The Most Amazing Stadiums
Our top-ten makes it clear that the most fantastic stadiums are not only for soccer or baseball, but also for swimming or athletics.
Our top-ten makes it clear that the most fantastic stadiums are not only for soccer or baseball, but also for swimming or athletics.
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Wingsuit flying is among the most dangerous sports in the world. How do Espen, Jokke and Niccolo manage to stay alive?
Jokke, Niccolo and Espen travel to China to participate in a wingsuit flying competition. Their jump platform is just like the mountains: gigantic!
In the Spring, while the Alaskan mountains are mind-blowing, Jokke and his friends board a helicopter to go speed flying. It may look peaceful, but it's very dangerous.
Jokke travels to the U.S. for some fun in California. Then it's on to Alaska for speed flying with his friend, Miles Daisher. Chopper time!
The group jumps into unexplored territory: wingsuit flying on the coast of Sardinia. Also, Niccolo and Espen desperately want to try a new line which finishes on a beach.
Jokke Espen and Niccolo have emotional reunions with family members: first in the Alps, and later on the island of Sardinia—where Niccolo was raised.
In 1981, Prince Charles finally found his bride and thus began a year of royal festivity in the UK, culminating in the wedding of the century.
1977 held celebrations in the form of Queen Elizabeth the Second's Silver Jubilee, Space Shuttle Columbia's first test flight, and the release of Star Wars.
Boardrooms, courtrooms, and ocean-crossing killer waves: this was 2004.
The coming collapse of the planet as we knew it hit the agenda of world leaders for the first time.
The USSR began to lose grip on power in Eastern Europe, climaxing in the collapse of the Berlin Wall.
In 1981, Prince Charles finally found his bride and thus began a year of royal festivity in the UK, culminating in the wedding of the century.
1977 held celebrations in the form of Queen Elizabeth the Second's Silver Jubilee, Space Shuttle Columbia's first test flight, and the release of Star Wars.
In the Middle Ages, the technology of the castle evolved by leaps and bounds. Engineers constructed some of the most spectacular buildings of all time in a dramatic arms- race. At the same time, new weapons designed to attack castles came to the fore.
Even before the start of recorded history, ancient engineers across the World were erecting giant monuments. What was their purpose? And how did early peoples move such massive slabs of stone across hundreds of miles – long before the wheel had been invented?
Building for God reached a high point in the Middle Ages when a new engineering movement emerged in Europe, changing the rules forever. It aimed to use pioneering construction methods and architecture to create a glimpse of heaven...on earth.
Chariots were the express vehicles of their day – but how did they work? And what about the roads, tunnels, and bridges that they relied upon? Transport networks are also indispensable in our fast-paced, interconnected modern world, and we've learned from our ancestors.
As far back as the Bronze Age, humans were building ships capable of crossing oceans and trading between continents. Perhaps the greatest surviving vessel from the Ancient world, is The Mary Rose, Henry VIII's mighty warship. It was a true engineering wonder, but one built with a fatal weakness.
Awe-inspiring palaces are the legacy that demonstrates the brilliance of Islamic engineers, working centuries before Western Europe began its own engineering revolution. It's a process that culminated in what is arguably the most beautiful building in the World – the Taj Mahal.
The earth really moves in this episode as we take in scenes and stories from some of the most devastating of all the natural cataclysms: the earthquake.
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