| Lost Worlds Vanished Lives [1989] | ![Lost Worlds Vanished Lives [1989]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51ASS3PM74L._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Actor: David Attenborough Studio: 2 Entertain Video Category: DVD
List Price: £15.99 Buy New: £5.99 You Save: £10.00 (63%)
New (15) from £5.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 1808
Format: Pal Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Exempt Running Time: 156 minutes Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.5
EAN: 5014503146627 ASIN: B0002CH8ZG
Theatrical Release Date: April 27, 1989 Release Date: September 27, 2004 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New & Sealed - UK Region 2 - Just As Pictured by Amazon - 7 Day Returns (if unopened) - Covered by Warranty
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a great snapshot in time February 17, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
This Attenborough outing is a superb guide to all the choice preserved fossils on museum display up to 1989. In four 40 minute programmes David whisks us on a route march around all the 1989 cutting edge scientific techniques for reconstructing the lives of creatures preserved solely in rock. There's also some nifty dig sites where the excavators explain the various problems they have to overcome to remove entire specimens. There's CAT scanning, there's primitive computer reconstruction of burrows and the odd radio controlled flying pterosaur. Full marks to whoever excavated the primitive beaver burrow in its entirety - complete with an ex beaver at the bottom! And the hadrosaur dinosaur nests were incredible.
The final programme delves into all the great classic fossil communities - the Burgess Shales (trilobites and soft body preservation) Solnhofen (Archaeopterix etc in the limestones used for lithography), and the tar pit preservations of Messel (Germany) and La Brea (Los Angeles).
This is pre Walking With Dinosaurs animations (thankfully- as I think they were rather overdone) and pre the opening up of China. Still the credits should give you enough of a guide to where to book your holidays to see all the really great megafossil reconstructions if the trilobite nips you!
his best work, just breath-taking September 3, 2006 35 out of 36 found this review helpful
I remember watching this when it first came on tv, I still have my VHS recordings of it! For me it is his best ever series, but then maybe that's because I'm slightly more interested in the subject than anything else he's done since. That isn't to say he's not an inspiration and a real British gem, because he is. No-one has done more in the field of making the public aware of nature and the issues facing it than David. He's a jewel in our crown. He should be knighted, if he hasn't been already!
The most memorable moment for me comes in the first episode, "Magic in the Rocks", I think, where he's fossil hunting with an expert on the coast of England. They find a rock and he hits it with the hammer and chisel, to reveal a most wonderfully preserved amonite fossil inside, to which David gasps "Oh gosh! That's beautiful!". Still gives me goose-pimples just remembering that scene. For that moment among many, you should get this DVD. "Lost Worlds, Vanished Lives", is a crowning achievement in David's portfolio; it's a shame it has disappeared more or less into obscurity. Fortunately DVD has saved it from fossilation itself, giving new generations the chance to enjoy it again!
For adults and children alike, for entertainment value and education, "Lost Worlds, Vanished Lives" is a real gem.
For all ages. February 3, 2006 50 out of 51 found this review helpful
I was trawling through the site looking for an alternative to the childrens seemingly interminable video games/tv scene..looking for something else in the same medium which might spark off an interest and a desire to explore and investigate further. On coming across this presentation by David Attenborough my only doubt was whether it would appeal to a 7 year old. On reading the two excellent and very true reviews below, I decided to take the chance and have been amazed at the response. Not only was he enthralled by it but could talk of nothing else afterwards and begged to be taken to see fossils. We have now been to an area where fossils are plentiful and next week are on our way to the museum to learn further. This has sparked a desire to know more - not only about fossils but about geology in general and how our earth was formed, which has led to us obtaining an excellent booklet on our area from the geological society. He is now also busy doing a project for one of his beaver badges using his new found knowledge. It has proved to be an inspirational DVD which has precipitated a learning curve for all the family. Thankyou to a master teacher.
