Coast (TV series)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Coast_(TV_series) an entity of type: Thing

Coast is een Britse documentaireserie van de BBC. Per aflevering wordt een stukje kust afgereisd en wordt aan de hand van de bezochte locaties informatie gegeven over geografie, geschiedenis, biologie, geologie en dergelijke. De serie is een coproductie van de BBC met The Open University. rdf:langString
Coast is a BBC documentary series first broadcast on BBC Two television in 2005. It covers various subjects relating to both the natural and social history of the British coastline and also more recently, that of Britain's near neighbours. The seventh series followed a different format from previous series. In 2016, reports from the show were repackaged as Coast: The Great Guide (known as Coast Great Guides when broadcast on BBC Four in 2021), an eight part series on BBC Two. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Coast (TV series)
rdf:langString Coast (televisieserie)
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rdf:langString Neil Oliver visits New Zealand's remotest communities in the far-flung Chatham Islands.
rdf:langString Alice Roberts visits Ravenscar to watch chemists re-create the alum crystals once produced in the area. Neil Oliver looks back on Scarborough's long-standing popularity as a seaside resort, then pays a visit to the first Butlins resort at Skegness. Meanwhile, Mark Horton takes to the water in a replica of a Bronze Age boat, Nicholas Crane recalls the advent of the fish finger, and Miranda Krestovnikoff finds out more about the Wash.
rdf:langString In the opening episode of Coast Australia’s second season, Neil Oliver becomes one of only five people known to have set foot on the isolated island known as Skull Rock, as he joins the first scientific expedition there to discover what life it has sustained over millennia. At Eagle’s Nest, Tim Flannery delves into pre-history, revealing his own role in discovering Australia’s polar dinosaurs. Neil heads offshore to explore the incredible engineering feat that keeps Bass Strait oil pumping, even under a hundred-year wave. while Alice Garner visits Victoria’s notorious Cheviot Beach, reliving the fateful day Australia lost its Prime Minister to these inclement waters. Neil then travels to Phillip Island, and reveals how an entire town was removed to save the penguins. Brendan Moar tackles the tricky sport of Blo-Karting along the flat sands of Waratah Bay, on the Gippsland Lakes, Emma Johnston hunts for a brand new species of dolphin, and finally Neil Oliver takes to the skies with aviatrix Judy Pay, for an unforgettable tour of the Bass Strait Coast in a fully restored warbird.
rdf:langString Exploring the stories and histories of Britain's beaches. Nicholas Crane searches for leeches in the pebble-pools of Dungeness in Kent, and learns how the area was formed. Hermione Cockburn takes to the air to view sand art in Jersey, Andy Torbet visits one of the nation's most dangerous beaches, Tessa Dunlop inspects a steelworks built on the shore of Port Talbot, and in Aberlady Bay, East Lothian, Nick Hewitt unearths submarines that played a pivotal role in sinking the Tirpitz, one of Hitler's largest battleships.
rdf:langString Nick Crane visits a project to build a new seaport for London, before travelling across the channel to Belgium, where he takes a ride on a tram that runs along the country's coastline. Alice Roberts learns how to be a seaside landlady in Margate, and Neil Oliver tells the story of British forces' efforts to stop Hitler's biggest battleships reaching the coast of Kent during the Second World War. Back in Belgium, Mark Horton reveals the city of Bruges's role in the history of brick-making, and Miranda Krestovnikoff goes shrimp-fishing on horseback.
rdf:langString Beautiful but troubled, Northern Ireland's coast has had a turbulent history for more than 2,000 years. Nicholas Crane et al take in the history as they cycle Antrim's scenic Coast Road, dive Strangford Lough – the largest sea lough on the island Ireland, home to 2,000 marine species – and, in a visit to one of the country's most popular tourist attractions, step across the Giant's Causeway.
rdf:langString Nicholas Crane begins his exploration of Scotland's west coast aboard the yacht Crunneaig, Alice Roberts joins the launch of a warship and Neil Oliver goes below the waves on a submarine. Meanwhile, Mark Horton feels the force of a noted whirlpool and Miranda Krestovnikoff searches for the elusive minke whale. Later, Neil Oliver and Mark Horton have a go at re-creating a novel interpretation of "air mail" between the islands of Scarp and Harris.
rdf:langString How the sea has shaped the island that is Ireland – both North and South. Miranda Krestovnikoff joins the punters at a unique horse race by the sea, while Mark Horton investigates the salvage of the SS Great Britain, the world's first ocean liner. Neil Oliver finds an eyewitness to the untold story of the surrender at Derry of the German U-boat fleet, and Alice Roberts visits a very unusual house.
rdf:langString On this wind-swept coast, Neil Oliver investigates why no one survived the attack on HMAS Sydney in its dramatic battle with a German raider in 1941. Xanthe Mallett heads to the Houtman Abrolhos islands and unearths the gruesome tale of the Dutch Batavia murders of 1629. In Shark Bay Tim Flannery finds 3 billion year old life, while Neil Oliver explores why Carnarvon's jetty was once the life-blood of the Gascoyne region. Emma Johnston witnesses why the world's largest fish keeps returning to the crystal waters of Ningaloo Reef, and Brendan Moar catches up with coastal nomads off the grid, on the edge of the continent.
rdf:langString What becomes of our Coast in winter, its 'secret season', when we're at home? Nick Crane visits the storm capital of our shores, Cornwall, where he explores the worst lifeboat disaster of the last 60 years. Nick also discovers how wild winter seas bring surprising benefits to Cornish farmers growing cauliflowers and potatoes, and to the oyster fishermen of the Fal Estuary. Neil Oliver experiences the extraordinary Viking Fire Festival in Shetland our most northerly isles. Is their spectacular ritual of burning a Viking longship as authentic as it appears? On the wild western Isles of St Kilda a feral flock of sheep untouched for thousands of years battle to the death as winter approaches, and Andy Torbet throws himself into the fray.
rdf:langString In Coast's Norwegian odyssey we explore how the Ice Age is still affecting Norwegians today; a collapsing mountainside threatens to thunder down into one of the country's most beautiful fjords creating a devastating tsunami. Nick Crane visits the little town of Geiranger which sits in the path of the impending tidal wave.
