
Tutankhamun With Dan Snow
A discovery of a fracture in Tutankhamun's skeleton, signalling the injury that led to his death.

A discovery of a fracture in Tutankhamun's skeleton, signalling the injury that led to his death.

The remains of Tutankhamun's parents.

David Attenborough investigates the discovery of a giant dinosaur find in Argentina.

Dinosaurs are extinguished by an asteroid in prehistoric Idaho.

Dinosaurs thrived during springtime when ferns and evergreens reappeared in the polar forest.

Prehistoric flying reptiles.

Large marine reptiles command the seas during the late Jurassic period.

Colorado was once a desert home to dinosaurs.

The life of the first reptilian carnivores on Earth, told through computer animation.

It may come as a surprise that we're living with many of the reptiles that survived the great extinction.

Dr Alice Roberts finds out how the experts put dinosaur skeletons back together.

A look at the science supporting Darwin's idea that humans have an ancestral connection with the ape.

The 120-million-year reign of the dinosaurs ended when mammals became the fiercest creatures on the planet.

Iain Stewart shows the impact of salt on the existence of ice ages and the preservation of the dead in Egypt.

Iain Stewart discovers how water has played a role in history, including the fall of the Roman Empire.

Dr Iain Stewart looks at how the rocks of the Mediterranean have shaped human history.

Cave painters scraped their colors from rocks, but later civilizations used rocks to broaden their palettes.

Dr Stewart reveals how rocks inspired the Egyptians to build pyramids and the Romans to build perfect circles.

Earthquakes are behind everything from catastrophic volcanoes to natural health spas.

Christianity filled a spiritual vacuum at the heart of the Roman civilization.