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Oldest traces of blood found in Italy's prehistoric iceman
May 2 - Scientists examining the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric iceman who roamed the Alps some 5300 years ago, have discovered what they believe to b...
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The oldest traces of blood found in Italy's prehistoric iceman 2012
for more science and technology discoveries visit this website: www.gstdiscovery.yolasite.com Scientists examining the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric i...
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Travel Italy - Prehistoric Valcamonica Rock Drawings in Lombardy Alps
Take a tour of Valcamonica Rock Drawings, Italy - part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats. Hi, I am Naomi and I am very excited to show y...
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Red Fang - Prehistoric Dog live livorno The Cage
Red Fang - Prehistoric Dog live livorno The Cage
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3154LI ITALY-PREHISTORIC INSECTS
3154LI ITALY-PREHISTORIC INSECTS.
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Italian prehistoric iceman's blood found
Scientists say they have found what is believed to be the oldest traces of human blood ever.
The blood cells were found on the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric iceman who roamed the Alps 53-hundred years ago. Scientists used an atomic force microscope to examine a wound on Otzi that caused his death. They say the red blood cells found on the wound are similar to modern-day samples and show t
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Video Shock - Orvieto (Italy): Ufo invasion with prehistoric creature
Incredibile invasione aliena ai piedi della rupe di Orvieto!
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Sassi di Matera - Italy
The Sassi di Matera (meaning "stones of Matera") - prehistoric cave dwellings in the Italian city of Matera, Basilicata.
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Temple and Tomb: Prehistoric Malta, 3600 - 2500 BCE
Located between southern Italy and the northern coast of Africa, the Maltese archipelago was home to an astonishing and artistically rich prehistoric culture...
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Prehistoric Pigs - Zug
Band: Prehistoric Pig
Song: Zug
Album: Marijuanaut Vol.I
Year: 2014
From: Mortegliano, Italy
Genre: Stoner, Instromental, Psych, Rock
http://doommabbestia.bandcamp.com/album/marijuanaut-vol-i-cd2
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Prehistoric Pigs - Hypnodope
Everything is Good 2015
https://thesmokinggoatrecords.bandcamp.com/album/everything-is-good
https://www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs?fref=nf
https://www.facebook.com/Thesmokingoat
Instrumental Psycho Stoner Rock from Italy
-uploaded in HD at http://www.TunesToTube.com
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Prehistoric Pigs - Everything Is Good II
Everything is Good 2015
https://thesmokinggoatrecords.bandcamp.com/album/everything-is-good
https://www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs?fref=nf
https://www.facebook.com/Thesmokingoat
Instrumental Psycho Stoner Rock from Italy
-uploaded in HD at http://www.TunesToTube.com
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prehistoric
The dinosaur roar heralds the certification of Prehistoric for Comma 6A Italy. The life of the virgin forest is saturated with wild events. The main characters are the first two of the human kind. They play the eternal game of love, treasures and fortune.
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Top 5 Travel Attractions, Milan (Italy) - Travel Guide
Take a tour of Top 5 Travel Attractions of Milan, Italy - part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats.
Hi, this is your travel host, Naomi. I would like to guide you the the top five attractions of Milan.
#5: Victorio Emanuele Gallery - a 19th century arcade and an iconic landmark of Milan. Its architecture a feast for eyes.
#4: Orta San Giulio - Situated on the picturesque Lake
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Prehistoric Lovers
A Movie I made about the couple found in Italy, me and a friends project in English class!
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Prehistoric Pigs - "Prehistoric Pigs once ruled the world"
We're a stoner rock band from Udine, Italy. http://www.facebook.com/pages/PrehistoricPigs http://www.myspace.com/prehistoricpigs We are Prehistoric Pigs. We ...
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Prehistoric Pigs - "XXI century riots" live @ Shack Club
Prehistoric Pigs live @ Shack Club, Codroipo (UD) Italy, 26/10/2012 Song: XXI century riots Album: Wormhole Generator www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs.
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UAV-based topographic surveying at Punta di Zambrone (Italy)
2014 CHNT Video Award - Vote if you like it!
Marco BLOCK-BERLITZ / Reinhard JUNG / Marco PACCIARELLI
(University of Applied Sciences Dresden, Germany / Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Austria / University degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, Italy)
Abstract:
This video showcases the use of UAVs for recording the prehistoric (Bronze Age) site at Punta di Zambrone, Italy (http://www.pun
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Prehistoric Pigs - " Suburban Revolution "
We're a stoner rock band from Udine, Italy. http://www.facebook.com/pages/PrehistoricPigs http://www.myspace.com/prehistoricpigs We are Prehistoric Pigs. We ...
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Matera italy
Matera is a town and a province in the region of Basilicata, in southern Italy. It is the capital of the province of Matera. Apart from an economy which has ...
-
Full Documentary Films Sex in the Ancient World Addict HD Official
We Share Information Only For Educational Purposes
Watch More , Like & Subscribe To Our Channel :
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdn1NDwAPSgxKQmrxGVPCyw
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Prehistoric Pigs - "Entelodonts" live @ Shack Club
Prehistoric Pigs Live @ Shack Club, Codroipo (UD) Italy, 26/10/2012 Song: Entelodonts Album: Wormhole Generator.
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UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Italy | Part 2
Thanks for watching....
Late Baroque Towns of the Val di Noto (South-Eastern Sicily)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val_di_Noto
Longobards in Italy. Places of the power (568-774 A.D.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longobards_in_Italy,_Places_of_Power_(568%E2%80%93774_A.D.)
Mantua and Sabbioneta
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantua
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabbioneta
Medici Villas and Garden
Oldest traces of blood found in Italy's prehistoric iceman
May 2 - Scientists examining the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric iceman who roamed the Alps some 5300 years ago, have discovered what they believe to b......
May 2 - Scientists examining the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric iceman who roamed the Alps some 5300 years ago, have discovered what they believe to b...
wn.com/Oldest Traces Of Blood Found In Italy's Prehistoric Iceman
May 2 - Scientists examining the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric iceman who roamed the Alps some 5300 years ago, have discovered what they believe to b...
The oldest traces of blood found in Italy's prehistoric iceman 2012
for more science and technology discoveries visit this website: www.gstdiscovery.yolasite.com Scientists examining the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric i......
for more science and technology discoveries visit this website: www.gstdiscovery.yolasite.com Scientists examining the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric i...
wn.com/The Oldest Traces Of Blood Found In Italy's Prehistoric Iceman 2012
for more science and technology discoveries visit this website: www.gstdiscovery.yolasite.com Scientists examining the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric i...
Travel Italy - Prehistoric Valcamonica Rock Drawings in Lombardy Alps
Take a tour of Valcamonica Rock Drawings, Italy - part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats. Hi, I am Naomi and I am very excited to show y......
Take a tour of Valcamonica Rock Drawings, Italy - part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats. Hi, I am Naomi and I am very excited to show y...
wn.com/Travel Italy Prehistoric Valcamonica Rock Drawings In Lombardy Alps
Take a tour of Valcamonica Rock Drawings, Italy - part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats. Hi, I am Naomi and I am very excited to show y...
- published: 09 Sep 2010
- views: 632
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author: geobeats
Red Fang - Prehistoric Dog live livorno The Cage
Red Fang - Prehistoric Dog live livorno The Cage...
Red Fang - Prehistoric Dog live livorno The Cage
wn.com/Red Fang Prehistoric Dog Live Livorno The Cage
Red Fang - Prehistoric Dog live livorno The Cage
- published: 01 Feb 2014
- views: 357
Italian prehistoric iceman's blood found
Scientists say they have found what is believed to be the oldest traces of human blood ever.
The blood cells were found on the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehist...
Scientists say they have found what is believed to be the oldest traces of human blood ever.
The blood cells were found on the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric iceman who roamed the Alps 53-hundred years ago. Scientists used an atomic force microscope to examine a wound on Otzi that caused his death. They say the red blood cells found on the wound are similar to modern-day samples and show their ability to survive for thousands of years. The discovery may help lead to a more precise determination of the age of blood spots in crime investigations.
wn.com/Italian Prehistoric Iceman's Blood Found
Scientists say they have found what is believed to be the oldest traces of human blood ever.
The blood cells were found on the remains of Otzi, Italy's prehistoric iceman who roamed the Alps 53-hundred years ago. Scientists used an atomic force microscope to examine a wound on Otzi that caused his death. They say the red blood cells found on the wound are similar to modern-day samples and show their ability to survive for thousands of years. The discovery may help lead to a more precise determination of the age of blood spots in crime investigations.
- published: 03 May 2012
- views: 437
Sassi di Matera - Italy
The Sassi di Matera (meaning "stones of Matera") - prehistoric cave dwellings in the Italian city of Matera, Basilicata....
The Sassi di Matera (meaning "stones of Matera") - prehistoric cave dwellings in the Italian city of Matera, Basilicata.
wn.com/Sassi Di Matera Italy
The Sassi di Matera (meaning "stones of Matera") - prehistoric cave dwellings in the Italian city of Matera, Basilicata.
- published: 29 Aug 2010
- views: 3115
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author: Keeh2102
Temple and Tomb: Prehistoric Malta, 3600 - 2500 BCE
Located between southern Italy and the northern coast of Africa, the Maltese archipelago was home to an astonishing and artistically rich prehistoric culture......
Located between southern Italy and the northern coast of Africa, the Maltese archipelago was home to an astonishing and artistically rich prehistoric culture...
wn.com/Temple And Tomb Prehistoric Malta, 3600 2500 Bce
Located between southern Italy and the northern coast of Africa, the Maltese archipelago was home to an astonishing and artistically rich prehistoric culture...
Prehistoric Pigs - Zug
Band: Prehistoric Pig
Song: Zug
Album: Marijuanaut Vol.I
Year: 2014
From: Mortegliano, Italy
Genre: Stoner, Instromental, Psych, Rock
http://doommabbestia.ban...
Band: Prehistoric Pig
Song: Zug
Album: Marijuanaut Vol.I
Year: 2014
From: Mortegliano, Italy
Genre: Stoner, Instromental, Psych, Rock
http://doommabbestia.bandcamp.com/album/marijuanaut-vol-i-cd2
wn.com/Prehistoric Pigs Zug
Band: Prehistoric Pig
Song: Zug
Album: Marijuanaut Vol.I
Year: 2014
From: Mortegliano, Italy
Genre: Stoner, Instromental, Psych, Rock
http://doommabbestia.bandcamp.com/album/marijuanaut-vol-i-cd2
- published: 21 Jan 2015
- views: 82
Prehistoric Pigs - Hypnodope
Everything is Good 2015
https://thesmokinggoatrecords.bandcamp.com/album/everything-is-good
https://www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs?fref=nf
https://www.face...
Everything is Good 2015
https://thesmokinggoatrecords.bandcamp.com/album/everything-is-good
https://www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs?fref=nf
https://www.facebook.com/Thesmokingoat
Instrumental Psycho Stoner Rock from Italy
-uploaded in HD at http://www.TunesToTube.com
wn.com/Prehistoric Pigs Hypnodope
Everything is Good 2015
https://thesmokinggoatrecords.bandcamp.com/album/everything-is-good
https://www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs?fref=nf
https://www.facebook.com/Thesmokingoat
Instrumental Psycho Stoner Rock from Italy
-uploaded in HD at http://www.TunesToTube.com
- published: 30 Apr 2015
- views: 102
Prehistoric Pigs - Everything Is Good II
Everything is Good 2015
https://thesmokinggoatrecords.bandcamp.com/album/everything-is-good
https://www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs?fref=nf
https://www.face...
Everything is Good 2015
https://thesmokinggoatrecords.bandcamp.com/album/everything-is-good
https://www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs?fref=nf
https://www.facebook.com/Thesmokingoat
Instrumental Psycho Stoner Rock from Italy
-uploaded in HD at http://www.TunesToTube.com
wn.com/Prehistoric Pigs Everything Is Good Ii
Everything is Good 2015
https://thesmokinggoatrecords.bandcamp.com/album/everything-is-good
https://www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs?fref=nf
https://www.facebook.com/Thesmokingoat
Instrumental Psycho Stoner Rock from Italy
-uploaded in HD at http://www.TunesToTube.com
- published: 30 Apr 2015
- views: 212
prehistoric
The dinosaur roar heralds the certification of Prehistoric for Comma 6A Italy. The life of the virgin forest is saturated with wild events. The main characters ...
The dinosaur roar heralds the certification of Prehistoric for Comma 6A Italy. The life of the virgin forest is saturated with wild events. The main characters are the first two of the human kind. They play the eternal game of love, treasures and fortune.
wn.com/Prehistoric
The dinosaur roar heralds the certification of Prehistoric for Comma 6A Italy. The life of the virgin forest is saturated with wild events. The main characters are the first two of the human kind. They play the eternal game of love, treasures and fortune.
- published: 07 Nov 2013
- views: 4
Top 5 Travel Attractions, Milan (Italy) - Travel Guide
Take a tour of Top 5 Travel Attractions of Milan, Italy - part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats.
Hi, this is your travel host, Naomi. I w...
Take a tour of Top 5 Travel Attractions of Milan, Italy - part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats.
Hi, this is your travel host, Naomi. I would like to guide you the the top five attractions of Milan.
#5: Victorio Emanuele Gallery - a 19th century arcade and an iconic landmark of Milan. Its architecture a feast for eyes.
#4: Orta San Giulio - Situated on the picturesque Lake Orta about 50 miles from Milan, this is a storybook Italian town.useum showcases Finland's history from prehistoric to present times.
#3: Santa Maria Delle Grazie or Holy Mary of Grace - an over 500 year-old church. It houses Leonardo Da Vinci's The Last Supper.
#2: Castello Sforzesco - Originally built in 1368, the castle is steeped in history. Artifacts hundreds of years old are on display in its museums.
#1: The Duomo - the largest gothic cathedral in the world. Commissioned over 600 years ago, it is amongst the world's most famous buildings.
Thank you for watching our travel video series. See you next time.
wn.com/Top 5 Travel Attractions, Milan (Italy) Travel Guide
Take a tour of Top 5 Travel Attractions of Milan, Italy - part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats.
Hi, this is your travel host, Naomi. I would like to guide you the the top five attractions of Milan.
#5: Victorio Emanuele Gallery - a 19th century arcade and an iconic landmark of Milan. Its architecture a feast for eyes.
#4: Orta San Giulio - Situated on the picturesque Lake Orta about 50 miles from Milan, this is a storybook Italian town.useum showcases Finland's history from prehistoric to present times.
#3: Santa Maria Delle Grazie or Holy Mary of Grace - an over 500 year-old church. It houses Leonardo Da Vinci's The Last Supper.
#2: Castello Sforzesco - Originally built in 1368, the castle is steeped in history. Artifacts hundreds of years old are on display in its museums.
#1: The Duomo - the largest gothic cathedral in the world. Commissioned over 600 years ago, it is amongst the world's most famous buildings.
Thank you for watching our travel video series. See you next time.
- published: 15 Jul 2010
- views: 62476
Prehistoric Lovers
A Movie I made about the couple found in Italy, me and a friends project in English class!...
A Movie I made about the couple found in Italy, me and a friends project in English class!
wn.com/Prehistoric Lovers
A Movie I made about the couple found in Italy, me and a friends project in English class!
- published: 21 Feb 2007
- views: 305
-
author: Maria F
Prehistoric Pigs - "Prehistoric Pigs once ruled the world"
We're a stoner rock band from Udine, Italy. http://www.facebook.com/pages/PrehistoricPigs http://www.myspace.com/prehistoricpigs We are Prehistoric Pigs. We ......
We're a stoner rock band from Udine, Italy. http://www.facebook.com/pages/PrehistoricPigs http://www.myspace.com/prehistoricpigs We are Prehistoric Pigs. We ...
wn.com/Prehistoric Pigs Prehistoric Pigs Once Ruled The World
We're a stoner rock band from Udine, Italy. http://www.facebook.com/pages/PrehistoricPigs http://www.myspace.com/prehistoricpigs We are Prehistoric Pigs. We ...
Prehistoric Pigs - "XXI century riots" live @ Shack Club
Prehistoric Pigs live @ Shack Club, Codroipo (UD) Italy, 26/10/2012 Song: XXI century riots Album: Wormhole Generator www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs....
Prehistoric Pigs live @ Shack Club, Codroipo (UD) Italy, 26/10/2012 Song: XXI century riots Album: Wormhole Generator www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs.
wn.com/Prehistoric Pigs Xxi Century Riots Live Shack Club
Prehistoric Pigs live @ Shack Club, Codroipo (UD) Italy, 26/10/2012 Song: XXI century riots Album: Wormhole Generator www.facebook.com/PrehistoricPigs.
UAV-based topographic surveying at Punta di Zambrone (Italy)
2014 CHNT Video Award - Vote if you like it!
Marco BLOCK-BERLITZ / Reinhard JUNG / Marco PACCIARELLI
(University of Applied Sciences Dresden, Germany / Österre...
2014 CHNT Video Award - Vote if you like it!
Marco BLOCK-BERLITZ / Reinhard JUNG / Marco PACCIARELLI
(University of Applied Sciences Dresden, Germany / Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Austria / University degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, Italy)
Abstract:
This video showcases the use of UAVs for recording the prehistoric (Bronze Age) site at Punta di Zambrone, Italy (http://www.puntazambrone.com/it/). A coastal site with some striking topography, Punta di Zambrona provides a challenge for ultra-light aerial vehicles, due to strong thermal winds. Another problem was the positioning of georeferencing markers with sufficient visual exposure in the rugged terrain. Nevertheless, the robust UAV technology proved its worth and produced some spectacular video footage from which we were able to reconstruct detailed and stunning 3D models of the site and its surroundings.