rdf:langString Cables beneath a Cornish beach lead to a dramatic tale of the birth of radio, espionage, and greed. At Carlyon Bay, Nicholas Crane discovers an unusual beach. Mark Horton visits the Isles of Scilly to reveal ancient tombs on these "isles of the dead". Miranda Krestovnikoff discovers how nature can turn a shipwreck into a sanctuary for wildlife, and Alice Roberts investigates the Cornish light that has inspired generations of artists. Plus Britain's smallest football league.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver recounts the tragic tale of Captain Matthew Webb, the first man to swim the English Channel. Alice Roberts finds out how Jersey reinvented itself after the Nazi occupation, while Nicholas Crane remembers the coastal supply ships that kept Britain afloat during the Second World War. And Miranda Krestovnikoff visits the Gouliot caves on Sark, where sea creatures stranded during low tide fight to survive until the water returns to claim them.
rdf:langString Exploring the lifestyles and history of some of the most extreme locations in Britain. Nick Crane visits the Isles of Scilly, Ruth Goodman walks the dangerous path traversed daily by the Branscombe Cliff farmers in Devon, while Mark Horton investigates the Transatlantic Telegraph service, and Hermione Cockburn learns how the fossil of a large sea creature found at St David's Head, Pembrokeshire, shaped understanding of Earth's history.
rdf:langString The sea eagles of the island of Canna were hunted to extinction, but now they have been brought back. We climb into one of their nests perched high on a steep cliff to find out what their chances of survival are. Neil Oliver visits Europe's biggest super-quarry to receive an explosive lesson in how the rock is mined. Armed with a simple ruler on a Scottish beach, Nick Crane learns how the challenge of measuring our coastline led to a new branch of maths that could help our mobile phones get smaller.
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rdf:langString Investigating the lifestyles, history and legends of Britain and its people, beginning with a look at the nation's islands. Nick Crane learns how Fair Isle's small community has become so well established and Neil Oliver visits Orkney to explore conspiracy theories surrounding the death of Lord Kitchener. Tessa Dunlop heads to the Western Isles to investigate an optical phenomenon called the green ray, and new presenter Andy Torbet becomes the first person to ascend one of The Needles of the Isle of Wight. Plus, a performance by folk singer June Tabor.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver begins this stunning journey through the world's largest coral reef in the wake of James Cook, and in the hands of the Australian Navy's hydrography team. Brendan Moar discovers an Australian community overcoming wretched beginnings by renewing island family ties. Tim Flannery is granted rare access to a scientific research zone to examine coral history. Xanthe Mallett dives a spectacular wreck in search of answers about its calamitous sinking. On an idyllic island, Neil Oliver uncovers a bloody tale of cultural misunderstanding. Finally, at the southern end of the Great Barrier Reef, Emma Johnston heads underwater with Google to take the reef into homes around the world.
rdf:langString In Australia’s extreme North, Neil Oliver arrives on Horn Island to uncover the role of Australia’s only indigenous battalion, a World War II fighting force of Torres Strait Islanders. On Possession Island Tim Flannery stands where James Cook finally claimed Australia for Great Britain, and discovers the riches that he missed. Xanthe Mallett ventures into the treacherous Adolphus Channel, the scene of Queensland’s worst peacetime maritime disaster. Neil Oliver visits Mer Island to tell the story of its most famous son, Eddie Mabo, who spearheaded Australia’s land rights' revolution. On Yam and Tudu Islands Tim Flannery is on the trail of fearsome headhunters to unearth the significance of their historic practice. Alice Garner joins an unusual border patrol on Saibai Island, less than four kilometres from Papua New Guinea, and finally Neil Oliver meets the Torres Strait’s most prominent musician, who started recording at the age of 70.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver tackles a coastal sport like no other and encounters one of the world's great survivors at an exclusive haven for vulnerable species.
rdf:langString The team explore stories on both sides of the English Channel. On the French channel coast Nick Crane explores life on the incredible outcrop of Mont St Michel, home to monks living an elevated ecclesiastical life high in a hilltop monastery that attracts a million tourists a year. Nick also investigates the network of remarkable seaforts that kept the port of St Malo safe from raids by the Royal Navy. Mark Horton reveals how two centuries ago when the French mapped the exact distance across the Channel it led to the birth of Britain's Ordnance Survey and the maps we use today. Miranda Krestovnikoff is on patrol with the Royal Navy who police the fishing boats which compete in the Channel.
rdf:langString Nicholas Crane begins his journey at John o' Groats, the village farthest from Land's End. At Cruden Bay he sees the impact made years ago by the discovery of North Sea oil. Meanwhile, Miranda Krestovnikoff observes bottlenose dolphins in the Moray Firth, Neil Oliver meets two generations of a fishing family to learn of their hopes and fears for the industry, and Alice Roberts finds out about life on board a whaling ship.
rdf:langString Nick Crane visits the Devon and Cornwall coastlines, joining a fishing expedition on board one of the last remaining Brixham trawlers. He explores a string of forts built by Henry VIII, before taking a ferry to the Isles of Scilly, where Miranda Krestovnikoff goes snorkelling in the underwater seagrass meadows. Mark Horton recalls how Lawrence of Arabia helped develop rescue boats in Plymouth, Dick Strawbridge learns about the steam-power revolution pioneered in the tin mines of Cornwall, and Alice Roberts discovers how weather far out at sea generates waves that hit the UK's shoreline.
