Walking with Dinosaurs: Shortbites
This episode's featured species are the leaellynasaura and the tyrannosaurus.
This episode's featured species are the leaellynasaura and the tyrannosaurus.
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Richard Miles traces the roots of civilization in Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Anatolia and Greece.
A herd of mammoths head south for winter, running a gauntlet of ice-age hunters.
The largest of all the sabre tooth cats roamed South America one million years ago.
Three million years ago, Ethiopia was home of the ape-man Australopithecus and the sabre-toothed Dinofelis.
Twenty five million years ago lived the Indricotheres - the largest land mammals of all time.
In the sea, 36 million years ago the most monstrous mammals can be found.
Forty-nine million years ago, the world was heavily forested and birds ruled the planet.
This episode's featured species are the leaellynasaura and the tyrannosaurus.
This episode's featured species are the opthalmosaurus and the ornithocheirus.
This episode's featured species are the coelophysis and the diplodocus.
David Attenborough explores why dinosaurs vanished while reptiles like crocodiles and turtles survived.
The ancient powers must get rich by trading their treasures and monetizing their assets.
In an unpredictable world, our ancient powers must lay down their foundations.
In a brutal world where nature is both friend and foe, our ancient powers take shape.
What finally killed all the woolly rhinos, mammoths, sloths and sabre-toothed cats?
Professor Alice Roberts ventures to the areas hit hardest by the cold of the Ice Age.
Professor Alice Roberts is on the trail of Ice Age beasts including the sabre-toothed cat.
Steve looks back at the experiments over the series and chooses his highlights.
Steve Backshall focuses on the biggest dinosaurs to have walked the earth.
It may come as a surprise that we're living with many of the reptiles that survived the great extinction.
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