CHNT - Vienna | Conference on Cultural Heritage an New Technologies
November 3 - 5, 2014 | Vienna, Austria - http://www.chnt.at
CHNT Video Award - supported by 7reasons - http://www.7reasons.at
wn.com/Uav Based Topographic Surveying At Punta Di Zambrone (Italy)
2014 CHNT Video Award - Vote if you like it!
Marco BLOCK-BERLITZ / Reinhard JUNG / Marco PACCIARELLI
(University of Applied Sciences Dresden, Germany / Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Austria / University degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, Italy)
Abstract:
This video showcases the use of UAVs for recording the prehistoric (Bronze Age) site at Punta di Zambrone, Italy (http://www.puntazambrone.com/it/). A coastal site with some striking topography, Punta di Zambrona provides a challenge for ultra-light aerial vehicles, due to strong thermal winds. Another problem was the positioning of georeferencing markers with sufficient visual exposure in the rugged terrain. Nevertheless, the robust UAV technology proved its worth and produced some spectacular video footage from which we were able to reconstruct detailed and stunning 3D models of the site and its surroundings.
CHNT - Vienna | Conference on Cultural Heritage an New Technologies
November 3 - 5, 2014 | Vienna, Austria - http://www.chnt.at
CHNT Video Award - supported by 7reasons - http://www.7reasons.at
- published: 27 Oct 2014
- views: 6
Prehistoric Pigs - " Suburban Revolution "
We're a stoner rock band from Udine, Italy. http://www.facebook.com/pages/PrehistoricPigs http://www.myspace.com/prehistoricpigs We are Prehistoric Pigs. We ......
We're a stoner rock band from Udine, Italy. http://www.facebook.com/pages/PrehistoricPigs http://www.myspace.com/prehistoricpigs We are Prehistoric Pigs. We ...
wn.com/Prehistoric Pigs Suburban Revolution
We're a stoner rock band from Udine, Italy. http://www.facebook.com/pages/PrehistoricPigs http://www.myspace.com/prehistoricpigs We are Prehistoric Pigs. We ...
Matera italy
Matera is a town and a province in the region of Basilicata, in southern Italy. It is the capital of the province of Matera. Apart from an economy which has ......
Matera is a town and a province in the region of Basilicata, in southern Italy. It is the capital of the province of Matera. Apart from an economy which has ...
wn.com/Matera Italy
Matera is a town and a province in the region of Basilicata, in southern Italy. It is the capital of the province of Matera. Apart from an economy which has ...
Full Documentary Films Sex in the Ancient World Addict HD Official
We Share Information Only For Educational Purposes
Watch More , Like & Subscribe To Our Channel :
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdn1NDwAPSgxKQmrxGVPCyw...
We Share Information Only For Educational Purposes
Watch More , Like & Subscribe To Our Channel :
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdn1NDwAPSgxKQmrxGVPCyw
wn.com/Full Documentary Films Sex In The Ancient World Addict Hd Official
We Share Information Only For Educational Purposes
Watch More , Like & Subscribe To Our Channel :
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdn1NDwAPSgxKQmrxGVPCyw
- published: 24 Apr 2015
- views: 0
Prehistoric Pigs - "Entelodonts" live @ Shack Club
Prehistoric Pigs Live @ Shack Club, Codroipo (UD) Italy, 26/10/2012 Song: Entelodonts Album: Wormhole Generator....
Prehistoric Pigs Live @ Shack Club, Codroipo (UD) Italy, 26/10/2012 Song: Entelodonts Album: Wormhole Generator.
wn.com/Prehistoric Pigs Entelodonts Live Shack Club
Prehistoric Pigs Live @ Shack Club, Codroipo (UD) Italy, 26/10/2012 Song: Entelodonts Album: Wormhole Generator.
UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Italy | Part 2
Thanks for watching....
Late Baroque Towns of the Val di Noto (South-Eastern Sicily)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val_di_Noto
Longobards in Italy. Places of t...
Thanks for watching....
Late Baroque Towns of the Val di Noto (South-Eastern Sicily)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val_di_Noto
Longobards in Italy. Places of the power (568-774 A.D.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longobards_in_Italy,_Places_of_Power_(568%E2%80%93774_A.D.)
Mantua and Sabbioneta
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantua
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabbioneta
Medici Villas and Gardens in Tuscany
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medici_villas
Monte San Giorgio
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monte_San_Giorgio
Mount Etna
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Etna
Piazza del Duomo, Pisa
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piazza_dei_Miracoli
Portovenere, Cinque Terre, and the Islands (Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porto_Venere
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinque_Terre
Prehistoric pile dwellings around the Alps
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_pile_dwellings_around_the_Alps
Residences of the Royal House of Savoy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residences_of_the_Royal_House_of_Savoy
Rhaetian Railway in the Albula / Bernina Landscapes
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhaetian_Railway
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernina_railway
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albula_Railway
Rock Drawings in Valcamonica
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_Drawings_in_Valcamonica
Sacri Monti of Piedmont and Lombardy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacri_Monti_of_Piedmont_and_Lombardy
Su Nuraxi (Barumini)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Su_Nuraxi_(Barumini)
Syracuse and the Rocky Necropolis of Pantalica
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syracuse,_Sicily
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necropolis_of_Pantalica
Dolomites
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolomites
The Sassi and the Park of the Rupestrian Churches of Matera
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sassi_di_Matera
The Trulli of Alberobello
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trullo
Traditional agricultural practice of cultivating the ‘vite ad alberello’ (head-trained bush vines) of the community of Pantelleria
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pantelleria
Val d'Orcia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val_d%27Orcia
Venice and its Lagoon
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venice
Villa Adriana (Tivoli)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadrian%27s_Villa
Villa d'Este, Tivoli
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_d%27Este
Villa Romana del Casale
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Romana_del_Casale
Vineyard Landscape of Piedmont: Langhe-Roero and Monferrato
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vineyard_Landscape_of_Piedmont:_Langhe-Roero_and_Monferrato
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_Heritage_Sites_in_Italy
Music: Dark Step,Silent Partner; YouTube Audio Library
A UNESCO World Heritage Site is a place (such as a forest, mountain, lake, island, desert, monument, building, complex, or city) that is listed by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as of special cultural or physical significance . The list is maintained by the international World Heritage Programme administered by the UNESCO World Heritage Committee, composed of 21 UNESCO member states which are elected by the General Assembly.
The programme catalogues, names, and conserves sites of outstanding cultural or natural importance to the common heritage of humanity. Under certain conditions, listed sites can obtain funds from the World Heritage Fund. The programme was founded with the Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage, which was adopted by the General Conference of UNESCO on 16 November 1972. Since then, 191 states parties have ratified the Convention, making it one of the most adhered to international instruments. Only Liechtenstein, Nauru, Somalia, South Sudan, Timor-Leste and Tuvalu are not Party to the Convention.
As of 2014, 1007 sites are listed: 779 cultural, 197 natural, and 31 mixed properties, in 161 states parties. By sites ranked by country, Italy is home to the greatest number of World Heritage Sites with 57 sites, followed by China (47), Spain (44), France (39), Germany (39), Mexico (32) and India (32). UNESCO references each World Heritage Site with an identification number; however, new inscriptions often include previous sites now listed as part of larger descriptions. As a result, the identification numbers exceed 1,200 even though there are fewer on the list.
wn.com/Unesco World Heritage Sites In Italy | Part 2
Thanks for watching....
Late Baroque Towns of the Val di Noto (South-Eastern Sicily)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val_di_Noto
Longobards in Italy. Places of the power (568-774 A.D.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longobards_in_Italy,_Places_of_Power_(568%E2%80%93774_A.D.)
Mantua and Sabbioneta
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantua
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabbioneta
Medici Villas and Gardens in Tuscany
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medici_villas
Monte San Giorgio
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monte_San_Giorgio
Mount Etna
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Etna
Piazza del Duomo, Pisa
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piazza_dei_Miracoli
Portovenere, Cinque Terre, and the Islands (Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porto_Venere
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinque_Terre
Prehistoric pile dwellings around the Alps
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_pile_dwellings_around_the_Alps
Residences of the Royal House of Savoy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Residences_of_the_Royal_House_of_Savoy
Rhaetian Railway in the Albula / Bernina Landscapes
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhaetian_Railway
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernina_railway
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albula_Railway
Rock Drawings in Valcamonica
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rock_Drawings_in_Valcamonica
Sacri Monti of Piedmont and Lombardy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacri_Monti_of_Piedmont_and_Lombardy
Su Nuraxi (Barumini)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Su_Nuraxi_(Barumini)
Syracuse and the Rocky Necropolis of Pantalica
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syracuse,_Sicily
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necropolis_of_Pantalica
Dolomites
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolomites
The Sassi and the Park of the Rupestrian Churches of Matera
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sassi_di_Matera
The Trulli of Alberobello
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trullo
Traditional agricultural practice of cultivating the ‘vite ad alberello’ (head-trained bush vines) of the community of Pantelleria
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pantelleria
Val d'Orcia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Val_d%27Orcia
Venice and its Lagoon
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venice
Villa Adriana (Tivoli)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadrian%27s_Villa
Villa d'Este, Tivoli
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_d%27Este
Villa Romana del Casale
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Romana_del_Casale
Vineyard Landscape of Piedmont: Langhe-Roero and Monferrato
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vineyard_Landscape_of_Piedmont:_Langhe-Roero_and_Monferrato
Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_Heritage_Sites_in_Italy
Music: Dark Step,Silent Partner; YouTube Audio Library
A UNESCO World Heritage Site is a place (such as a forest, mountain, lake, island, desert, monument, building, complex, or city) that is listed by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as of special cultural or physical significance . The list is maintained by the international World Heritage Programme administered by the UNESCO World Heritage Committee, composed of 21 UNESCO member states which are elected by the General Assembly.
The programme catalogues, names, and conserves sites of outstanding cultural or natural importance to the common heritage of humanity. Under certain conditions, listed sites can obtain funds from the World Heritage Fund. The programme was founded with the Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage, which was adopted by the General Conference of UNESCO on 16 November 1972. Since then, 191 states parties have ratified the Convention, making it one of the most adhered to international instruments. Only Liechtenstein, Nauru, Somalia, South Sudan, Timor-Leste and Tuvalu are not Party to the Convention.
As of 2014, 1007 sites are listed: 779 cultural, 197 natural, and 31 mixed properties, in 161 states parties. By sites ranked by country, Italy is home to the greatest number of World Heritage Sites with 57 sites, followed by China (47), Spain (44), France (39), Germany (39), Mexico (32) and India (32). UNESCO references each World Heritage Site with an identification number; however, new inscriptions often include previous sites now listed as part of larger descriptions. As a result, the identification numbers exceed 1,200 even though there are fewer on the list.
- published: 22 Jul 2015
- views: 0
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Italia Travel Guide
From Tuscany to Rome and the Alps to Venice and Sicily, Italy is an historic gem set within a world of culture and good wine!
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Rome in a nutshell city guide for first-time visitors
City guide of Rome for first-time visitors.
A trip to the Eternal City can be eternally confusing for first-time visitors. This guide will make it easier to uncover Rome, offering lots of practical advice that will help you discover and enjoy the city in all its glory.
More informations on: http://www.italyguides.it/us/roma/rome_italy_travel.htm
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You can use the Youtube HTML code to emb
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Italy Travel Skills
In this Italy travel skills talk, you'll almost be able to smell the linguini and taste the vino rosso as Rick explores enchanting Italian cities and countryside. More Italy travel tips: http://www.ricksteves.com/travel-tips
At http://www.ricksteves.com, you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
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FOOTLOOSE IN ITALY III ~ HD travel guide video 3 Naples Sorrento Amalfi Coast Capri
Extract from our new 150 minute Italian travelogue, find it on AMAZON UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00NUH71M0 Debra and cameraman husband David Rixon make a Grand Tour in the Campania region. Find travel details and much more at http://www.footloose.tv/FLE/ITALY3sorrentoholiday.htm.
Features a city tour of Naples, visits to Ischia Vesuvius and Pompeii.
Chapter 2 is Sorrento and fabulous walki
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Rome, Italy Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions and Tips
http://bookinghunter.com
Rome is one of the most romantic places on Earth, where you can easily enjoy a unique historical ambience, surrounded by a colourful abundance of nature, restaurants, cozy cafeterias and countless amusements. Moreover, the capital city of Italy offers a perfect fit for everyone`s taste and style to enjoy an unforgettable experience.
The most important places to visit in
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Florence, Italy Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Florence is one of the most attractive cities in this part of Italy and has many tourist delights. A Renaissance City this is in the middle of Tuscany and has some of the best cathedrals, museums, streets and squares and churches and shops and buildings.
The most important places to visit in Florence are: Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore adn Galleria Degli Uffizi.
Thi
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Rome Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
As legend has it, Rome, Italy, was founded by the twin brothers, Romulus and Remus, in 700 B.C. The former Caput Mundi, or Capital of the World, sits beneath Palatine Hill, where the ruins of its original incarnation are open for exploration.
No Rome tour is complete without stopping by the remains of the Temple of Saturn and Arch of Septimus, both located in the Roman Forum. Get in touch with yo
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Italy's Riviera: Cinque Terre
Exploring Italy’s most remote and romantic stretch of Riviera, we visit five tiny port towns: dramatic Vernazza, surrounded by vineyards; reclusive Corniglia, high on its bluff; pastel Manarola; hardscrabble Riomaggiore; and the pint-sized resort of Monterosso. Fishing for anchovies, sipping wine out of rustic barrels, and savoring twinkling Mediterranean vistas, we enjoy the ultimate Riviera adve
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Roma Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Roma in Italy.
Roma Aeterna, eternal city and ancient centre of the world.
The Piazza Navona is situated in one of the Italian capital's most beautiful squares in a city that has always been a dream destination for travelers from all over the world. Three large fountains adorn the large oval square that was built above the ruins of a Domitian stadium that dates back
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Tips for travel in Italy - The 5 cultural differences every tourist should know!
Learn more about the Italian culture of Bella Figura and Brutta Figura on our blog: http://www.strommeninc.com/5+things+you+should+never+do+in+Italy
More lessons and videos for Italian:
http://www.strommeninc.com/blog/categ
The 5 things you should never do in Italy! We made this video because these are a few things that people can find interesting about Italian culture. While American's love ic
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20 Things to do in Milan, Italy Travel Guide
Well, welcome to Italy! This week we're exploring the fashion capital of Europe. We're here in Milan. But of course there is more to do in Milan than just go shopping. So we're going to be showing you 20 attractions around town.
We had 3 days in Milan so we hit the ground running and tried to see and do as much as possible. We made time for major attractions like Il Duomo, Sforza Castle, and Gall
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Florence in a nutshell HD - 1 of 2 - city guide for first-time visitors in Italy - travel guide
Italy travel guide: Florence, small and immense and at the same time, is an open air museum grown more beautiful over the centuries; a treasure chest enclosed by ancient walls that safeguard grandiose masterworks of art and architecture so close that you can almost touch them.
More informations on:
http://www.italyguides.it/us/florence/florence_italy.htm
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Italy travel advice - smartraveller.gov.au
Jenny from the Australian Embassy in Rome provides advice to Australians on how to have a safe and hassle-free visit to Italy.
Visit http://smartraveller.gov.au/Advice/Italy for more information.
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Vatican City, Italy - Travel Guide
Take a tour of Vatican City in Italy -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats.
Hey, this is your host, Naomi. I would like to give you a tour of the top five attractions of Vatican City.
Number five: St. Peter's Square. Vatican City is the home of the Pope. In a small area you'll find many attractions, like the St. Peter's Square where many ceremonies are held.
Number fo
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Travel guide video: 10 things you need do in Tuscany, Italy
when I first saw the "Under the tucsan Sun trailer" I knew that I need to discover Toscana or Tuscany as the Italian folk says (Travel Channel Tuscany)... today after visiting Rome, Bologna, Genova, Sardinia, Florence, Verona, Venezia, Firenze, Pisa, Siena, Livorno, Padova, Viareggio, Lucca, Volterra, Chianti Barberino val de Elsa and San Gimignano ...so I decided to create this travel guide video
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5 travel tips for Rome, Italy
Things we learnt from our maiden trip to Rome, which we hope will make the difference for your visit too! :-)
Recent blogposts/pictures:
1) Travel Rome: Getting there, what to expect, how much to budget, where to stay? http://www.hannahtan.com/journal/2014/12/our-honeymoon-romancing-rome-part-1/
2) Handling the Honeymoon Horror: 4 Things to consider when planning your trip http://www.hannahtan.
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Travel Guide to Milan, Italy
http://bestflights.co.za/europe/italy/milan - Visit for more information on Milan, Italy.
Milan, the second largest city in Italy, is a thriving cosmopolitan business capital and the center of cultural and tourist activities. The main industries of Milan are textiles, the manufacture of cars, machinery, chemicals and paper-making.
What to see / do:
There are a great variety of things to do and s
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A Trip to Venice - English Travel Guide HD
Please subscribe my channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/killerwalcom
Come join me on my trip to the beautiful city of Venice in Italy, which is considered t be one of the greatest tourist attractions in the world.
Veneice is a city in the north eastern part of the italian country right at the Adriatic within the province of Venetia and is often called La Serenissima.
The city counts 270.884 in
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Travel Guide -- Rome, Italy
http://WatchMojo.com/ - A quick look at the city of Rome, Italy, what to see and where to go if you are visiting. For more travel guides visit http://www.WatchMojo.com!
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Travel, Vacation Italy | Tuscany, Amalfi Coast HD
Travel, Vacation, Tourism Italy | Tuscany, Amalfi Coast HD
World Travel https://www.youtube.com/user/World1Tube
Rome, Chianciano, Sorrento http://youtu.be/SHSbo-lbPn4
Travel to Italy and experience Tuscany and Amalfi from your base at these two legendary locales, and enjoy unique included features such as a guided tour of Rome.