rdf:langString Across the glittering waters of Sydney, Neil Oliver explores the network of fortification to protect "Fortress Sydney", and discovers how close the city came to being taken in WW2. Xanthe Mallett learns how to make lime as the convicts did in her quest to understand the importance of oysters in building the early colony. Tim Flannery reveals the geological secrets of the city's vast and sprawling harbour and unlocks the riddle of the rivers that had Captain Philip baffled in 1788. Brendan Moar examines an international icon in engineering and design, and reveals the story of those who made the greatest sacrifice. Emma Johnston hunts for tropical fish in Sydney's temperate and diverse harbour.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver joins the crew of the last surviving coal-fired, steam-powered, "Clyde Puffer". Amateur artist Alice Roberts explores what drew Joan Eardley to Catterline and how her life was cut tragically short on the verge of great success. Nick Crane reveals how the majestic Loch Ness became part of Britain's biggest building project in the early 1900s. Miranda Krestovnikoff dives into Loch Creran to explore how the tiny worms built a giant reef known as Worm City. Hermione Cockburn visits the "Islands that Roofed the World" and Mark Horton unearths what remains of the mysterious and violent people who once ruled much of Scotland, the Picts.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver discovers the fatal engineering errors behind Cape St George Lighthouse that cursed Wreck Bay for four decades. In Callala Bay, Tim Flannery uncovers the life saving properties of seaweeds. On Gabo Island, on the Victorian side of the border, Emma Johnston witnesses a secret method for growing unusual pearls in wild abalone. In Eden, Neil Oliver investigates the truth behind the folktale of Old Tom, the country’s most famous killer whale. Alice Garner revisits the weather-bomb horror of the 1998 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race, that became a race for survival. Tim Flannery unearths a piece of lost British treasure that went down with the Cumberland ship in World War I. In the peaceful town of Currarong, Brendan Moar explores a century-old love of coastal-gazing, and the mighty fibro beach house. Finally Neil Oliver recreates the great age of speed, racing vintage cars along their old stomping ground of Seven Mile Beach.
rdf:langString Tim Flannery begins this North-Western adventure in the remote Montebello Islands where he finds evidence of British atomic testing from 1952. Neil Oliver boards an iron ore carrier to discover only a tiny margin of error allowed in docking and loading these enormous vessels. Emma Johnston travels to Dampier to dig into the world’s largest solar salt operation. Tim Flannery explores the highest concentration of rock art in the world in an ancient gallery off the Burrup Peninsula. Emma Johnston blends science and art in Port Hedland’s intertidal reefs. At the former port of Condon, Neil Oliver discovers the pastoral history of a wool trade in the region, and then takes to the air above De Grey Station to appreciate the challenges of a one million acre property with coastal frontage. Finally at Cape Keraudren Neil Oliver revisits the scene of an extraordinary scientific expedition to prove Einstein’s Theory of Relativity.
rdf:langString The team goes island-hopping around the Western Isles and out to Shetland. Nick Crane hunts for gannets on Eriskay, and Neil Oliver hears the tragic story of a 1918 shipwreck off the Isle of Lewis in which more than 200 servicemen returning from the First World War were drowned. Hermione Cockburn tests the acoustic qualities of Fingal's Cave on the uninhabited island of Staffa, and Miranda Krestovnikoff investigates a project to breed a super-strong Shetland pony.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver explores the wreck of the SS Richard Montgomery in the Thames estuary that could explode with a force that would devastate the coast. Alice Roberts savours the sea salt at Maldon, and Miranda Krestovnikoff goes in search of the thornback ray, an exotic species that feeds on the seabed close to the capital. Mark Horton digs into the seafaring history of London and Neil Oliver re-creates a remarkable cricket match.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver begins this journey in the rigging of the Duyfken, a replica 16th-century Dutch ship, the first known European vessel to visit Australia. Emma Johnston heads to Cockburn Sound to explore the world’s first fully submerged, large-scale wave energy conversion project. Neil Oliver learns of the professional triumph and personal tragedy behind the construction of Fremantle Harbour. Xanthe Mallett joins the Police Dive Squad off Dunsborough for an exercise in underwater body retrieval. Neil Oliver retraces the steps of six Irish prisoners-of-conscience whose daring escape off Rockingham beach nearly triggered a war with the United States. Tim Flannery travels to the vineyards of Margaret River to see if he can taste the maritime clime in its signature drop. Neil Oliver discovers the perfect Coast vehicle to gad about in, while Alice Garner visits a small coastal chapel in Prevelly to explore its link to a wartime history of resistance on Crete. Finally Brendan Moar journeys to Augusta to expose the strength of a great pioneer, and her legacy as a world-class botanical collector.
rdf:langString In this first episode the team embark on an extraordinary circular tour of the Irish Sea to visit every country and territory within the United Kingdom. The hub for this wheel around the heart of the British Isles is the Isle of Man where Neil Oliver explores the small island. On the edge of the Irish Sea at Morecambe Bay, Alice Roberts gets trapped in quicksand to discover why it is so sticky and so deadly. In Northern Ireland, Miranda Krestovnikoff sees how seals cope with the struggle to find food as they bring up pups in the beautiful inland sea of Strangford Lough. Nick Crane goes sea cliff climbing on the remarkable rocks of Anglesey as he explores why this corner of North Wales is the site of some of Britain's biggest earthquakes.
rdf:langString Blackpool is Britain's most visited seaside destination. How has the resort succeeded when others have gone under? The pleasure park is one of many innovative attractions imported here from America. Neil Oliver views the coast at high speed with a visit to the RAF's world famous "Pilot Factory". As he takes to the skies in a Hawk Jet with an instructor, can he travel from Anglesey to Blackpool and back in just under half an hour?
rdf:langString In East Anglia, Alice Roberts finds evidence of Britain's Ice Age landbridge to Europe, Nicholas Crane meets a modern-day King Canute fighting to prevent his home from falling into the sea and Neil Oliver uncovers an eyewitness account from the heart of the Battle of Trafalgar. Mark Horton, meanwhile, chats to an architectural historian about the colourful beach huts which are a popular aspect of the British coastline.
rdf:langString Scottish historian, archaeologist, author, and broadcaster Neil Oliver returns to our screens to explore the panoramic beauty and history of our coastlines
rdf:langString Just five months before President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, he was riding in an open-top limo through the crowded streets of Galway. Neil Oliver meets the photographer who managed to get up close and personal with the President and talk him into the perfect snap. Miranda Krestovnikoff explores an odd little island where the mountain hare population is thriving and Nick Crane investigates a local legend that says that Clew Bay has 365 islands, one for each day of the year. Alice Roberts unearths the remarkable remains of the oldest farm in the British Isles.
