video record
Media not available in the Digital Archive
Description
The way of life of many animals was shaped by the industrial age. The canal network not only provided transport for bulk goods, it was also a fantastic new habitat. In Wales, slate quarries, with t...heir cliff-like ledges, provided a new home for coastal birds and falcons. London in the 1800s was the largest city in the world. Coal fires choked the city and the Victorians planted large numbers of London plane trees. They became the capital's lungs, changing the tree-scape of cities forever.
Metadata describing this Open University video programme
Series: British Isles: A Natural History
First transmission date: 03-11-2004
Published: 2004
Rights Statement:
Restrictions on use:
Duration: 00:59:00
Note: This programme contains a 10 minute 'Landscape Detectives' section looking at the natural history of the east of England.
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Producer: Michael Gunton
Contributors: Alan Adkinson; Richard Daniel; Penny Hemphill; Phil Richardson; Alan Titchmarsh
Publisher: BBC Open University
Link to related site: Website: http://www.open2.net/naturalhistory/index.html
Subject terms: Archaeology--Great Britain; Natural history--Great Britain
Production number: NINH20235
Available to public: no