Tuscany & the Amalfi Coast
Rome • Chianciano • Sorrento
Watch a video
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2 DAYS IN GENOA, ITALY - A TRAVEL GUIDE
For more aerial drone shots of Genoa, please see Stefano McCoy's channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsgQjacVyrNWo5vSmjsdAzQ
The gritty maze of the medieval city that makes up the core of Genoa is both beauty and the beast. The grandeur and heritage of this once great trading city lives side by side with modern vice and decrepitude. The odious smelling alleys give way to modern and chic re
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Top Ten Things to Do in Venice, Italy by Donna Salerno Travel
Venice Top Ten Things to Do, by Donna Salerno Travel
Join us for the highlights of Venice, Italy including the Grand Canal, St. Mark's Square (Piazza San Marco), Saint Mark's Basilica, Doge's Palace, Campanile di San Marco, Rialto Bridge, Gondola ride, Teatro La Fenice, Murano Glass, Shopping and Dining in this romantic city.
Contact us for all your vacation needs and visit DonnaSalernoTravel.co
Italia Travel Guide
From Tuscany to Rome and the Alps to Venice and Sicily, Italy is an historic gem set within a world of culture and good wine!...
From Tuscany to Rome and the Alps to Venice and Sicily, Italy is an historic gem set within a world of culture and good wine!
wn.com/Italia Travel Guide
From Tuscany to Rome and the Alps to Venice and Sicily, Italy is an historic gem set within a world of culture and good wine!
- published: 14 Aug 2013
- views: 131
Rome in a nutshell city guide for first-time visitors
City guide of Rome for first-time visitors.
A trip to the Eternal City can be eternally confusing for first-time visitors. This guide will make it easier to un...
City guide of Rome for first-time visitors.
A trip to the Eternal City can be eternally confusing for first-time visitors. This guide will make it easier to uncover Rome, offering lots of practical advice that will help you discover and enjoy the city in all its glory.
More informations on: http://www.italyguides.it/us/roma/rome_italy_travel.htm
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You can use the Youtube HTML code to embed that video in your webpage or blog if you like it.
wn.com/Rome In A Nutshell City Guide For First Time Visitors
City guide of Rome for first-time visitors.
A trip to the Eternal City can be eternally confusing for first-time visitors. This guide will make it easier to uncover Rome, offering lots of practical advice that will help you discover and enjoy the city in all its glory.
More informations on: http://www.italyguides.it/us/roma/rome_italy_travel.htm
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You can use the Youtube HTML code to embed that video in your webpage or blog if you like it.
- published: 20 Mar 2009
- views: 639586
Italy Travel Skills
In this Italy travel skills talk, you'll almost be able to smell the linguini and taste the vino rosso as Rick explores enchanting Italian cities and countrysid...
In this Italy travel skills talk, you'll almost be able to smell the linguini and taste the vino rosso as Rick explores enchanting Italian cities and countryside. More Italy travel tips: http://www.ricksteves.com/travel-tips
At http://www.ricksteves.com, you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
wn.com/Italy Travel Skills
In this Italy travel skills talk, you'll almost be able to smell the linguini and taste the vino rosso as Rick explores enchanting Italian cities and countryside. More Italy travel tips: http://www.ricksteves.com/travel-tips
At http://www.ricksteves.com, you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
- published: 07 Feb 2011
- views: 622323
FOOTLOOSE IN ITALY III ~ HD travel guide video 3 Naples Sorrento Amalfi Coast Capri
Extract from our new 150 minute Italian travelogue, find it on AMAZON UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00NUH71M0 Debra and cameraman husband David Rixon make a ...
Extract from our new 150 minute Italian travelogue, find it on AMAZON UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00NUH71M0 Debra and cameraman husband David Rixon make a Grand Tour in the Campania region. Find travel details and much more at http://www.footloose.tv/FLE/ITALY3sorrentoholiday.htm.
Features a city tour of Naples, visits to Ischia Vesuvius and Pompeii.
Chapter 2 is Sorrento and fabulous walking on the peninsula.
Chapter 3 is the Amalfi coast featuring a cookery lesson at Positano, the paper museum at Amalfi and the gardens of Villas Rufolo and Cimbrone at Positano
Chapter 4 is a panoramic coastal trail of Capri and its town, featuring Villa Jovis, Anacapri and the Blue Grotto. Part of the Footloose in Europe series. Music by Barnaby Smith. Homage to Rick Steves Europe.
wn.com/Footloose In Italy Iii ~ Hd Travel Guide Video 3 Naples Sorrento Amalfi Coast Capri
Extract from our new 150 minute Italian travelogue, find it on AMAZON UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00NUH71M0 Debra and cameraman husband David Rixon make a Grand Tour in the Campania region. Find travel details and much more at http://www.footloose.tv/FLE/ITALY3sorrentoholiday.htm.
Features a city tour of Naples, visits to Ischia Vesuvius and Pompeii.
Chapter 2 is Sorrento and fabulous walking on the peninsula.
Chapter 3 is the Amalfi coast featuring a cookery lesson at Positano, the paper museum at Amalfi and the gardens of Villas Rufolo and Cimbrone at Positano
Chapter 4 is a panoramic coastal trail of Capri and its town, featuring Villa Jovis, Anacapri and the Blue Grotto. Part of the Footloose in Europe series. Music by Barnaby Smith. Homage to Rick Steves Europe.
- published: 04 Oct 2014
- views: 1241
Rome, Italy Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions and Tips
http://bookinghunter.com
Rome is one of the most romantic places on Earth, where you can easily enjoy a unique historical ambience, surrounded by a colourful a...
http://bookinghunter.com
Rome is one of the most romantic places on Earth, where you can easily enjoy a unique historical ambience, surrounded by a colourful abundance of nature, restaurants, cozy cafeterias and countless amusements. Moreover, the capital city of Italy offers a perfect fit for everyone`s taste and style to enjoy an unforgettable experience.
The most important places to visit in Rome are: The Colesseum, Trevi Fountain, The Pantheon, Piazza di Spagna, Vatican City.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Rome travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
wn.com/Rome, Italy Travel Guide Must See Attractions And Tips
http://bookinghunter.com
Rome is one of the most romantic places on Earth, where you can easily enjoy a unique historical ambience, surrounded by a colourful abundance of nature, restaurants, cozy cafeterias and countless amusements. Moreover, the capital city of Italy offers a perfect fit for everyone`s taste and style to enjoy an unforgettable experience.
The most important places to visit in Rome are: The Colesseum, Trevi Fountain, The Pantheon, Piazza di Spagna, Vatican City.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Rome travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
- published: 27 Mar 2013
- views: 65539
Florence, Italy Travel Guide - Must-See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Florence is one of the most attractive cities in this part of Italy and has many tourist delights. A Renaissance City this is in the m...
http://bookinghunter.com
Florence is one of the most attractive cities in this part of Italy and has many tourist delights. A Renaissance City this is in the middle of Tuscany and has some of the best cathedrals, museums, streets and squares and churches and shops and buildings.
The most important places to visit in Florence are: Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore adn Galleria Degli Uffizi.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Florence travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
Background music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) / Dan-O at DanoSongs.com
wn.com/Florence, Italy Travel Guide Must See Attractions
http://bookinghunter.com
Florence is one of the most attractive cities in this part of Italy and has many tourist delights. A Renaissance City this is in the middle of Tuscany and has some of the best cathedrals, museums, streets and squares and churches and shops and buildings.
The most important places to visit in Florence are: Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore adn Galleria Degli Uffizi.
This video offers a lot of tips to help you plan the perfect vacation. If you want to save time and money, the most important Florence travel tip is to compare prices before booking a hotel room or a flight. You can do this for free on http://bookinghunter.com, a site that searches through hundreds of other travel websites in real time for the best travel deals available.
Background music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) / Dan-O at DanoSongs.com
- published: 22 Feb 2013
- views: 55202
Rome Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
As legend has it, Rome, Italy, was founded by the twin brothers, Romulus and Remus, in 700 B.C. The former Caput Mundi, or Capital of the World, sits beneath Pa...
As legend has it, Rome, Italy, was founded by the twin brothers, Romulus and Remus, in 700 B.C. The former Caput Mundi, or Capital of the World, sits beneath Palatine Hill, where the ruins of its original incarnation are open for exploration.
No Rome tour is complete without stopping by the remains of the Temple of Saturn and Arch of Septimus, both located in the Roman Forum. Get in touch with your inner gladiator and stop by the Colosseum, a relic of Roman bloodsports and perhaps the most recognizable element of the city.
Toss a coin into the Trevi Fountain to ensure you’ll return to Rome one day; don’t toss in two coins unless you’re ready to fall in love with a Roman. Continue your Rome sightseeing in St. Peter’s Square, home of St. Peter’s Basilica. The world’s largest church, designed by Michelangelo, is both a remarkable structure and a tribute to faith. You can look down from the famous dome to the Holy Square, which is usually filled with the faithful looking to obtain a blessing from the Pope. After this, it’s just a few steps to restaurants filled with Italian food. Forget coming back to Rome – you’ll never want to leave.
What’s your favorite memory of Rome?
Visit our Rome travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
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Google+: https://plus.google.com/+Expedia
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Follow us on our travel blog, Viewfinder:
http://viewfinder.expedia.com/
wn.com/Rome Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
As legend has it, Rome, Italy, was founded by the twin brothers, Romulus and Remus, in 700 B.C. The former Caput Mundi, or Capital of the World, sits beneath Palatine Hill, where the ruins of its original incarnation are open for exploration.
No Rome tour is complete without stopping by the remains of the Temple of Saturn and Arch of Septimus, both located in the Roman Forum. Get in touch with your inner gladiator and stop by the Colosseum, a relic of Roman bloodsports and perhaps the most recognizable element of the city.
Toss a coin into the Trevi Fountain to ensure you’ll return to Rome one day; don’t toss in two coins unless you’re ready to fall in love with a Roman. Continue your Rome sightseeing in St. Peter’s Square, home of St. Peter’s Basilica. The world’s largest church, designed by Michelangelo, is both a remarkable structure and a tribute to faith. You can look down from the famous dome to the Holy Square, which is usually filled with the faithful looking to obtain a blessing from the Pope. After this, it’s just a few steps to restaurants filled with Italian food. Forget coming back to Rome – you’ll never want to leave.
What’s your favorite memory of Rome?
Visit our Rome travel guide page for more information or to plan your next vacation!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow us on social media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Expedia
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/expedia
Instagram: http://instagram.com/expedia
Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/Expedia/
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+Expedia
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Follow us on our travel blog, Viewfinder:
http://viewfinder.expedia.com/
- published: 13 May 2013
- views: 215452
Italy's Riviera: Cinque Terre
Exploring Italy’s most remote and romantic stretch of Riviera, we visit five tiny port towns: dramatic Vernazza, surrounded by vineyards; reclusive Corniglia, h...
Exploring Italy’s most remote and romantic stretch of Riviera, we visit five tiny port towns: dramatic Vernazza, surrounded by vineyards; reclusive Corniglia, high on its bluff; pastel Manarola; hardscrabble Riomaggiore; and the pint-sized resort of Monterosso. Fishing for anchovies, sipping wine out of rustic barrels, and savoring twinkling Mediterranean vistas, we enjoy the ultimate Riviera adventure. | © 2014 Rick Steves' Europe
At http://www.ricksteves.com, you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
wn.com/Italy's Riviera Cinque Terre
Exploring Italy’s most remote and romantic stretch of Riviera, we visit five tiny port towns: dramatic Vernazza, surrounded by vineyards; reclusive Corniglia, high on its bluff; pastel Manarola; hardscrabble Riomaggiore; and the pint-sized resort of Monterosso. Fishing for anchovies, sipping wine out of rustic barrels, and savoring twinkling Mediterranean vistas, we enjoy the ultimate Riviera adventure. | © 2014 Rick Steves' Europe
At http://www.ricksteves.com, you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
- published: 10 Oct 2014
- views: 2533
Roma Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Roma in Italy.
Roma Aeterna, eternal city and ancient centre of the world.
The Piazza Navona is situated in one of the Italian c...
Travel video about destination Roma in Italy.
Roma Aeterna, eternal city and ancient centre of the world.
The Piazza Navona is situated in one of the Italian capital's most beautiful squares in a city that has always been a dream destination for travelers from all over the world. Three large fountains adorn the large oval square that was built above the ruins of a Domitian stadium that dates back to the 3rd century A.D.
The Romans had a special regard for fountains, the most famous of which is the Fontana Di Trevi. It was designed by Nicolo Salvi for the façade of the Palazzo Poli.
The Via Appia Antica was the most important street in ancient Rome. It connected the southern area with the main city and even today, one can walk over its ancient cobblestones.
Pope Gregory XIII had the Palazzo Del Quirinale built as his summer residence but it was not long after that the Italian monarchs acquired it as their Renaissance palace. Today it is the residence of Italy's President and the daily changing of the guards ceremony is still a popular attraction.
The 17th century St. Peter's Square is the most beautiful square in the world and is situated in the centre of the Vatican, an autonomous Church State in the heart of Rome that also contains the imposing and breathtaking Petersdom, the largest Christian church in the world.
The allure of this city lies in its combination of chaos and joie de vivre, elegance and creativity. Rome is a complete work of art!
wn.com/Roma Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Roma in Italy.
Roma Aeterna, eternal city and ancient centre of the world.
The Piazza Navona is situated in one of the Italian capital's most beautiful squares in a city that has always been a dream destination for travelers from all over the world. Three large fountains adorn the large oval square that was built above the ruins of a Domitian stadium that dates back to the 3rd century A.D.
The Romans had a special regard for fountains, the most famous of which is the Fontana Di Trevi. It was designed by Nicolo Salvi for the façade of the Palazzo Poli.
The Via Appia Antica was the most important street in ancient Rome. It connected the southern area with the main city and even today, one can walk over its ancient cobblestones.
Pope Gregory XIII had the Palazzo Del Quirinale built as his summer residence but it was not long after that the Italian monarchs acquired it as their Renaissance palace. Today it is the residence of Italy's President and the daily changing of the guards ceremony is still a popular attraction.
The 17th century St. Peter's Square is the most beautiful square in the world and is situated in the centre of the Vatican, an autonomous Church State in the heart of Rome that also contains the imposing and breathtaking Petersdom, the largest Christian church in the world.
The allure of this city lies in its combination of chaos and joie de vivre, elegance and creativity. Rome is a complete work of art!
- published: 13 Aug 2013
- views: 75641
Tips for travel in Italy - The 5 cultural differences every tourist should know!
Learn more about the Italian culture of Bella Figura and Brutta Figura on our blog: http://www.strommeninc.com/5+things+you+should+never+do+in+Italy
More lesson...
Learn more about the Italian culture of Bella Figura and Brutta Figura on our blog: http://www.strommeninc.com/5+things+you+should+never+do+in+Italy
More lessons and videos for Italian:
http://www.strommeninc.com/blog/categ
The 5 things you should never do in Italy! We made this video because these are a few things that people can find interesting about Italian culture. While American's love ice in their drinks Italians... more on the blog: http://www.strommeninc.com/5+things+you+should+never+do+in+Italy
wn.com/Tips For Travel In Italy The 5 Cultural Differences Every Tourist Should Know
Learn more about the Italian culture of Bella Figura and Brutta Figura on our blog: http://www.strommeninc.com/5+things+you+should+never+do+in+Italy
More lessons and videos for Italian:
http://www.strommeninc.com/blog/categ
The 5 things you should never do in Italy! We made this video because these are a few things that people can find interesting about Italian culture. While American's love ice in their drinks Italians... more on the blog: http://www.strommeninc.com/5+things+you+should+never+do+in+Italy
- published: 10 Jan 2014
- views: 25601
20 Things to do in Milan, Italy Travel Guide
Well, welcome to Italy! This week we're exploring the fashion capital of Europe. We're here in Milan. But of course there is more to do in Milan than just go sh...
Well, welcome to Italy! This week we're exploring the fashion capital of Europe. We're here in Milan. But of course there is more to do in Milan than just go shopping. So we're going to be showing you 20 attractions around town.
We had 3 days in Milan so we hit the ground running and tried to see and do as much as possible. We made time for major attractions like Il Duomo, Sforza Castle, and Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, but we also veered away from the crowds in search of street art and interesting neighborhoods. This being Italy, we also tried to prioritize meals, sampling everything from pizza to risotto, and cappuccinos to aperitivos. The following travel guide will highlight 20 things to do when you visit Milan, Italy
1) Milan Catherdral (Il Duomo - Duomo di Milano - Domm de Milan)
2) Il Duomo Terrace
3) Italian Breakfast - Cappuccino and sweet Italian pastries
4) Sforza Castle - Castello Sforzesco
5) The Galleria - Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II
6) Risotto alla Milanese - Milan style risotto
7) Street Art around Porta Ticinese
8) Colonne di San Lorenzo - Columns of San Lorenzo Roman Ruins
9) Boat tour down the canal (linea traghetti gaggiano milano)
10) Dine along the canal in Milan's Navigli District
11) Aperitivo drinks and buffet - Apéritifs and digestifs
12) Shopping in Milan down Via Torino
13) Visiting Chinatown for some Chinese food
14) Ride a bicycle in Milan like a local
15) Pizza al taglio (pizza al trancio) Italian pizza by the slice
16) Basilica of Sant'Eustorgio containing relics of the 3 Magi
17) Duomo Museum covering the cathedrals history in-depth
18) New City Views with a hop-on-hop-off bus pass
19) Museum of Natural History - Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Milano
20) Night views of Milan nearby Il Duomo
Our trip to Milan, Lombardy was part of the Blogville project where we stayed in a local apartment and experienced all of the best cultural activities, museums, restaurants, arts and entertainment the city has to offer. This city guide is our best attempt to create a mix of best attractions and off-the-beaten-path activities that you won't necessarily find in a typical Milan tourism brochure.
20 Things to do in Milan, Italy Travel Guide Video Transcript:
Our first stop was Il Duomo, which is the most recognized attraction in the city. The cathedral took nearly six centuries to complete and the exterior is covered in Candoglia marble, which gives it its off-white pinkish colour.