rdf:langString Along this historic stretch of coast, Neil Oliver explores Cape Otway and the beacon that helped birth a nation. Tim Flannery scours the water for evidence of the marine mega fauna that roamed ancestral Port Phillip Bay. Brendan Moar uncovers the history of the Great Ocean Road, and, armed with his pick, grasps the challenges of building a now world famous coastal road in the 1920s. Emma Johnston hunts for the delicate weedy seadragon and discovers a tragic tale of one artist much captivated by its vivid beauty. On the historic Loch Ard wreck, Xanthe Mallet dives for clues about how and why disaster struck, with only two lives saved, while Miriam Corowa discovers why the coast at Bells Beach keeps pumping out the perfect waves.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver takes part in an aerial dogfight to discover why a Nazi flying ace landed his top-secret new plane on Welsh tarmac at the height of the Second World War. Miranda Krestovnikoff visits a seabird paradise, the magical island of Skomer, and at Porth Oer, Alice Roberts attempts to solve the riddle of the "Singing Sands". What makes some very special British beaches whistle when you walk on them? Mark Horton visits an imposing castle at Harlech, one of the best preserved in Britain. Nick Crane explores the violent history of smuggling around the Gower Peninsula and abseils into an extraordinary stone structure concealed in the side of a sea cliff.
rdf:langString Beginning his journey at the most north-westerly point of the British mainland — Cape Wrath — Nicholas Crane finds this uninhabited wilderness a hub of military activity. He also experiences the full impact of the region's storms as a Stornoway coastguard. Alice Roberts visits the site of the Dounreay nuclear power station, and local people explain how the impact of the Highland Clearances can still be felt even today.
rdf:langString Dover's iconic chalk cliffs are the dramatic starting point for this epic exploration of Britain's 11,700 miles of coastline. Nicholas Crane investigates Martello towers – man-made defences on the south coast – and finds out how the "sound mirrors" built to warn of approaching enemy aircraft worked; Mark Horton reveals why Portsmouth became home to the Royal Navy; and Neil Oliver learns of a Nazi concentration camp in the Channel Islands.
rdf:langString NB. This episode is not included in the DVD release for the series.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver performs the lead role in an extract from Shakespeare’s The Tempest on the stage of a remarkable coastal amphitheatre near Land's End. Nick Crane ventures out into the infamous "Portland Tidal Race" to see how this fearsome tidal surge creates some of the roughest waters in Britain, surprisingly close to the tourist beaches and Georgian splendour of Weymouth. Miranda Krestovnikoff goes in search of a family of white-beaked dolphins and Alice Roberts follows her nose to discover what gives the sea its distinctive smell. In Devonport, Mark Horton has privileged access to the historic dockyards to see where the wooden ships of Nelson’s Navy were built. Mark reveals how the steel fleet of the modern Royal Navy still relies on the age old skills of wood working.
rdf:langString Exploring Britain's maritime stories. Nicholas Crane tells the tale of the Great Storm of 1703, which saw ships blown from British shores to Norway, while Ian McMillan discusses the fate of hospital ship Rohilla, which ran aground off Whitby, North Yorkshire, in 1914. Tessa Dunlop reveals the dangers of working in the dockyards where naval warships were built in the 19th century, and Dick Strawbridge is in Tiree in the Inner Hebrides, where he explains how the timings of the D-Day landings were determined by RAF weather forecasters. Andy Torbet searches for the elusive storm petrel on Alderney, in the Channel Islands.
rdf:langString In the pristine Kimberley of Western Australia Neil Oliver discovers Broome's dark pearling history and the delicate science of their cultivation. Tim Flannery walks in primeval tracks along the legendary Dinosaur Coast. Xanthe Mallett explores a unique maritime war grave. Brendan Moar learns the art of Indigenous Raft making and Emma Johnston investigates the lush, protected habitat of migratory shorebirds. Finally Neil Oliver wrestles the Southern Hemisphere's biggest tides at the surging Horizontal Falls, and finally experiences the dreaming stories through a little sacred maintenance on some ancient rock art.
rdf:langString For thousands of years, the world's second greatest tidal range has had a huge impact on the inhabitants of the South Wales coast. Neil Oliver uncovers real-life horror at the Smalls Lighthouse, Mark Horton explores the terrifying power of sand, Alice Roberts seeks out our Ice Age ancestor and Miranda Krestovnikoff reveals the secrets of rockpools. Plus a chance to witness a dramatic natural spectacle: the Severn Bore.
rdf:langString In the tranquil south-east of Tasmania, Neil Oliver probes Port Arthur's harsh penal history. Brendan Moar examines the dramatic grip of lighthouse life on a remote Island. Emma Johnston dives into an underwater battleground to see how science and industry are saving the marine neighbourhood. Neil joins the Southern Hemisphere's largest wooden boat festival. Tim Flannery investigates Hobart's long and illustrious role in Antarctic exploration. Finally, Xanthe Mallett delves into the violent history of whaling, and the legacy that helped build a colony.
rdf:langString For the first time, the experts visit the west coast of Ireland. Neil Oliver discovers what prompted Columbus's voyage to America, as Miranda Krestovnikoff listens in on some dolphin conversations. Meanwhile, Alice Roberts investigates the perplexing mystery of "The Burren", where Arctic and Mediterranean plants grow alongside each other, then sails out to the mystical monastery on the island of Skellig Michael.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver explores the province of Finistère, "The End of the Earth", and meets a lighthouse keeper made famous by one of the world's most reproduced photographs. Nick Crane joins the "Onion Johnnies", who gave us our stereotypical image of a Frenchman, complete with stripy tee shirt, beret and bicycle laden with onions. Alice Roberts reveals the life-saving chemical element that is locked away inside seaweed and Miranda Krestovnikoff dives for a seafood delicacy. At Carnac, Mark Horton wanders amongst the mysterious lines of standing stones, erected thousands of years before Stonehenge, to investigate their age-old connection with Britain.
rdf:langString Journeying along the coast from Bournemouth to Plymouth, Neil Oliver finds out about the building of Britain's most famous lighthouse on the perilous Eddystone rocks. Meanwhile, Alice Roberts investigates the secret formula for the perfect sandcastle and Dick Strawbridge joins an American serviceman on his emotional return to the beach where he was left for dead during the Second World War's secret, and disastrous, Operation Tiger.
