Here we present the most exciting expeditions and unique journeys. The world is growing smaller, but it is bigger than you think. Some people visualize the opportunities for others, and make our lives exciting to live.
View the world with no secrets: you can consider it in two ways: both as a threat and a opportunity. Some ways people live their lifes will surprise you...
87 participants from nine countries join an expedition led of The Norwegian Polar Institute. Approximately 15 000 kg with equipment will in few days arrive by ship. Further will the equipment be transported on sledges to the Norwegian camp Troll.
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Long time to wait for tasting.
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The 71 years old Norwegian Bordvar Schjeldrup says he has discovered a forgotten, geomethrical ancient languange, which connect everything from the pyramids and Jesus together. Now his theory would be presented in the library of Alexandria. One is of his most interesting theory is about the Kheops Pyramid in Egypt.
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Fossil find of "oldest land animal" in Scotland near near Stonehaven. It was not big animal, but anyway it was interesting to find out more about our past.
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This find was a great discovery in a very interesting archaeological site. Lions are mentioned by classical scholars and in pharaonic inscriptions as being among the sacred animals that were bred and buried in the Nile valley. And yet no specimens have been found in Egypt until the excavation of the Bubasteion necropolis at Saqqara (photo for illustration:TE).
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A new species of a prehistoric reptile with a 16-foot wingspan has emerged from the Sahara desert sands in Africa, American scientists announced. Belonging to the group of flying reptiles known as pterosaurs, the creature lived in the middle of the Cretaceous period, the final chapter of the age of its dinosaur cousins.
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Has Nessie in Loch Ness, Scotland, really a relative in China? According to Chinese state media have hundreds of visitors spotting a black monster with a horse-like head in a deep volcanic lake near China's border with North Korea. China now claims to have its own Nessie.
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Remains of a 120-million-year-old plesiosaur, which looks like Scotland's Loch Ness Monster, has been discovered in the central Australian outback. So perhaps Nessie in Scotland has a relative in Australia?
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What is really happening in Hessdalen? Mysterious lights have frightened locals for many years. Now it`s time to find out what it really is, and some of the most advanced equipment is used to solve the great mystery.
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A skeleton is found in a grave. Based on the find, do we have to reconsider our understanding that this old monument has been a holy place only, and has only been used to measure summer and winter solstice, and then at a later time been used to execute people?
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250 members from an Indian tribe that the anthropologists believed that had died out in the 1920`s, has recently been found in a desert part of Brazil. The sensational exploration happened when local authorities in the state Acre decided to establish a national park.
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Two French archaeologists have found secret entrances (passages) to several unknown rooms and chambers in the Cheops Pyramid in Egypt, also known as the great Pyramid in Giza.
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Japan's most celebrated Yeti-hunter, Yoshiteru Takahashi, left his country to make "the definitive attempt" to photograph the beast. Mr Takahashi claims to have found a yeti cave on the slopes of Dhaulagiri, the world's fifth highest mountain, in western Nepal.
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It is just what the locals believe. Now Chinese scientists are going to find the truth about it.
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Is the recently found skull fossil a hominid, perhaps our earliest known ancestor? This is the only really complete skull in that five-million-year gap. It's given the nickname "Toumaë. This creature could be our missing ancestor; it could be on the human line of evolution.
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