Now we weren't entirely sure what an Italian breakfast looks like so we did a bit of research and asked around and apparently it is just a coffee and anything sweet. So that could be pastries, bread with jam, cake or cookies. So we've sat down at a little cafe and we're going to have our first Italian breakfast with cappuccino and sweet pastries.
Something that surprised us about Milan is that there is a castle right in the middle of the city. Sforza Castle was built in the 15th century by the Duke of Milan, and it then underwent several restorations and expansions in the following centuries. Today it houses several of the city's most prized art possessions, including frescoes by Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo's very last sculpture.
For some upscale designer shopping, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II is the place to be. It is considered one of the world's oldest and most beautiful shopping malls, and its most impressive feature is an arching glass and cast iron roof.
So we just found a local little restaurant and we're going to be trying a traditional dish that is very popular in this city and in the Lombardy region. We are going to have Risotto alla Milanese.
The Colonne di San Lorenzo are the remains of Roman ruins that date back to the 2nd century. They are believed to have been part of a bath house.
Another fun activity to try in Milan is a boat tour of the canals. The city's canals are attributed to Leonardo Da Vinci, who in 1482 was called over by the Duke of Milan to help renovate the city’s canal system.
Milan's Navigli District is one of the liveliest parts of town especially when the sun goes down for dining al fresco.
So we've gone out for our first Italian Aperitivo. Which is kind of like a pre-dinner drinking tradition. Basically, you get yourself a cocktail for about 10 Euros and that gives you access to this massive buffet.
And that's all for our visit to Milan. We hope this video will give you some cool ideas of sights and attractions to check out around town, and if you have any other suggestions for travellers, feel free to add those to the comments below.
This is part of our Travel in Italy series. We're making a series of videos showcasing Italian culture, Italian arts, Italian foods, Italian religion, Italian cuisine and Italian people.
Proudly presented by: http://nomadicsamuel.com & http://thatbackpacker.com
All photos and video taken by Samuel Jeffery (Nomadic Samuel) and Audrey Bergner (That Backpacker).
Music in this video courtesy of Audio Network
wn.com/20 Things To Do In Milan, Italy Travel Guide
Well, welcome to Italy! This week we're exploring the fashion capital of Europe. We're here in Milan. But of course there is more to do in Milan than just go shopping. So we're going to be showing you 20 attractions around town.
We had 3 days in Milan so we hit the ground running and tried to see and do as much as possible. We made time for major attractions like Il Duomo, Sforza Castle, and Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, but we also veered away from the crowds in search of street art and interesting neighborhoods. This being Italy, we also tried to prioritize meals, sampling everything from pizza to risotto, and cappuccinos to aperitivos. The following travel guide will highlight 20 things to do when you visit Milan, Italy
1) Milan Catherdral (Il Duomo - Duomo di Milano - Domm de Milan)
2) Il Duomo Terrace
3) Italian Breakfast - Cappuccino and sweet Italian pastries
4) Sforza Castle - Castello Sforzesco
5) The Galleria - Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II
6) Risotto alla Milanese - Milan style risotto
7) Street Art around Porta Ticinese
8) Colonne di San Lorenzo - Columns of San Lorenzo Roman Ruins
9) Boat tour down the canal (linea traghetti gaggiano milano)
10) Dine along the canal in Milan's Navigli District
11) Aperitivo drinks and buffet - Apéritifs and digestifs
12) Shopping in Milan down Via Torino
13) Visiting Chinatown for some Chinese food
14) Ride a bicycle in Milan like a local
15) Pizza al taglio (pizza al trancio) Italian pizza by the slice
16) Basilica of Sant'Eustorgio containing relics of the 3 Magi
17) Duomo Museum covering the cathedrals history in-depth
18) New City Views with a hop-on-hop-off bus pass
19) Museum of Natural History - Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Milano
20) Night views of Milan nearby Il Duomo
Our trip to Milan, Lombardy was part of the Blogville project where we stayed in a local apartment and experienced all of the best cultural activities, museums, restaurants, arts and entertainment the city has to offer. This city guide is our best attempt to create a mix of best attractions and off-the-beaten-path activities that you won't necessarily find in a typical Milan tourism brochure.
20 Things to do in Milan, Italy Travel Guide Video Transcript:
Our first stop was Il Duomo, which is the most recognized attraction in the city. The cathedral took nearly six centuries to complete and the exterior is covered in Candoglia marble, which gives it its off-white pinkish colour.
Now we weren't entirely sure what an Italian breakfast looks like so we did a bit of research and asked around and apparently it is just a coffee and anything sweet. So that could be pastries, bread with jam, cake or cookies. So we've sat down at a little cafe and we're going to have our first Italian breakfast with cappuccino and sweet pastries.
Something that surprised us about Milan is that there is a castle right in the middle of the city. Sforza Castle was built in the 15th century by the Duke of Milan, and it then underwent several restorations and expansions in the following centuries. Today it houses several of the city's most prized art possessions, including frescoes by Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo's very last sculpture.
For some upscale designer shopping, Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II is the place to be. It is considered one of the world's oldest and most beautiful shopping malls, and its most impressive feature is an arching glass and cast iron roof.
So we just found a local little restaurant and we're going to be trying a traditional dish that is very popular in this city and in the Lombardy region. We are going to have Risotto alla Milanese.
The Colonne di San Lorenzo are the remains of Roman ruins that date back to the 2nd century. They are believed to have been part of a bath house.
Another fun activity to try in Milan is a boat tour of the canals. The city's canals are attributed to Leonardo Da Vinci, who in 1482 was called over by the Duke of Milan to help renovate the city’s canal system.
Milan's Navigli District is one of the liveliest parts of town especially when the sun goes down for dining al fresco.
So we've gone out for our first Italian Aperitivo. Which is kind of like a pre-dinner drinking tradition. Basically, you get yourself a cocktail for about 10 Euros and that gives you access to this massive buffet.
And that's all for our visit to Milan. We hope this video will give you some cool ideas of sights and attractions to check out around town, and if you have any other suggestions for travellers, feel free to add those to the comments below.
This is part of our Travel in Italy series. We're making a series of videos showcasing Italian culture, Italian arts, Italian foods, Italian religion, Italian cuisine and Italian people.
Proudly presented by: http://nomadicsamuel.com & http://thatbackpacker.com
All photos and video taken by Samuel Jeffery (Nomadic Samuel) and Audrey Bergner (That Backpacker).
Music in this video courtesy of Audio Network
- published: 24 Nov 2015
- views: 169
Florence in a nutshell HD - 1 of 2 - city guide for first-time visitors in Italy - travel guide
Italy travel guide: Florence, small and immense and at the same time, is an open air museum grown more beautiful over the centuries; a treasure chest enclosed b...
Italy travel guide: Florence, small and immense and at the same time, is an open air museum grown more beautiful over the centuries; a treasure chest enclosed by ancient walls that safeguard grandiose masterworks of art and architecture so close that you can almost touch them.
More informations on:
http://www.italyguides.it/us/florence/florence_italy.htm
------
You can use the Youtube HTML code to embed that video in your webpage or blog if you like it.
---
Versione in italiano:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0g6ylhMIiA
wn.com/Florence In A Nutshell Hd 1 Of 2 City Guide For First Time Visitors In Italy Travel Guide
Italy travel guide: Florence, small and immense and at the same time, is an open air museum grown more beautiful over the centuries; a treasure chest enclosed by ancient walls that safeguard grandiose masterworks of art and architecture so close that you can almost touch them.
More informations on:
http://www.italyguides.it/us/florence/florence_italy.htm
------
You can use the Youtube HTML code to embed that video in your webpage or blog if you like it.
---
Versione in italiano:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0g6ylhMIiA
- published: 06 Mar 2009
- views: 397208
Italy travel advice - smartraveller.gov.au
Jenny from the Australian Embassy in Rome provides advice to Australians on how to have a safe and hassle-free visit to Italy.
Visit http://smartraveller.go...
Jenny from the Australian Embassy in Rome provides advice to Australians on how to have a safe and hassle-free visit to Italy.
Visit http://smartraveller.gov.au/Advice/Italy for more information.
wn.com/Italy Travel Advice Smartraveller.Gov.Au
Jenny from the Australian Embassy in Rome provides advice to Australians on how to have a safe and hassle-free visit to Italy.
Visit http://smartraveller.gov.au/Advice/Italy for more information.
- published: 12 Dec 2011
- views: 21528
Vatican City, Italy - Travel Guide
Take a tour of Vatican City in Italy -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats.
Hey, this is your host, Naomi. I would like to give you a ...
Take a tour of Vatican City in Italy -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats.
Hey, this is your host, Naomi. I would like to give you a tour of the top five attractions of Vatican City.
Number five: St. Peter's Square. Vatican City is the home of the Pope. In a small area you'll find many attractions, like the St. Peter's Square where many ceremonies are held.
Number four: Vatican Guards. These are the famous Swiss Guards of the Vatican. Although a major tourist draw, they have the serious responsibility of protecting the Pope.
Number three: Vatican museums. Even though it's the world's smallest country, the museums here are among the best in the world. They hold numerous art works of historical significance.
Number two: gardens. Not many people know that gardens in the Vatican are also an attraction. Take time to explore these gems where you'll find beautifully landscaped areas.
And number one: St. Peter's Basilica. It's the central landmark of the Vatican, considered one of the holiest Christian sites. Visitors come from all over to enjoy its beauty.
Thank you for watching our travel video series. See you next time!
wn.com/Vatican City, Italy Travel Guide
Take a tour of Vatican City in Italy -- part of the World's Greatest Attractions series by GeoBeats.
Hey, this is your host, Naomi. I would like to give you a tour of the top five attractions of Vatican City.
Number five: St. Peter's Square. Vatican City is the home of the Pope. In a small area you'll find many attractions, like the St. Peter's Square where many ceremonies are held.
Number four: Vatican Guards. These are the famous Swiss Guards of the Vatican. Although a major tourist draw, they have the serious responsibility of protecting the Pope.
Number three: Vatican museums. Even though it's the world's smallest country, the museums here are among the best in the world. They hold numerous art works of historical significance.
Number two: gardens. Not many people know that gardens in the Vatican are also an attraction. Take time to explore these gems where you'll find beautifully landscaped areas.
And number one: St. Peter's Basilica. It's the central landmark of the Vatican, considered one of the holiest Christian sites. Visitors come from all over to enjoy its beauty.
Thank you for watching our travel video series. See you next time!
- published: 16 Sep 2010
- views: 27133
Travel guide video: 10 things you need do in Tuscany, Italy
when I first saw the "Under the tucsan Sun trailer" I knew that I need to discover Toscana or Tuscany as the Italian folk says (Travel Channel Tuscany)... today...
when I first saw the "Under the tucsan Sun trailer" I knew that I need to discover Toscana or Tuscany as the Italian folk says (Travel Channel Tuscany)... today after visiting Rome, Bologna, Genova, Sardinia, Florence, Verona, Venezia, Firenze, Pisa, Siena, Livorno, Padova, Viareggio, Lucca, Volterra, Chianti Barberino val de Elsa and San Gimignano ...so I decided to create this travel guide video for you! And I'm pretty excited to guide you through one of the most beautiful countries of Europe. In this video I introduce you Tuscany in Italy-The Charmed Land and the Dolce Vita Under the Tuscan Sun.
To sum up here are 10 things you should do in Tuscany:
1: sleep in a typical Tuscan Villa or Middle age like castle in Tuscany like "Villa Pitiana"
2: visit traditional italian cities like "Barberino val de Elsa" and enjoy the dolce vita
3: enjoy the view: like me in San Gimignano, Italy's Towering Hill Town
4: breath in the culture,make a guided tour in Florence (Firenze) and explore the Galleria dell Academia, make a walk on Piazza della Signoria and Palazzo Vecchio, check out the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore with the Baptistery, or discover the view from thr Campanile - Bell Tower. There are so many tourist attractions in Florence...you won't believe your eyes when crossing the Ponte Vecchio bridge. Oh and make sure to visit Boboli Garden and Pitti Palace formal seat of the Medici family. I fall in love with it as you can see in my video
5-6: Taste Tuscany: discover the Tuscan kitchen and delicious italian gastronomy. Tuscany Food and Wine Tours are famous...you should try tuscan receipts and attend a vine testing on the Tuscan hills..
7: Italy is the home of fast sport cars, like Maranello :Ferrari. My boyfriend chose to make a Lamborghini gallardo e-gear test.
8: Visit Pisa and take a photo holding the Pisa tower (Torre di Pisa)
9: Beach is waiting! If you are in Italy make sure to take some days to relax on the beach. We spent some time in Viareggio
10: realize that you need to come back to learn more about the 100 faces of Italy
To see more videos from Tuscany just type in one of the following keywords: [Florence in nutshell]
[travel guide-Florence,Italy]
[Florence,Italy]
[Italy travel guide]
[things to do in Italy]
[Italy-10 Things You Need To Know]
[Top 10 Things to Check Out in Florence and Tuscany Italy]
[pictures of tuscany]
[Tuscany, Italy]
[Tuscany Italy-The Charmed Land]
[More than food in beautiful Tuscany, Italy - BBC]
[Top 5 Things to Check Out in Florence, Italy]
[good italian food receipe]
[Andrea Bocelli]
[]
wn.com/Travel Guide Video 10 Things You Need Do In Tuscany, Italy
when I first saw the "Under the tucsan Sun trailer" I knew that I need to discover Toscana or Tuscany as the Italian folk says (Travel Channel Tuscany)... today after visiting Rome, Bologna, Genova, Sardinia, Florence, Verona, Venezia, Firenze, Pisa, Siena, Livorno, Padova, Viareggio, Lucca, Volterra, Chianti Barberino val de Elsa and San Gimignano ...so I decided to create this travel guide video for you! And I'm pretty excited to guide you through one of the most beautiful countries of Europe. In this video I introduce you Tuscany in Italy-The Charmed Land and the Dolce Vita Under the Tuscan Sun.
To sum up here are 10 things you should do in Tuscany:
1: sleep in a typical Tuscan Villa or Middle age like castle in Tuscany like "Villa Pitiana"
2: visit traditional italian cities like "Barberino val de Elsa" and enjoy the dolce vita
3: enjoy the view: like me in San Gimignano, Italy's Towering Hill Town
4: breath in the culture,make a guided tour in Florence (Firenze) and explore the Galleria dell Academia, make a walk on Piazza della Signoria and Palazzo Vecchio, check out the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore with the Baptistery, or discover the view from thr Campanile - Bell Tower. There are so many tourist attractions in Florence...you won't believe your eyes when crossing the Ponte Vecchio bridge. Oh and make sure to visit Boboli Garden and Pitti Palace formal seat of the Medici family. I fall in love with it as you can see in my video
5-6: Taste Tuscany: discover the Tuscan kitchen and delicious italian gastronomy. Tuscany Food and Wine Tours are famous...you should try tuscan receipts and attend a vine testing on the Tuscan hills..
7: Italy is the home of fast sport cars, like Maranello :Ferrari. My boyfriend chose to make a Lamborghini gallardo e-gear test.
8: Visit Pisa and take a photo holding the Pisa tower (Torre di Pisa)
9: Beach is waiting! If you are in Italy make sure to take some days to relax on the beach. We spent some time in Viareggio
10: realize that you need to come back to learn more about the 100 faces of Italy
To see more videos from Tuscany just type in one of the following keywords: [Florence in nutshell]
[travel guide-Florence,Italy]
[Florence,Italy]
[Italy travel guide]
[things to do in Italy]
[Italy-10 Things You Need To Know]
[Top 10 Things to Check Out in Florence and Tuscany Italy]
[pictures of tuscany]
[Tuscany, Italy]
[Tuscany Italy-The Charmed Land]
[More than food in beautiful Tuscany, Italy - BBC]
[Top 5 Things to Check Out in Florence, Italy]
[good italian food receipe]
[Andrea Bocelli]
[]
- published: 02 Dec 2010
- views: 20458
5 travel tips for Rome, Italy
Things we learnt from our maiden trip to Rome, which we hope will make the difference for your visit too! :-)
Recent blogposts/pictures:
1) Travel Rome: Getti...
Things we learnt from our maiden trip to Rome, which we hope will make the difference for your visit too! :-)
Recent blogposts/pictures:
1) Travel Rome: Getting there, what to expect, how much to budget, where to stay? http://www.hannahtan.com/journal/2014/12/our-honeymoon-romancing-rome-part-1/
2) Handling the Honeymoon Horror: 4 Things to consider when planning your trip http://www.hannahtan.com/journal/2014/11/handling-the-honeymoon-horror-4-things-to-consider-when-planning-your-trip/
3) Rome Highlights (Video) http://www.hannahtan.com/journal/2014/12/honeymoon-travel-romancing-rome-video/
♥ My Blog: http://hannahtan.com
♥ My Facebook: http://facebook.com/hannahonline
♥ My Instagram: http://instagram.com/hannahonline
♥ My Twitter: http://twitter.com/hannah_tan
Music Credits:
1) "An Alternate Universe Part 4 (Full version)" by David Lloyd
Available on https://www.freeplaymusic.com
2) "Salutation" by William Naughton
Available on https://www.freeplaymusic.com
3) "Second Wind" by Lucas Cantor, BMI (34%); Emil Milan Karol, BMI (33%); Isaac Jaffe, BMI (33%)
Available on https://www.freeplaymusic.com
4) "The French Quarter" by William Naughton
Available on https://www.freeplaymusic.com
5) "Going to The Top (Olympic Champions)" by Akashic Records
Available on https://www.jamendo.com
Website: http://saregama-music.blogspot.com/
wn.com/5 Travel Tips For Rome, Italy
Things we learnt from our maiden trip to Rome, which we hope will make the difference for your visit too! :-)
Recent blogposts/pictures:
1) Travel Rome: Getting there, what to expect, how much to budget, where to stay? http://www.hannahtan.com/journal/2014/12/our-honeymoon-romancing-rome-part-1/
2) Handling the Honeymoon Horror: 4 Things to consider when planning your trip http://www.hannahtan.com/journal/2014/11/handling-the-honeymoon-horror-4-things-to-consider-when-planning-your-trip/
3) Rome Highlights (Video) http://www.hannahtan.com/journal/2014/12/honeymoon-travel-romancing-rome-video/
♥ My Blog: http://hannahtan.com
♥ My Facebook: http://facebook.com/hannahonline
♥ My Instagram: http://instagram.com/hannahonline
♥ My Twitter: http://twitter.com/hannah_tan
Music Credits:
1) "An Alternate Universe Part 4 (Full version)" by David Lloyd
Available on https://www.freeplaymusic.com
2) "Salutation" by William Naughton
Available on https://www.freeplaymusic.com
3) "Second Wind" by Lucas Cantor, BMI (34%); Emil Milan Karol, BMI (33%); Isaac Jaffe, BMI (33%)
Available on https://www.freeplaymusic.com
4) "The French Quarter" by William Naughton
Available on https://www.freeplaymusic.com
5) "Going to The Top (Olympic Champions)" by Akashic Records
Available on https://www.jamendo.com
Website: http://saregama-music.blogspot.com/
- published: 16 Dec 2014
- views: 3247
Travel Guide to Milan, Italy
http://bestflights.co.za/europe/italy/milan - Visit for more information on Milan, Italy.
