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    • Inside Nature’s Giants

      1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (6 votes, average: 4.67 out of 5)
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      What are our world’s largest animals and where did they originally come from? This interesting documentary examines nature’s largest animals. Inside Nature’s Giants first aired in 2009, it is a British science documentary. The series features experts performing dissections on these animals as they hope to uncover these animal evolutionary hidden secrets.

      In this four-part series of the documentary a team of experts examine the extraordinary anatomy of a crocodile, an elephant, a giraffe and 55 tonne fin whale that measures of over 19 metres long. These are definitely some of nature giants. With their dissections, these experts reveal to viewers how these magnificent animals bodies work from the inside out. They reveal how the creatures have managed to adapt to their surroundings over the time-span of thousands of years.

      Presented by Mark Evans, this is an intriguing and fascinating look Inside Nature’s Giants. Simon Watt and Richard Dawkins, evolutionary biologists and Joy Reidenberg, a comparative anatomist assist Evans with his discoveries.

      The series continues to examine many other large creatures. Throughout the second season they examined a monster python, big cats, a giant quid and a great white shark. Season 3 airing in 2011-12 examines the polar bear, sperm whale, dinosaur bird, camel, leatherback turtle, a racehorse and a rogue baboon. Future episodes will uncover the mysteries of a kangaroo and a hippopotamus. Dive Inside Nature’s Giants in this informative documentary.

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      Published on January 12, 2010 · Filed under: Biology, Environment, Nature

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    • Willy

      Gross.

    • (just a) F R O G on the LOG

      Very interesting doc, although I wouldn't recommend that you sit down to watch this with your lunch, as I did.

    • (just a) F R O G on the LOG

      In the film the question is raised; Why are whales able to grow so much larger than their cousin, the hippo? The explanation given is that a whale has escaped the confines of gravity by living underwater, thus allowing it to grow to an enormous size. That seems quite illogical when you consider how large many sauropods were.

    • Immogen

      Wow. those are really big tummies XD

    • CBat

      This was fantastic! I was worried about the gross-out factor, but the visuals of the anatomy really made a difference in my understanding. Too bad they couldn't finish the whale (what a mess though)!

    • Le

      tooo interesting am not getting any sleep!
      thanks for posting, love your site

    • Jack Kebek

      Well, they are "vaguely" related. One is a herbivore and the other is a carnivore. Meat is far more caloric than weed… despite most whales have no teeth.
      Yes the explanation given in the doc is "summary", but not untrue. The whale is the largest "confirmed" creature to have roamed planet hearth, but for more than one reason. You just can't fit everything in a one hour doc no matter how interesting and factual this one is.

    • (just a) F R O G on the LOG

      Yeah – I thought it was kind of funny that they would pick a hippo as a "relative" reference for a whale.
      (Have you seen 'Kingdom of the Blue Whale'?
      That was an awesome doc posted May '09 – visually stunning)

    • (just a) F R O G on the LOG

      Oh, I get what you mean about "confirmed" size, too. Incomplete skeletal fossils, right?

    • Jack Kebeck

      Not only incomplete, but "controversial". Although I don't know what the controversy is about, I suspect it's because they ain't all that sure to what species that single vertebra belonged.

      As for the hippo being a relative of the whale, it dates back to common ancestors and it is a genetically confirmed relation.

      All life on earth descends from the first form of live to inhabit it : microbes.
      All Life is One.

    • spacebunny

      I was the kid in biology class who actually somewhat enjoyed dissection.

      Your skills in the kitchen aren't worth anything if you can't tolerate a little blood and crunching of bone. Try cutting up a chicken or degutting a fresh fish. It's the same thing as this doc but on a smaller scale. This doc doesn't phase me at all.

    • AJR

      I would have liked to see the brain and heart, but that was really interesting.

    • AJR

      On the elephant I mean.