rdf:langString Nicholas Crane visits Lytham St Anne's, site of the worst lifeboat disaster in British history, while Alice Roberts relates the discovery of 5,000-year-old human footprints on a beach near Liverpool. Neil Oliver experiences the dangerous quicksands of Morecambe Bay and Mark Horton takes a look at the coastal defences at the end of Hadrian's Wall, once the outer edge of the Roman empire.
rdf:langString In the north-west of England, Neil Oliver discovers why the Americans attacked the port of Whitehaven, Hermione Cockburn investigates the alarming rate that the Southport sands are disappearing into the sea, and Miranda Krestovnikoff goes in search of the biggest shark in British waters. Meanwhile, Alice Roberts meets a woman with a remarkable story of childhood in the Isle of Man's internment camps during the Second World War.
rdf:langString Nick Crane explores the wealth of wildlife and industry that are attracted to the Firth of Forth, the estuary that feeds Edinburgh. Nick also investigates a remarkable natural phenomenon discovered accidentally on this coast in 1834. First seen in the water of a canal near Edinburgh and dubbed the 'Soliton', it's a rare type of wave that appears to travel endlessly, without losing energy and without breaking up, even when it collides with another Soliton wave. Miranda Krestovnikoff witnesses the extraordinary transformation that salmon must make to their bodies to avoid death by dehydration as they migrate from freshwater to saltwater. Mark Horton discovers the astonishing struggle to build a rail tunnel deep under the Severn estuary between England and Wales. And multi-award winning folk-singer June Tabor returns to Coast.
rdf:langString The South West of England bears the brunt of our worst storms, as Alice Roberts discovers when she investigates how human greed led to the village of Hallsands being washed into the sea. Meanwhile, Nicholas Crane unearths the little-known history of the slave trade in Plymouth, Mark Horton probes the origins of the Royal Mail, and Miranda Krestovnikoff comes face to face with the UK's only native shark: the porbeagle.
rdf:langString Nick Crane visits Cornwall for an artistic exploration of Britain's coast. The team discovers untold tales of Explorers around our shores, and far beyond, going down-under to Australia. In Cornwall Nick Crane takes to the water in a recreation of Britain's oldest known boat, a remarkable paddle-powered design from the Bronze Age. Nick goes on to tell the story of the fabled Explorer 'Pytheas The Greek' who first mapped our isles. He also follows the most remarkable artistic exploration of Britain's coast that produced hundreds of stunning full-colour illustrations in the age before photography. Mark Horton reveals how a man born on a tiny Scottish Isle went on to found the country of Australia two centuries ago. Tessa Dunlop investigates the Pilgrims' Fathers' hidden history. Why did the Pilgrims go to live in Holland for ten years before they founded modern America? Andy Torbet joins modern day scientific Explorers trying to count how many fish there are in our seas.
rdf:langString The Danes top the polls as the happiest people on earth and Neil Oliver wants to know what they have to smile about. Nick Crane investigates how the Danish made a big business out of selling bacon to Britain. Alice Roberts sets sail in a full scale replica of a Viking longship to see how these ships gave Norsemen the advantage over the English in battle. Miranda Krestovnikoff meets some unflappable red deer. On Heligoland, Mark Horton reveals how in 1947 Britain's Royal Navy blew this tiny island apart in the largest non-nuclear explosion the world had ever seen and Dick Strawbridge gets access to the construction of one of the world's largest offshore wind farms.
rdf:langString On Holy Island, we find out how a Viking attack inadvertently united the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, creating a new national identity as they came together to resist a new enemy. Mark Horton navigates to Marine Esplanade in Ravenscar in search of the "town that never was". Destined to be a buzzing Victorian seaside parade, Mark uncovers why it is now just an empty field. Following three unsuccessful attempts to land a boat on Bass Rock, Miranda Krestovnikoff beats Neil Oliver to the challenge and is rewarded with a front row view of the diving gannets.
rdf:langString Exploring the tidal ebb and flow of the seas surrounding Britain. Nicholas Crane braves the dangerous rapids off the coast of Anglesey, and investigates a tidal predictor in Liverpool. Miranda Krestovnikoff visits Jersey's Seymour Tower to witness the marine life revealed at low spring tide, Tessa Dunlop compares the fashions in bathing suits favoured by different generations of beach-goers and Mark Horton travels to Poppit Sands, Pembrokeshire, to explore the remains of a 900-year-old fish trap.
rdf:langString On this lush-green island, 1,500 kilometres from the mainland, Neil Oliver wanders amidst penal ruins, as he discovers the inspiring legacies of two historic figures; the first an audacious convict, and the second a reforming commandant. Alice Garner meets descendants of the famous mutineers on the Bounty at their annual festival, and witnesses their cultural heritage in full swing. In the race to save one of the world’s most endangered birds, Tim Flannery finds an island ark in the making on nearby Phillip Island. On Mount Bates Emma Johnston uncovers the role of the island in the birth of radio astronomy. Neil Oliver tests his mettle with a meal of local dream fish, claimed to cause LSD-like hallucinations, and Brendan Moar explores the dangerous job of unloading vital supplies on an island without a harbour.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver visits the birth place of his seafaring hero Lord Nelson. On the eerie shingle bank of Orford Ness, Alice Roberts leads a team trying to recreate the original war-winning experiment which proved that radar would work. Off the Norfolk coast, Nick Crane explored the remarkable lost world of "Doggerland". Miranda Krestovnikoff wades out into the mud of the Wash", a vast tidal feeding ground for migrating birds. To investigate the appeal of the glorious Essex fishing smacks, Mark Horton joins a crew on competition around the Thames Estuary.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver explores the historic Victorian-era town of Oamaru, New Zealand's self-described "Capital of Steampunk", visits the origins of Truby King's Plunket Society infant care in Karitane, and the unique Moeraki Boulders.