Milan, the second largest city in Italy, is a thriving cosmopolitan b...
http://bestflights.co.za/europe/italy/milan - Visit for more information on Milan, Italy.
Milan, the second largest city in Italy, is a thriving cosmopolitan business capital and the center of cultural and tourist activities. The main industries of Milan are textiles, the manufacture of cars, machinery, chemicals and paper-making.
What to see / do:
There are a great variety of things to do and see in Milan, main attractions include:
* Duomo (Cathedral) -- The world's largest Gothic cathedral
* Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II -- Glass-domed arcade with coffee-shops
* Theatre Museum at La Scala -- World famous opera house
* Santa Maria delle Grazie -- House of Leonardo da Vinci's famous painting, The Last Supper.
* Museo Poldi-Pezzoli -- spectacular private collection of Poldi-Pezzoli
* Museum of Historic Art of the Sforzesco Castle -- Built in the 15th century and restored in 1943.
* Leonardo da Vinci National Science & Technology Museum -- museum with a collection of Leonardo's ingenious designs from war machines to architectural visions.
* Milan Aquarium -- 36 gigantic pools filled with more than 100 different species of fish.
* Orto Botanico di Brera -- A botanical garden established in 1774
* Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio -- One of the oldest churches in Milan, built by Bishop Ambrose in 379-386 AD.
Events
Milan is center of cultural and tourist activities like paradise for opera, shopping and nightlife and is known for its many cultural events:
* Antiques Market: Selection of furniture, clocks, porcelain, silver, jewelry, dolls, books and numerous collector's items.
* Tredesin de mars: Celebration of the start of a beautiful season of spring.
* Festival of Sant'Ambrogio: Antique furniture and handicrafts as well as different stalls of delicacies.
* Milan Fashion Weeks: Best designers showcase their Autumn/Winter and Spring/Summer collections.
* Italian F1 Grand Prix: The FIA Formula One World Championship.
wn.com/Travel Guide To Milan, Italy
http://bestflights.co.za/europe/italy/milan - Visit for more information on Milan, Italy.
Milan, the second largest city in Italy, is a thriving cosmopolitan business capital and the center of cultural and tourist activities. The main industries of Milan are textiles, the manufacture of cars, machinery, chemicals and paper-making.
What to see / do:
There are a great variety of things to do and see in Milan, main attractions include:
* Duomo (Cathedral) -- The world's largest Gothic cathedral
* Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II -- Glass-domed arcade with coffee-shops
* Theatre Museum at La Scala -- World famous opera house
* Santa Maria delle Grazie -- House of Leonardo da Vinci's famous painting, The Last Supper.
* Museo Poldi-Pezzoli -- spectacular private collection of Poldi-Pezzoli
* Museum of Historic Art of the Sforzesco Castle -- Built in the 15th century and restored in 1943.
* Leonardo da Vinci National Science & Technology Museum -- museum with a collection of Leonardo's ingenious designs from war machines to architectural visions.
* Milan Aquarium -- 36 gigantic pools filled with more than 100 different species of fish.
* Orto Botanico di Brera -- A botanical garden established in 1774
* Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio -- One of the oldest churches in Milan, built by Bishop Ambrose in 379-386 AD.
Events
Milan is center of cultural and tourist activities like paradise for opera, shopping and nightlife and is known for its many cultural events:
* Antiques Market: Selection of furniture, clocks, porcelain, silver, jewelry, dolls, books and numerous collector's items.
* Tredesin de mars: Celebration of the start of a beautiful season of spring.
* Festival of Sant'Ambrogio: Antique furniture and handicrafts as well as different stalls of delicacies.
* Milan Fashion Weeks: Best designers showcase their Autumn/Winter and Spring/Summer collections.
* Italian F1 Grand Prix: The FIA Formula One World Championship.
- published: 24 Nov 2010
- views: 78102
A Trip to Venice - English Travel Guide HD
Please subscribe my channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/killerwalcom
Come join me on my trip to the beautiful city of Venice in Italy, which is considered t b...
Please subscribe my channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/killerwalcom
Come join me on my trip to the beautiful city of Venice in Italy, which is considered t be one of the greatest tourist attractions in the world.
Veneice is a city in the north eastern part of the italian country right at the Adriatic within the province of Venetia and is often called La Serenissima.
The city counts 270.884 inhabitants, with only 62.000 people living in the historic centre, called centro storico and 30.000 more on other island in the lagoon. There are more than 100 islands in the lagoon of Venice.
The republic of Venice has been an important political and economic power in europa for about 1000 years, but lost its independence in 1897, when Napoleon set foot on the well known St. Mark's Square and forced the supreme authority to surrender.
Today the leading branch it tourism. In 2006 over 14.000.000 people visited the city to witness magnificent sights like the St. Mark's Basilica, the Campanile or the beautiful Rialto Bridge.
Made with:
Canon EOS 60D
Tamron 10-24mm
Tamron 17-50mm VC
Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II
Sony Vegas
Intro Music
Magdaleen Gral
Behind You (CC BY)
http://www.jamendo.com/de/album/62626
Musik: Felixjd - Beach Sun
Creative Commons (CC BY)
http://www.jamendo.com/en/album/47305
wn.com/A Trip To Venice English Travel Guide Hd
Please subscribe my channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/killerwalcom
Come join me on my trip to the beautiful city of Venice in Italy, which is considered t be one of the greatest tourist attractions in the world.
Veneice is a city in the north eastern part of the italian country right at the Adriatic within the province of Venetia and is often called La Serenissima.
The city counts 270.884 inhabitants, with only 62.000 people living in the historic centre, called centro storico and 30.000 more on other island in the lagoon. There are more than 100 islands in the lagoon of Venice.
The republic of Venice has been an important political and economic power in europa for about 1000 years, but lost its independence in 1897, when Napoleon set foot on the well known St. Mark's Square and forced the supreme authority to surrender.
Today the leading branch it tourism. In 2006 over 14.000.000 people visited the city to witness magnificent sights like the St. Mark's Basilica, the Campanile or the beautiful Rialto Bridge.
Made with:
Canon EOS 60D
Tamron 10-24mm
Tamron 17-50mm VC
Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II
Sony Vegas
Intro Music
Magdaleen Gral
Behind You (CC BY)
http://www.jamendo.com/de/album/62626
Musik: Felixjd - Beach Sun
Creative Commons (CC BY)
http://www.jamendo.com/en/album/47305
- published: 15 Nov 2011
- views: 137065
Travel Guide -- Rome, Italy
http://WatchMojo.com/ - A quick look at the city of Rome, Italy, what to see and where to go if you are visiting. For more travel guides visit http://www.WatchM...
http://WatchMojo.com/ - A quick look at the city of Rome, Italy, what to see and where to go if you are visiting. For more travel guides visit http://www.WatchMojo.com!
wn.com/Travel Guide Rome, Italy
http://WatchMojo.com/ - A quick look at the city of Rome, Italy, what to see and where to go if you are visiting. For more travel guides visit http://www.WatchMojo.com!
- published: 01 Jun 2006
- views: 1002667
Travel, Vacation Italy | Tuscany, Amalfi Coast HD
Travel, Vacation, Tourism Italy | Tuscany, Amalfi Coast HD
World Travel https://www.youtube.com/user/World1Tube
Rome, Chianciano, Sorrento http://youtu.be/SHSbo...
Travel, Vacation, Tourism Italy | Tuscany, Amalfi Coast HD
World Travel https://www.youtube.com/user/World1Tube
Rome, Chianciano, Sorrento http://youtu.be/SHSbo-lbPn4
Travel to Italy and experience Tuscany and Amalfi from your base at these two legendary locales, and enjoy unique included features such as a guided tour of Rome.
Tuscany & the Amalfi Coast
Rome • Chianciano • Sorrento
Watch a video of our travelers on this Land Tour, and see for yourself the rich discoveries awaiting you in Italy, including:
Exploring Florence's winding streets
Visiting the lost city of Pompeii
Enjoying a Home-Hosted lunch with locals
Watch our video about our popular Italian Land Tour. Grand Circle offers the best value in small group travel, including:
32 meals
11 included tours
6 Exclusive Discovery Series events
Day by Day Itinerary
When you travel to Italy, you'll explore a destination that combines history, romance, and architectural splendor with unparalleled serenity and grace. And no other travel company offers you as many in-depth discoveries—from cliffside towns to ancient monuments—at such a leisurely pace and tremendous value. Experience Tuscany and Amalfi from your base at these two legendary locales—spending seven nights in the Tuscan spa town of Chianciano and seven nights in Sorrento on the Amalfi Coast—and enjoy a host of Grand Circle's included tours and exclusive Discovery Series events, such as an included Countryside Dinner in Tuscany, an excursion to Pompeii, and a guided tour of Rome. As always, you'll have the freedom to explore your own interests during relaxing downtime.
=============================
River Cruise, Small Ship Cruise, Land Tour Videos, Grand Circle, Travel Italy, Tuscany , Amalfi Coast, Grand Circle Travel, Rome, Chianciano, Sorrento, city of Pompeii, Florence, Italian Land Tour, vacation Italy, tourism Italy, travel guide Italy
wn.com/Travel, Vacation Italy | Tuscany, Amalfi Coast Hd
Travel, Vacation, Tourism Italy | Tuscany, Amalfi Coast HD
World Travel https://www.youtube.com/user/World1Tube
Rome, Chianciano, Sorrento http://youtu.be/SHSbo-lbPn4
Travel to Italy and experience Tuscany and Amalfi from your base at these two legendary locales, and enjoy unique included features such as a guided tour of Rome.
Tuscany & the Amalfi Coast
Rome • Chianciano • Sorrento
Watch a video of our travelers on this Land Tour, and see for yourself the rich discoveries awaiting you in Italy, including:
Exploring Florence's winding streets
Visiting the lost city of Pompeii
Enjoying a Home-Hosted lunch with locals
Watch our video about our popular Italian Land Tour. Grand Circle offers the best value in small group travel, including:
32 meals
11 included tours
6 Exclusive Discovery Series events
Day by Day Itinerary
When you travel to Italy, you'll explore a destination that combines history, romance, and architectural splendor with unparalleled serenity and grace. And no other travel company offers you as many in-depth discoveries—from cliffside towns to ancient monuments—at such a leisurely pace and tremendous value. Experience Tuscany and Amalfi from your base at these two legendary locales—spending seven nights in the Tuscan spa town of Chianciano and seven nights in Sorrento on the Amalfi Coast—and enjoy a host of Grand Circle's included tours and exclusive Discovery Series events, such as an included Countryside Dinner in Tuscany, an excursion to Pompeii, and a guided tour of Rome. As always, you'll have the freedom to explore your own interests during relaxing downtime.
=============================
River Cruise, Small Ship Cruise, Land Tour Videos, Grand Circle, Travel Italy, Tuscany , Amalfi Coast, Grand Circle Travel, Rome, Chianciano, Sorrento, city of Pompeii, Florence, Italian Land Tour, vacation Italy, tourism Italy, travel guide Italy
- published: 29 Dec 2013
- views: 3409
2 DAYS IN GENOA, ITALY - A TRAVEL GUIDE
For more aerial drone shots of Genoa, please see Stefano McCoy's channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsgQjacVyrNWo5vSmjsdAzQ
The gritty maze of the medi...
For more aerial drone shots of Genoa, please see Stefano McCoy's channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsgQjacVyrNWo5vSmjsdAzQ
The gritty maze of the medieval city that makes up the core of Genoa is both beauty and the beast. The grandeur and heritage of this once great trading city lives side by side with modern vice and decrepitude. The odious smelling alleys give way to modern and chic restaurants and shops. Genoa is one of the most difficult of cities to describe and is very different from more generally travelled Italian cities like Rome, Florence or Venice.
My Grandfathers WWII RAF flight record for those that might be interested - the campaign against Genoa looks to be one of his earlier flights:
First Tour
25 June 1942 - Bremen (6.30)
29 July 1942 - Dusseldorf (3.00)
10 September 1942 - Dusseldorf (6.25)
13 September 1942 - Bremen (4.45)
16 September 1942 - Essen (5.50)
19 September 1942 - Saarbrucken (6.55)
24 September 1942 - Flensburg (6.20)
1 October 1942 - Flensburg (6.55)
6 October 1942 - Osnabruck (5.10)
13 October 1942 - Kiel (7.00)
23 October 1942 - Genoa (9.30)
27 October 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (10.25)
2 November 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (11.50)
7 November 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (9.20)
11 November 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (8.20)
8 December 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (10.25)
13 December 1942 - Convoy intervention (10.10)
18 December 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (10.10)
24 December 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (10.25)
28 December 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (6.10)
17 January 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (9.35)
21 January 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (8.45)
4 February 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (9.40)
12 February 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (8.05)
24 February 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (8.30)
29 March 1943 - Berlin (7.35)
4 April 1943 - Kiel (5.50)
13 May 1943 - Dortmund (5.15)
Second Tour
23 January 1944 - Air-Sea Rescue (4.50)
29 January 1944 - Air-Sea Rescue (4.10)
1 February 1944 - Air-Sea Rescue (4.45)
26 March 1944 - Essen (6.15)
30 March 1944 - Nuremburg (4.35 - incomplete ?)
9 April 1944 - St. George (5.45)
10 April 1944 - Ghent (2.50)
27 June 1944 - Foret d’Eauy (4.25)
28 June 1944 - Metz (6.50)
1 July 1944 - Biennais (3.45)
4 July 1944 - Biennais (3.45)
5 July 1944 - Biennais (3.15)
12 July 1944 - Creil (4.20)
20 July 1944 - L’Hey (3.25)
24 July 1944 - Stuttgart (8.35)
27 August 1944 - Mimoyecques (3.50)
3 September 1944 - Volkel (3.45)
10 September 1944 - Le Havre (4.15)
16 September 1944 - Boulogne (3.50)
26 September 1944 - Calais (4.15)
28 September 1944 - Cap Gris Nez (3.20)
28 October 1944 - Essen (6.20)
2 November 1944 - Dusseldorf (5.35)
wn.com/2 Days In Genoa, Italy A Travel Guide
For more aerial drone shots of Genoa, please see Stefano McCoy's channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsgQjacVyrNWo5vSmjsdAzQ
The gritty maze of the medieval city that makes up the core of Genoa is both beauty and the beast. The grandeur and heritage of this once great trading city lives side by side with modern vice and decrepitude. The odious smelling alleys give way to modern and chic restaurants and shops. Genoa is one of the most difficult of cities to describe and is very different from more generally travelled Italian cities like Rome, Florence or Venice.
My Grandfathers WWII RAF flight record for those that might be interested - the campaign against Genoa looks to be one of his earlier flights:
First Tour
25 June 1942 - Bremen (6.30)
29 July 1942 - Dusseldorf (3.00)
10 September 1942 - Dusseldorf (6.25)
13 September 1942 - Bremen (4.45)
16 September 1942 - Essen (5.50)
19 September 1942 - Saarbrucken (6.55)
24 September 1942 - Flensburg (6.20)
1 October 1942 - Flensburg (6.55)
6 October 1942 - Osnabruck (5.10)
13 October 1942 - Kiel (7.00)
23 October 1942 - Genoa (9.30)
27 October 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (10.25)
2 November 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (11.50)
7 November 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (9.20)
11 November 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (8.20)
8 December 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (10.25)
13 December 1942 - Convoy intervention (10.10)
18 December 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (10.10)
24 December 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (10.25)
28 December 1942 - Anti-submarine patrol (6.10)
17 January 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (9.35)
21 January 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (8.45)
4 February 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (9.40)
12 February 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (8.05)
24 February 1943 - Anti-submarine patrol (8.30)
29 March 1943 - Berlin (7.35)
4 April 1943 - Kiel (5.50)
13 May 1943 - Dortmund (5.15)
Second Tour
23 January 1944 - Air-Sea Rescue (4.50)
29 January 1944 - Air-Sea Rescue (4.10)
1 February 1944 - Air-Sea Rescue (4.45)
26 March 1944 - Essen (6.15)
30 March 1944 - Nuremburg (4.35 - incomplete ?)
9 April 1944 - St. George (5.45)
10 April 1944 - Ghent (2.50)
27 June 1944 - Foret d’Eauy (4.25)
28 June 1944 - Metz (6.50)
1 July 1944 - Biennais (3.45)
4 July 1944 - Biennais (3.45)
5 July 1944 - Biennais (3.15)
12 July 1944 - Creil (4.20)
20 July 1944 - L’Hey (3.25)
24 July 1944 - Stuttgart (8.35)
27 August 1944 - Mimoyecques (3.50)
3 September 1944 - Volkel (3.45)
10 September 1944 - Le Havre (4.15)
16 September 1944 - Boulogne (3.50)
26 September 1944 - Calais (4.15)
28 September 1944 - Cap Gris Nez (3.20)
28 October 1944 - Essen (6.20)
2 November 1944 - Dusseldorf (5.35)
- published: 02 Jun 2015
- views: 30
Top Ten Things to Do in Venice, Italy by Donna Salerno Travel
Venice Top Ten Things to Do, by Donna Salerno Travel
Join us for the highlights of Venice, Italy including the Grand Canal, St. Mark's Square (Piazza San Marco...
