Schedules
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10/06/2022 4:00 am |
Inside the Factory |
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| Malt loaf has been a popular teatime treat for more than 80 years, we get through 130 million of them every year. So to get to grips with how this sweet and squidgy cake-cum-bread is made, Gregg Wallace is rolling up his sleeves to get stuck in. | |||||
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10/06/2022 4:55 am |
Animal Impossible |
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| Incredible facts and myths about the animal kingdom are put to the test. Is spider silk stronger than steel? | |||||
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10/06/2022 5:45 am |
Life Below Zero |
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| Sue is out to hunt caribou. Ricko travels to a natural hot spring. Jessie moves to Brushkana. The Hailstones build a wall tent and go fishing. | |||||
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10/06/2022 6:35 am |
Civilisations |
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| Simon Schama explores the remote origins of human creativity with the first known marks made some 80,000 years ago in South African caves, marks which were not dictated merely by humanity's physical needs. He marvels at the later caveworks, shapes of hands, in red stencils on the walls of caves, and at the paintings of bison and bulls, and Stone Age carvings. | |||||
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10/06/2022 7:30 am |
Inside the Factory |
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| Malt loaf has been a popular teatime treat for more than 80 years, we get through 130 million of them every year. So to get to grips with how this sweet and squidgy cake-cum-bread is made, Gregg Wallace is rolling up his sleeves to get stuck in. | |||||
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10/06/2022 8:25 am |
A Perfect Planet |
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| A look at how the planet's limited fresh water is distributed around the globe thanks to storms, and how animals manage in the driest habitats on Earth. | |||||
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10/06/2022 9:25 am |
Animal Impossible |
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| Incredible facts and myths about the animal kingdom are put to the test. Is spider silk stronger than steel? | |||||
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10/06/2022 10:15 am |
Life Below Zero |
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| Sue is out to hunt caribou. Ricko travels to a natural hot spring. Jessie moves to Brushkana. The Hailstones build a wall tent and go fishing. | |||||
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10/06/2022 11:05 am |
Civilisations |
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| Simon Schama explores the remote origins of human creativity with the first known marks made some 80,000 years ago in South African caves, marks which were not dictated merely by humanity's physical needs. He marvels at the later caveworks, shapes of hands, in red stencils on the walls of caves, and at the paintings of bison and bulls, and Stone Age carvings. | |||||
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10/06/2022 12:00 pm |
Inside the Factory |
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| Malt loaf has been a popular teatime treat for more than 80 years, we get through 130 million of them every year. So to get to grips with how this sweet and squidgy cake-cum-bread is made, Gregg Wallace is rolling up his sleeves to get stuck in. | |||||
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10/06/2022 12:50 pm |
A Perfect Planet |
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| There are not five separate oceans, but one. Its waters linked by powerful forces that keep them on the move. | |||||
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10/06/2022 1:50 pm |
Animal Impossible |
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| Tim and Adam travel to Wyoming to discover if bulls are angered by the colour red by having Tim stand stationary in a red onesie with a bull in pen. | |||||
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10/06/2022 2:40 pm |
Life Below Zero |
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| Sue builds a drainage system under her runway. Ricko explores old family land. Jessie sets up camp in Brushkana. The Hailstones go boating. | |||||
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10/06/2022 3:30 pm |
Civilisations |
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| Professor Mary Beard explores images of the human body in ancient art, from Mexico and Greece to Egypt and China. Mary seeks answers to fundamental questions at the heart of ideas about civilisations. Why have human beings always made art about themselves? What were these images for? And in what ways do some ancient conventions of representing the body still affect people now? | |||||
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10/06/2022 4:25 pm |
Inside the Factory |
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| Gregg Wallace visits a factory tucked away amongst thatched cottages in the village of Wollaston, Northamptonshire. It may be a tranquil setting, but this factory has been making boots for 120 years. | |||||
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10/06/2022 5:15 pm |
The Secrets of Your Food |
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| Michael and James explore how chemistry fuels and builds human bodies. Michael begins by trying the first meal many people enjoyed, human breast milk, which contains everything a baby needs like fats, carbs, vitamins and minerals. | |||||
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10/06/2022 6:05 pm |
The Earthshot Prize: Repairing Our Planet |
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| Prince William is joined by David Attenborough and Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, an indigenous rights spokesperson from Chad, to explore the story of our wastefulness and how we might move to a waste-free world. They reveal the extent of our careless approach to producing waste, both non-biodegradable and biodegradable, and discover that we can solve the waste problem by reimagining our production lines as materials circles, ensuring that the waste from one process becomes the resource for the next. | |||||
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10/06/2022 7:05 pm |
The Planets |
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| Saturn is the jewel of the solar system, the most seductive of all the planets, but as Professor Brian Cox reveals, it wasn't born that way. Raised in the freezing outer reaches of the solar system Saturn began life as a strange planet of rock and ice. | |||||
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10/06/2022 8:00 pm |
Science's Greatest Mysteries |
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| The latest scientific discoveries in space, the cosmos, technology, and engineering feats - explored through thought-provoking, evocative and ambitious film making. | |||||
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10/06/2022 8:55 pm |
Universe |
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| Prof Brian Cox journeys into a supermassive black hole, a monster that can destroy worlds, stop time, and is forcing us to reassess our understanding of reality. | |||||
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10/06/2022 9:50 pm |
The Secrets of Your Food |
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| Michael and James explore how chemistry fuels and builds human bodies. Michael begins by trying the first meal many people enjoyed, human breast milk, which contains everything a baby needs like fats, carbs, vitamins and minerals. | |||||
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10/06/2022 10:45 pm |
The Earthshot Prize: Repairing Our Planet |
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| Prince William is joined by David Attenborough and Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, an indigenous rights spokesperson from Chad, to explore the story of our wastefulness and how we might move to a waste-free world. They reveal the extent of our careless approach to producing waste, both non-biodegradable and biodegradable, and discover that we can solve the waste problem by reimagining our production lines as materials circles, ensuring that the waste from one process becomes the resource for the next. | |||||
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10/06/2022 11:45 pm |
The Planets |
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| Saturn is the jewel of the solar system, the most seductive of all the planets, but as Professor Brian Cox reveals, it wasn't born that way. Raised in the freezing outer reaches of the solar system Saturn began life as a strange planet of rock and ice. | |||||
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10/07/2022 12:40 am |
Science's Greatest Mysteries |
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| The latest scientific discoveries in space, the cosmos, technology, and engineering feats - explored through thought-provoking, evocative and ambitious film making. | |||||
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10/07/2022 1:30 am |
Universe |
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| Prof Brian Cox journeys into a supermassive black hole, a monster that can destroy worlds, stop time, and is forcing us to reassess our understanding of reality. | |||||
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10/07/2022 2:30 am |
The Secrets of Your Food |
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| Michael and James explore how chemistry fuels and builds human bodies. Michael begins by trying the first meal many people enjoyed, human breast milk, which contains everything a baby needs like fats, carbs, vitamins and minerals. | |||||
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10/07/2022 3:30 am |
Deadly 60 |
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| Steve starts his South African adventure in one of the weirdest places he's ever gone looking for animals, a power station, in the dark. He's staking the location out for a little big cat that has so far eluded the Deadly 60, the serval. | |||||