cueva de Villa Luz that produce hydrogen sulphide. The gas emerges into the caves, where it reacts with oxygen to produce powerful sulphuric acid. This acid dissolves limestone eight times the volume of its weaker cousin, carbonic acid. It also leaves a mineral residue of gypsum.

Other planets

These microbial engineers have been busy hundreds of metres below the surface of the Earth for millennia. They have created geological beauty through biological activity. This process, still ongoing in Cueva de Villa Luz, was completed millions of years ago in Carlsbad and Lechuguilla. These environments are as extreme as the primordial Earth and may even be present under the freezing permafrost of the UV-saturated surface of Mars, or beneath the thick ice of Jupiter's moon, Europa.

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The Dinosaur that Fooled the World

Postby Adam Cook on Wed May 24, 2006 2:02 pm

Horizon - 2002-02-21 - The Dinosaur that Fooled the World


ed2k://|file|Horizon.2002.The_Dinosaur_ ... 69BFAA2D|/


Epside info @ BBC
Transcript @ BBC


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Language.....: English

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T. Rex - Warrior or Wimp?

Postby Adam Cook on Wed Jun 28, 2006 11:37 pm

Horizon - 2004-03-11 - T. Rex - Warrior or Wimp?


ed2k://|file|Horizon.2004.T_Rex,_Warrio ... 7BEA65FB|/


Epside info @ BBC
Transcript @ BBC


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Language.....: English

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Postby Adam Cook on Wed Jul 12, 2006 11:37 pm

Horizon - 2005-02-10 - Neanderthal


ed2k://|file|Horizon.2005.Neanderthal.W ... DEC8304F|/


Episode info @ BBC
Transcript @ BBC


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Their bodies were well equipped to cope with the Ice Age, so why did the Neanderthals die out when it ended?

In 1848 a strange skull was discovered on the military outpost of Gibraltar. It was undoubtedly human, but also had some of the heavy features of an ape... distinct brow ridges, and a forward projecting face. Just what was this ancient creature? And when had it lived? As more remains were discovered one thing became clear, this creature had once lived right across Europe. The remains were named Homo neanderthalensis (Neanderthal man) an ancient and primitive form of human.

The archaeological evidence revealed that the earliest Neanderthals had lived in Europe about 200,000 years ago. But then, about 30,000 years ago, they disappeared... just at the time when the first modern humans appear in Europe. The story has it that our ancestors, modern humans, spread out of Africa about 100,000 years ago with better brains and more sophisticated tools. As they spread into Neanderthal territory, they simply out-competed their primitive cousins.

But was Neanderthal really the brutish ape-man of legend, or an effective rival to our own species? And how exactly had he been driven to extinction? What could be found out about this remarkable evolution from the bones themselves? To begin the investigation a skeleton was needed, and no complete Neanderthal had ever been found.

However a reconstruction expert at The American Museum of Natural History in New York realised that it would be possible to create an entire composite skeleton from casts of partial skeletons. Gary Sawyer combined and rebuilt broken parts to create the most complete Neanderthal ever seen. This Neanderthal stood no more than 1.65m (5' 4") tall, but he had a robust and powerful build - perfect for his Ice Age environment. But would he have stood up to the cold better than modern humans?

Cold adaptation

The popular image of the Ice Age is a period of unremitting freezing conditions. But over nearly a million years, Europe has seen huge climate swings including warm as well as cold periods. For much of the last 200,000 years, when Neanderthals were alive, the climate was mild, sometimes even warmer than today's. But they did also have to live through periods of intense cold.

Professor Trenton Holliday is a body plan expert from Tulane University, New Orleans. After seeing the skeleton, he believed it had comparatively short limbs and a deep, wide ribcage. This body plan minimises the body's surface area to retain heat, and keeps vital organs embedded deep within the body to insulate them from the cold.

To see if this would have helped him to survive, anthropology professor Leslie Aiello from UCL, teamed up with Dr George Havenith, who runs a laboratory studying the way modern humans retain heat at Loughborough University. They subjected two modern humans with very different body shapes to cooling in an ice bath. One had the long limbed, athletic shape of a runner, the other had a stockier, heavily-muscled body plan closer to that of a Neanderthal.

The heavily muscled person lasted longer in the ice bath, so it seems that Neanderthal would have had an advantage. His muscle would have acted as an insulator, and his deep chest did help to keep organs warm. Even so, the advantage doesn't mean that Neanderthal could have survived the icy extremes. This was a polar wasteland and his heavily muscled body plan needed a lot of feeding - about twice as much as we need today.

