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1-34 of 34
- Brian O'Conner, back working for the FBI in Los Angeles, teams up with Dominic Toretto to bring down a heroin importer by infiltrating his operation.
- When Jason Bourne is framed for a CIA operation gone awry, he is forced to resume his former life as a trained assassin to survive.
- Focuses on life and the environment in both the Arctic and Antarctic.
- Follow National Geographic photographer James Balog across the Arctic as he deploys time-lapse cameras designed for one purpose: to capture a multi-year record of the world's changing glaciers.
- A prequel taking place in the Belkan War, 15 years before the events of Ace Combat 5, this game follows the role of a legendary ace in the hate-fueled war.
- The game's story mainly focuses on members of the United Nations' 108th Task Force, a joint NATO-Russia military organization primarily assigned to quell a rebellion spreading over East Africa set in 2015-2016.
- The story campaign contains 15 missions that cover the war between the Republic of Emmeria and the Federal Republic of Estovakia on the Anean continent, north of Yuktobania. Cut-scenes between mission tell stories about how the player's actions influence the course of war.
- Dan Snow attempts to use the latest satellite technology to reveal the secrets of the Roman Empire, identifying lost cities, amphitheatres and forts.
- It is possible that only one per cent of the wonders of ancient Egypt have been discovered, but now, thanks to a pioneering approach to archaeology, that is about to change.
- Trees are earth's largest organisms and are also one of the planet's oldest inhabitants. Seasonal forests (unlike tropical rain-forest) the largest land habitats. A third of all trees grow in the endless taiga of the Arctic north. Northern America has forests that include California's sequoia's, the earth's largest trees. There and elsewhere, their vast production of photosynthesis and shade presides over a seasonal cycle of life and involves countless plant and animal species.
- Is it Real examines whether there is life on Mars. It examines the controversial "Martian Face" and talks to scientists about the possibility of microscopic life on Mars.
- Water, at least the small potable fraction of the huge planetary supply, is vital for wildlife. It's availability largely determines human population too, even more since the invention of agriculture, which also gave rise to ingenious methods to gather and use it such as irrigation and deep wells. Furthermore water is important for navigation, climatic phenomena and disasters.
- Modern life would be impossible without plentiful energy, but it's an addiction that could cost the Earth. We rely on fossil fuels - oil, coal, and gas - which all emit the carbon that contributes to global warming. The dilemma is how to keep the lights on without cooking the planet. Future Earth investigates in vivid photo-real CGI, the disastrous consequences of a world where energy is king and worth any price.
- Mikey goes on a treasure hunt to Venezuela for a rare CL-215 waterbomber. Cargo Manager Kelly's stress levels hit a new high when she returns from her Mexican vacation in even worse health than when she left. And new pilots Andrew and Graeme face the toughest test of their young careers - flying with irascible Buffalo boss Joe McBryan.
- The Sahara. Covering a vast swathe of Northern Africa, it is the largest desert in the world. On the surface, it appears to be a desolate empty land, but there are a few specialist species who have adapted to this harsh landscape.
- Australia was once part of a super-continent and its deserts were covered in forests. Once joined to Antarctica, it split off and moved northwards into warmer climes, whilst Antarctica became an icy wasteland. Australia's move forced the life forms it supported to adapt and the evidence of this can still be found in its unique wildlife, some of which exist nowhere else on earth.
- Horizon meets the two men who uncovered Stuxnet, the pioneers of ultra-paranoid computing, a white-hat hacker who showed out how to hack into stand alone cash machines, and explains how companies test resilience.
- A massive tsunami hundreds of feet high that never touches land; a secret underground base in China; an image from space may have revealed the location of the Garden of Eden.
- Weird barren rings in the Namib Desert, an island the size of Manhattan that vanishes without trace and a lost city in the heart of the Amazonian jungle. What on Earth? Investigates six more mysteries captured from space.
- First seen from space in 1965, the Eye of the Sahara is a beautiful 25 mile structure, but how it formed remains a mystery. And are extraordinary clouds emanating from an island in the Indian Ocean evidence of a terrifying new weather weapon?
- NASA astronaut Mike Barratt, describes photographing a strange ring in the ice on the world's oldest and most mysterious lake from the International Space Station. More rings on Lake Baikal have been seen since, they baffle scientists.
- A possible smoke screen over North Korea worries military analysts while an amateur archaeologist makes an extraordinary discovery with the help of a satellite image; has this image revealed not one but two forgotten pyramids in Egypt?
- Images of earth from space reveal an intimate portrait of human activity. Cities glow bright while the wilderness remains dark. Why then is the Australian outback, lit up like a series of vast cities?
- Harry Wallop investigates the housing shortage in Britain and in particular the Government sell-off of state-owned land to build housing on. He discovers that the land was undersold and few houses built on it.
- The myth of Merlin is associated with an arrangement of stones in northern France, and satellite images might finally explain this ancient riddle. Investigators uncover something mysterious buried beneath the Gulf of Mexico. An island suddenly appears.
- 202054m7.1 (78)TV EpisodeLate into Night 1 - Team Bend Racing, who were almost forced out of the race from heat exhaustion, manage to rally together and continue on. The pack of front-running teams sets a blistering pace, paddling through the darkness as they return to the main island of Viti Levu. Team Iron Cowboy fumbles as they retrieve the Ocean Leg Medallion, leading a team member to become frustrated. Slower teams continue their way up, over, and around the dangerous volcanic island trek in the humid conditions, including father and son Team Endure, who are hoping to reunite with Mark Macy's former teammates, Team Stray Dogs - the oldest team in the field. Teams returning to the main island switch disciplines to Stand-Up Paddleboarding (SUP). Struggling with nighttime navigation, Team Unbroken decides to rest and wait for daylight before continuing their trek. As Day 2 begins, lead teams finish the SUP portion of the Ocean Leg - with one experienced team falling hours behind after making a critical river navigation error. Team Unbroken tries to make up time on the island trek, but their past physical injuries hamper their progress and put them in jeopardy of missing the Day 3 cutoff. The lead pack of teams arrive at Camp 1, reuniting with their assistant crews and taking a brief respite and refuel before beginning Leg 2 - the Jungle Leg. The Iron Cowboy team captain has an emotional breakdown after suffering on the open ocean. Two rookie teams are forced to quit the race after a fast-moving tropical storm threatens their safety. As the storm begins to pummel the island interior, one section of the racecourse becomes impassable, trapping Team Estonian Ace in a steep canyon facing rising waters. Race Management is forced to temporarily shutdown the course as they mount a rescue attempt of the trapped Estonians.
- Dan Snow and space archaeologist Dr Sarah Parcak conclude their search for evidence of Viking settlements in North America, as they aim to provide a definitive answer to the question of whether the Norse raiders settled in the New World 500 years before Columbus.