far_solitaire
07/10/2006, 20h32
Walking With Cavemen
(BBC - 4 épisodes - 30 min)
http://funkysouls.com/img/BBC_Walking_with_Cavemen.jpg
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/prehistoric_life/human/human_evolution/images/human_evolution_article_big4.jpg
Professeur Robert Winston rencontre Lucy, la première bipède, et suit ses ancêtres dans un voyage de trois million dannées vers la civilisation. Télévisé en 2003, Walking with Cavemen a combiné des effets spéciaux avec les dernières théories scientifiques, pour nous montrer ce que signifie d'être un humain.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/prehistoric_life/tv_radio/wwcavemen
BBC Walking with Cavemen Episode 1 of 4 - First Ancestors
It's 3.5 million years ago and in East Africa a remarkable species of ape roams the land. Australopithecus afarensis has taken the first tentative steps towards humanity by standing and walking on two legs.
Just a few million years previously, Africa was covered, almost edge-to-edge, with dense rain forest. Our ancestors almost certainly used all four limbs to move and live and hunt in their tree-top homes. But massive geological turmoil changed their destiny.
The rift valley was forming, and the rain forests dying as Africa dried out - turning the landscape into a mosaic of scattered trees and grass. In this new environment afarensis found it more efficient to move about on two legs rather than four.
http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=5197313405679768683&hl=en
(BBC - 4 épisodes - 30 min)
http://funkysouls.com/img/BBC_Walking_with_Cavemen.jpg
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/prehistoric_life/human/human_evolution/images/human_evolution_article_big4.jpg
Professeur Robert Winston rencontre Lucy, la première bipède, et suit ses ancêtres dans un voyage de trois million dannées vers la civilisation. Télévisé en 2003, Walking with Cavemen a combiné des effets spéciaux avec les dernières théories scientifiques, pour nous montrer ce que signifie d'être un humain.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/prehistoric_life/tv_radio/wwcavemen
BBC Walking with Cavemen Episode 1 of 4 - First Ancestors
It's 3.5 million years ago and in East Africa a remarkable species of ape roams the land. Australopithecus afarensis has taken the first tentative steps towards humanity by standing and walking on two legs.
Just a few million years previously, Africa was covered, almost edge-to-edge, with dense rain forest. Our ancestors almost certainly used all four limbs to move and live and hunt in their tree-top homes. But massive geological turmoil changed their destiny.
The rift valley was forming, and the rain forests dying as Africa dried out - turning the landscape into a mosaic of scattered trees and grass. In this new environment afarensis found it more efficient to move about on two legs rather than four.
http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=5197313405679768683&hl=en