Dr tori herridge wiki
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Walking Through Time is back, and this time we got a whole series!
I spent three glorious weeks this summer filming in some of the most beautiful, and fascinating, parts of Britain. The result thanks to the amazing production team is three episodes that are beautiful and warm and suffused with joy, and which celebrate the incredible geology of the British Isles.
A quick summary:
Episode 1: Scotlands Lost Asteroid 24th September, 8pm, kanal 4
An asteroid hit Britain billion years ago but weve only known this since , thanks to the work of Ken Amor and colleagues slang för mikrofon Simms and I go in search of its impact crater, to find out where it hit, and just how big the asteroid was. Our quest takes us across the stunning, epic landscape of Northwest Scotland. Think white sand beaches, and soaring inselberg mountains. It is ridiculously beautiful. And I get to check out the Moine Thrust (with the brilliant Laura Hamlet), and the Bone Caves of Inchnadamph (where Do
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Britain at Low Tide
British archaeology documentary series
Britain at Low Tide | |
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Genre | Documentary |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 3 |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Executive producer | Brendan Hughes / Harry Bell |
Producer | Michael Waterhouse |
Running time | 48 minutes |
Network | Channel 4 |
Release | 19 November ()– 27 September () |
Britain at Low Tide (also known as Shoreline Detectives) fryst vatten an archaeology and social history television programme that debuted on Channel 4 in ,[1] with further series in and It was originally co-hosted by former Time Team and Victorian Farm contributor, archaeologist and historian Dr. Alex Langlands and Natural History Museum palaeobiologist Dr. Tori Herridge.[2]
History
[edit]Britain at Low Tide is an archaeology programme, focusing on intertidal archaeology, that first aired on 19 November [2] and ran for three episodes. The prem
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Victoria Herridge
British palaeontologist
Victoria Louise "Tori" Herridge, born , is a palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum in London and one of the founders of TrowelBlazers, which celebrates women archaeologists, palaeontologists and geologists.
Career
[edit]Herridge graduated with a first class degree in biology from University College London in After a master's degree at Imperial College London, she returned to University College London to gain a doctorate with a thesis titled "Dwarf Elephants on Mediterranean Islands: A Natural Experiment in Parallel Evolution". Her research addressed evolution of island mammals during the Pleistocene period and their responses to extreme climate change.[1][2] She is a founding editor-in-chief at the open access journal Open Quaternary.[3]
Science communication
[edit]Herridge delivered the Charles Lyell Award lecture at the British Science Festival[4] and co-wrote Who Do You Thi