Hunting

The archaeological record suggests that Neanderthals lived around the edges of forests where they hunted large animals like red deer, horse and wild cattle. The forests gave them firewood, and materials to construct shelters and spears. By studying Neanderthal stone spear points, Professor John Shea, from Stony Brook University, New York, has found that the shafts of Neanderthal spears would have been thick and heavy. And if they hunted in woodland, then trying to throw these spears at animals would have been useless. So just how did Neanderthals hunt?

Professor Holliday has identified a clue in the Neanderthal skeleton: he was much stronger on the right side than on the left, and his right forearm was particularly powerful, demonstrating a very powerful grip.

To see how this muscle development might have related to hunting, Professor Steve Churchill, from Duke University, carried out another experiment. The results of this and Holliday's work suggest Neanderthal was an ambush hunter; waiting in a forest for his prey to stray close, and then attacking with a thrusting spear. Neanderthal was possibly the most carnivorous form of human ever to have lived.

Intelligence

But the brutality of his hunting methods didn't mean he was simple minded. Could the skeleton tell us more? Professor Ralph Holloway, from Columbia University, New York, is an expert on ancient brains.

His assessment of the Neanderthal skull was startling. It was 20% larger than the average size of a modern human's brain, and anatomically identical. He could tell that this Neanderthal was right-handed and that that the areas of brain responsible for complex thought were just as advanced as ours. He should have had the ability to think like us.

But one of the ways we use our brains is very particular. We talk. This ability makes us unique in the world today, and arguably makes us human. So was it possible to tell if Neanderthal could have spoken? A tiny bone in the throat, called the hyoid, offered a clue. This bone supports the soft tissue of the throat, and several groups of scientists are attempting to model that soft tissue from the bones and discover what he might have sounded like.

Professor Bob Franciscus, from Iowa University, is part of a multi-national group attempting to do just that. By making scans of modern humans, he saw how the soft tissue of the vocal tracts depends on the position of the hyoid bone and the anchoring sites on the skull. Computer predictions were then be made to determine the shape of the modern human vocal tract from bone data alone. The same equations were then used with data from a Neanderthal skull to predict the shape of a Neanderthal vocal tract.

The Neanderthal vocal tract seems to have been shorter and wider than a modern male human's, closer to that found today in modern human females. It's possible, then, that Neanderthal males had higher pitched voices than we might have expected. Together with a big chest, mouth, and huge nasal cavity, a big, harsh, high, sound might have resulted. But, crucially, the anatomy of the vocal tract is close enough to that of modern humans to indicate that anatomically there was no reason why Neanderthal could not have produced the complex range of sounds needed for speech.

Powerful, better adapted to the cold, and perhaps just as intelligent... Neanderthal should have been invincible. So just how are we here, and Neanderthal is extinct?

Extinction

It seems that something much more random could have played a significant role. About 45,000 years ago, the climate of Europe went through a burst of very sudden switches between warm and cold conditions that would have transformed the Neanderthals' environment.

The forests on which they depended began to recede, giving way to open plains. On these plains, Professor Shea believes, the Neanderthal thrusting spear and ambush strategy wouldn't have worked. So Neanderthals retreated with the forests, their population falling as their hunting grounds shrank.

By comparison, modern humans made lighter stone points that could be fitted on to lighter spear shafts. These could be thrown, enabling our ancestors to hunt more effectively in an open landscape. Hunting in an open landscape also required high levels of mobility to follow migrating herds, and the agility to throw the spears themselves. So how did Neanderthal stand up to modern humans' ancestors in agility?

Analysing the inner ear of a Neanderthal, Professor Fred Spoor, from UCL, has discovered clues to Neanderthal's agility. The semi-circular canals of the inner ear provide sense of balance, and by studying a range of animals, he has found a high correlation between the size of the canals and agility. Throughout human evolution, the canals seem to have increased in size as our agility has increased. But Neanderthals have smaller canals than both modern humans and even earlier ancestors. This suggests they were less agile.

Returning to the skeleton, Professor Holliday found an explanation for this - that the short limbs and wide pelvis of Neanderthals would have resulted in less efficient locomotion than modern humans. The energy costs in travelling would have been higher, and this would have been a serious evolutionary disadvantage.

For Neanderthal, it was an ironic end. The very body plan that had made Neanderthal so well adapted to the Ice Age, had locked him into an evolutionary cul-de-sac. He might have been better adapted to the cold than the first modern humans, but as the landscape changed, it was our ancestors, who could take better advantage of the more open environment, who survived.

