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Seven worlds, one planet. Episode 2, Asia

Title
Seven worlds, one planet. Episode 2, Asia / produced & directed by Emma Napper ; a BBC Studios Natural History Unit production ; co-produced with BBC America, Tencent Penguin Pictures, ZDF, France Télévisions and China Media Group CCTV9.
Publication
London, England : BBC Worldwide, 2019.
Physical Description
1 streaming video (54 minutes)
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Originally broadcast on the BBC network in 2019.
Title from resource description page (viewed April 10, 2020).
In English.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
Asia is the largest and most extreme continent on our planet, stretching from the Arctic Circle in the North to the tropical forests on the equator. The animals here face the hottest deserts, tallest jungles and highest mountains found anywhere on Earth. But the continent has not always looked like this. These extreme worlds were created when India collided with the rest of Asia 30 million years ago, shaping the continent as we know it today. Animals here have adapted to the extreme environments in almost unbelievable ways. In the frozen lands of the Kamchatka peninsula in Russia, bears seek out active volcanoes - despite the dangers. And on the Siberian coast, a remarkable spectacle appears for a few weeks during the summer - tens of thousands of walruses haul themselves on to a beach in one of the largest gatherings of mammals seen anywhere in the world. In China, mysterious blue-faced monkeys walk upright through some of the least-explored forests on Earth, whilst the baking deserts of Iran are home to what has to be the world's most bizarre snake. On the barren plateaus of India, garishly coloured lizards fight like miniature kung fu masters as they try to find a mate before they die.The south of the continent couldn't be more different. When India collided with Asia, the Himalayas were formed. These mountains blocked clouds, helping to create the monsoon. Heavy rains fell and tropical forests, full of life, developed to the south. Here, baby orangutans learn to climb the tallest jungle trees on the planet and a female Sumatran rhino - one of the rainforest's rarest inhabitants - sings a mournful and haunting song. Will anyone return her call? These forests - home to thousands of incredible species - are in danger of being lost forever. Under threat from deforestation and human development, today the largest continent on Earth is running out of space for its wildlife. But there's hope in Asia's tropical waters, where endangered whale sharks gather to find food and get a helping hand from a surprising source.
Variant and related titles
Asia
ASP-AVON OCLC KB.
Format
Images / Online / Video & Film
Language
English
Added to Catalog
June 17, 2020
Performers
Narrator, David Attenborough.
Genre/Form
Documentary television programs.
Nature television programs.
Nonfiction television programs.
Also listed under
Attenborough, David, 1926- narrator.
Napper, Emma, director, producer.
BBC America, production company.
BBC Worldwide Ltd., film distributor.
British Broadcasting Corporation. Natural History Unit, production company.
France télévision, production company.
Tencent Penguin Pictures, production company.
Zhong yang dian shi tai (Beijing, China). Ji lu pin dao, production company.
Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen, production company.
Citation

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