Forces of nature Our world's beauty & power revealed through color, elements, motion, shape

DVD - 2016

Take a global tour in four themed episodes, answering the simplest questions about the complex forces that shape our planet. Why is water blue? How can a shape defy gravity? Why do bees make hexagonal honeycombs? And how do these things affect our own lives? Discover what lies beneath Earth's startling beauty as we reveal the secrets of our cosmos and the natural forces that govern everything within it.

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DVD/508/Forces
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2nd Floor DVD/508/Forces Due Dec 26, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Documentary television programs
Science television programs
Nature television programs
Video recordings for the hearing impaired
Published
[Arlington, Virginia] : PBS [2016]
Language
English
Corporate Author
BBC Earth (Firm)
Corporate Author
BBC Earth (Firm) (contributor)
Other Authors
Stephen Cooter (film director), Matthew Dyas
Edition
Widescreen
Item Description
Widescreen.
Documentary.
Title from container.
"BBC Earth."
Program content: ©2016.
Total running time indicated on container: 240 minutes; actual total running time: episode running time: 53:38 each.
Physical Description
2 videodiscs (240 min.) : sound, color ; 4 3/4 in
Format
DVD; NTSC, Region 1; widescreen presentation; stereo.
Production Credits
Composer, Benji Merrison ; editors, Simon Holland (Shape, Color), Sam Billinge (Elements, Motion) ; photography, Simon De Glanville (Elements, Shape), Julius Brighton (Color, Motion).
ISBN
9781627898102
  • Disc 1. Elements (53:38)
  • Shape (53:38)
  • Disc 2: Color (53:38)
  • Motion (53:38).
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 8 Up-This collection of four programs explores the forces that make up our planet. "Elements" considers the building blocks of life and the chemistry that pulls those components together. The understanding of underwater thermal vents, the places where life likely began, leads scientists to believe in life on other water-rich planets. "Shape" looks at gravity and its effects on everything on Earth. The height of mountains is restricted by it, and it squeezes everything inward, making the planet spherical. "Color" discusses how photons from the sun create all the colors we see: the blue of the oceans, the green of plant life, the vivid hues of animals and flowers. Finally, "Motion" examines the rotation of the planet, its journey around the sun, the moon's orbit around the earth, and how all this motion impacts weather, the tides, seasons, and the sense of time. This is a typical PBS nature documentary: sumptuously shot footage, clear explanations of complex concepts, and eye-opening educational moments. But the topics are very broad, and sometimes it seems as though the filmmakers are stretching to connect the subject matter to the footage. At the end, students will certainly have learned something, but whether they will connect what they have watched to the concepts the programs are trying to convey is iffy. VERDICT Thoroughly enjoyable, but perhaps too general for much use in a science classroom.-Geri Diorio, Stratford Library, CT © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.