Venice Top Ten Things to Do, by Donna Salerno Travel
Join us for the highlights of Venice, Italy including the Grand Canal, St. Mark's Square (Piazza San Marco), Saint Mark's Basilica, Doge's Palace, Campanile di San Marco, Rialto Bridge, Gondola ride, Teatro La Fenice, Murano Glass, Shopping and Dining in this romantic city.
Contact us for all your vacation needs and visit DonnaSalernoTravel.com
You will love where we take you!
wn.com/Top Ten Things To Do In Venice, Italy By Donna Salerno Travel
Venice Top Ten Things to Do, by Donna Salerno Travel
Join us for the highlights of Venice, Italy including the Grand Canal, St. Mark's Square (Piazza San Marco), Saint Mark's Basilica, Doge's Palace, Campanile di San Marco, Rialto Bridge, Gondola ride, Teatro La Fenice, Murano Glass, Shopping and Dining in this romantic city.
Contact us for all your vacation needs and visit DonnaSalernoTravel.com
You will love where we take you!
- published: 20 Feb 2012
- views: 242689
-
Prehistoric collections and 3D-printing for education
First International Workshop on "Low-cost 3D Printing for Science, Education and Sustainable Development" ICTP Science Dissemination Unit (SDU) - Trieste, It...
-
The Human Evolutionary Mind's Big Bang - "Origin of Species" (Prehistoric Tools)
The emergence of art, technology, and society about 50,000 years ago. Hominid evolution and Neanderthals. Early human migrations. Language. Memes and how they now counteract biological evolution.
A. Cave Paintings, Stone Tools, and Fossil Skulls
An archaeologist crawling through a cave in France is "searching for a special moment in evolution," the narrator tells us, "an era cloaked in mystery,
-
Italian American Writers, Enrico Sciamanna
Vito De Simone Interviews Enrico Sciamanna on the a-pre Christian-Roman town of Assisi, Italy. In this talk, Mr. Sciamnna ralso tells us about a prehistoric ...
-
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth Jules VERNE (FULL Audiobook)
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth Jules VERNE (1828 - 1905) http://free-audio-books.info/fantasy/a-journey-to-the-interior-of-the-earth/ Journey to the ...
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Earth: A History (HD - 720P)
Imagine cameras have been around since the creation of Earth to record every major event. Take a photographic journey thorough time from the violent birth of...
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1864 A journey to the interior of the earth by Jules Vernes, Unabridged audiobook full length
Unabridged audio book - collaboration - Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction, Fantastic Fiction
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth
Jules VERNE (1828 - 1905)
Journey to the Interior of the Earth is an 1864 science fiction novel by Jules Verne (published in the original French as Voyage au centre de la Terre). The story involves a professor who leads his nephew and hired guide down a volcano in
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History of the Renaissance
A documentary about a period that change the World with new artists, inventions and more things: the Renaissance.
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Naples Ancient Buildings, Caverns and Tunnels
The bombardment of Naples during World War Two revealed a forgotten underground world of ancient buildings, caverns and tunnels. This was fortunate because t...
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Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet
=PLEASE SUBSCRIBE= Subscribe to stay current on recent Movie & Music video uploads http://www.youtube.com/user/papadoc73
Channel 3 YouTube
Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet is a 1965 science fiction film directed by Curtis Harrington. The film is an American adapted and edited version of the Soviet science fiction movie Planeta Bur (Planet of the Storms) directed by Pavel Klushantsev, with Cu
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3.2 Art Appreciation Italy Iconography in the Italian Renaissance and Baroque
http://www.kenney-mencher.com/ Prof. Kenney Mencher Department of Art and Art History Ohlone College, 43600 Mission Blvd. Fremont, California 94539 Phone: (5...
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Pompeii: The Last Day (BBC)
On 24 August AD79, the sleeping giant Mount Vesuvius erupted with horrifying force, destroying the prosperous Roman cities Pompeii and Herculeneum. Their inh...
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Archaeology of Iberia: State of the Field, Session I
Brown University 1 March 2014 9-10:40am Archaeology of Iberia: State of the Field Session I: Recent Developments and Key Issues in Prehistoric through Islami...
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Journey to the Center of the Earth Discovery
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth (French: Voyage au centre de la Terre, also translated under the titles Journey to the Centre of the Earth and A Journey...
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Archaeoacoustical analysis of an ancient hypogeum in Italy
The archaeoacoustic properties of an ancient hypogeum in Cividale del Friuli (North Italy) were studied. A series of experiments took place over a one year p...
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1867 A journey to the centre (center) of the earth by Jules Verne, audiobook full length
Audio book - Collaboration - Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction , Fantastic Fiction
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth
Jules Verne (1828 - 1905)
The story involves a German professor (Otto Lidenbrock in the original French, Professor Von Hardwigg in the most common English translation) who believes there are volcanic tubes going toward the center of the Earth. He, his nephew Axel (Harry), and
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History Of The Early Giant Birds - Documentary
History Of The Early Giant Birds - Documentary
Prehistoric birds are various taxa of birds that became extinct before recorded history, or more precisely, before they could be studied alive by ornithologists. They are known from subfossil remains and sometimes folk memory, as in the case of Haast's eagle from New Zealand.
Birds (Aves) are generally believed to have evolved from feathered dinosa
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Stage 05 - Lance Armstrong's Favourite Training Route to Tende - The Retro Lab's Monte Carlo Rallye
Stage Five of the adventure would see us driving the Col de la Madone before heading to our destination of Tende near the Italian border.
Despite the fact that the Col de la Madone has never been used on the Tour de France it is still a popular training route amongst competitors with several of the top riders using it over the years, most notably Lance Armstrong and Tony Rominger.
The Col de la
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Secrets of Archaeology: 500 Years Old Frozen Girl - History Documentary
Mummified Child documentary - Documentary Films Rosalia Lombardo (1918 in Palermo, Italy – December 6, 1920), was a two-year-old Italian child who died of .
Working under a tight deadline, scientists extract samples that will help describe their young mummy's life. Child Mummy Sacrifice .
Exclusive Video :Baby Mammoth 40000 years old Discovered Beneath Ice Still Looks Alive Video.
The stark, be
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Race in Antiquity in Europe and Asia Blacks;The first inhabitants of Italy, Greece, China and Japan)
Race in Antiquity in Europe and Asia Blacks;The first inhabitants of Italy, Greece, China and Japan) "Beginning during the renaissance and even earlier, Euro...
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Invincible Gladiator - Spanish / Italian historical film
The Invincible Gladiator (Italian: Il gladiatore invincibile, Spanish: El gladiador invencible) is a 1962 Spanish/Italian film directed by Alberto De Martino...
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The Cosmic Dead full set at Dunajam 2014 - High Quality
The Cosmic Dead - Scotland Setlist 1 - 00:00 - ? 2 - 12:53 - ? 3 - 24:25 - ? 4 - 40:17 - Djamba (from "The Cosmic Dead / Pigs x7 - Split LP" - 2013) 5 - 51:0...
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Art of Eternity - Painting Paradise (BBC Documentary)
Please Enjoy and Subscribe. Thanks!
Please enjoy and subscribe too. Thanks!
How should art depict the relationship between man and God? How can art best express eternal values? Can you, and should you, portray the face of Christ? For over a thousand years these were some of the questions which taxed the minds of the greatest artists of the early West. In this three-part series, art historian Andr
Prehistoric collections and 3D-printing for education
First International Workshop on "Low-cost 3D Printing for Science, Education and Sustainable Development" ICTP Science Dissemination Unit (SDU) - Trieste, It......
First International Workshop on "Low-cost 3D Printing for Science, Education and Sustainable Development" ICTP Science Dissemination Unit (SDU) - Trieste, It...
wn.com/Prehistoric Collections And 3D Printing For Education
First International Workshop on "Low-cost 3D Printing for Science, Education and Sustainable Development" ICTP Science Dissemination Unit (SDU) - Trieste, It...
- published: 15 May 2013
- views: 385
-
author: fluido
The Human Evolutionary Mind's Big Bang - "Origin of Species" (Prehistoric Tools)
The emergence of art, technology, and society about 50,000 years ago. Hominid evolution and Neanderthals. Early human migrations. Language. Memes and how they n...
The emergence of art, technology, and society about 50,000 years ago. Hominid evolution and Neanderthals. Early human migrations. Language. Memes and how they now counteract biological evolution.
A. Cave Paintings, Stone Tools, and Fossil Skulls
An archaeologist crawling through a cave in France is "searching for a special moment in evolution," the narrator tells us, "an era cloaked in mystery, when with hardly a change in appearance, humans began behaving in ways they had never behaved before. He wants to find out how it was our ancestors became truly human." Where once there were just bare cave walls, suddenly there was art, technology, communication and culture. "The question is, What happened to make all this possible? How could it be, a species opened its eyes and burst into a new realm? How was it, human ancestors evolved a whole new way of seeing themselves? And because of this, in time transformed the planet?"
We fly over a mist-shrouded landscape. "The Great Rift Valley of East Africa," the narrator continues, "here is where the human story began. For millions of years, Africa was the landscape of human evolution. Across this terrain, an ancestral people survived, reproduced, and passed on who they were to succeeding generations. Without Africa, humanity as we know it might never have become."
We stop at a spot in the Great Rift Valley which was "once inhabited by hominids, before they were truly human." Smithsonian Institution paleoanthropologist Rick Potts clambers up a hillside looking for fossils and stone tools. "Now it's a site scientists visit to understand how people lived and what they thought about a million years ago." Potts digs up a stone axe, and a computer animation shows us primitive humans making such tools and using them to butcher a large animal.
"Here, across this terrain," the narrator says, "these paleolithic or ancient stone-tool people made one simple implement for nearly a million years." According to Potts, the stone axe he found was the Swiss Army knife of the paleolithic period. The people who made them, he says, made the same thing over and over, but they probably didn't speak to each other as we do. "They didn't have something that we have--the creativity, the innovation, the diversity of cultures that of course characterizes our own species."
Another computer animation takes us on a long journey through time. "On the tree of life," the narrator tells us, "human evolution began around six million years ago when hominids split off from the common ancestor they shared with chimpanzees. They descended from the trees about four million years ago and entered a new world. Two and a half million years ago with a modified hand they fashioned stone tools and began to depend more and more on a diet of meat." Thanks to the computer, this all happens before our very eyes.
"The size of their brains increased substantially," continues the narrator. "At about two million years ago they began to leave Africa. These early humans were successful for a while but in the end every one of them would become extinct. It wasn't until fifty or sixty thousand years ago that the first truly modern humans, our ancestors, left Africa." Human actors take the place of computer-generated figures. "They were hunter-gatherers, foraging for food living in small groups roaming the wide landscape, but they were different from their predecessors. They had begun to live a revolutionary new way of life."
A series of reconstructed skulls appears on the screen, starting with one that is very ape-like and ending with one from a modern human. "This lifestyle had been achieved over millions of years," says the narrator, "through the multiple processes of evolution--adaptation, competition, mutation, selection, and failure, punctuated by the occasional success. Ours was a routine story of evolution, of change over time, no different from the stories of so many other species, but it produced behavior new to the planet."
B. The Beginnings of Art and Technology
"Behavior changed very radically around fifty thousand years ago," we are told. A fossil skull appears, but "this hundred-thousand-year-old human did not behave like us." Fully modern human behavior, we are told, included the making of a wide range of artifacts, such as art and jewelry.
According to Massachusetts Institute of Technology psychologist Steven Pinker: "In a sense, we're all Africans." He explains that human babies from all over the world have the same basic ability to learn languages, how to count, and how to make and use tools. "It suggests," says Pinker, "that the distinctively human parts of our intelligence were in place before our ancestors split off into the different continents."
wn.com/The Human Evolutionary Mind's Big Bang Origin Of Species (Prehistoric Tools)
The emergence of art, technology, and society about 50,000 years ago. Hominid evolution and Neanderthals. Early human migrations. Language. Memes and how they now counteract biological evolution.
A. Cave Paintings, Stone Tools, and Fossil Skulls
An archaeologist crawling through a cave in France is "searching for a special moment in evolution," the narrator tells us, "an era cloaked in mystery, when with hardly a change in appearance, humans began behaving in ways they had never behaved before. He wants to find out how it was our ancestors became truly human." Where once there were just bare cave walls, suddenly there was art, technology, communication and culture. "The question is, What happened to make all this possible? How could it be, a species opened its eyes and burst into a new realm? How was it, human ancestors evolved a whole new way of seeing themselves? And because of this, in time transformed the planet?"
We fly over a mist-shrouded landscape. "The Great Rift Valley of East Africa," the narrator continues, "here is where the human story began. For millions of years, Africa was the landscape of human evolution. Across this terrain, an ancestral people survived, reproduced, and passed on who they were to succeeding generations. Without Africa, humanity as we know it might never have become."
We stop at a spot in the Great Rift Valley which was "once inhabited by hominids, before they were truly human." Smithsonian Institution paleoanthropologist Rick Potts clambers up a hillside looking for fossils and stone tools. "Now it's a site scientists visit to understand how people lived and what they thought about a million years ago." Potts digs up a stone axe, and a computer animation shows us primitive humans making such tools and using them to butcher a large animal.
"Here, across this terrain," the narrator says, "these paleolithic or ancient stone-tool people made one simple implement for nearly a million years." According to Potts, the stone axe he found was the Swiss Army knife of the paleolithic period. The people who made them, he says, made the same thing over and over, but they probably didn't speak to each other as we do. "They didn't have something that we have--the creativity, the innovation, the diversity of cultures that of course characterizes our own species."
Another computer animation takes us on a long journey through time. "On the tree of life," the narrator tells us, "human evolution began around six million years ago when hominids split off from the common ancestor they shared with chimpanzees. They descended from the trees about four million years ago and entered a new world. Two and a half million years ago with a modified hand they fashioned stone tools and began to depend more and more on a diet of meat." Thanks to the computer, this all happens before our very eyes.
"The size of their brains increased substantially," continues the narrator. "At about two million years ago they began to leave Africa. These early humans were successful for a while but in the end every one of them would become extinct. It wasn't until fifty or sixty thousand years ago that the first truly modern humans, our ancestors, left Africa." Human actors take the place of computer-generated figures. "They were hunter-gatherers, foraging for food living in small groups roaming the wide landscape, but they were different from their predecessors. They had begun to live a revolutionary new way of life."
A series of reconstructed skulls appears on the screen, starting with one that is very ape-like and ending with one from a modern human. "This lifestyle had been achieved over millions of years," says the narrator, "through the multiple processes of evolution--adaptation, competition, mutation, selection, and failure, punctuated by the occasional success. Ours was a routine story of evolution, of change over time, no different from the stories of so many other species, but it produced behavior new to the planet."
B. The Beginnings of Art and Technology
"Behavior changed very radically around fifty thousand years ago," we are told. A fossil skull appears, but "this hundred-thousand-year-old human did not behave like us." Fully modern human behavior, we are told, included the making of a wide range of artifacts, such as art and jewelry.
According to Massachusetts Institute of Technology psychologist Steven Pinker: "In a sense, we're all Africans." He explains that human babies from all over the world have the same basic ability to learn languages, how to count, and how to make and use tools. "It suggests," says Pinker, "that the distinctively human parts of our intelligence were in place before our ancestors split off into the different continents."
- published: 10 May 2015
- views: 0
Italian American Writers, Enrico Sciamanna
Vito De Simone Interviews Enrico Sciamanna on the a-pre Christian-Roman town of Assisi, Italy. In this talk, Mr. Sciamnna ralso tells us about a prehistoric ......
Vito De Simone Interviews Enrico Sciamanna on the a-pre Christian-Roman town of Assisi, Italy. In this talk, Mr. Sciamnna ralso tells us about a prehistoric ...
wn.com/Italian American Writers, Enrico Sciamanna
Vito De Simone Interviews Enrico Sciamanna on the a-pre Christian-Roman town of Assisi, Italy. In this talk, Mr. Sciamnna ralso tells us about a prehistoric ...
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth Jules VERNE (FULL Audiobook)
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth Jules VERNE (1828 - 1905) http://free-audio-books.info/fantasy/a-journey-to-the-interior-of-the-earth/ Journey to the ......
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth Jules VERNE (1828 - 1905) http://free-audio-books.info/fantasy/a-journey-to-the-interior-of-the-earth/ Journey to the ...
wn.com/A Journey To The Interior Of The Earth Jules Verne (Full Audiobook)
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth Jules VERNE (1828 - 1905) http://free-audio-books.info/fantasy/a-journey-to-the-interior-of-the-earth/ Journey to the ...
Earth: A History (HD - 720P)
Imagine cameras have been around since the creation of Earth to record every major event. Take a photographic journey thorough time from the violent birth of......
Imagine cameras have been around since the creation of Earth to record every major event. Take a photographic journey thorough time from the violent birth of...
wn.com/Earth A History (Hd 720P)
Imagine cameras have been around since the creation of Earth to record every major event. Take a photographic journey thorough time from the violent birth of...
- published: 09 Jun 2012
- views: 105677
-
author: bdw5000
1864 A journey to the interior of the earth by Jules Vernes, Unabridged audiobook full length
Unabridged audio book - collaboration - Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction, Fantastic Fiction
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth
Jules VERNE (1828 - 1905)...
Unabridged audio book - collaboration - Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction, Fantastic Fiction
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth
Jules VERNE (1828 - 1905)
Journey to the Interior of the Earth is an 1864 science fiction novel by Jules Verne (published in the original French as Voyage au centre de la Terre). The story involves a professor who leads his nephew and hired guide down a volcano in Iceland to the "center of the Earth". They encounter many adventures, including prehistoric animals and natural hazards, eventually coming to the surface again in southern Italy.
