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《历史频道: 进化》(History Channel: Evolve)更新第3集[DVDRip]

状态: 精华资源
摘要:
发行时间2008年7月29日
地区美国
语言英语
时间: 2009/04/08 07:44:16 发布 | 2009/04/14 11:52:55 更新
分类: 综艺   纪录片  
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中文名历史频道: 进化
英文名History Channel: Evolve
资源格式DVDRip
版本更新第3集
发行时间2008年7月29日
制作发行History Channel
地区美国
语言英语
制作团队香草花园
简介

IPB Image

自然世界所谓的生活其实是一场永无止境的竞争,迄今为止,起球上出现过的物种大约有百分之九十九已经灭绝。为了生存,所有的生物包括人,必须把生活作为一个战场,掌握自然的武器和自己的防御系统,例如暴龙13英寸长的牙齿,壁虎的吸盘趾垫,秃鹰有望远镜似的眼睛能发现一英里以外野兔,这些属性怎么在每一个独特的生物体身上出现?当然不是任意的,一个共同的原因就是进化,进化让这些动物在自然界的战争中有一个关键优势,并确保个体基因到继承到下一代。进化是生存!

History Channel: Evolve

Throughout the eons of its existence, the natural world has played host to this never-ending competition called Life. Since the dawn of time, roughly 99 percent of all species have become extinct. In order to survive, all creatures, including man, must treat life as a battlefield and master the natural weapons and defenses that they have evolved: Tyrannosaurus Rex's 13-inch canines; the gecko's velcro-like toe pads; the bald eagle's telescopic vision capable of spotting a hare a mile away. How did these attributes, each unique to the organism itself, appear? Certainly not arbitrarily. They evolved for a common reason - to give these animals a critical edge in interspecies warfare, and to ensure the survival of the individual’s genes into the next generation. To evolve is to survive!

Season1

E01: Eyes
They are one of evolution's most useful and prevalent inventions. Ninety five percent of living species are equipped with eyes and they exist in many different forms. Learn how the ancestors of jellyfish may have been the first to evolve light-sensitive cells. Discover how dinosaur's evolved eyes that helped them become successful hunters. Finally, learn how primates evolved unique adaptations to their eyes that allowed them to better exploit their new habitat, and how the ability to see colors helped them find food.

E02: Guts
It doesn't just take willpower to survive. It takes guts--in the form of a digestive system that turns food into fuel. Look closely at the role guts have played in shaping some of Earth's most successful animals: tyrannosaurs, snakes, cows, humans and others. Take a 575-million year journey that begins with the planet's first multi-cellular organisms and ends at our dinner tables. Watch as live-action natural history sequences, CGI, epic docudrama, and experimental science help to illustrate our and our fellow species' eternal struggle for survival on earth.

E03: Jaws
It's one of the most important developments in the history of life. An adaptation that lets animals kill, butcher, and devour. There is perhaps no instrument more important to survival than a strong set of jaws. From the shark's rows of razor-sharp serrated teeth, the crocodile's overwhelmingly swift-snapping-trap, to the lion's shredding canines--all have evolved in response to the never-ending struggle between predator and prey. But just how did these ultimate killing weapons develop in the first place?

E04: Sex
In the history of life on earth, sex may be the ultimate survival skill, because the bottom line is: reproduce or die. This episode looks at sex in its many forms, from sharks--among the first vertebrates to have intercourse--to dinosaurs that had to figure out how to join their giant bodies together to mate; from the stick insect (that mates nonstop for 10 straight weeks) to macaques monkeys (about once an hour)... and finally to humans. This driving force of life comes in many forms. How will sex evolve in the future? Are we evolving beyond sex? In fact, is a time coming when we will be able to seize control of our own evolution... not via sex at all, but through genetic engineering?

E05: Skin
It makes up 16% of your body weight, is the largest organ in the human body, allows birds to fly, mammals to nurse their young, and provides a lifelong defense against predators and parasites alike. What is it? Skin. From the delicate membranes that encased the earliest animals to the leathery hides that protected the dinosaurs, this episode looks at how skin has changed and adapted to virtually any challenge it has faced throughout history.

E06: Flight
Humans have always been fascinated with the one part of the world that we could not conquer - the sky. How did the earth's first flying creatures come to be? In this episode of Evolve we will examine the first vertebrate flyer, the pterosaur, which took to the air over 220 million years ago and eventually evolved to be the size of small airplanes. Scientists have long pondered how they, the largest flying creatures ever, were able to achieve such an astonishing feat. Scientists examine the fossil record and living birds to try and unlock how some species evolved to have the remarkable trait of flight.

E07: Communication
How has our ability to communicate defined us as a species? Sharing information with each other has allowed humans to rise to the top of the food chain and dominate our environments. But humans aren't the only species that can communicate. Organisms as simple as bacteria can communicate, a strategy that lets them cooperate to take down creatures millions of times their own size. Fish use pheromones to warn each other about predators and find mates. Chemicals are also an effective means of communicating on land, and they've allowed insects--some of nature's smallest and most unassuming animals--to become the most populous and prolific on earth. The ability to interact stretches back billions of years and has often been one of the primary factors in a species ability to evolve and survive.

E08: Size
Life has evolved into a multitude of sizes. Over the course of three billion years, life has taken on many forms--from an .02-micrometer-long bacteria to the 110-foot-long blue whale. Scientists are learning how the struggle for survival has led some animals to become small and others to get huge. Understanding the evolution of size tells us why giant dinosaurs went extinct while the first tiny mammals thrived; gives us answers to why mammoths evolved into pygmies when restricted to islands; and why carnivorous mammals have never grown to weigh more than a ton. Whether it's the speed of movement or population numbers, the biological world revolves--and "evolves"--around size.