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Horizon - 2002-01-17 - Volcano Hell

Postby Adam Cook on Wed Jul 12, 2006 11:37 pm

Horizon - 2002-01-17 - Volcano Hell


ed2k://|file|Horizon.2002.Volcano_Hell. ... 34944F6F|/


Epside info @ BBC
Transcript @ BBC



It began with a ghastly tragedy. In 1985 the massive Colombian volcano Nevado del Ruiz erupted, melting a glacier and sending a vast landslide of mud down on the people asleep in the town of Armero below. Twenty thousand died.

In the aftermath science was set a challenge: to make sure such a catastrophe never happened again, by finding a way of accurately predicting when a volcano will erupt. Now, at last, it seems that one scientist may have met that challenge.

Prediction to the day

Anyone can tell when a volcano becomes active. You can see it and you can smell it. But a volcano can be active for years without erupting. For those living nearby, there is no way they will abandon their homes and livelihoods just because of a few rumblings. The only way to persuade them to seek safety is to predict an eruption almost to the day, leaving just enough time for an evacuation.

Scientists threw themselves at the problem, but there just seemed to be no way to make sense of the violent forces at work inside a volcano. Then along came Bernard Chouet. He is different from other volcanologists. His training lay in the complex equations and theories of physics, and he believed the answer had to lie in analysing the mysterious patterns drawn by seismographs. These measure the tremors caused by active volcanoes.

Good vibrations

Previous attempts to use these tremors to predict eruptions had proved fruitless. No one could find any correlation between the squiggles on the graph paper and the timing of eruptions. So Chouet locked himself away for five years and then emerged claiming he had found the answer. The key, he said, were seismic signals called long period events. These strange shapes had baffled volcanologists for years.

Chouet said they were made by molten magma resonating - that is coming under pressure - inside the volcano. The more long period events there were, then the nearer the volcano was to exploding. Chouet could use the long period events to predict an eruption to within days.

Sniffing gas

But another scientist was working on a completely different method. Stanley Williams could not be more different from Chouet. Where Chouet crunched numbers and looked at graphs, Williams climbed into craters and got up close; because he believed the best clue to when a volcano would erupt was to measure how much gas it was belching out.

In 1993 the two methods came head to head. A conference was held at the foot of another Colombian volcano, Galeras. The highlight was to be a trip into the crater. Williams's gas readings indicated the volcano was safe. Chouet's long period events suggested the volcano might blow. After some debate, Williams led a team of volcanologists up the mountain. Suddenly Galeras exploded, killing six scientists and three tourists. Williams himself survived but was maimed for life.


Saving lives

Since that day on Galeras, Chouet's methods have commanded wide respect and have been increasingly used around the world. In a dramatic demonstration last year Mexican scientists used Chouet's method to predict an eruption of the mighty volcano Popocatépetl. Tens of thousands of people were safely evacuated just before the biggest eruption of the volcano for a thousand years. No one was hurt.

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Last edited by Adam Cook on Sun Jul 23, 2006 10:06 am, edited 4 times in total.
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Postby Adam Cook on Sun Jul 23, 2006 9:36 am

Horizon - 2002-02-07 - Death of the Iceman


ed2k://|file|Horizon.2002.Death_of_the_ ... 68AA1183|/


Epside info @ BBC
Transcript @ BBC


Image

In September 1991 two hikers made a sensational discovery - a frozen body high in the mountains, near the border between Austria and Italy. It turned out to be 5,300 years old, the oldest frozen mummy ever found. Named Ötzi the Iceman after the Ötztal area where he was found, he became a worldwide sensation.

The body was taken to Austria where scientists soon got to work on him. They analysed his bone density to find out how old he was (in his 40s, an advanced age for the time) and examined his wonderfully preserved belongings. The cause of his death remained a mystery. Now archaeologists are being joined by forensic scientists to investigate this unique case and new research has revealed a shocking answer.

Frozen in time

The investigation into Ötzi's death started at the scene of discovery. By examining photos which had been taken at the site, Austrian archaeologist Konrad Spindler worked out the layout. He was particularly intrigued by the position of the Iceman's copper axe, which was found propped up against a rock. He believed that this must have been placed in that position by Ötzi himself which meant that everything at the site had been preserved in the position it was when Ötzi died. His body was slumped face down on the ground, his cap lay nearby just as if it had fallen from his head.

Scientists also wanted to know when he died so they examined the ice in which he'd been found. This contained pollen that they could identify as coming from autumn-flowering plants, so they concluded that Ötzi had died in the autumn. Together, this evidence implied that the Iceman might have got caught in a storm and died of hypothermia.

