Planet Earth: The Series
Don’t you objective love British accents? I identify I do! But that’s not the only reason why I completely fell in devotion with the BBC series titled, Planet Earth and Blue Planet. Yes, the relator’s voice is dreamy, but once the amazing images of our Earth are viewed in the most technically advanced angles we have ever seen, one seems to pass over David Attenborough. Not only do viewers see the unlikely biodiversity that our earth has to offer, but we also get a chance to become popular glimpses of the Earth that people have never seen in their lifetime.
One of my girl discs is that of the Blue Planet: The Deep. I’ve well-grounded that humans have only investigated 1% of the without a scratch ocean floor, and that every ten days a new species is discovered; talk about an breathtaking job!
Another great disc is titled, Planet Earth: Seasonal Forests, which examines the oldest and tallest trees known to our planet. The symbolism that Planet Earth has produced is simply astounding; it is as if you were as a matter of fact there. It almost seems impossible that the camera-men (and women) were talented to achieve such angles. Yet, not surprisingly, Planet Earth was kind-hearted enough to provide the “how to” at the end of each disc – just astonishing! In this specific disc, the camera man rose to the sky in a expressly designed hot air balloon in order to reach the sky-scraping trees of Chile and California. In Planet Earth: Caves, a few of the Planet Earth employees had to material in a cave for weeks at a time surrounded by bats and walls covered in the largest populace of cockroaches in the world! Eek!!
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