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- In 1936, archaeologist and adventurer Indiana Jones is hired by the U.S. government to find the Ark of the Covenant before the Nazis can obtain its awesome powers.
- A wildlife officer, who is haunted by a tragedy that happened because of him, teams up with an FBI agent in solving a murder of a young woman on a Wyoming Native American reservation and hopes to get redemption from his past regrets.
- Two hardened criminals get into trouble with the US border patrol after meeting with a Mexican drug lord, and then revelations start to unfold.
- Nice guy junior exec Peter doesn't play dirty but unfortunately, some of his colleagues do. In comes Kris, his new temp, who is bright and efficient and saves him. She's willing to play dirty for Peter.
- True-Life nature photography is used to tell the tale of a female tree squirrel named Perri who encounters many different forest creatures, both friendly and dangerous, as she grows up through the four seasons and finds a mate named Porro.
- Story of the American prairie as it was when vast herds of bison and elk grazed there.
- A lad finds himself magically sent back to ancient Egypt where he and the young King Tut team up to stop their evil and overly ambitious elders.
- The first of the True-Life Adventure featurettes. Fur seals arrive on the Pribilof Islands for the purpose of mating. The older seals are known as bulls and have "harems" of females which they protect very seriously. The younger male seals get together, train themselves to fight, and then help each other overthrow the bulls to become the new masters of the harems.
- A look at the Alaskan wilderness throughout the year, from the harsh winters to the rejuvenating spring, and the animals (including its human residents) who learn to adapt to the extremes of Alaskan weather.
- Travel around the world looking for sharks with renowned expert Ian Gordon. In this exciting 13-part series, you'll get up close and personal with a wide variety of these magnificent creatures, learning their habits, feeding and breeding grounds, and what does and does not make them dangerous. For Ian "Shark" Gordon, life doesn't get much better than an encounter with a deadly shark.
- Witness the unique marine life at the depths of the Pacific Ocean, and journey to shores of the archipelago in this one-hour documentary, which reveals a new facet of this tropical location.
- Crittercam unveils the remarkable survival of the Emperor Penguin in Antarctica's frozen expanses, offering an intimate look into their extraordinary lives.
- There is a mystery behind that masked grey visage, and ancient life force, delicate and mighty, awesome and enchanted, commanding the silence ordinarily reserved for mountain peaks, great fires, and the sea.
- Spy in the Wild (2017) franchise returns with a brand new wintertime entry about animals that live in the coldest places in the world.
- A project about Florida's endangered Gentle Giants and the current threats they face.
- America's Greatest Animals takes us across North America on a revelatory mission: which of the continent's landmark creatures deserve to make the list?
- An award-winning 32 minute docu-fantasy that takes the creation cycle of the seasons from poetic thought through finished ballet featuring the award-winning poetry of Gus Nicholson, Alexei Karpov's award-winning score and David Taylor's award-winning choreography. A great study tool on the use of language and imagination and a delight to the senses.
- In May 2012, a Massachusetts black bear altered the course of history. WHO'S AFRAID OF THE CAPE COD BEAR? chronicles this Bear's journey, in the context of debates about human coexistence with wildlife across much of North America. This bear captured the imagination,attention and hearts of kids and grown-ups, from backyards to newscasts, twitter to television, tourists to law enforcement, all hoping to catch a glimpse or even capture the elusive bear himself. The doc features insights from a wildlife biologist, veterinarian, zoo curator, park rangers, a Cape Cod writer, a Province town entrepreneur, a cub rescuer in Maine and a bear hunter in New Hampshire. The film asks-if bears are people with fur, who should adapt to whom and how?
- America's Wildest Refuge is an ecological and historical portrait of a majestic place and those who have worked to protect it.
- A look at people who keep rats as pets.
- Prime Hook is one of the largest coastal marsh restoration projects on the Atlantic Coast. Supported by federal funding for Hurricane Sandy recovery, the project restores 4,000 acres of coastal marsh and rebuilds one mile of existing dunes and barrier beach to improve the coastline's natural defenses in the face of storms and sea-level rise.
- A description of the unique ecology of the Delaware Bay coast of New Jersey, and the work done by a consortium of organizations to preserve and protect it.
- The American Golden plover and the Buff-breasted sandpiper fly 8 thousand miles from the Arctic tundra to the Eastern Uruguayan lagoons where they interact with the native fauna.