The Disaster Theory

Then the scientists looked inside the iceman using X-rays and CAT (Computer Assisted Tomography) scans. They saw what looked like unhealed rib fractures. So Spindler came up with what he called his disaster theory. He believed Ötzi was a shepherd who, one autumn, was returning to his home village with his animals. When he got there he became involved in some kind of argument or battle. He suffered a severe injury to his chest, fracturing his ribs, but managed to escape. He fled into the mountains and made it to the top, but by then he was exhausted from his injuries. He lay down to rest in a sheltered gully where he died of hypothermia and was buried in ice.

The theory seemed to make sense, but it would not go unchallenged for long. In 1998, Ötzi was transferred to Italy since the body had actually been found just inside the Italian border. There the iceman was placed on display in a specially built museum in the town of Bolzano. To put the finishing touch to their display, the museum contacted forensic pathologist Peter Vanezis to reconstruct Ötzi's face, based on the shape of the skull. Vanezis normally works from the skull itself, but in this case, of course, that was impossible. So using the 3D CAT scan data and a rapid prototyping machine, the Austrian team created a detailed life-size replica of the Iceman's skull and gave this to Vanezis. He then used a laser to scan the skull into his facial reconstruction system. This measures the proportions of the skull and shapes a generic face to match. This allowed him to recreate Ötzi's face at last.

Re-examining the evidence

Vanezis also wanted to look again at the theory of Ötzi's death, to question assumptions that the archaeologists had made. More and more evidence was questioning the disaster theory. An examination of the contents of Ötzi's intestine found hop hornbeam pollen. This pollen was incredibly well preserved - the cell contents still intact. This could only mean that it had been consumed very soon after the flowering of the plant just before the Iceman died. And since the hop hornbeam only flowers between March and June he must have actually died in spring.

Also, evidence from the body and objects showed that the site had melted at least once and so things weren't necessarily in the same position. And finally, new examinations of the ribs showed that they hadn't been fractured before death - but been bent out of shape after death. Scientists seemed to be back to square one.

A Shocking Discovery

It seemed his death might be shrouded in mystery forever. Then in June 2001, his new custodians, the Italians, decided to X-ray the body again. A local hospital radiologist noticed what looked like a foreign object near the shoulder, a shadow in the shape of an arrow. When they looked at its density they found it was denser than bone, it was the same density as flint. They'd discovered a stone arrowhead embedded in Ötzi's shoulder, which had been missed despite 10 years of intensive study.

Now scientists can tell a new story of the Iceman's death. Ötzi was attacked and managed to flee. As he ran he was shot in the back with an arrow. He pulled out the arrow shaft but the head remained stuck in his shoulder. He reached the top of the mountains but was now exhausted and weakened from bleeding. He could go no further, lay down and died.

Although this story fits the latest results, there are still many unanswered questions. Scientists hope soon to conduct an autopsy to remove the arrowhead and only then will we be able to say for certain what killed Ötzi. The Iceman may still be hiding more secrets.

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Horizon What Really Killed The.Dinosaurs

Postby stevenrollastercoon on Sat Oct 07, 2006 4:54 am

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       ╔════════════════════════╗ NOT ANOTHER NOOB TEAM ╔════════════════════════╗
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  ▓│    http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/horizon/dino_prog_summary.shtml    │▓
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  ▓│            First Air Date: 08/10/2004                                            │▓
  ▓│            Genre: Documentary                                                    │▓
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╔╝                                                                                    ╚╗
▓│      "What Really Killed Tghe Dinosaurs" (2004)                                    │▓
▓│                                                                                    │▓
▓│      Until recently most scientists thought they knew what killed off the          │▓
▓│      dinosaurs. But now a small but vociferous group of scientists believes        │▓
▓│      there is increasing evidence that this 'impact' theory could be wrong.        │▓
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Horizon - 2003-11-13 - The Big Chill

Postby Adam Cook on Fri Jan 19, 2007 9:14 pm

Horizon - 2003-11-13 - The Big Chill


ed2k://|file|Horizon.2003-11-13.The_Big ... 357C7565|/


Epside info @ BBC
Transcript @ BBC


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Remember that long, hot summer? You might never see its like again. And all that talk of global warming? Forget it.

This season's first Horizon reveals that a growing number of experts fear Britain could be heading for a climate like Alaska. Our ports could be frozen over. Ice storms could ravage the country, and London could see snow lying for weeks on end. It would be the biggest change in the British way of life since the last Ice Age.
The first signs that such a disaster could happen came from deep within the ice sheet of Greenland. Scientists discovered that the Earth's past was littered with sudden, drastic drops in temperature.

The big question was: could it ever happen again? Clues came from tiny shells at the bottom of the Atlantic; a huge glacier on the move in Arctic and some alarming discoveries in the far north of Russia.

