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1-50 sur 84
- Explore the tragic truth about the massacre at the 1972 Olympic Games in Germany. Through interviews with key people such as the families of slain Olympians, German investigators and an anonymous perpetrator.
- "Giganten der Kunst" dedicates a film to three artists: Michelangelo, Rembrandt, and Van Gogh. These three exceptional geniuses went their own way, and left behind gigantic and iconic works of art, which still inspire the artists of today.
- Exploring how plants, animals, and oceans responded to past climate shifts when Earth underwent rapid warming periods over billions of years. Examines adaptation and survival amid environmental changes.
- "Terra Xplore" is a scientific/documentary show on german ZDF.
- The end of the last ice age may have sounded the death knell for saber-toothed tigers, mammoths and other large animals, but climate is not the only cause of this mass extinction. Recent findings by European and American researchers have shown that the disappearance of the mega-fauna was the result of a combination of climate change and human activity. The extinction of the mammoths and other ice behemoths coincides in fact with the development of the human species throughout the world 12 000 years ago. Another element against our ancestors is their pronounced taste for the meat, richer in vitamin D, of large animals.
- How, in 15 B.C., did the Roman emperor Augustus manage to take control of vast swathes of the Alps occupied by the Celts? Combining archaeological discoveries, real-life situations and expert analysis, this documentary reconstructs this vast military operation.
- The bowels of cities are covered by a vast network of pipes containing a dubious cocktail of waste water. To the northwest of Paris, the Achères waste water treatment plant treats about 80% of the capital's waste water. A sample is taken there by a team of scientists and sent to Germany for analysis. The comparative study of the substances contained in the Paris and Berlin discharges provides valuable information on the medicines and drugs consumed by the inhabitants of the two cities, but also on the industrial chemicals to which they are exposed. These analytical techniques could in future be used by the German criminal police to identify laboratories involved in the production of drugs or explosives.