Move or die. Survive as one. National Geographic Channel's Great Migrations gives the word "move" a whole new meaning. This seven-part global programming event takes viewers around the world on the arduous journeys millions of animals undertake to ensure the survival of their species. Shot from land and air, in trees and cliff-blinds, on ice floes and underwater, Great Migrations tells the formidable stories of many of the planet's species and their movements, while revealing new scientific discoveries with breathtaking high-definition clarity. The miraculous red crab migration on Christmas Island. Flying foxes in Australia and army ants in Costa Rica. Wildebeest, great white sharks, zebra and Mali elephants. Microscopic plankton and jellyfish in Indonesia. The first radio transmitter attached to a monarch butterfly. The first film crew on the ground in Sudan in 25 years, there to capture the migration of the white-eared kob. The beauty of these stories is underscored by new knowledge of these species' fragile existence and their life-and-death quest for survival in an ever-changing world. The all-National Geographic Great Migrations team spent two and a half years in the field, travelling 670,000 kilometres in 120 countries and all seven continents to bring this spectacular first-of-its-kind production to life.
http://www.natgeotv.com.au/great-migrations
@Shifti597 Mike Deric - Penis
DKDamilos 1 month ago
its another comercial
3stantherobloxdude78 5 months ago
i think so XD
3stantherobloxdude78 5 months ago
song?
Shifti597 6 months ago
Where can I specifically find the ones with the butterflies? I need the clips for a video I'm making.
EllenRebecca3 10 months ago
meh, im gonna watch great vibrations
JustSomeGuyiThink 1 year ago
@ByPass117 blood an glory by audiomachine
adyboy76 1 year ago
@julkur1979 What's it called ????
ByPass117 1 year ago
nat geo has very good trailers...
mrninko 1 year ago
the most powerful trailer ever made..
adyboy76 1 year ago