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  2. Valley of the T. rex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valley_of_the_T._rex

    Valley of the T. rex is a Discovery Channel documentary, featuring paleontologist Jack Horner, that aired on September 10, 2001.The program shows Horner with his digging team as they travel to Hell Creek Formation in search for dinosaur fossils, while also following Horner as he presents his view of the theropod dinosaur Tyrannosaurus rex as a scavenger rather than a predator, as it is often ...

  3. WWOR-TV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWOR-TV

    Channel 9 was New York City's last remaining commercial station to air children's programming on both weekday mornings and afternoons, an ironic twist from 20 years earlier; however, Fox later discontinued the Fox Kids weekday block in January 2002 while UPN ended its cartoon block in August 2003, WWOR then picked up syndicated cartoons in the ...

  4. Prehistoric Beast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_Beast

    Made with the go motion animation technique, scenes from Prehistoric Beast were included in the 1985 full-length documentary Dinosaur!, first aired on CBS in the United States on November 5, 1985. [1] On April 2011, the Tippett Studio had published on its YouTube official channel a digital restoration of the short. [2]

  5. Prehistoric Planet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_Planet

    Prehistoric Planet is a British–American nature documentary television series about dinosaurs, that premiered on Apple TV+ beginning May 23, 2022. It is produced by the BBC Studios Natural History Unit, with Jon Favreau as showrunner, visual effects by The Moving Picture Company, and narration by natural historian Sir David Attenborough. [1]

  6. Wild New World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_New_World

    Wild New World was co-produced by the BBC Natural History Unit and Discovery Channel. The music was composed by Barnaby Taylor and performed by the BBC Concert Orchestra. The series was narrated by Jack Fortune and produced by Miles Barton. The series forms part of the Coordinator History Unit's Continents strand.

  7. 9-foot-tall ‘giant ape’ mysteriously vanished. Their caves ...

    www.aol.com/9-foot-tall-giant-ape-194516772.html

    Standing at 9 feet tall and weighing up to 660 pounds, Gigantopithecus blacki was the largest primate to walk the Earth. The giant ape — an herbivore with a fondness for fruit — appeared in ...

  8. Walking with Dinosaurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walking_with_Dinosaurs

    Walking with Dinosaurs was the brainchild of Tim Haines, who came with the idea in 1996 while he was working as a science television producer at the BBC. [1] Then-head of BBC Science Jana Bennett had at the time started a policy of encouraging producers to pitch possible future landmark series, with the goal of increasing the science output of the BBC and raising the bar of science programming.

  9. The Ballad of Big Al - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ballad_of_Big_Al

    The Ballad of Big Al, [a] marketed as Allosaurus [b] in North America, is a 2000 special episode of the nature documentary television series Walking with Dinosaurs. The Ballad of Big Al is set in the Late Jurassic, 145 million years ago, and follows a single Allosaurus specimen nicknamed "Big Al" whose life story has been reconstructed based on a well-preserved fossil of the same name.