Exploring The Underwater World | 4K UHD | Blue Planet II | BBC Earth

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Publicado 2023-09-06
Travel to the depths of our mysterious oceans to discover all kinds of curious creatures underwater – from fish that communicate by glowing to the deadly Portuguese Man O' War.

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Planet Earth bit.ly/PlanetEarthPlaylist
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Planet Dinosaur bit.ly/PlanetDinosaurPlaylist

Taken From Blue Planet II
This bold cinematic experience takes viewers on a magical adventure across the greatest, yet least known, parts of our planet – our oceans. Since Blue Planet aired in 2001, our understanding of life beneath the waves has completely changed. Travelling from the icy polar seas to the vibrant blues of the coral atolls, this series shares these astonishing new discoveries. Meet the strange octopuses lurking in the depths of the Antarctic Ocean. Watch giant trevally fish leap to catch birds in mid-air. And ride on the back of a hammerhead shark as it attacks. Inspiring awe and wonder, Blue Planet II reveals surprising new places, charismatic new characters and extraordinary new behaviours.

Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of entertaining and thought-provoking natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this.

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00:00:00 The Deadly Portuguese Man O’War
00:05:14 Stingray Ambushes Army Of Crabs
00:11:05 Crab vs Eel vs Octopus
00:16:22 Cuttlefish Hypnotises Prey
00:20:13 Fish vs Bird
00:26:27 Amazing Clownfish Teamwork
00:32:48 Sharks Feast on Whale
00:36:53 Cuttlefish Mimics Being Female to Mate
00:41:53 The Sex-Shifting Fish
00:47:24 Puffin Hunts Fish To Feed Puffling
00:55:02 What Lurks In The Midnight Zone?
01:02:47 Eel Suffers Toxic Shock

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @JAY1892
    Sir David has educated so many people across our planet, it’s unfathomable. Not to mention the spark of interest he’s more than likely ignited in thousands of youngsters to become biologists, palaeontologists, scientists, geographers, zoologists etc What a marvellous man that we’ve been lucky enough to ‘know,’ a true legend.
  • @stevensims3342
    The cuttlefish along with many other sea creatures are perfect depictions of alien creatures you've simply grown accustomed to.
  • @BeanutButterBoy
    The footage 10/10 The Sound Design 10/10 The Narration 100/10 Making this free for us to all enjoy 10/10 Thank you so much BBC, David Attenborough is a gem and a one of a kind human being <3
  • @rogsolaris7411
    Unbelievable footage, it's hard to imagine how much time and research goes into just getting one shot. In the 8th minute, all those crabs, and then that Stingray glides in from nowhere and dwarfs all the crabs, like a patrolling alien. Just incredible.
  • @nickacelvn
    Can you give a thumbs up not only for Davids narration but for the utter brilliance and sheer dedication of the camera people who capture this incredible footage. Truly masters of there art.
  • @OneEyedJoel
    everyday I find a new reason to love this planet and appreciate everything we have here, it is such a honor and a privilege to be able to see some of the things bbc and others give us to view. Thank you a million times over!
  • @matthewsykes4814
    The daft thing is I'm watching this on a 1080p TV rather than a 4K UHD monitor and it still looks incredible. Nature never ceases to amaze me.
  • @tonydabaloney
    I worked one summer at a science center and the curator was a guy named Mobley. He had a thick beard that I asked him about, because it was so hot and he looked miserable. He pulled it up under his chin and showed me how his skin looked like scars from 3rd degree burns. It went down his chest and back in strings in some places. He was in Brazil doing research and while swimming one day had one tentacle from a Man a War hit his arm. He felt the pain ,but when he tried to pull his arm away it just pulled the rest of it on to him. He said that it came close to killing him, but during the 3 hour ride to a hospital he said he prayed for death. Said the pain was indescribable. I will say it looked bad. Like someone pulled super heated wires over his skin. It wasn't floating on top, but just under the surface.
  • @lexplorerrr
    Wow! Wasn’t just amazed by the creatures I’ve seen here, but learned a lot as well! Kudos to the whole crew as well who captured and recorded all of these👏🏼
  • @theingabo212
    All of these epic shots and cinematography are truly amazing. But without David’s narration it wouldn’t be the same. It’s crazy how dependent these sort of documentaries are on their narrator.
  • Thanks to bbc for uploading this on youtube. Such Awe-inspiring documentaries need to be appreciated by the entire humanity. Kudos to Sir Attenborough and the entire team for their dedication and commitment. Great work🎉.
  • @Remhad
    Jellyfish are deadly, but so gorgeous. It’s like a villain from a story that you can’t help be captivated by.
  • @AntsCanada
    I love you, Sir David Attenborough! You were the voice of my nature understanding since childhood. 🙌🌊🪼🐟
  • @thananunr
    I cannot stand not hitting Like to this video. The art of doing documentary as of it's a film with the wild animal as the main actor. The sound, scene arrangement & sequences, its colors, story-telling, sound effects, etc. It's a really brilliant job you guys are doing.
  • @alainlalonde
    Johnny seems like a really nice guide. He cared and respected the fish. Good man.
  • @joecash6245
    THANK YOU DAVID ATTENBOROUGH for all the narrations you have done over the years and the many more to come
  • @brianmccaig
    Only the BBC can do this type of nature programme successfully. The best camera technicians, and Sir David Attenborough's unrivalled narration.
  • @ericchan6343
    The amount of high quality video, audio and story telling. What a wonderful time to be in to be able to enjoy such a masterpiece.
  • @agnibhu
    I find this documentary very philosophical, full of wisdom. Especially the last statement of each chapter by Mr. Attenborough is very deep philosophical that you can relate to everyday human life.