terça-feira, 22 de agosto de 2017

Watch This: How to move 500 elephants, and more

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ANIMALS  |   EXPLORERS  |  NEWS  |  ADVENTURE
See our producers' favorite videos of the week
|     1:08    |     NEWS    |
This Is the Biggest Dinosaur Ever Found
It's no small feat to uncover the largest dinosaur ever discovered. In 2013, Argentine paleontologists were called to a family farm in the Patagonia region after the landowners thought they had found something interesting. The newly named Patagotitan mayorum is the biggest dinosaur paleontologists have ever found. At nearly 70 tons, it is the heaviest animal to ever walk on land. It belongs to a group of long-necked dinosaurs called titanosaurs, many of which grew to sizes similar to Patagotitan.
—Shaena Montanari, mass media fellow
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|     1:43    |     101 VIDEOS    |
Meet Some of the World's Most Endangered Animals
While some of the world's critically endangered species include charismatic animals like the Malayan tiger, others—like the Santa Catalina Island rattlesnake—are at risk of going extinct before most people know they even exist. Fortunately, photographer Joel Sartore has been on a mission to capture portraits of thousands of species across the globe as part of National Geographic Photo Ark. His portraits, such as those in this video, serve both as a record of each animal's existence and inspiration to help protect them.
—Jed Winer, associate producer
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|     1:29    |     NEWS    |
See What It Takes to Move 500 Elephants
Last July, one conservation group completed a years-long endeavor to move more than 500 African elephants. Sedated via helicopter, unconscious elephants were hoisted by a crane onto trucks and driven 12 hours across Malawi. Conservationists hope they'll repopulate a park once decimated by poaching. Watching these six-ton animals move to a new home makes for video that's both exciting and adorable. Amid news of horrific threats facing wildlife, it's a success story worth celebrating.
—Sarah Gibbens, online writer
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|     7:03    |     SHORT FILM SHOWCASE    |
She Escaped Genocide in Her Homeland. Now, She Returns to Help
This Short Film Showcase piece is beautifully shot and inventively animated, but it's Imana's poignant story—narrowly escaping death as an infant, growing up in Belgium as a dark-skinned girl, reconnecting to her homeland and birth family as an adult—that makes this such a powerful watch. It's intimate, personal stories like these that help us truly connect to the impact of horrifying events like the Rwanda genocide—and learn what we can do to help rebuild.
—Rachel Brown, associate producer
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Let us know at watchthis@natgeo.com.
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