Path: news.nzbot.com!not-for-mail
NNTP-Posting-Date: Sun, 23 Oct 2016 13:32:49 -0500
From: mike
Newsgroups: alt.binaries.documentaries
Subject: The.Incredible.Human.Journey.parts1-5 (20009)
Date: Sun, 23 Oct 2016 14:32:50 -0400
Message-ID: <qhvp0c9r9q09c75c7au99obltn1vgbgmr0@4ax.com>
User-Agent: ForteAgent/8.00.32.1272
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Lines: 58
X-Usenet-Provider: http://www.giganews.com
X-Trace: sv3-p5c149WRIfopNwHMverTITxsh6xFODGhe/R73EGGCepVPuyITcyRDKik+0m3mZXzXJOYjTQqCnnNdAO!+v13/pbFBeq/b6/dVHNRzlszbRYTuIxixEELoPuiEZYyiNRwHuVNOsg1YKfsftCo6ADTN1LWI8c=
X-Complaints-To: abuse@giganews.com
X-DMCA-Notifications: http://www.giganews.com/info/dmca.html
X-Abuse-and-DMCA-Info: Please be sure to forward a copy of ALL headers
X-Abuse-and-DMCA-Info: Otherwise we will be unable to process your complaint properly
X-Postfilter: 1.3.40
X-Original-Bytes: 3918
X-Received-Bytes: 4040
X-Received-Body-CRC: 2185900527
Xref: news.nzbot.com alt.binaries.documentaries:7069
There is a 2 year old post of this that is damaged but repairable if
anyones interested. It's BR 480p, < 2GB for all 5 parts. MVGroup just
posted all 5 parts 720p that is >7GB. I can repost here if anyone
can't get it to repair.
http://www.nzbindex.nl/search/?q=The.Incredible.Human.Journey&age=&max=25&minage=&sort=agedesc&minsize=100&maxsize=&dq=&poster=twentyforty&nfo=&hidespam=0&hidespam=1&more=1
BBC.The.Incredible.Human.Journey.1-5.(20009)
The Incredible Human Journey
There are seven billion humans on Earth, spread across the whole
planet. Scientific evidence suggests that most of us can trace our
origins to one tiny group of people who left Africa around 70,000
years ago. In this five-part series, Dr Alice Roberts follows the
archaeological and genetic footprints of our ancient ancestors to find
out how their journeys transformed our species into the humans we are
today, and how Homo Sapiens came to dominate the planet.
1) Out of Africa
Alice travels to Africa in search of the birthplace of the first
people. They were so few in number and so vulnerable that today they
would probably be considered an endangered species. So what allowed
them to survive at all? The Bushmen of the Kalahari have some answers
- the unique design of the human body made them efficient hunters and
the ancient click language of the Bushmen points to an early ability
to organise and plan.
2) Asia
Dr Alice Roberts visits Asia on her quest to discover how a small band
of humans came to eventually populate the globe. In Siberia, one of
the most inhospitable places on Earth, she meets the Evenki nomads, a
remote tribe that has much to teach the world about surviving in
extreme climates. Alice also considers the claim that the Chinese do
not share the same African ancestry as other peoples
3) Europe
When our species first arrived in Europe, the peak of the Ice Age was
approaching and the continent was already crawling with a rival:
stronger, at home in the cold and even (contrary to the popular image)
brainier than us. So how did the European pioneers survive first the
Neanderthals and then the deep freeze as they pushed across the
continent?
4) Australia
Alice looks at our ancestors' seemingly impossible journey to
Australia. Miraculously preserved footprints and very old human
fossils buried in the outback suggest a mystery: that humans reached
Australia almost before anywhere else. How could they have travelled
so far from Africa, crossing the open sea on the way, and do it
thousands of years before they made it to Europe?
5) The Americas
Alice tries to find out how Stone Age people reached North and South
America for the first time. She finds out about an ancient corridor
through the Canadian ice sheet that might have allowed the first
humans through. Old finds in Chile though point to a whole different
route for the first humans making it there.
|
|