rdf:langString Tim Flannery begins this Top End adventure at Victoria Settlement and its tragic history in the struggle to colonise Australia's northern frontier. Neil Oliver examines the ferocious bombing of Darwin and a remarkable story of reconciliation between former enemies. Miriam Corowa confirms that not all Hollywood dreams come true especially along this unforgiving coast. Xanthe Mallett goes on patrol with Australian Customs and Fisheries to hunt for killer ghost nets. And no Top End story would be complete without a crocodile - Emma Johnston draws blood in the name of science.
rdf:langString Nicholas Crane journeys from Cardigan Bay in Ceredigion to the English/Welsh border via the seaside resort of Llandudno. Along the way he hears the heroic story of how two bridges were built across the treacherous Menai Strait. Meanwhile, anthropologist Alice Roberts explores the biggest prehistoric copper mine in the world, historian Neil Oliver unearths a Welsh Atlantis, and zoologist Miranda Krestovnikoff goes in search of the elusive leatherback turtles.
rdf:langString Historian Neil Oliver investigates the Victorian channel tunnel, anthropologist Alice Roberts heads for the Isle of Wight's forgotten space rocket testing site, and geographer Nicholas Crane dangles from Beachy Head to discover how the chalk coast was formed – and why it's disappearing. Mark Horton probes Southampton's claim to be the oldest active port, while Miranda Krestovnikoff explores the flora and fauna living on and around chalk ledges on the seabed.
rdf:langString On the rugged north Wales coast, we meet one of the longest-living animals, learn how a shipwrecked child changed the way we practise medicine and reveal how pebbles make detectives of us all. Farther along, we find out how, in 1826, messages were sent from Holyhead to Liverpool in mere seconds. Meanwhile, Neil Oliver is fascinated by a strange cave on the cliffs of the Great Orme.
rdf:langString Britain's last great wilderness, the stunning Cape Wrath, is the stomping ground for Nick Crane who discovers where wolves once trod and a hermit made his home. Ruth Goodman learns about the bizarre Victorian craze that drove women to extraordinary lengths collecting ferns on the perilous sea cliffs of Devon. Gem stone hunter Adam McIntosh finds an underwater path off the isle of Iona that leads to rare and beautiful 'Green Marble'. To learn the scientific secrets of fear used to design Blackpool's 'Big One' roller-coaster, Helen Arney rides this steel track of terror. Mark Horton reveals a coastal walk that takes in the whole history of Britain in just ten miles, on the little island of Lundy.
rdf:langString Castles are an integral part of the history and landscape of Britain, but the art of building a castle was brought across the channel by William the Conqueror. We visit the medieval quarry in France which supplied the stone for iconic buildings such as the Tower of London and Canterbury Cathedral. Nick Crane sets sail from Dover to visit the white cliffs of France. Connected by land before a mega flood carved the channel, Nick discovers that these divided cliffs are facing parallel challenges of coastal erosion.
rdf:langString The Coast team are all at sea, as they head offshore to explore surprising stories of love and death, cannibalism and communist submarines, seasickness and a seafaring prince. Nick Crane attempts one of the world's most fearsome yachting challenges, the Isle of Wight Round the Island Race. Mark Horton relives a gruesome tale of cannibalism and murder that scandalised Victorian Britain and still affects the law today. In Milford Haven, Ruth Goodman celebrates unsung heroes who arrived from distant shores. Naval historian Nick Hewitt searches out the remarkable remains of the submarines that threatened to sink Britain by strangling its sea trade. And one hardy bunch of sea-anglers, who all hail from Zimbabwe, find that a life on the ocean wave isn't all it's cracked up to be when they chance their hand with rod and line in the rolling seas off the coast of Yorkshire.
rdf:langString Nick must master the controls of a massive crane as he lifts the lid on the frantic activity at the Mega-Port of Immingham. Built a century ago to export coal, now they import the fuel that keeps our lights burning. Tessa Dunlop uncovers an astonishing top-secret story of how Hitler's bombers could have flooded London and possibly won the war. Ruth Goodman investigates how one fearless Victorian woman took on the Government to prevent prostitutes being thrown into 'Lock Hospitals', a tale of the clandestine sex trade that scandalized Victorian Britain. Mark Horton reveals how Greenwich became the centre of global sea navigation, examining the competing madcap schemes to determine a ship's position at sea that were proposed by the world's best brains in the 18th century.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver goes on a wild goose chase, and uncovers the hidden history of a remarkable singing star. Matt Carter delves into a brief encounter that left a curious legacy on the island.
rdf:langString A chance to see some of the best bits of the series, plus a look to the future to see how Britain's coastline might alter. What will be the effects of climate change, and could the coast become the country's powerhouse, with wind turbines dominating the skyline? What measures are we taking to protect the creatures that live in our waters? And just how much of our coastline is actually open to the public?
rdf:langString Scottish historian, archaeologist, author, and broadcaster Neil Oliver returns to our screens to explore the panoramic beauty and history of our coastlines.
rdf:langString Nick Crane explores some of the most spectacular Yorkshire sea cliffs in Britain. He joins secretive sea fishermen who have constructed a remarkable ropeway to make the perilous descent to fishing grounds at the foot of sheer sea cliffs. Nick also explores the ingenious water-powered mechanism that operates the Victorian cliff lift at Saltburn-by-the-Sea. Tessa Dunlop meets a woman who witnessed a top-secret American 'invasion' of the English south coast during the Second World War. On the sea cliffs that surround Ramsey Island, biologist Sarah Beynon hunts for the superheroes of the insect world who do the island's dirty work, the dung beetles.
rdf:langString Nicholas Crane unearths Berwick-upon-Tweed's violent past and Mark Horton explores Bamburgh Castle, once the royal seat of the Kingdom of Northumbria. Alice Roberts joins a project to rebuild a Stone Age settlement and Miranda Krestovnikoff visits a thriving colony of grey seals. Plus a trip to Lindisfarne and, as this leg of the journey comes to an end in Whitby, the team reveal how Bram Stoker was inspired to write Dracula there.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver takes to the air on an RAAF training mission to seek and destroy submarine invaders. Tim Flannery has a close encounter with history as he uncovers an unlikely meeting between French and English navigators Flinders and Baudin at Encounter Bay. Brendan Moar visits the moody Coorong to remember the ground-breaking Australian film Storm Boy. Neil Oliver investigates the quest to preserve Adelaide’s mother-ship, freshly saved from Scottish ruin. Emma Johnston dives deep into the stunning underwater caverns of the Limestone Coast to understand their formation. In Robe, Alice Garner gets a taste of how Victoria’s gold rush was the making of this coastal town across the border, and Neil Oliver examines new archaeological evidence of a wild fur trade that sprung up on remote Kangaroo Island, and its lasting impact on the endangered sea lions of Seal Bay.