- In winter the Arcitc Ocean is an inhospitable, dark world of ice, but in the short summer life awakens. It is bright day around the clock and on the Arctic islands animals come to the light: in front of Svalbard polar bears go hunting for seals, and walruses lay huddled close together. Black and white thick-billed murres breed on the rocks - the cliffs shield them from predators until the fledglings are fledged and go into the ice-cold sea three weeks later. On Ellesmere island in the north of Canada, musk oxen move through the tundra. Hungry polar wolves do not shrink from attacking some of the huge artiodactyls in order to get fresh meat for their offspring. In the west of Iceland, Atlantic puffins raise their young ones on a promontory more than 450 meters high. The real element of the "clowns of the seas" is the ocean, and on a dive they catch up to ten fish. This documentary shows the manifold survival strategies of the well adjusted Arcitc species: how they gain new energy and how they ensure the continued existence of their races before the polar night reigns again.
- Penn and Teller ask if the Endangered Species Act is about saving rare animals, or just another Government grab for power.
- The boundary between land and sea is an exciting place, with seabirds, turtles, and marine mammals constantly coming and going.
- 1954–19971hUnrated8.9 (15)TV EpisodeWinston Hibler explains how Perri, Disney's first and only True-Life Fantasy, was filmed. The film crew was so entranced in Utah, that it became known as Wildwood Heart. It took almost three years to film the adventures of the squirrels.
- Left to their own devices, birds have reached almost all ends of the Earth - still, humans can do many things to help their feathered friends.
- The Mammoth species is revived in this episode.
- Forgotten wrecks from the American Revolution are discovered. Cutting-edge computer graphics shed new light on the struggle for independence.
- Many if the countless island in the South Pacific are neither broken off continental shells nor made by corals, but created by spectacular volcanic activity in the ocean. These often young, fertile grounds developed varied wildlife on and around them.
- Due to its extreme size and depth, the South Pacific has an equivalent variety of marine life. Some species are unique and most adapted to the various requirements of its conditions, such as great distances to travel in seasonal migrations, as whales, sharks and even turtles do.
- The South Sea, or southern Pacific Ocean, from Galapagos to Antarctic, comprises a quart of the world's water. Yet is's barely known, being so vast and scarcely populated with humans, yet immensely with wildlife, largely in seasonal migrations, as with breeding birds etc. and their predators. In reality, the weather and currents are varied, not just tropical heat, and crucial, as even storms were for propagating species, which may then mutate, often bizarrely, resulting in extraordinary variety on over 20,000, often quite isolated islands. Man too evolved uniquely, most within a mere two milennia, resulting in the strangest cultural traditions. Easter Island testifies to their ecological fragility.
- Uncovered clues from a famous Montana battleground, a 19th-century steamboat and a frontier ghost town reveal surprising truths about the Wild West.
- Street dogs are trained to ward off increasing attacks on humans by Bangladesh's near-extinct Bengal tiger population.
- Join host Jeff Corwin on an adventure across central Florida to connect with the giant manatee. Jeff uncovers the harsh realities that manatees face in the wild and works with conservationists who are racing to save this iconic species. Jeff explores the vast waterways of central Florida, helps transport giant manatees to safety, cares for manatee babies who lost their parents, and dives alongside groups of manatees foraging for food.
- Join host Jeff Corwin on an adventure across America to help save California condors and Massachusetts salt-marsh sparrows. First, Jeff travels to the spectacular coastline of Big Sur, California, to the renowned condor sanctuary of the Ventana Wildlife Society. Jeff helps prepare young condors for their new life in the wild and learns about how condors shape their environment - and how the environment shapes them. Later, Jeff travels to his home state to work alongside the Massachusetts Department of Fish and Wildlife on a mission to save a unique species of bird that only lives in salt marsh habitats of the East Coast.
- Join host Jeff Corwin as he connects with some of the most threatened and endangered animals that live underwater. First, Jeff helps conservationists save one of Florida's most iconic species: the gentle manatee. Later, Jeff comes face to face with a Kemp's Ridley sea turtle - the most endangered sea turtle species on Earth. Finally, Jeff learns about endangered coral reefs and how biologists are racing to save them before it's too late.
- Join host Jeff Corwin as he connects with a collection of amazing mammals that face difficult conservation challenges. First, Jeff travels into the remote forests of New England to help care for a rowdy group of orphaned baby black bears. Jeff learns about bear conservation and discovers the unique and friendly behaviors bear cubs have towards each other. Later, Jeff travels to Florida to meet orphaned baby manatees. Jeff learns about the threats to manatee habitat and what biologists are doing to save them. Finally Jeff assists veterinarians to help two adorable opossums heal from their wounds and return to the forest.