20080528

中国·四川大地震(NHK)

转自:http://kamonka.blogspot.com/2008/05/blog-post_27.html

earthquake







中国四川大地震 中国・四川大地震

2008.5.24 73mins

本 片通过NHK的独自采访映像和灾区的实况报告,结合专家的现场讨论,从受灾惨状、避难生活的严峻现状、引发地震的断层构造、校舍坍塌的原因,堰塞湖崩溃的 模拟分析、中国国营媒体报道姿态的变化等等各种角度,介绍和分析四川大地震的灾区现状,灾害扩大的原因,及其对中国社会造成的巨大冲击。

空前的大地震袭击中国
引发这次大地震的
是现身地面的巨大断层
断层长度竟达250公里以上
以阪神大地震30倍的能量
撕裂了中国的大地
900名学生中
300人以上遇难的中学
突然间失去了孩子
家长们百感交集
黑板上孩子们画的奥运圣火
大地震无情摧毁了
幼小生命的梦想和未来
大地震震动了整个社会
经济飞速发展的
中国的阴暗面大白于天下
中国四川大地震
来自最前线的报告

下载:
[NHK][纪录片]中国四川大地震.avi
640x480 WMV3+MP3 423M
http://www.verycd.com/files/8cbee126d4832eb784f4300aff7d7dfb444084224

[NHK][纪录片]中国四川大地震.srt
中文字幕 53KB
http://www.verycd.com/files/ec9b131c6229be9928776b478b9d7a6c54441

[NHK][纪录片]中国四川大地震(字幕版).avi
http://www.verycd.com/files/249e188ed15f63c3c55dc0f088c640d0254676582



20080522

锦绣中华(BBC+CTV+Travel Channel)[Wild China]

锦绣中华(BBC+CTV+Travel Channel)[Wild China]















出品:BBC+CTV+Travel Channel
片名 :Wild China 锦绣中华
播出时间:2008年5月11日始每周日
长度:60 分钟/集
类别:记录/自然
字幕:无
语言:英语
官方网址:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/wildchina/

介绍:
出自《新京报-地球周刊》作者:刘铮 黄茜
http://www.thebeijingnews.com/culture/xzzk/2008/05-18/018@010755.htm

《锦绣中华》为中英联合摄制小组拍摄的一部关于中国野生动物和自然风光的系列记录片,全系列共分6集。
  第一集“龙之心”开宗明义,介绍了整个系列片的内容。细致地描述了南中国的野生动物。在长江流域的冲积平原上,稀有的丹顶鹤跳着求偶之舞。
  第二集“香格里拉”展现了中国西南省份云南的雨林和竹林之乡。亚洲象、短尾猴是片中的明星,还有对27种雉鸡中的一些品种的展示。
  在第三集“西藏”中,广泛地展示了羌塘自然保护区的风光。它是世界上第二大的生物保护区。
  在这片保护区里被拍摄的动物包括藏野驴、野牦牛以及藏羚羊群。
  第四集“跨越长城”中展现了中国北部上百万平方千米的高原和荒芜人烟的沙漠,从内蒙古一直伸展到塔吉克斯坦西部。
  在第五集“熊猫之乡”中,展现了中国中部野生动物的栖息地。秦岭山脉位于温带和热带气候交界处,因此有稀罕生物如扭角羚、金丝猴在此处留居。在本集中,还将第一次看到野生大熊猫交配的场面。
  在第六集“变化大潮”中,展现了中国绵长海岸线的自然风光。从冰冻的北方城市大连到热带的海南,有着极其多样的野生物种,包括迁徙的涉禽和南中国海的珊瑚礁。

下载:

第一集:龙之心Heart of the Dragon
http://www.verycd.com/files/0a723950118068c6f3df801931b7b93e488370176
中文字幕: http://www.shooter.cn/xml/file/90/90818.xml

第二集:香格里拉Shangri-La
http://www.verycd.com/files/76561a343663b77bb25a9a8332628163488169472

第三集:西藏Tibet
http://www.verycd.com/files/2f85ba4ca20141aa22fde0d77335d02d731850752























China is a vast country with an astonishingly diverse landscape and the world's largest population. Through unprecedented access, this six-part series reveals the little-known natural treasures and secret wildlife havens of China's wildest regions.
  
  Programme 1: Heart of the Dragon
  The improbable egg-carton hills of Southern China seem to float in a sea of glistening rice paddies. This is a landscape full of surprises. Next to peasants ploughing with buffaloes are rivers concealing dwarf alligators and giant salamanders, trained cormorants that catch fish for their masters, bats with unusual tastes and monkeys that hide in caves.
  But this isn't a nature park. Almost 300 million people live here, with a tradition of eating wildlife. So what forces have shaped this remarkable landscape and how do farmers and wild creatures manage to coexist among the rocks and the rice fields?

  Programme 2: Shangri-La
  Hidden beneath billowing clouds, in China's remote south west, are perhaps the richest natural treasures in all China. Immense rivers carve their way south below towering peaks. The wind-swept slopes are home to the highest-living primates in the world and hidden in the valleys below are jungles with a diversity of wildlife comparable to those around the Amazon.
  Jewel-coloured birds and ancient tribes share forests where wild elephants still roam. The mystery is that Yunnan's remote forests stretch into northern territories where deserts would normally be found. How can these northern forests exist? The rugged landscape holds the key.

  Programme 3: Tibet
  The Tibetan plateau covers a quarter of China – an area the size of Western Europe. This vast, windswept wilderness is one of the world's most remote places, defined by the glacier-strewn Himalayas. It's also home to some incredible wildlife such as the rare chiru, brown bears, wild yaks and the highest-living predators on Earth. There are more large creatures here than anywhere else in China.
  Defined by over a thousand years of Buddhism, Tibet has a unique culture that has nurtured remarkable beliefs. The programme discovers why this landscape and ancient culture is the life support system for much of the planet.

  Programme 4: Beyond the Great Wall
  China's emperors built the Great Wall to keep their kingdom safe from the hostile barbarians to the north. This is a land of warrior tribes, bizarre wildlife and extreme weather, but also of vast and breathtaking evergreen forests, grassy plains and sweeping desert dunes, rich with history.
  The legendary Silk Road drew traders and their camels across the deserts in search of fabulous wealth, and fierce Mongolian horsemen conquered the known world. Today, nomadic tribesmen still race horses and hunt with golden eagles, while tiny hamsters and Asia's last wild horses struggle to survive in the world's most northerly desert.

  Programme 5: Land of the Panda
  China's heartland with its Han people is the centre of a 5,000-year-old civilization. This land contains the Great Wall, the Temple of Heaven, and Beijing's Olympic Stadium and is home to some of China's most charismatic creatures such as the giant panda, golden snub-nosed monkey, and golden takin.
  China has undergone significant development in the past 50 years, bringing many environmental problems. The programme explores the deep, complex and often extraordinary relationship between the Chinese peoples, their environment and its creatures, and finds out what it means for the future of China.

  Programme 6: Tides of Change
  From the eastern end of the Great Wall, China's coast spans 14,500km and more than 5,000 years of history. This is a place of huge contrasts: futuristic modern cities jostling with traditional seaweed-thatched villages, ancient tea terraces and wild wetlands where rare animals still survive.
  Here Chinese white dolphins, red-crowned cranes, deadly vipers, giant sturgeon and sabre-wielding monkeys struggle to eke out a living faced by competition from 700 million people, widespread pollution and over-fishing. How China is managing such conflicting pressures has lessons for us all.