海角换妻

漏 2025 海角换妻

FCC Public Inspection Files:
路 路 路
路 路 路 路 路
Public Files ContactATSC 3.0 FAQ
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Why Do Hundreds of Icebergs Keep Visiting This Town?

Season 1 Episode 2 | 7m 05s

Icebergs are often found in the world鈥檚 most remote, coldest and dangerous seas. But each spring, a unique geological phenomenon brings hundreds of Icebergs into the communities along Newfoundland鈥檚 Northeast coast, where they have become a staple of everyday life. What are these icebergs doing here? And why is it imperative that we keep our eyes on them?

Aired: 06/11/23
Extras
Dr. M. Sanjayan investigates the largest river restoration ever attempted in the United States.
The coming-of-age story and rise of Ashley Chea, a Cambodian American basketball prodigy.
The midwives enter the 1970s, which brings with it new challenges for Nonnatus House.
A rare glimpse of Mary as a child from 1552. There's no sign of "Bloody Mary" here?
A coronation designed for Kings, presented some problems for the first Queen.
Lucy investigates Queen Mary I - was she really as bloody as history suggests?
Promo: Living History Farms, Hour 3
Appraisal: New England Federal Card Table, ca. 1800
Appraisal: 1959 Gibson ES-355 Mono Guitar
Appraisal: German Candy Container Rabbit, ca. 1890
Latest Episodes
All
  • All
  • Untold Earth Season 2
  • Untold Earth Season 1
Meet Pando, an ancient tree in Utah that has grown into one of Earth's largest living wonders.
How are truffles key to the survival of the forest ecosystem at large?
What does it mean to preserve a place that is defined by it's impermanence?
Microbial warfare has been raging for thousands of years deep below the Chihuahuan Desert.
What does one of Earth's harshest environments teach us about planet survival?
At 87潞 Celcius, the Grand Prismatic Spring is a beacon of microbial life and discovery.
At 50 million years old, the origins of Devils Tower or Bears Lodge remains a mystery.
An ancient and modern mystery, what about bioluminescence inspires such obsession?
Over half a million years old, the story of Mono Lake is one of survival.
At 450 million years old, moss may hold the key to surviving our rapidly warming planet.