rdf:langString Scottish historian and archaeologist Neil Oliver has his world turned upside down in Pauanui, while Marine Biologist Jacky Geurts delves into Whangamatā's mangrove wars.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver investigates the origins of the New Zealand accent and goes in search of a toxic arachnid with a tortured love life.
rdf:langString Miranda Krestovnikoff puts St Abbs' reputation as one of the foremost sites for underwater wildlife to the test as she dives into a marine reserve there. Alice Roberts finds out how the experts propose to save the Forth Road Bridge from the looming threat of rust, while Neil Oliver re-creates a wartime scheme which involved training seabirds to find German submarines.
rdf:langString In much-loved Byron Bay, Neil Oliver unearths the town’s surprisingly dirty history. Tim Flannery uncovers one of the most breathtaking adventures ever to have touched the Australian coast; the world’s longest recorded unbroken raft journey, that arrived in Ballina in 1973. Neil Oliver investigates a war along this coast that the authorities were determined to cover up, at great personal cost. In the pretty seaside town of Woolgoolga, Brendan Moar uncovers the historic roots of the largest regional population of Sikhs in the country. Off the coast of Coffs Harbour, Xanthe Mallett floors it with 600 horsepower of high-octane speed. Emma Johnston joins a grey nurse necropsy, and a dive, in search of the endangered species' hidden killers. At South West Rocks, Alice Garner discovers the surprising high society created by German internees during World War II. Finally, in the name of science, Neil Oliver launches a research missile into the East Australian Current.
rdf:langString Nick Crane explores how the remarkable history of Guernsey reveals both the risks and rewards of invasion. Tessa Dunlop visits Norfolk to relive the forgotten Zeppelin blitz on Britain during the First World War, which began at Great Yarmouth in January 1915 when the first Britons were killed in an air raid. Ruth Goodman joins the friendly invasion of the Isle of Man by thousands of bikers for the annual Isle of Man TT races. On a tiny rocky outcrop in seas off western Scotland, Andy Torbet encounters remarkable animal invaders – water voles who are usually confined to mainland Britain. The Coast team also visits the remote Island of Stroma, which was abandoned following the invasion of the modern world.
rdf:langString Neil Oliver evokes memories of the Cold War as he explores an abandoned radar site, while Hermione Cockburn meets a woman who was involved in top-secret work during the Second World War. As Mike Horton reveals the perilous state of some seaside piers, Alice Roberts indulges her interest in art when she visits Southwold, a Suffolk town which has inspired numerous painters in their artistic endeavours.
rdf:langString A trip along Scotland's south-west coast, from the jagged mountains of Arran to the English border at Gretna. The team visit the sand dunes where Alfred Nobel created the world's largest explosives factory. Plus the only place in the UK visited by Elvis Presley, the most southerly point in Scotland, the vast windswept mudflats of the Solway Firth — and the World Flounder Tramping Championships. Nicholas Crane also visits the granite island of Ailsa Craig.
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rdf:langString
rdf:langString ''[[#Coast Australia
rdf:langString Coast Australia
rdf:langString Coast Australia]]''
rdf:langString Coast New Zealand
rdf:langString Coast and Beyond
rdf:langString Greg Kung
rdf:langString Julian Clinkard
rdf:langString Alan Parker
rdf:langString Australia
rdf:langString New Zealand
rdf:langString United Kingdom
rdf:langString BBC Birmingham
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jonathan Barker
rdf:langString Oliver Clark
rdf:langString Jane Manning
rdf:langString Nigel Walk
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Lauri White
rdf:langString Marcus Moro
rdf:langString Martin Dowell
rdf:langString Mike Bloore
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Philip Smith
rdf:langString Phillip Smith
rdf:langString Gill Tierney
rdf:langString William Lyons
rdf:langString Debbie Cuell
rdf:langString Duncun Cooper
rdf:langString Emma De'ath
rdf:langString Gary Hunter
xsd:date 2005-07-22
xsd:date 2013-12-02
xsd:date 2016-04-19
rdf:langString English
xsd:date 2017-02-27
xsd:date 2017-05-29
rdf:langString present
xsd:integer 3
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rdf:langString
rdf:langString Niamh Linnie
rdf:langString Steve Evanson
rdf:langString Coast
rdf:langString Coast Australia
rdf:langString Coast New Zealand
rdf:langString Fossil Detectives
<second> 3600.0
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Brendan Walker
rdf:langString Cassie Newland
rdf:langString Dr Xanthé Mallett
rdf:langString Helen Arney
rdf:langString Auckland
rdf:langString Kaipara Harbour
rdf:langString The Netherlands
rdf:langString Winter
rdf:langString Far North
rdf:langString Devon and Cornwall
rdf:langString All at Sea
rdf:langString The Channel
rdf:langString Northern New South Wales: Byron Bay to South West Rocks
rdf:langString Anglesey to Blackpool
rdf:langString Arran to Gretna
rdf:langString Berwick to Robin Hood's Bay
rdf:langString Berwick-upon-Tweed to Aberdeen
rdf:langString Bounty from the Sea
rdf:langString Bournemouth to Plymouth
rdf:langString Bristol to Cardigan Bay
rdf:langString Cape Wrath to Orkney
rdf:langString Cardiff to St. David's
rdf:langString Cardigan Bay to the Dee
rdf:langString Caves and Coves
rdf:langString Coast Australia - NSW - Botany to Shoalhaven
rdf:langString Coral Coast: Wedge Island to Cape Range
rdf:langString Cork to Dublin
rdf:langString Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly
rdf:langString Darwin to the Cobourg Peninsula
rdf:langString Deep South
rdf:langString Dover to Exmouth
rdf:langString Dover to the Isle of Wight
rdf:langString Dublin to Derry
rdf:langString East Cape: White Island to Māhia Peninsula
rdf:langString Exmouth to Bristol
rdf:langString Felixstowe to Margate
rdf:langString Fiordland: Milford Sound to Puysegur Point
rdf:langString France: Cap Gris-Nez to Mont-Saint-Michel
rdf:langString Galway to Arranmore Island
rdf:langString Galway to Baltimore
rdf:langString Glasgow to Edinburgh via the Caledonian Canal
rdf:langString Gold to Sunshine Coast
rdf:langString Gower to Anglesey
rdf:langString Great Barrier Reef: Lizard to Heron Island
rdf:langString Heart of the British Isles: A Grand Tour
rdf:langString Holyhead to Liverpool
rdf:langString Hull to London
rdf:langString Ingenious Isles
rdf:langString Inner Hebrides to the Faroe Islands
rdf:langString Invaders of the Isles
rdf:langString John o' Groats to Berwick
rdf:langString Joy of the Coast
rdf:langString King's Lynn to Felixstowe
rdf:langString Land's End to Porthcawl
rdf:langString Life Beyond the Edge
rdf:langString Liverpool to the Solway Firth
rdf:langString London to Antwerp
rdf:langString Newcastle to Hull
rdf:langString North NSW - Lord Howe
rdf:langString North Queensland - Townsville to Cooktown
rdf:langString Norway: Lillesand to Svalbard
rdf:langString Offshore!