E09: Venom
The deadliest natural weapon employed in the animal kingdom, venom has independently evolved in creatures as diverse as jellyfish, insects, snakes, and even mammals. Scientists from around the globe show how evolution adapted venom to fit the needs of the animals who wield it. Injecting venom into samples of his blood, Australia's Bryan Fry demonstrates how the world's deadliest snake, the inland taipan, has converted the building blocks of its body into lethal toxins. Toto Olivera will introduce us to the cone snail, pound-for-pound the most toxic creature in the world, able to continually update its chemical cocktails with the help of the world's fastest-evolving genes, guaranteeing the creatures stay one step ahead of their prey.

E10: Speed
The ability to react and move can often mean the difference between life and death in the animal kingdom. Some animals have evolved into championship fliers, swimmers, and runners. What are the forces that create this need for speed, and how do animal bodies adapt to go into overdrive? In this episode, find out about nature's ultimate engine, muscle, how it evolved and how it works. Meet some of the fastest species on earth.

E11: Shape
Living organisms have entered into a battle for survival for hundreds of millions of years and the pressure to survive has resulted in ever changing shapes. From the hammerhead shark to the platypus, new and sometimes extreme shapes can mean survival for certain species. But, as nature has proven, sometimes the most basic shapes on earth have the staying power of survival. This episode will explore the evolution of animal shape and how the slightest alteration of a leg or a head can mean the difference between life and extinction.

代码
Video Codec: XviD @ ~1761kbps
Resolution: 704x400
Audio: AC3 @ 224kbps (CBR)

仅需3M,安全播放所有视频,简单到极致,绿色无插件,自动下载字幕
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最新评论

www99966   2009/04/08 10:50:41  1楼   举报

不知道好看不好看 下了在说


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liuqiang159   2009/04/08 11:02:28  2楼   举报

好东西-又是个好资源啊! lz太好啦(缺点就是咱听不懂英语啊 可怜啊!)


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ordovician   2009/04/08 11:49:05  3楼   举报

不错的好东东,就是怕没源


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deceiveme   2009/04/08 13:49:28  4楼   举报

希望一直更新下去!!但是不知道会不会发布中文字幕版的!!支持


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lido00   2009/04/08 15:53:32  5楼   举报

不错的东西


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mrlyd   2009/04/08 21:42:41  6楼   举报

不错的东西 下了在说


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yangxb246   2009/04/11 14:09:48  7楼   举报

喜欢自然科学类型的,看看啦


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小欣要小心   2009/04/11 20:14:36  8楼   举报

哪位高人发到优酷去啊 弄个大字幕的
我的手机屏幕小啊


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s6225329   2009/04/14 13:01:58  9楼   举报

LZ来点截图啊


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wuhanlxj   2009/04/15 06:51:15  10楼   举报

很不错的,有字幕就好了


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wdwd10   2009/04/15 11:39:03  11楼   举报

不错不错,要下崽。


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cib007   2009/05/03 01:02:11  12楼   举报

喜欢这类的片,可是没中文听不懂


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charlsnpl   2009/05/07 20:46:33  13楼   举报

有中文字幕不


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canlion   2009/05/07 21:23:12  14楼   举报

感觉会不错


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DJ琳   2009/05/20 18:08:24  15楼   举报

楼主你放这电影上去好好真的好好 但是你要了解到我们中国人的文化是非常一般的 如果你没有字幕你掉这个电影上来是好多人看不明白 还不是没上去一样吗


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xvqingfu   2009/05/25 19:26:10  16楼   举报

先收藏起來 以後下載 呵呵呵


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无行浪子zzk   2009/05/28 20:19:03  17楼   举报

楼主能不能找到云南台引进并翻译的那个版本呢,这个片子非常好看,去年奥运期刚结束的时候,云南台一直在播,看了几集感觉拍的太好了,后来在网上一直找没找到。楼主发的这个版本是英文的,还买有字幕,实在是遗憾呢!


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打总市   2009/06/09 19:04:49  18楼   举报

好东西,希望楼主继续更新.


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topboyleo   2009/07/10 19:47:03  19楼   举报

期待更新


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13602176666   2009/07/12 00:16:47  20楼   举报

谢谢楼主了


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balance226   2009/07/14 10:42:11  21楼   举报

阿。。。。字幕字幕。。。。。。。。。。。


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deceiveme   2009/07/15 21:09:01  22楼   举报

楼主 这是好东西啊!!!可惜英文不怎么好啊………………


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ilifinil   2009/07/16 16:30:30  23楼   举报

不知道什么时候能够DVD全套补全,先收藏等补全,希望不要成坑。

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yajingj   2009/08/08 19:22:14  24楼   举报

美国拍的探索纪录片真好


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anzoe   2009/08/10 15:26:48  25楼   举报

探索频道的字幕较多,但是个人比较喜欢历史频道的风格。没字幕也坚持看完,练英语


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walkingmouse   2009/08/24 19:42:59  26楼   举报

只有三集啊?还是没有发完?


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zhanglei2002006   2009/11/13 12:00:26  27楼   举报

得加强英语了


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    小贴士:
  1. 类似“顶”、“沙发”之类没有营养的文字,对勤劳贡献的楼主来说是令人沮丧的反馈信息。
  2. 提问之前请再仔细看一遍楼主的说明,或许是您遗漏了。
  3. 勿催片。请相信驴友们对分享是富有激情的,如果确有更新版本,您一定能搜索到。
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