Earth Story [1998]
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A must have for all science lovers - should be 6 stars!
Review date: 2007-11-14 Rating: 10 out of 10
I was enthralled by this series when it was originally broadcast on TV. I waited years for it to come out on DVD, putting up with an increasingly fuzzy VHS home recording, even writing to the BBC to implore them to publish it. So imagine how pleased I was when it was eventually released on DVD!
Aubrey Manning's velvet broadcasting style takes the viewer on a deceptively deep and fascinating journey into one of the great mystery areas of science - the nature, composition, origins and working mechanisms of our home planet. Seemingly inaccessible principles are covered effortlessly, principles which are difficult to find anywhere except in the most specialist text books. The mechanics of plate tectonics, subduction and ocean floor spreading, mantle convection, mountain root drop, rebound and flow away, all are explained clearly in a relaxed, informative and entertaining style. How else would we learn so delightfully of the large scale fluid behaviour of seemingly-solid rock, the long term carbon cycle, the role of water in maintaining the dynamic nature of the Earth's deep interior, the unique partnership between life, water and geology which has given us the one habitable world we know of.
You know this stuff is good for expanding your mind, but it's so nice and easy and great to watch. It's like eating bran that tastes of chocolate, spinach that tastes of lemon sorbet, exercising that feels like a caress.
A truly great documentary series, a must have for all science lovers. I would award 6 stars out of 5 if I could!
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Reviews
Wonder of the WorldReview date: 2007-11-14 Rating: 8 out of 10I gave up biology and chemistry in my fourteenth year. I carried on with physics but failed the `O' level. I did well in geography, but my interests at school were more geared towards arts and languages. At university, I did some modules on the philosophy of science and on geology. And I have always had an intuitive regard for landscape history, in which geology is a prime ingredient. In addition, from childhood days I have pondered on the creation of the universe and of the Earth.
Why am I telling you this? Because I think it is important to know where I am coming from in order to appreciate the review that follows, to judge whether I am being too naïve. I do not have a detailed scientific background to comment on the veracity or otherwise of the theories proposed in this series. On a number of occasions, it seemed to me that supposed causal links relying on chemistry and physical forces were not described in enough detail for me to grasp in any depth. But on a general level, the series met my intellectual expectations.
I learned a lot; no, I learned a hell of a lot! I learned just how fragile our life is on this planet, how it could quite easily be wiped out by some cosmic event or by an eruption of one of those huge concentrations of magma that exist under, say Iceland or Yellowstone Park. I also learned how much our evolutionary development has been subject to so many chance conjunctions or oppositions of factors. But I guess the real lesson learned is the one which its presenter and `guru' expresses at the end of his journey, namely how the relationship between life itself and the planet that we occupy has ensured the continuing presence of living organisms, for example in keeping the planet cool enough for evolution to do its work.
The presenter is Aubrey Manning, Emeritus Professor of Biology at the University of Edinburgh, and what a marvellously engaging character he proves to be. Not at all patronising or with his head in the clouds, he has a wonderful tendency to appear as if he is taking you by the hand and slowly and surely demonstrating to you, in the company of other learned colleagues outside his own area of study, the fascinating insights to be gleaned from the Earth's story. Flying all over the world, reporting from Greenland, South Africa, Australia of the mid-Atlantic ridge, his well-intoned words are accompanied by superb photography and stirring music (composed by Deborah Mollison).
The series was originally broadcast in 1998. Whilst the final two episodes raise the spectre of carbon dioxide levels and climate change, there is no direct link made with present worries about global warming. Indeed, the arguments used might lead one to conclude that the vast differences in the planet's temperature merely show present high levels to be part of a natural cycle. But this series is a history covering huge and unimaginable time-spans, and is not really concerned with the minute timescale - a mere 250 years - that has seen the onset of the industrial revolution to today. It would have been interesting to have had maybe some kind of DVD extra in which Aubrey Manning might expand on this issue. Perusing entries on Google indicates that his concerns are more urgent than may have previously been the case.
Each of the eight episodes was produced and/or directed by a different person, so whereas there is an overarching conception throughout the series, there are noticeable differences between each programme. Some are better than others. But overall I was extremely impressed with this marvellous series. One of my friends, who is a senior lecturer in geology, also rates it highly. You will too.Just brilliant. An insight to the life of our living rock planet.Review date: 2007-09-27 Rating: 10 out of 10I saw this series a number of times on cable and actively sought it on DVD, only to find that the BBC had not put this magnificent series on disk. Well, the oversight's been recitified, and not too soon!
If you really want to understand what makes our planet's geology tick, then you must see this documentary. Where does lava come from? Where do continents, indeed mountains, come from? Why is Greece sinking and Scandanavia rising? Most importantly, what is the relationship between life on Earth and its geology? Did you know that life itself has made and kept this world habitable for itself for perhaps billions of years? I didn't - till Aubrey made it clear. This is perhaps the most valuable point made in the entire series.
After watching the series about half a dozen times however, I can't help but feel that there is an episode missing. What drives and fuels Earth's Great Engine, and what is its (and consequently our) future? It's hinted at, but it requires more attention, as well as Aubrey's gentle, inquisitive narrative, (combined with insightful research ;-)) to bring to life this final piece of our planet's life story.
Yet another masterful BBC documentary series.Insightful explaining of principles of GeologyReview date: 2007-02-09 Rating: 10 out of 10[...]
This is a brief, entertaining and information-packed explaining of the forces that have shaped our world.
The brevity of the dialogue shows its been crafted carefully to help the viewers to grasp potentially immense-and overwhelming- periods of time and interacting processes and forces.
The nice thing is that the information contained in each documentary has an inherent place in a much larger pattern cast over the whole series. This is usefully repeated in places to help the comprehension.
This seems to me a documentary series of rare quality for a mass-market television programme.
Better than AttenboroughReview date: 2007-02-02 Rating: 10 out of 10I've recently been watching this series on History TV and have found it inspirational and entirely different from any other TV program. Although the format is somewhat similar to the Attenborough vehicles, the ideas in this program are backed up by detailed consideration of academic evidence and historical debate with detailed examples on earth to demonstrate the idea in action.
In contrast, Attenborough is a cloying, emotional amateur; which is not to say that Aubrey Manning is earnest or an obsessive scientist - in fact the opposite is true - his grasp of detail and willingness to enter into it evokes a man in his element, who can convey a depth of understanding with the lightest of touch.
Congratulations must go to Aubrey Manning and the writers and producers of this series.
Product Details/Specifications
Recording label: 2 Entertain Video Manufacturer: 2 Entertain VideoEAN: 5014503198824Binding: DVDNumber of items: 2Format: PAL, Release date: 2006-08-07Aspect ratio: 1.77:1Audience rating: ExemptRegion code: 2Running time: 400 minutesTheatrical release date: 1998Language: English (Subtitles For The Hearing Impaired)
Language: English (Original Language)