Season 7
20 episodes · Oct 9, 1988
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- S7E1
Bonebreakers' Mountain
Oct 9, 198853mAn exploration of the Spanish Pyrenees mountains and the bearded "bonebreaker" vulture that lives in this harsh environment.
- S7E2
Extremadura: Spain's Forgotten Forest
Oct 16, 198853mExplores Spain's Extremadura, an oak forest and wilderness plain, home to griffin vultures, imperial eagles, genets and other animals native to Africa.
- S7E3
Peacock's War
Oct 30, 198853mFormer Vietnam medic Doug Peacock lives as a firewatcher and conservationist in Montana's Glacier National Park.
- S7E4
Nature of Australia: a Portrait of the Island Continent: A Separate Creation
Nov 13, 198853mExamines marsupials and others animals which have evolved because of Australia's isolation from the rest of the world.
- S7E5
Nature of Australia: a Portrait of the Island Continent: Seas Under Capricorn
Nov 20, 198853mTwo distinct marine worlds meet in the waters that encircle Australia. In its long voyage into isolation following its breakaway from Gondwana, 45 million years ago, the island continent came to span both tropical and temperate seas. Today its shores are ringed by the most diverse assemblies of marine life on earth. This program recounts the making of this unique Australia down under, from the storm tossed kelp forests of the cool south, to the magic splendours of the Great Barrier Reef. The program begins its story where Australia was born, in the southern latitudes of the Antarctic seas. Antarctica is the last remnant of Gondwana - it froze over after the other continents broke away, but its cool rich waters still generate a wealth of nutrients which, carried by the deep currents, sustain Australia's marine life.
- S7E6
Nature of Australia: a Portrait of the Island Continent: the Making of the Bush
Nov 27, 198853mA koala up a gumtree is the classic image of the Australian bush. How that odd partnership evolved is one of the strands woven into this episode of Nature Of Australia. The program tells the story of how the island continent's wooded margins came to be dominated by one unique type of tree growing in a great variety of forms - the eucalypt. The nursery for nearly all life in Australia is the rainforest, of which only a few patches remain today - th last remnants of vast, dense forests that covered Australia when it first broke away from the ancestral super-continent of Gondwana, and voyaged north into isolation. From among its proliferation of plants emerged the eucalypts, the characteristic gum trees - and from among the forest animals arose a great and varied company of marsupials, adapting to every kind of environment that evolved in response to Australia's changing, drying climate.
- S7E7
Nature of Australia: a Portrait of the Island Continent: the Sunburnt Country
Dec 4, 198853mAustralia's arid interior is often called the dead heart. In fact, it teems with life, supported by a hidden network of buried rivers recharged by rare but heavy rains. This episode tells the story of this surprising desert - formed when the climatic change overtook and dried out central Australia. What was once a land of vast lakes and broad rivers turned into a parched region of glittering stone and burning sand, interwoven with swathes of hardy woodland and plains of desert grass. A great variety of plants and animals has adapted to life in the arid centre, with its swings between the brief good condition that follow the unpredictable rains, and then long periods of drought. It's the land of the lizards - from giant goannas that sniff out snakes hiding under the sand, to the tiny, delicate Lake Eyre dragons who've made the desolate saltpans their domain.
- S7E8
Nature of Australia: a Portrait of the Island Continent: the Land of Flood and Fire
Dec 11, 198853mAustralia's northward drift slowed down when it collided with Asia about 15 million years ago - in the upheavals, chains of islands were thrust up and eventually they became the stepping stones for an invasion that would change the face of Australia. With the arrival of the first humans - at least 50,000 and possibly as long as 120,000 year ago - a new force entered the continent to shape the fortunes of its plants and animals. The first landfall was on the far north coast of Australia, a rich and tropical region ruled by the annual monsoonal rains. This program tells the story of Australia's top end, where the first Aboriginal people arrived, settled, and perfected the use of fire as a means to manage the landscape.
- S7E9
Nature of Australia: A Portrait of the Island Continent: End of Isolation
Dec 18, 198853mModern Australians want to recapture the Aborigines ability to live harmoniously with indigenous plants and animals.
- S7E10
Night Hunters
Jan 8, 198953mThe different types of owls and the characteristics which make them ideal birds of prey.
- S7E11
Beyond Timbuktu
Feb 5, 198953mWildlife artist Bruce Pearson sketches the various bird species found in the arid lands of Western Africa's Mali, through which the River Niger flows.
- S7E12
Under the Emerald Sea
Feb 19, 198953mExplores the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Vancouver, B.C.
- S7E13
Wild Waterfalls
Feb 26, 198953mExplores the variety of local environments found around waterfalls in Africa, South and North America.
- S7E14
Meerkats United / The Bee-Team
Mar 5, 198953mProfiles of the Kalahari Desert's gray meerkat or mongoose, and a Kenyan colony of bee-eater birds.
- S7E15
Icebird
Mar 12, 198953mThe Adelie penguin is observed at the Cape Bird nesting site on Antarctica's Ross Island.
- S7E16
Mozu the Snow Monkey
Mar 19, 198953mChronicling the life of "Mozu the Snow Monkey," a macaque with deformed limbs that's survived harsh winters in Japan's highlands to raise seven offspring. The complex social structure among the primates is documented.
- S7E17
The Everglades: Rain Machine
Mar 26, 198953mExamines the role computers play in managing the Everglades and whether this vital freshwater marsh will survive the effects of diking, draining and development.
- S7E18
Islands in the Sky
Apr 16, 198953mUnique animals and plants flourish atop mist-shrouded Venezuelan plateaus thousands of feet above the surrounding jungle.
- S7E19
Rulers of the Wind
Apr 30, 198953mScientists study birds of prey, creatures historically admired and hated, as indicators of environmental damage.
- S7E20
Kariba: the Lake that Made a Dent
May 14, 198953mWildlife flourishes around the manmade lake conservationists denounced 30 years ago at its creation.