A fascinating view of long extinct lives September 17, 2005 97 out of 97 found this review helpful
There are four episodes, each a delight:1) "Magic in the Rocks", looks at the types of rocks where fossils can be found, from limestone, mudstone and sandstone to coal and amber. We travel from the Dorset coast to a quarry in Leicestershire then across the world to the Dominican Republic and Arizona and back to Glasgow and Edinburgh. We visit mines, petrified forests and swamps and laboratories where fossils are being extracted from their stony matrix, X rayed, cat scanned and manipulated in 3D computer cross-sections. 2) "Putting Flesh on Bone", explores what the animals looked like and how they behaved when they were alive. Some of the fossils are preserved in remarkable detail so that you can see the outlines of their flesh and the contents of their stomachs. Fur is clearly visible around a pterosaur fossil and the large breastbone suggests substantial flight muscles allowing powerful flight rather than just gliding. We visit the Smithsonian Institute where they have made a half-sized pterosaur model (large full-sized fossils can range from 35 to 50 feet wing-spans) to try to work out how the real giants of the air could fly. 3) "Dinosaur", provides the most familiar information. Dinosaurs have been 'done to death' by, seemingly, dozens of speculative and factual documentaries since David made this. But even if this episode is full of facts that have become familiar to us, it's better presented than most and still interesting. 4) "The Rare Glimpses", examines areas of the fossil record where information is sparse. We visit The Burgess Shales in British Columbia, Canada where there's a rare deposit of soft-bodied animals, the sort that don't usually fossilize. The animals of The Burgess Shale are beautiful, unlikely and bizarre. The most common creatures preserved 500 million years ago, were trilobites. But what did the trilobites eat and what ate the trilobites? The creatures that trilobites preyed upon and those that preyed upon trilobites are found here, at The Burgess Shale. After the time of the dinosaurs, there's another period when small, delicate mammals only rarely fossilized and we see a rare glimpse of them at sites in Germany: one where the famous Archaeopteryx fossil was discovered and another where the mudstone is a mere 48 million years old and hasn't finished solidifying into rock. Somehow I missed this when it was first transmitted in 1989. That's a shame because it's exactly the sort of programme I look out for when scanning the tv listings. When so much is repeated on the television these days, it seems remarkable that I remained unaware of it until I did a search for the DVDs of David Attenborough's work. Thank goodness the BBC has started digging these treasures out of its dusty old archives and transferring them to DVDs for sale to those of us who can appreciate them. This is another of the Attenborough gems and all you would expect from the master of natural history/science programmes. The information still seems fresh, even though the series is 16 years old. Its age is only evident from the absence of raucous, irritating music and whiz-bang computer graphics. David Attenborough's narration is calm and his fascination and enthusiasm are obvious without the need for gushing and galumphing, as has become the fashion with more recent natural history documentary programmes. I've watched these series 3 times since I first received the DVD. We may watch documentaries mainly to acquire information and, of course, learning is a great source of enjoyment. But with really well-made programmes like this, it's more like the pleasure of reading a good book that, when you've finished it, you know you're going to want to read again. Highly recommended.
Honest, passionate, scientific poetry March 29, 2005 75 out of 76 found this review helpful
A neglected Attenborough work, but perhaps his most passionate. The astonishing world of fossil creatures is presented without apology, with intellect, and poetry. From snakes petrified by a Yorkshire saint to the 'one small death' of a horsheshoe crab, buried with its footprints a hundred and forty million years ago, no attention is paid to anything but the subject, and no second of your time is wasted. When Attenborough grasps an ammonite and exclaims "oh, that's beautiful!" you're not watching some flourescent airhead (or pretended airhead) gurning at the camera and yelling "WOWWW! What IS it!?!". Nor are you watching Alan Titchmarsh eat scones in a field. No, this is the real thing, the honest communication of a real thought by a mind that knows what it it seeing to a mind capable of seeing it too - yours. Four episodes to rank with 'Life on Earth'.The polystyrene-rock title sequence and some Jaws-like music add an unintentional period touch.
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