Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
Samuel Gruber's team films white-tipped sharks and barracuda feeding at night off Cocos Island. Enjoy!
Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
Here's some more stunning underwater footage. This time it's hammerhead sharks and stingrays, a wahoo and some striped eels, all filmed near the Cocos Island in the Caribbean. Take a look!
Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
In this episode, Doc Gruber and a colleague are testing a shark repellent. If effective, it could help save the lives of divers, swimmers and surfers all over the world.
Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
The team's divers conclude their filming and come back to the surface unharmed. We learn more about current developments in the prevention of shark attacks.
Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
Nathalie and Jim get up close and personal with tiger and lemon sharks, trying to get the best footage while taking care not to disturb or excite the dangerous animals.
Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
At times, Doc Gruber's research requires the team to dive right into shark-infested waters! Their line of work certainly isn't for the faint of heart! Enjoy.
Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
Gruber's team of researchers work day and night. In this episode they record a shark's vital statistics while it's in a state of tonic immobility. Before releasing it, they take a DNA sample. Enjoy!
Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
Sam Gruber's team of biologists capture, tag and release a juvenile tiger shark. Then they track it electronically into the mangroves, an ideal location for their research.
Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
Wild Sharks continues in the mangroves of Bimini Island, the islands most valuable asset, as we learn about and follow mating nurse sharks and other ocean wildlife, including eagle rays and remoras.
Difficulty: Intermediate
United Kingdom
The Prince of Wales' Accounting for Sustainablity project is offering two concrete intervention options for companies and their policies, which lead not only to tangible profits, but also help to reduce the supply chains.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Switzerland, USA
It is some men's great dream to explore the world. Today we present Solar Impulse 2, an aircraft, powered only by the sun that will attempt the first solar flight around the world. What is Solar Impulse? The only airplane of perpetual endurance, able to fly day and night on solar power, without a drop of fuel. Get more information here about the project.
Difficulty: Intermediate
USA
What actually are planets, asteroids and dwarf planets? Here, Dr. Robert Hurt from the Spitzer Science Center in California, touches upon this intriguing question. In addition, he addresses the status of Pluto and how it recently came to pass that, what was once considered our solar system's most distant planet, has recently been demoted and... why? Enjoy!
Difficulty: Intermediate
USA
Tony "Caveman" Groman has been a fixture in the Kailua kiteboarding scene since the beginning. He doesn't spend his time chasing or waiting for wind, he simply goes around the corner to the beach and kites every single day. He has adapted his equipment, style and attitude to just have fun no matter what the wind or the rest of the world is doing.
Naish Kiteboarding TV
Difficulty: Intermediate
USA
What does the Holocaust have to do with us, anyway? In part three, Roderick Miller, the chair of the nonprofit organization Tracing the Past, gives a talk at TEDxVienna about the Holocaust and contemporary Europeans' perception of the space they live in.
Difficulty: Intermediate
USA
What does the Holocaust have to do with us, anyway? In part two, Roderick Miller, the chair of the nonprofit organization Tracing the Past, gives a talk at TEDxVienna about the Holocaust and contemporary Europeans' perception of the space they live in.
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