Clips Fromthe Bbc's "walk On The Wild Side"



  1. Clips From The Bbc's Gang
  2. Clips From The Bbc's Series
Clips from the bbc

Online shopping for Movies & TV from a great selection of All BBC Titles, Gift Sets, Nature & Wildlife & more at everyday low prices. BBC Teach has thousands of curriculum-linked film resources to help you deliver your lessons. These sit either on our YouTube channel, or in our Class Clips collection on BBC Bitesize. The BBC is the world’s leading public service broadcaster. We’re impartial and independent, and every day we create distinctive, world-class programmes and content which inform, educate. The Walking with Dinosaurs TV series changed the way we saw dinosaurs forever. This revolutionary show took viewers right into the dinosaurs' world, showing them as if they were alive and filmed in the wild. Math videos note: these videos run on adobe flash player which needs to be installed in your system. Click on the topic to link directly to the video. There is a brief write-up, list of keywords and some ideas for use in the classrooms.

Video available for embedding on non-BBC websites

Clips From The Bbc's Gang

BBC News makes some video content available for embedding on other websites and blogs. These videos can be embedded onto both personal and business websites, subject to our revised terms of use.

The video news available for embedding is from the UK Politics, Business, Health, Science & Environment and Technology sections of the BBC News website. Occasionally there will be videos from these sections which aren't available, usually due to rights restrictions.

You can easily see which videos are available - in the grey bar underneath the video, an EMBED button appears if it is available for off-site embedding.


By clicking on the embed button, you will see the embed code you will need to copy and then paste into your own website.


As explained in our terms of use the embed code mustn't be altered in any way.

All of the content has been produced for the BBC's own news services and the BBC is not generating any 'bespoke' content to meet third-party requirements.

Clips from the bbc

As well as discovering our embeddable videos on the News website, you can also use our video RSS feeds which contain links to all our video and audio stories from those sections:

Business video RSS feed

Clips From The Bbc's Series

Health video RSS feed

UK Politics video RSS feed

Science & Environment RSS feed

Bbc

Technology video RSS feed

For more general information on the BBC News embedded player, go to our guide to the embedded player page .

Use this form to send us feedback or report a problem:

The BBC may edit your comments and not all emails will be published. Your comments may be published on any BBC media worldwide.





The closest planet to the Sun, and the smallest in our solar system, Mercury often appears as a bright star-like object in our sky during the early evening or early morning. With a cratered surface, and little atmosphere, the planet’s appearance is incredibly similar to Earth’s Moon. A molten iron core sits at the centre of the planet, accounting for around 40% of its total volume.

Venus’ thick atmosphere traps UV radiation from the Sun creating an extreme greenhouse gas effect and making it the hottest planet in our solar system at a scorching 462ºC (864ºF). Spinning incredibly slowly, almost upright on its axis, Venus has the longest rotation of the planets and experiences almost no seasonal effects. This means one day on Venus is equivalent to 243 days here on Earth!

About half the size of Earth, Mars is a cold, rocky, dusty, planet with a thin atmosphere and temperature highs of 20ºC (68ºF). Affectionately coined ‘The Red Planet’, Mars was named by the Romans after their god of war, as its reddish colour is reminiscent of blood. Thanks to its proximity to Earth, Mars is one of the most explored planets in our solar system. Its surface conditions and the past presence of water make it arguably the most hospitable planet after our own. Could Mars be our new home in the future?

The largest planet in the solar system (more than 2.5 times the mass of all other planets combined), Jupiter is the fifth planet from our Sun. While beautiful, its stripes and swirls are actually cold, windy clouds of ammonia and water, floating in an atmosphere of hydrogen and helium. For hundreds of years, Jupiter’s iconic Great Red Spot has been observed (a giant storm bigger than Earth) and we are yet to discover whether this raging storm is deeply rooted in Jupiter’s interior.

The

The farthest planet from Earth discovered by the unaided human eye, Saturn has been known since ancient times and is named for the Roman god of agriculture and wealth. Recognised for its rings, made of chunks of ice, Saturn has no surface to speak of. Rather, it is mostly swirling gases and liquids, inhospitable to human life and the spacecrafts trying to fly into the planet. For its many moons, however, the story could be different. Could life exist on Titan, whose terrain resembles that of Earth?

Uranus is one of just two planets, alongside Venus, that rotates in the opposite direction to most of the planets, from east to west. Some of the most extreme seasons in the solar system occur here on Uranus. For nearly a quarter of each Uranian year, the Sun shines directly over each pole, plunging the other half of the planet into a 21-year-long, dark winter.

It’s impossible to view Neptune with the naked human eye. More than 30 times as far from the Sun as Earth, its orbit takes a massive 165 years to complete, experiencing seasons lasting 40 years at a time. 80-90% of Neptune is made up of a hot dense fluid of “ices”, making it one of two ice giants in the solar system alongside Uranus. While not as impressive as Saturn’s, Neptune is the proud owner of its own planetary ring system, made up of ice particles coated with silicates or carbon-based material.