rdf:langString Our Holiday Coast
rdf:langString Peril from the Seas
rdf:langString Pilbara - Montebello Islands to Cape Keraudren
rdf:langString Rivers and Seas Collide
rdf:langString Robin Hood's Bay to the Wash
rdf:langString Rosyth to Hull
rdf:langString Sea and the City
rdf:langString Secret Paths to Hidden Treasures
rdf:langString Shetland to Orkney
rdf:langString South Australia - Adelaide to Port Lincoln
rdf:langString South Western Australia - Albany to Esperance
rdf:langString South Western Australia: Perth to Augusta
rdf:langString South Westland
rdf:langString Southport to Whitehaven including the Isle of Man
rdf:langString Swanage to Land's End
rdf:langString Sweden and The Baltic Sea
rdf:langString Sydney: Botany Bay to North Head
rdf:langString Tasmania - North Coast and Bass Strait Islands
rdf:langString Tasmania: Freycinet to Bruny Island
rdf:langString The Channel Islands to Dover
rdf:langString The Explorers' Coast
rdf:langString The Future Coast
rdf:langString The Hidden History of Harbours
rdf:langString The Irish Sea
rdf:langString The Kimberley: Broome to Freshwater Cove
rdf:langString The Mysteries of the Isles
rdf:langString The North Kimberley
rdf:langString The Northern Ireland Coast
rdf:langString The Riddle of the Tides
rdf:langString The Secret Life of Beaches
rdf:langString The Secret Life of Sea Cliffs
rdf:langString The Wash to Dover
rdf:langString The West Coast of Scotland and Western Isles
rdf:langString The Western Isles and Shetland
rdf:langString The Workers' Coast
rdf:langString Top of the South: Farewell Spit to Picton
rdf:langString Victoria - Port Melbourne to Portland
rdf:langString Victoria: Mornington to Port Campbell
rdf:langString Wales: Border to Border
rdf:langString Whitstable to the Isle of Wight
rdf:langString Wild Waters
rdf:langString Victoria: Mornington Peninsula to the Gippsland Lakes
rdf:langString South Australia: Kangaroo Island & Port Adelaide to the Limestone Coast
rdf:langString Southern New South Wales: Seven Mile Beach to Gabo Island
rdf:langString Coast is a BBC documentary series first broadcast on BBC Two television in 2005. It covers various subjects relating to both the natural and social history of the British coastline and also more recently, that of Britain's near neighbours. The seventh series followed a different format from previous series. In 2016, reports from the show were repackaged as Coast: The Great Guide (known as Coast Great Guides when broadcast on BBC Four in 2021), an eight part series on BBC Two. The series is a collaboration between the Open University and BBC Productions, Birmingham. It is also known as the placeholder programme when BBC2 is under a fault in programming. In December 2013, the first reversion of the series format, Coast Australia, was screened on The History Channel in Australia. Hosted by Neil Oliver, it was the second highest-rated show in the history of the channel. It started airing on BBC Two from 14 May 2014; series 2 was aired in 2015. Coast New Zealand aired in 2016. A similar show, Arfordir Cymru (Wales Coast), is broadcast on the Welsh-language broadcaster S4C and hosted by Bedwyr Rees; three series have aired so far, each of six 23-minute-long episodes, travelling in Pembrokeshire (2014), the Llŷn Peninsula (2015), and Cardigan Bay (2017).
rdf:langString Coast is een Britse documentaireserie van de BBC. Per aflevering wordt een stukje kust afgereisd en wordt aan de hand van de bezochte locaties informatie gegeven over geografie, geschiedenis, biologie, geologie en dergelijke. De serie is een coproductie van de BBC met The Open University.
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rdf:langString Michael Burke
rdf:langString Ross Young
rdf:langString Jonathan Barker
rdf:langString Jason Holmes
rdf:langString Oliver Clark
rdf:langString Matt Barrett
rdf:langString Paul Barnett
rdf:langString Amanda Reilly
rdf:langString Amanda Reilly &
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rdf:langString Chris Rushton
rdf:langString David Symonds
rdf:langString Dick Sharman
rdf:langString Eleanor Horne
rdf:langString Jane McWilliams
rdf:langString Jason Holmes &
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rdf:langString John Trefor
rdf:langString Jonathon Barker
rdf:langString Lizzie Mottram
rdf:langString Nicky Taylor
rdf:langString Nigel Walk
rdf:langString Paul Overton
rdf:langString Richard Maude
rdf:langString Richard Trayler-Smith
rdf:langString Roger Ford-Hutchinson
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data from the linked data cloud