In the end there came the terrifying revelation: the Gulf Stream, that vast current of water that keeps us warm, could be cut off.
According to one scientist, there is a one in two chance it will happen in the next century.
Others say a climatic catastrophe could be heading our way in just twenty years time.

How does the ocean affect the weather?

Heat transfers readily from ocean to atmosphere, and much of the sun's radiation is absorbed by the ocean. In fact, the upper ten feet (3 metres) of the ocean holds as much heat as the entire atmosphere. Ocean currents move warm surface water away from the tropics and return cold water to them via the ocean floor in a conveyer system. As the surface currents flow, they release heat into the environment, and thereby affect our weather.

How widely accepted is the theory that we could be heading for a climate like Iceland's?

If the ocean conveyer were to shutdown, the Gulf Stream would no longer reach our shores the UK would lose its heat blanket, allowing the full force of winter to hit us in much the same way it does Iceland. If this change were to happen within the next 20 years, Britain would be plunged into the worst winters in living memory. There would be ice storms that break power cables and phone lines. Snow might lie on the ground for a month or more, and temperatures could hit the minus 20's in some regions. Snow drifts might also trap people in their homes. If a conveyer shutdown occurs, our infrastructure would struggle to cope.

Scientists such as Terry Joyce, from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in the USA, believe it is likely to happen in the next 100 years. Others simply say that is a possibility that we have to consider.

In 2001, the Government put £20 million into investigating rapid climate change. A programme called RAPID has been set up by the Natural Environment Research Council "...to improve our ability to quantify the probability and magnitude of future rapid change in climate..."". In addition, large marine research institutions such as the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute and the LamontDoherty Earth Observatory have teams of scientists looking into both what happened during shutdowns in the past and what processes are occurring at the moment.

Why do some scientists disagree with this theory?

Other scientists prefer to describe a rapid regional cooling as a 'low probability, high impact' event so by definition, it might not happen. It is not the most likely outcome of our climate by 2100, but it could have the greatest effect. Scientists who disagree with this theory feel it is most likely that global warming would continue, and Britain's climate would rise by up to 5.8ºC as predicted by the International Panel for Climate Change. This would mean the UK would have a climate more like the south of France's.

If global warming might cause the conveyor to switch off in the future, what caused it to switch off in the past?

The most significant rapid climate change to occur since the end of the last Ice Age is the Younger Dryas period (~11,500 years ago). There are several theories in the scientific literature as to what caused the conveyer to shutdown at that time. One is that the massive Laurentide ice sheet covering much of North America during the last Ice Age melted quickly, and the resulting fresh water was effectively dumped into the North Atlantic, and another talks of vast armadas of icebergs coming down from the pole, melting as they moved south.

There is little doubt among scientists that fresh water is the cause of conveyer shutdown, as it prevents it from overturning. The sources of this fresh water will be different at different times (e.g., depending on climatic conditions), and there may be more than one source, so it has been difficult to show a definitive answer for past shutdowns.

Might the effects of global warming on Britain counter the effects of the conveyor switching off?

The effects of a shutdown would be felt no matter what global warming might bring in the next 50 years. If a shutdown occurs in the next 20 years the cooling effect would be very strong, causing temperatures to fall far below current averages, making Britain a lot like Iceland. Should the shutdown occur in 50 years, global warming will mitigate the effect slightly, but Britain will still end up with a net loss in temperatures. Winters like the 1962 winter, the worst in living memory, could happen around once every 7 years.

If other countries that are on the same latitude as Britain can cope with low temperatures, why would it be a problem for us?

Countries on the same latitude as Britain, but without the warmth of the Gulf Stream, have a very different way of life, having adapted to cooler winters over many centuries. If the shutdown occurs, we would feel the effects very rapidly, and while we could certainly adapt to the change, it's likely that it would take many years. In the mean time our infrastructure would struggle to cope. London came to a standstill in February 2003 due to 2 inches of snow. What would life be like if there were several feet of snow all over the country?

Can we do anything to stop the conveyor switching off, or is it too late?

NERC's RAPID programme aims to "investigate and understand the causes of rapid climate change." While this might not give us the opportunity to prevent a shutdown from happening, it would enhance our ability to monitor and predict future changes, and hopefully mean we can plan for a chilly future.

If the conveyor does switch off, how long would we have to prepare for the change in climate that this causes?

Our clues as to what might happen in the event of a shutdown come from the past. The most significant rapid climate change since the last Ice Age was the Younger Dryas period. Not only did it begin quickly, with temperatures dropping within a few years, but it also ended quickly. It is likely that we would have only 10 years of decreasing temperatures before we get to 5ºC below current temperatures.

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