00:00:00 - Ch. 01 - The Professor and his family - Vinny Bove
00:08:44 - Ch. 02 - A mystery to be solved at any price - Vinny Bove(8:18
00:17:02 - Ch. 03- The runic writing exercises the professor - Vinny Bove(17:02
00:31:38 - Ch. 04 - The enemy to be starved into submission - Mark Bradford(7:46
00:39:24 - Ch. 05 - Famine, then victory, followed by dismay - Mark Bradford(18:14
00:57:38 - Ch. 06 - Exciting discussions about an unparalleled enterprise - Mark Bradford
01:04:17 - Ch. 07 - A woman courage Hugh McGuire
01:19:32 - Ch. 08 - Serious preparations for vertical descent Hugh McGuire
01:34:53 - Ch. 09 - Iceland! But what next? Hugh McGuire
01:50:36 - Ch. 10 - Interesting conversations with icelandics savants Kristin LeMoine
02:00:36 - Ch. 11 - A guide found to the centre of the earth Kristin LeMoine
02:13:47 - Ch. 12 - A Barren land Kristin LeMoine
02:25:01 - Ch. 13 - Hospitality under the Arctic Circle Mur Lafferty
02:35:16 - Ch. 14 - But Arctics can be inhospitable, too Mur Lafferty
02:46:13 - Ch. 15 - SNÆFELL at last Mur Lafferty
02:56:46 - Ch. 16 - Boldly down the crater Vinny Bove
03:08:02 - Ch. 17 - Vertical descent Vinny Bove
03:16:42 - Ch. 18 - The wonders of terrestrial depths Vinny Bove
03:26:39 - Ch. 19 - Geological studies in situ Paul S. Jenkins
03:36:05 - Ch. 20 - The first signs of distress Paul S. Jenkins
03:45:39 - Ch. 21 - Compassion fuses the professor's heart Paul S. Jenkins
03:54:36 - Ch. 22 - Total failure of water Paul S. Jenkins
04:01:15 - Ch. 23 - Water Discovered Alex Foster
04:11:07 - Ch. 24 - Well said, old mole! Canst thou work I' the ground so fast? Alex Foster
04:18:20 - Ch. 25 - DE PROFUNDIS Alex Foster
04:26:39 - Ch. 26 - The worst peril of all Alex Foster
04:32:07 - Ch. 27 - Lost in the bowels of the earth Kristen McQuillin
04:39:10 - Ch. 28 - The rescue in the whispering Kristen McQuillin
04:48:45 - Ch. 29 - Thalatta! Thalatta! Kristen McQuillin
04:55:09 - Ch. 30 - A new mare internum Michael Crowl
05:12:26 - Ch. 31 - Preparations for a voyage of discovery Michael Crowl
05:21:37 - Ch. 32 - Wonders of the deep Michael Crowl
05:37:06 - Ch. 33 - A battle of monsters Brad Bush
05:50:41 - Ch. 34 - The great Geyser Brad Bush
06:00:28 - Ch. 35 - An electric storm Brad Bush
06:13:35 - Ch. 36 - Calm philosophic discussions Lana Taylor
06:24:58 - Ch. 37 - The Liedenbrock museum of geology Lana Taylor
06:34:52 - Ch. 38 - The professor in his chair again Lana Taylor
06:46:50 - Ch. 39 - Forest scenery illuminated by electricity Alex Foster
06:59:35 - Ch. 40 - Preparations for blasting a passage to the centre of the earth Alex Foster
07:09:33 - Ch. 41 - The great explosion and the rush down below Alex Foster
07:19:38 - Ch. 42 - Headlong speed upward through the horrors of darkness Kara Shallenberg
07:32:28 - Ch. 43 - Shot out of a volcano at last! Kara Shallenberg
07:46:50 - Ch. 44 - Sunny lands in the blue mediterranean Kara Shallenberg
08:01:05 - Ch. 45 - All's well that ends well Kara Shallenberg
Running time: 7:49:06
Audio Recording © courtesy of Librivox
This video: © Copyright 2013. PublicAudioLibrary. All Rights Reserved.
wn.com/1864 A Journey To The Interior Of The Earth By Jules Vernes, Unabridged Audiobook Full Length
Unabridged audio book - collaboration - Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction, Fantastic Fiction
A Journey to the Interior of the Earth
Jules VERNE (1828 - 1905)
Journey to the Interior of the Earth is an 1864 science fiction novel by Jules Verne (published in the original French as Voyage au centre de la Terre). The story involves a professor who leads his nephew and hired guide down a volcano in Iceland to the "center of the Earth". They encounter many adventures, including prehistoric animals and natural hazards, eventually coming to the surface again in southern Italy.
00:00:00 - Ch. 01 - The Professor and his family - Vinny Bove
00:08:44 - Ch. 02 - A mystery to be solved at any price - Vinny Bove(8:18
00:17:02 - Ch. 03- The runic writing exercises the professor - Vinny Bove(17:02
00:31:38 - Ch. 04 - The enemy to be starved into submission - Mark Bradford(7:46
00:39:24 - Ch. 05 - Famine, then victory, followed by dismay - Mark Bradford(18:14
00:57:38 - Ch. 06 - Exciting discussions about an unparalleled enterprise - Mark Bradford
01:04:17 - Ch. 07 - A woman courage Hugh McGuire
01:19:32 - Ch. 08 - Serious preparations for vertical descent Hugh McGuire
01:34:53 - Ch. 09 - Iceland! But what next? Hugh McGuire
01:50:36 - Ch. 10 - Interesting conversations with icelandics savants Kristin LeMoine
02:00:36 - Ch. 11 - A guide found to the centre of the earth Kristin LeMoine
02:13:47 - Ch. 12 - A Barren land Kristin LeMoine
02:25:01 - Ch. 13 - Hospitality under the Arctic Circle Mur Lafferty
02:35:16 - Ch. 14 - But Arctics can be inhospitable, too Mur Lafferty
02:46:13 - Ch. 15 - SNÆFELL at last Mur Lafferty
02:56:46 - Ch. 16 - Boldly down the crater Vinny Bove
03:08:02 - Ch. 17 - Vertical descent Vinny Bove
03:16:42 - Ch. 18 - The wonders of terrestrial depths Vinny Bove
03:26:39 - Ch. 19 - Geological studies in situ Paul S. Jenkins
03:36:05 - Ch. 20 - The first signs of distress Paul S. Jenkins
03:45:39 - Ch. 21 - Compassion fuses the professor's heart Paul S. Jenkins
03:54:36 - Ch. 22 - Total failure of water Paul S. Jenkins
04:01:15 - Ch. 23 - Water Discovered Alex Foster
04:11:07 - Ch. 24 - Well said, old mole! Canst thou work I' the ground so fast? Alex Foster
04:18:20 - Ch. 25 - DE PROFUNDIS Alex Foster
04:26:39 - Ch. 26 - The worst peril of all Alex Foster
04:32:07 - Ch. 27 - Lost in the bowels of the earth Kristen McQuillin
04:39:10 - Ch. 28 - The rescue in the whispering Kristen McQuillin
04:48:45 - Ch. 29 - Thalatta! Thalatta! Kristen McQuillin
04:55:09 - Ch. 30 - A new mare internum Michael Crowl
05:12:26 - Ch. 31 - Preparations for a voyage of discovery Michael Crowl
05:21:37 - Ch. 32 - Wonders of the deep Michael Crowl
05:37:06 - Ch. 33 - A battle of monsters Brad Bush
05:50:41 - Ch. 34 - The great Geyser Brad Bush
06:00:28 - Ch. 35 - An electric storm Brad Bush
06:13:35 - Ch. 36 - Calm philosophic discussions Lana Taylor
06:24:58 - Ch. 37 - The Liedenbrock museum of geology Lana Taylor
06:34:52 - Ch. 38 - The professor in his chair again Lana Taylor
06:46:50 - Ch. 39 - Forest scenery illuminated by electricity Alex Foster
06:59:35 - Ch. 40 - Preparations for blasting a passage to the centre of the earth Alex Foster
07:09:33 - Ch. 41 - The great explosion and the rush down below Alex Foster
07:19:38 - Ch. 42 - Headlong speed upward through the horrors of darkness Kara Shallenberg
07:32:28 - Ch. 43 - Shot out of a volcano at last! Kara Shallenberg
07:46:50 - Ch. 44 - Sunny lands in the blue mediterranean Kara Shallenberg
08:01:05 - Ch. 45 - All's well that ends well Kara Shallenberg
Running time: 7:49:06
Audio Recording © courtesy of Librivox
This video: © Copyright 2013. PublicAudioLibrary. All Rights Reserved.
- published: 22 Nov 2013
- views: 1901
History of the Renaissance
A documentary about a period that change the World with new artists, inventions and more things: the Renaissance....
A documentary about a period that change the World with new artists, inventions and more things: the Renaissance.
wn.com/History Of The Renaissance
A documentary about a period that change the World with new artists, inventions and more things: the Renaissance.
- published: 30 Nov 2013
- views: 151541
Naples Ancient Buildings, Caverns and Tunnels
The bombardment of Naples during World War Two revealed a forgotten underground world of ancient buildings, caverns and tunnels. This was fortunate because t......
The bombardment of Naples during World War Two revealed a forgotten underground world of ancient buildings, caverns and tunnels. This was fortunate because t...
wn.com/Naples Ancient Buildings, Caverns And Tunnels
The bombardment of Naples during World War Two revealed a forgotten underground world of ancient buildings, caverns and tunnels. This was fortunate because t...
Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet
=PLEASE SUBSCRIBE= Subscribe to stay current on recent Movie & Music video uploads http://www.youtube.com/user/papadoc73
Channel 3 YouTube
Voyage to the P...
=PLEASE SUBSCRIBE= Subscribe to stay current on recent Movie & Music video uploads http://www.youtube.com/user/papadoc73
Channel 3 YouTube
Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet is a 1965 science fiction film directed by Curtis Harrington. The film is an American adapted and edited version of the Soviet science fiction movie Planeta Bur (Planet of the Storms) directed by Pavel Klushantsev, with Curtis Harrington filming extra scenes featuring Basil Rathbone and American actors for the US/English speaking market.
In the story, it is 2020 and the Moon has been colonized. After travelling 200,000,000 miles, the first group of men land on Venus, a prehistoric world, where the crew are attacked by various monsters, plants, etc.
While Harrington considered Queen of Blood, another film that was edited together in a similar way, good enough to keep his name on, in this film he is credited as "John Sebastian", in homage to Johann Sebastian Bach.
This edit of the film also forms the basis of another edit of Planeta Bur, Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women.
Directed by Pavel Klushantsev
Curtis Harrington
Produced by George Edwards
Roger Corman
Stephanie Rothman
Written by Curtis Harrington
Starring Basil Rathbone
Faith Domergue
Marc Shannon
Gennadi Vernov(uncredited)
Georgi Zhzhyonov (uncredited)
Music by Ronald Stein
Cinematography Vilis Lapenieks
Arkadi Klimov
Editing by Leo H. Shreve
Distributed by AIP-TV
Release dates 1 August 1965
Running time 78 min
Country US / USSR
Language English
wn.com/Voyage To The Prehistoric Planet
=PLEASE SUBSCRIBE= Subscribe to stay current on recent Movie & Music video uploads http://www.youtube.com/user/papadoc73
Channel 3 YouTube
Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet is a 1965 science fiction film directed by Curtis Harrington. The film is an American adapted and edited version of the Soviet science fiction movie Planeta Bur (Planet of the Storms) directed by Pavel Klushantsev, with Curtis Harrington filming extra scenes featuring Basil Rathbone and American actors for the US/English speaking market.
In the story, it is 2020 and the Moon has been colonized. After travelling 200,000,000 miles, the first group of men land on Venus, a prehistoric world, where the crew are attacked by various monsters, plants, etc.
While Harrington considered Queen of Blood, another film that was edited together in a similar way, good enough to keep his name on, in this film he is credited as "John Sebastian", in homage to Johann Sebastian Bach.
This edit of the film also forms the basis of another edit of Planeta Bur, Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women.
Directed by Pavel Klushantsev
Curtis Harrington
Produced by George Edwards
Roger Corman
Stephanie Rothman
Written by Curtis Harrington
Starring Basil Rathbone
Faith Domergue
Marc Shannon
Gennadi Vernov(uncredited)
Georgi Zhzhyonov (uncredited)
Music by Ronald Stein
Cinematography Vilis Lapenieks
Arkadi Klimov
Editing by Leo H. Shreve
Distributed by AIP-TV
Release dates 1 August 1965
Running time 78 min
Country US / USSR
Language English
- published: 06 Jan 2014
- views: 4
3.2 Art Appreciation Italy Iconography in the Italian Renaissance and Baroque
http://www.kenney-mencher.com/ Prof. Kenney Mencher Department of Art and Art History Ohlone College, 43600 Mission Blvd. Fremont, California 94539 Phone: (5......
http://www.kenney-mencher.com/ Prof. Kenney Mencher Department of Art and Art History Ohlone College, 43600 Mission Blvd. Fremont, California 94539 Phone: (5...
wn.com/3.2 Art Appreciation Italy Iconography In The Italian Renaissance And Baroque
http://www.kenney-mencher.com/ Prof. Kenney Mencher Department of Art and Art History Ohlone College, 43600 Mission Blvd. Fremont, California 94539 Phone: (5...
Pompeii: The Last Day (BBC)
On 24 August AD79, the sleeping giant Mount Vesuvius erupted with horrifying force, destroying the prosperous Roman cities Pompeii and Herculeneum. Their inh......
On 24 August AD79, the sleeping giant Mount Vesuvius erupted with horrifying force, destroying the prosperous Roman cities Pompeii and Herculeneum. Their inh...
wn.com/Pompeii The Last Day (Bbc)
On 24 August AD79, the sleeping giant Mount Vesuvius erupted with horrifying force, destroying the prosperous Roman cities Pompeii and Herculeneum. Their inh...
- published: 23 May 2014
- views: 32616
-
author: The Romans
Archaeology of Iberia: State of the Field, Session I
Brown University 1 March 2014 9-10:40am Archaeology of Iberia: State of the Field Session I: Recent Developments and Key Issues in Prehistoric through Islami......
Brown University 1 March 2014 9-10:40am Archaeology of Iberia: State of the Field Session I: Recent Developments and Key Issues in Prehistoric through Islami...
wn.com/Archaeology Of Iberia State Of The Field, Session I
Brown University 1 March 2014 9-10:40am Archaeology of Iberia: State of the Field Session I: Recent Developments and Key Issues in Prehistoric through Islami...
Journey to the Center of the Earth Discovery
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth (French: Voyage au centre de la Terre, also translated under the titles Journey to the Centre of the Earth and A Journey......
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth (French: Voyage au centre de la Terre, also translated under the titles Journey to the Centre of the Earth and A Journey...
wn.com/Journey To The Center Of The Earth Discovery
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth (French: Voyage au centre de la Terre, also translated under the titles Journey to the Centre of the Earth and A Journey...
- published: 13 Apr 2013
- views: 66534
-
author: Manu John
Archaeoacoustical analysis of an ancient hypogeum in Italy
The archaeoacoustic properties of an ancient hypogeum in Cividale del Friuli (North Italy) were studied. A series of experiments took place over a one year p......
The archaeoacoustic properties of an ancient hypogeum in Cividale del Friuli (North Italy) were studied. A series of experiments took place over a one year p...
wn.com/Archaeoacoustical Analysis Of An Ancient Hypogeum In Italy
The archaeoacoustic properties of an ancient hypogeum in Cividale del Friuli (North Italy) were studied. A series of experiments took place over a one year p...
1867 A journey to the centre (center) of the earth by Jules Verne, audiobook full length
Audio book - Collaboration - Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction , Fantastic Fiction
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth
Jules Verne (1828 - 1905)
The story ...
Audio book - Collaboration - Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction , Fantastic Fiction
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth
Jules Verne (1828 - 1905)
The story involves a German professor (Otto Lidenbrock in the original French, Professor Von Hardwigg in the most common English translation) who believes there are volcanic tubes going toward the center of the Earth. He, his nephew Axel (Harry), and their guide Hans encounter many adventures, including prehistoric animals and natural hazards, eventually coming to the surface again in southern Italy.
[ Redactor's Note: Journey to the Centre of the Earth is number V002 in the Taves and Michaluk numbering of the works of Jules Verne. First published in England by Griffith and Farran, 1871, this edition is not a translation at all but a complete re-write of the novel, with portions added and omitted, and names changed. The most reprinted version, it is entered into PublicAudioLibrary for reference purposes only. A better translation is A Journey into the Interior of the Earth translated by Rev. F. A. Malleson.]
