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Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
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Descrição

1 Disco blu-ray

206 minutos (3.40 horas) - 3 episódios de 60 minutos cada + Extras: behind the scenes

5 eur + 2.30 de portes (1.80 portes + .50 envelope almofadado)

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Caixa e disco em bom estado.

Tem apenas um defeito, uma das duas palhetas que fecham a caixa, a de baixo, está partida (veja última foto), por isso a caixa só fecha com a de cima (penúltima foto)

SEM legendas em PT ou em Inglês.

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***Tenho mais blu rays sobre o mundo natural (um total de 9, este inclusive), 7 narrados por David Attenborough, um por Peter Firth e um por Tilda Swinton, 7 da BBC Earth, 2 da Sky (em 3D), todos em bom estado, a saber:

Yellowstone: narrado por Peter Firth - BBC - 1 Disco Blu Ray
Madagascar: narrado por David Attenborough - BBC - 2 Discos Blu Ray
The Hunt: narrado por David Attenborough - BBC - 3 Discos Blu Ray
The Penguin King 3D: narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray
Galápagos: Islands that Changed the World - Tilda Swinton - Blu Ray
Frozen Planet: narrado por David Attenborough - BBC - 3 Discos Blu Ray
Africa - narrado por David Attenborough - BBC Earth - 3 Discos Blu Ray
LIfe - narrado por David Attenborough - BBC Earth - 4 Discos Blu Ray

Se levar vários faço-lhe uma boa atenção no preço final

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Galapagos 3D is a British nature documentary series written and presented by David Attenborough, directed by Martin Williams and filmed in 3D.

Attenborough returns to the Galápagos Islands for the fourth time in his career and travels throughout the archipelago to explain their origins and their unique fauna in evolutionary terms.

The series premiered on 1 January 2013 on the Sky 3D network in the UK.

The series is notable for its pioneering use of 3D cameras for underwater filming.

It also features the first known footage of the Galápagos pink land iguana, a new species of lizard identified in 2009, and Attenborough's encounter with Lonesome George, the last Pinta Island tortoise, filmed a fortnight before the animal's death.

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1 "Origin"
The series begins on Isabela Island, where Attenborough observes a group of Galápagos tortoises wallowing in a mud pool near Volcán Alcedo. In this programme he addresses two questions; how the islands were formed and how they came to be populated with an unusual assortment of creatures. The first islands emerged 4 million years ago, formed as volcanoes rising from the ocean floor. A CGI sequence shows a 3D visualisation of the hotspot which lies beneath the Galápagos. Their isolation made colonisation by terrestrial mammals and amphibians almost impossible, but plants, invertebrates, birds and reptiles succeeded in establishing themselves. Plant seeds, spiderlings and other minibeasts were blown here on equatorial trade winds. Attenborough demonstrates how other invertebrates arrived by opening a piece of driftwood to reveal a carpenter bee larva. The islands lie at the confluence of three deep ocean currents which carry nutrients from across the Pacific and up into surface waters. These nutrients support a diverse food chain, from phytoplankton to scalloped hammerheads and humpback whales. The marine life in turn supports populations of sea lions, sea birds and Galápagos penguins. The physiology of reptiles enabled some individuals to survive the long crossing from South America on floating rafts of vegetation washed down rivers and out to sea. Thus, the island’s "cast of characters", as Attenborough describes them, was assembled.

2 "Adaptation"
The second programme considers how Galápagos's plants and animals managed to adapt to the harsh conditions they encountered. A CGI sequence demonstrates the life cycle of a typical Galápagos island. Born through volcanic activity, it rises from the ocean eventually reaching mountainous heights before sinking under its own weight and then finally eroding back into the sea. There are islands today which represent all stages of this history. The youngest, Fernandina, has a barren, volcanic interior. Marine iguanas have successfully colonised its shoreline by adapting to feed on seaweed and expel salt from a special gland. Santa Cruz is a middle-aged mountainous island, able to create its own rainfall and thus enabling plants to thrive. Attenborough demonstrates the forests of giant Scalesia, a relative of the dandelion, which flourish on its highland slopes. Scientists exploring lava tunnels just below the surface are still discovering new species. Older islands such as Española are smaller, drier and flatter. Its sandy beaches are used by Galápagos sea lions and waved albatross. Tortuga and Devil's Crown are the eroded remnants of volcanic cones, close to disappearing into the sea. Their surrounding waters support coral reefs, fertilised by the erosion of sediments from the land. Submerged islands further to the east can still influence life. Whale sharks are thought to use them for navigation, but the reason why they pass through Galápagos waters is still unclear.

3 "Evolution"
In the final episode, Attenborough explains why the islands have a greater number of species for their size than anywhere else on Earth. One factor is their isolation, which can even occur between different parts of an island. Volcán Wolf is cut off from the rest of Isabela Island by a barren lava flow. Aerial footage of giant tortoises which try to cross it show how they are baked alive by the tropical sun. Secondly, the deep geological forces which produced the islands are still at work. Volcanic activity, continental drift and erosion give each island its own character and each its own evolutionary community. An absence of large predators is a third factor. Galápagos hawks and Galápagos racers prey on young, weak or dying iguanas but this does not have much effect on the overall population. The inhabitants can reproduce freely and rapidly, thus accelerating evolutionary change. Attenborough uses the examples of Galápagos finches and lava lizards to show how variations in anatomy and behaviour on different islands can lead to speciation. He goes on to explain that scientists are now revealing how human beings are acting as an agent of evolutionary change. In the closing sequences, Attenborough is filmed with Lonesome George, the last surviving Pinta Island tortoise, and the pink iguana, a newly-discovered species found only on the slopes of Volcano Wolf.
ID: 646213893

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Nuno Fernandes

No OLX desde agosto de 2015

Esteve online ontem às 18:18

Publicado 14 de abril de 2024

Galápagos 3D - narrado por David Attenborough - Sky 3D - Blu ray

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