| začátek čtvrtek 1., 23:00 |
konec 00:00 |
TV kanál National Geographic |
tagy sport, věda, dokumenty |
(Strangest Things: Season 3: Turin Shroud, Rocket Belt, Scythian Cups) Věda Locked away in the vaults of museums, laboratories and storage rooms are the most remarkable and mysterious objects on Earth. Until now, the public has never had such access to these rare finds. Using the latest 3D imaging, we can pull them apart, zero in on small details, and rebuild lost or damaged features to uncover their mind-boggling, ancient and bizarre secrets. Scientists and historians reveal the most up-to-date understanding of these oddities and ponder the unanswered questions that remain. From the rarest artifacts found in buried tombs to the weirdest inventions of military engineers and mad scientists to the most beautiful and feared relics of cults and lost societies, these are the world’s strangest things. The shroud of Turin is one of the most debated archaeological artifacts in the world. Is it the burial cloth of the Christian messiah, Jesus of Nazareth, or is it an elaborate fake? Every time the evidence points one way or another, a credible counter argument is raised. In the collective imagination of the mid-20th century, jetpacks were the personalized transportation of the future. American engineer Wendell Moore really did develop and test a model for the military, so why don’t we all have one? Buried for 2,400 years, a pair of beautiful cups are discovered in a grave mound made by Scythians, an ancient civilization of the Caucasus Mountains. What can the cups be for if they have holes in the bottom? And why are they solid gold? MN 7 (United States)
Zatím si tento pořad nikdo nepřidal do osobního programu.