00:00:00 - 01. My Uncle makes a great Discovery Lars Rolander
00:14:58 - 02 . The Mysterious Parchment Lars Rolander
00:25:25 - 03 . An Astounding Discovery Lars Rolander
00:42:47 - 04 . We Start on the Journey Lars Rolander
00:52:54 - 05. First Lessons in Climbing Lars Rolander
01:02:03 - 06. Our Voyage to Iceland badey
01:14:36 - 07. Conversation and Discovery badey
01:22:31 - 08. The Eider-Down Hunter-- Off at Last badey
01:35:42 - 09. Our Start - We Meet with Adventures by the Way badey
01:46:07 - 10. Traveling in Iceland badey
01:56:31 - 11. We Reach Mount Sneffels - The "Reykir" Chris Donnelly
02:11:26 - 12. The Ascent of Mount Sneffels Chris Donnelly
02:30:20 - 13. The Shadow of Scartaris Kevin Green
02:44:20 - 14. The Real Journey Commences Kevin Green
02:55:15 - 15. We Continue Our Descent Kevin Green
03:05:56 - 16. The Eastern Tunnel Lars Rolander
03:19:23 - 17. Deeper and Deeper - The Coal Mine Lars Rolander
03:33:29 - 18. The Wrong Road! Lars Rolander
03:46:11 - 19. The Western Gallery - A New Route Lars Rolander
03:55:30 - 20. Water, Where is it? A Bitter Disappointment dave k
04:10:03 - 21. Under the Ocean dave k
04:20:02 - 22. Sunday Below Ground Sundiata
04:35:24 - 23. Alone Sundiata
04:45:58 - 24. Lost! Sundiata
05:01:02 - 25. The Whispering Gallery Sundiata
05:21:00 - 26. A Rapid Recovery Lars Rolander
05:31:08 - 27. The Central Sea Lars Rolander
05:49:43 - 28. Launching the Raft Lars Rolander
06:03:24 - 29. On the Waters - A Raft Voyage Lars Rolander
06:24:05 - 30. Terrific Saurian Combat Lars Rolander
06:46:26 - 31. The Sea Monster Lars Rolander
06:59:57 - 32. The Battle of the Elements Lars Rolander
07:16:34 - 33. Our Route Reversed Lars Rolander
07:34:12 - 34. A Voyage of Discovery Lars Rolander
07:47:36 - 35. Discovery Upon Discovery Lars Rolander
08:04:11 - 36. What is it? Lars Rolander
08:15:21 - 37. The Mysterious Dagger Lars Rolander
08:24:07 - 38. No Outlet - Blasting the Rock Lars Rolander
08:40:06 - 39. The Explosion and its Results Lars Rolander
08:56:16 - 40. The Ape Gigans Lars Rolander
09:12:03 - 41. Hunger Lars Rolander
09:28:23 - 42. The Volcanic Shaft Lars Rolander
09:50:50 - 43. Daylight at Last Lars Rolander
10:05:04 - 44. The Journey Ended Lars Rolander
Running time: 10:13:28
Read by: LibriVox Volunteers
Book Coordinator: Chris Donnelly
Meta Coordinator: Nadine Eckert-Boulet
Proof Listener: lomond
Audio Recording © courtesy of Librivox
This video: © Copyright 2013. PublicAudioLibrary. All Rights Reserved.
wn.com/1867 A Journey To The Centre (Center) Of The Earth By Jules Verne, Audiobook Full Length
Audio book - Collaboration - Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction , Fantastic Fiction
A Journey to the Centre of the Earth
Jules Verne (1828 - 1905)
The story involves a German professor (Otto Lidenbrock in the original French, Professor Von Hardwigg in the most common English translation) who believes there are volcanic tubes going toward the center of the Earth. He, his nephew Axel (Harry), and their guide Hans encounter many adventures, including prehistoric animals and natural hazards, eventually coming to the surface again in southern Italy.
[ Redactor's Note: Journey to the Centre of the Earth is number V002 in the Taves and Michaluk numbering of the works of Jules Verne. First published in England by Griffith and Farran, 1871, this edition is not a translation at all but a complete re-write of the novel, with portions added and omitted, and names changed. The most reprinted version, it is entered into PublicAudioLibrary for reference purposes only. A better translation is A Journey into the Interior of the Earth translated by Rev. F. A. Malleson.]
00:00:00 - 01. My Uncle makes a great Discovery Lars Rolander
00:14:58 - 02 . The Mysterious Parchment Lars Rolander
00:25:25 - 03 . An Astounding Discovery Lars Rolander
00:42:47 - 04 . We Start on the Journey Lars Rolander
00:52:54 - 05. First Lessons in Climbing Lars Rolander
01:02:03 - 06. Our Voyage to Iceland badey
01:14:36 - 07. Conversation and Discovery badey
01:22:31 - 08. The Eider-Down Hunter-- Off at Last badey
01:35:42 - 09. Our Start - We Meet with Adventures by the Way badey
01:46:07 - 10. Traveling in Iceland badey
01:56:31 - 11. We Reach Mount Sneffels - The "Reykir" Chris Donnelly
02:11:26 - 12. The Ascent of Mount Sneffels Chris Donnelly
02:30:20 - 13. The Shadow of Scartaris Kevin Green
02:44:20 - 14. The Real Journey Commences Kevin Green
02:55:15 - 15. We Continue Our Descent Kevin Green
03:05:56 - 16. The Eastern Tunnel Lars Rolander
03:19:23 - 17. Deeper and Deeper - The Coal Mine Lars Rolander
03:33:29 - 18. The Wrong Road! Lars Rolander
03:46:11 - 19. The Western Gallery - A New Route Lars Rolander
03:55:30 - 20. Water, Where is it? A Bitter Disappointment dave k
04:10:03 - 21. Under the Ocean dave k
04:20:02 - 22. Sunday Below Ground Sundiata
04:35:24 - 23. Alone Sundiata
04:45:58 - 24. Lost! Sundiata
05:01:02 - 25. The Whispering Gallery Sundiata
05:21:00 - 26. A Rapid Recovery Lars Rolander
05:31:08 - 27. The Central Sea Lars Rolander
05:49:43 - 28. Launching the Raft Lars Rolander
06:03:24 - 29. On the Waters - A Raft Voyage Lars Rolander
06:24:05 - 30. Terrific Saurian Combat Lars Rolander
06:46:26 - 31. The Sea Monster Lars Rolander
06:59:57 - 32. The Battle of the Elements Lars Rolander
07:16:34 - 33. Our Route Reversed Lars Rolander
07:34:12 - 34. A Voyage of Discovery Lars Rolander
07:47:36 - 35. Discovery Upon Discovery Lars Rolander
08:04:11 - 36. What is it? Lars Rolander
08:15:21 - 37. The Mysterious Dagger Lars Rolander
08:24:07 - 38. No Outlet - Blasting the Rock Lars Rolander
08:40:06 - 39. The Explosion and its Results Lars Rolander
08:56:16 - 40. The Ape Gigans Lars Rolander
09:12:03 - 41. Hunger Lars Rolander
09:28:23 - 42. The Volcanic Shaft Lars Rolander
09:50:50 - 43. Daylight at Last Lars Rolander
10:05:04 - 44. The Journey Ended Lars Rolander
Running time: 10:13:28
Read by: LibriVox Volunteers
Book Coordinator: Chris Donnelly
Meta Coordinator: Nadine Eckert-Boulet
Proof Listener: lomond
Audio Recording © courtesy of Librivox
This video: © Copyright 2013. PublicAudioLibrary. All Rights Reserved.
- published: 21 Nov 2013
- views: 5555
History Of The Early Giant Birds - Documentary
History Of The Early Giant Birds - Documentary
Prehistoric birds are various taxa of birds that became extinct before recorded history, or more precisely, bef...
History Of The Early Giant Birds - Documentary
Prehistoric birds are various taxa of birds that became extinct before recorded history, or more precisely, before they could be studied alive by ornithologists. They are known from subfossil remains and sometimes folk memory, as in the case of Haast's eagle from New Zealand.
Birds (Aves) are generally believed to have evolved from feathered dinosaurs, and there is no real dividing line between birds and dinosaurs except of course that the former survived the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event and the latter did not. For the purposes of this article, a "bird" is considered to be any member of the clade Neornithes, that is the bird lineage as exists today. The other lineages of the Aves also became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous.
Taxon extinctions taking place before the Late Quaternary happened in the absence of significant human interference. Rather, reasons for extinction are stochastic abiotic events such as bolide impacts, climate changes, mass volcanic eruptions etc. Alternatively, species may have gone extinct due to evolutionary displacement by successor or competitor taxa – it is notable for example that in the early Neogene, seabird biodiversity was much higher than today; this is probably due to competition by the radiation of marine mammals after that time. The relationships of these ancient birds are often hard to determine, as many are known only from very fragmentary remains and due to the complete fossilization precludes analysis of information from DNA, RNA or protein sequencing.
Tags:
prehistoric birds,early giant birds,hidtory of birds,documentary,documentary hd,documentary films,world documentary,
wn.com/History Of The Early Giant Birds Documentary
History Of The Early Giant Birds - Documentary
Prehistoric birds are various taxa of birds that became extinct before recorded history, or more precisely, before they could be studied alive by ornithologists. They are known from subfossil remains and sometimes folk memory, as in the case of Haast's eagle from New Zealand.
Birds (Aves) are generally believed to have evolved from feathered dinosaurs, and there is no real dividing line between birds and dinosaurs except of course that the former survived the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event and the latter did not. For the purposes of this article, a "bird" is considered to be any member of the clade Neornithes, that is the bird lineage as exists today. The other lineages of the Aves also became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous.
Taxon extinctions taking place before the Late Quaternary happened in the absence of significant human interference. Rather, reasons for extinction are stochastic abiotic events such as bolide impacts, climate changes, mass volcanic eruptions etc. Alternatively, species may have gone extinct due to evolutionary displacement by successor or competitor taxa – it is notable for example that in the early Neogene, seabird biodiversity was much higher than today; this is probably due to competition by the radiation of marine mammals after that time. The relationships of these ancient birds are often hard to determine, as many are known only from very fragmentary remains and due to the complete fossilization precludes analysis of information from DNA, RNA or protein sequencing.
Tags:
prehistoric birds,early giant birds,hidtory of birds,documentary,documentary hd,documentary films,world documentary,
- published: 09 Apr 2015
- views: 1
Stage 05 - Lance Armstrong's Favourite Training Route to Tende - The Retro Lab's Monte Carlo Rallye
Stage Five of the adventure would see us driving the Col de la Madone before heading to our destination of Tende near the Italian border.
Despite the fact that...
Stage Five of the adventure would see us driving the Col de la Madone before heading to our destination of Tende near the Italian border.
Despite the fact that the Col de la Madone has never been used on the Tour de France it is still a popular training route amongst competitors with several of the top riders using it over the years, most notably Lance Armstrong and Tony Rominger.
The Col de la Madone has a maximum elevation of 3005 feet.
Tende is known to be habited in 690 but it is unclear when the town first became an organized settlement.
Prehistoric rock engravings have been found in the area, some of which are now on display in the Musée des Merveilles.
From 1861 to 1947 Tende was part of Italy and was damaged during the Italian invasion of France in 1940. Tende was the last commune to join the French Republic in 1947, when Italy was forced to cede some alpine areas to France after defeat in World War II.
What is better on mountain roads; a hot hatch or a luxury sports saloon?
We went on a 2000 mile road trip to The French Riviera (Monaco and the surrounding area) to drive some of the world’s best driving roads to find out! This is The Retro Lab’s Monte Carlo Rallye!
The music used in this video is entitled “Not from the Ghetto” and can be found here: https://goo.gl/VrKjFH
For more videos visit our channel:
YouTube Channel: http://goo.gl/1eJCax
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TheRetroLab
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheRetroLabUK
To see photos taken on our adventures please visit our Flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/TheRetroLab
wn.com/Stage 05 Lance Armstrong's Favourite Training Route To Tende The Retro Lab's Monte Carlo Rallye
Stage Five of the adventure would see us driving the Col de la Madone before heading to our destination of Tende near the Italian border.
Despite the fact that the Col de la Madone has never been used on the Tour de France it is still a popular training route amongst competitors with several of the top riders using it over the years, most notably Lance Armstrong and Tony Rominger.
The Col de la Madone has a maximum elevation of 3005 feet.
Tende is known to be habited in 690 but it is unclear when the town first became an organized settlement.
Prehistoric rock engravings have been found in the area, some of which are now on display in the Musée des Merveilles.
From 1861 to 1947 Tende was part of Italy and was damaged during the Italian invasion of France in 1940. Tende was the last commune to join the French Republic in 1947, when Italy was forced to cede some alpine areas to France after defeat in World War II.
What is better on mountain roads; a hot hatch or a luxury sports saloon?
We went on a 2000 mile road trip to The French Riviera (Monaco and the surrounding area) to drive some of the world’s best driving roads to find out! This is The Retro Lab’s Monte Carlo Rallye!
The music used in this video is entitled “Not from the Ghetto” and can be found here: https://goo.gl/VrKjFH
For more videos visit our channel:
YouTube Channel: http://goo.gl/1eJCax
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TheRetroLab
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheRetroLabUK
To see photos taken on our adventures please visit our Flickr:
http://www.flickr.com/TheRetroLab
- published: 21 Aug 2015
- views: 6
Secrets of Archaeology: 500 Years Old Frozen Girl - History Documentary
Mummified Child documentary - Documentary Films Rosalia Lombardo (1918 in Palermo, Italy – December 6, 1920), was a two-year-old Italian child who died of .
Wo...
Mummified Child documentary - Documentary Films Rosalia Lombardo (1918 in Palermo, Italy – December 6, 1920), was a two-year-old Italian child who died of .
Working under a tight deadline, scientists extract samples that will help describe their young mummy's life. Child Mummy Sacrifice .
Exclusive Video :Baby Mammoth 40000 years old Discovered Beneath Ice Still Looks Alive Video.
The stark, beautiful landscape of Greenland holds a chilling secret. Eight perfectly preserved mummies have been discovered in a remote area. They are Inuits .
wn.com/Secrets Of Archaeology 500 Years Old Frozen Girl History Documentary
Mummified Child documentary - Documentary Films Rosalia Lombardo (1918 in Palermo, Italy – December 6, 1920), was a two-year-old Italian child who died of .
Working under a tight deadline, scientists extract samples that will help describe their young mummy's life. Child Mummy Sacrifice .
Exclusive Video :Baby Mammoth 40000 years old Discovered Beneath Ice Still Looks Alive Video.
The stark, beautiful landscape of Greenland holds a chilling secret. Eight perfectly preserved mummies have been discovered in a remote area. They are Inuits .
- published: 30 Aug 2015
- views: 2
Race in Antiquity in Europe and Asia Blacks;The first inhabitants of Italy, Greece, China and Japan)
Race in Antiquity in Europe and Asia Blacks;The first inhabitants of Italy, Greece, China and Japan) "Beginning during the renaissance and even earlier, Euro......
Race in Antiquity in Europe and Asia Blacks;The first inhabitants of Italy, Greece, China and Japan) "Beginning during the renaissance and even earlier, Euro...
wn.com/Race In Antiquity In Europe And Asia Blacks The First Inhabitants Of Italy, Greece, China And Japan)
Race in Antiquity in Europe and Asia Blacks;The first inhabitants of Italy, Greece, China and Japan) "Beginning during the renaissance and even earlier, Euro...
Invincible Gladiator - Spanish / Italian historical film
The Invincible Gladiator (Italian: Il gladiatore invincibile, Spanish: El gladiador invencible) is a 1962 Spanish/Italian film directed by Alberto De Martino......
The Invincible Gladiator (Italian: Il gladiatore invincibile, Spanish: El gladiador invencible) is a 1962 Spanish/Italian film directed by Alberto De Martino...
wn.com/Invincible Gladiator Spanish Italian Historical Film
The Invincible Gladiator (Italian: Il gladiatore invincibile, Spanish: El gladiador invencible) is a 1962 Spanish/Italian film directed by Alberto De Martino...
The Cosmic Dead full set at Dunajam 2014 - High Quality
The Cosmic Dead - Scotland Setlist 1 - 00:00 - ? 2 - 12:53 - ? 3 - 24:25 - ? 4 - 40:17 - Djamba (from "The Cosmic Dead / Pigs x7 - Split LP" - 2013) 5 - 51:0......
The Cosmic Dead - Scotland Setlist 1 - 00:00 - ? 2 - 12:53 - ? 3 - 24:25 - ? 4 - 40:17 - Djamba (from "The Cosmic Dead / Pigs x7 - Split LP" - 2013) 5 - 51:0...
wn.com/The Cosmic Dead Full Set At Dunajam 2014 High Quality
The Cosmic Dead - Scotland Setlist 1 - 00:00 - ? 2 - 12:53 - ? 3 - 24:25 - ? 4 - 40:17 - Djamba (from "The Cosmic Dead / Pigs x7 - Split LP" - 2013) 5 - 51:0...
- published: 24 Aug 2014
- views: 330
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author: anieckele
Art of Eternity - Painting Paradise (BBC Documentary)
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Please enjoy and subscribe too. Thanks!
How should art depict the relationship between man and God? How can art best expres...
Please Enjoy and Subscribe. Thanks!
Please enjoy and subscribe too. Thanks!
How should art depict the relationship between man and God? How can art best express eternal values? Can you, and should you, portray the face of Christ? For over a thousand years these were some of the questions which taxed the minds of the greatest artists of the early West. In this three-part series, art historian Andrew Graham-Dixon sets out to unravel the mysteries of the art of the pre-perspective era. Why has this world been so frequently misunderstood and underrated? His journey takes him from the mysterious catacombs of ancient Rome to Coptic Egypt, to the Orthodox Christian world of Istanbul and then onwards to medieval Italy and France.
In the first episode, Andrew Graham-Dixon traces the beginnings of Christian art in the declining Roman Empire, Egypt and medieval France, and reveals the ideas which lay behind the transition from classical art to the first icons.
Art of Eternity - Painting Paradise (BBC Documentary)
wn.com/Art Of Eternity Painting Paradise (Bbc Documentary)
Please Enjoy and Subscribe. Thanks!
Please enjoy and subscribe too. Thanks!
How should art depict the relationship between man and God? How can art best express eternal values? Can you, and should you, portray the face of Christ? For over a thousand years these were some of the questions which taxed the minds of the greatest artists of the early West. In this three-part series, art historian Andrew Graham-Dixon sets out to unravel the mysteries of the art of the pre-perspective era. Why has this world been so frequently misunderstood and underrated? His journey takes him from the mysterious catacombs of ancient Rome to Coptic Egypt, to the Orthodox Christian world of Istanbul and then onwards to medieval Italy and France.
In the first episode, Andrew Graham-Dixon traces the beginnings of Christian art in the declining Roman Empire, Egypt and medieval France, and reveals the ideas which lay behind the transition from classical art to the first icons.
Art of Eternity - Painting Paradise (BBC Documentary)
- published: 19 Oct 2014
- views: 18