Ice has always moved. When glaciation took hold some 34 million years ago, interconnected rivers of ice combined to produce the Earth's vast ice sheets. As temperatures slowly warmed glaciers developed a unique balancing act; advancing and retreating to calibrate their annual winter accumulation against summer melt. Sometimes calving colossal icebergs into the sea. A positive feedback loop that has regulated the movement of ice for millions of years.

Stand-up comedian Robert Newman gets to grips with the wars and politics of the last hundred years, ...

Departing from peripheral details of some paintings of the Bilbao Fine Arts Museum, a female narrato...

An epic story of Australian and international scientists who are racing to understand our greatest n...

Deciding whether to have a child is an emotionally fraught and deeply personal process. Deciding ami...

The story of life on our planet by the man who has seen more of the natural world than any other. In...

A bare-knuckled critique of corporate America told through the powerful true story of a toxic CEO wh...

Spin doctors spread misinformation and confusion among American citizens to delay progress on such i...

In Inukjuak, an Inuit community in the Eastern Arctic, a baby boy has come into the world and they c...

According to climate scientists, the year 2050 will be a tipping point in the history of our planet....

Since the late 18th century American legal decision that the business corporation organizational mod...

In the years since New Zealand politicians began to grapple with climate change our greenhouse gas e...

Drawing on original footage from National Geographic, Etched in Bone explores the impact of one noto...

In the fifties, when the future Democratic Republic of Congo was still a Belgian colony, an entire g...

An investigation into the unfolding history of nuclear testing, uranium mining, and nuclear waste di...

The early retired Gert spends the last summer in his garden, a place that has become a real home for...

This portait of life on the tea plantations is decidedly rosy – clearly, there are no exploited work...