Videos with tag nature
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John Mayer performing Human Nature Michael Jackson Memorial Tribute

no talking - no noise - just music. Enjoy! Please comment, rate and subscribe me! Visit my blog for daily music updates! http://iwontstfu.com/

Channels: Music 

Added: 5062 days ago by blogpost_biz

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Michael Jackson's This Is It HD Teaser 02: Drill - They Don't Care About Us

1080p HD: http://is.gd/4E0j7 Official HD teaser released by Sony that shows Michael Jackson rehearsing the Drill dance sequence and The Way You Make Me Feel for his "This Is It" concert series. The documentary "This Is It" makes its debut worldwide on October 28, 2009.

Channels: Music 

Added: 5062 days ago by blogpost_biz

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MovNat - Erwan Le Corre - The Workout The World Forgot

http://www.movnat.com/ MovNat = Move Natural / Movement in Nature / Movement for Nature MovNat® is a philosophy and practice that empowers Zoo humans to experience their true nature. Our true nature is to be strong, healthy, happy and free. MovNat = Move Natural / Movement in Nature / Movement for Nature The MovNat education program comprises the Natural Movement Coaching System® and the True Nature® Life Coaching. _The Natural Movement Coaching System® enables people to make faster, safer and broader progress in the practice of natural movement. The practice of MovNat is fully scalable and suits any individual regardless of experience, condition, or gender. _The True Nature® Life Coaching empowers Zoo humans to experience their true nature. The True Nature® program includes the Natural Movement Coaching System® and also addresses the rehabilitation of other natural patterns such as eating patterns, sleeping patterns, thinking patterns and other daily life patterns. To learn more, visit http://www.movnat.com/ This video displays the most natural expression of MovNat and is designed to be inspirational. It does not encompass all aspects of natural movement training nor explains the MovNat coaching method. MovNat video "Explore your true nature" Natural movement: Erwan Le Corre, founder of MovNat. Location: Corsica island, France. Filmmaking: Timothy Kahn. Music: Tryad http://www.tryad.org/ "Waltz into the moonlight" and "I see". Thanks to Tryad for their wonderful music!

Channels: Fitness 

Added: 5062 days ago by blogpost_biz

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Geo Da Silva Vs Dj Matush - Like A Truck & Latino Life (Ebo Mastermix) HQ

Geo Da Silva Vs Dj Matush - Like A Truck & Latino Life (Ebo Mastermix) HQ

Channels: Music 

Added: 5062 days ago by blogpost_biz

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Timbaland feat Justin Timberlake - Carryout (Vindata Electro Remix)

♥♫ Timbaland feat Justin Timberlake - Carryout (Vindata Electro Remix) ♥♫ *****╔═╦╗╔╦╗╔═╦═╦╦╦╦╗╔═╗***** *****║╚╣║║║╚╣╚╣╔╣╔╣║╚╣═╣***** *****╠╗║╚╝║║║╗║╚╣║║║║║═╣***** *****╚═╩══╩═╩═╩═╩╝╚╩═╩═╝*****

Channels: Music 

Added: 5063 days ago by blogpost_biz

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Worlds deepest living fishes survives under pressure

fishes survives under the largest pressure during millions of years. peixe das profundezas sobrevive sob a maior pressao do mar durante milhões de anos. Prehistoric fish are various groups of fishes that lived before recorded history. A few, such as the coelacanth still exist today and are considered living fossils. The first fish and the first vertebrates, were the ostracoderms, which appeared in the Cambrian Period, about 510 million years ago, and became extinct at the end of the Devonian, about 350 million years ago. Ostracoderms were jawless fishes found mainly in fresh water. They were covered with a bony armor or scales and were often less than 30 cm (1 ft) long. The ostracoderms are placed in the class Agnatha along with the living jawless fishes, the lampreys and hagfishes, which are believed to be descended from the ostracoderms. The first fish with jaws, the acanthodians, or spiny sharks, appeared in the late Silurian, about 410 million years ago, and became extinct before the end of the Permian, about 250 million years ago. Acanthodians were generally small sharklike fishes varying from toothless filter-feeders to toothed predators. They were once often classified as an order of the class Placodermi, another group of primitive fishes, but recent authorities tend to place the acanthodiaes or that both groups share a common ancestor. The placoderms, another group of jawed fishes, appeared at the beginning of the Devonian, about 395 million years ago, and became extinct at the end of the Devonian or the beginning of the Mississippian (Carboniferous), about 345 million years ago. Detailed anatomical studies of fossil remains by the Swedish scientist Erik Stensiö strongly suggest that the placoderms were closely related to sharks. Placoderms were typically small, flattened bottom-dwellers, however, many, particularly the arthrodires, were active midwater predators. Dunkleosteus was the largest and most famous of these. The upper jaw was firmly fused to the skull, but there was a hinge joint between the skull and the bony plating of the trunk region. This allowed the upper part of the head to be thrown back, and in arthrodires, this allowed them to take larger bites. The cartilaginous-skeleton sharks and rays, class Chondrichthyes, which appeared about 370 million years ago in the middle Devonian, are generally believed to be descended from the bony-skeleton placoderms. The cartilaginous skeletons are considered to be a later development. The modern bony fishes, class Osteichthyes, appeared in the late Silurian or early Devonian, about 395 million years ago. The early forms were freshwater fishes, for no fossil remains of modern bony fishes have been found in marine deposits older than Triassic time, about 230 million years ago. The Osteichthyes may have arisen from the acanthodians. A subclass of the Osteichthyes, the ray-finned fishes (subclass Actinopterygii), became and have remained the dominant group of fishes throughout the world. It was not the ray-finned fishes, however, that led to the evolution of the land vertebrates. The ancestors of the land vertebrates are found among another group of bony fishes called the Choanichthyes or Sarcopterygii. Choanate fishes are characterized by internal nostrils, fleshy fins called lobe fins, and cosmoid scales. The choanate fishes appeared in the late Silurian or early Devonian, more than 390 million years ago, and possibly arose from the acanthodians. The choanate fishes include a group known as the Crossopterygii, which has one living representative, the coelacanth (Latimeria). During the Devonian Period some crossopterygian fishes of the order (or suborder) Rhipidistia crawled out of the water to become the first tetrapods. The story of vertebrate evolution started in the seas of the Cambrian period, when jawless, toothless, soft-bodied fishlike creatures wriggled through the water, sucking up microscopic food particles. Only after tough, non-decaying bone was developed (initially as a scaly outer covering and later within the body) did fossils form and become preserved in the rocks. And only then could paleontologists take up the story with any certainty. The earliest traces of bony scales are found in rocks of the Late Cambrian period, and the first recognizable vertebrate fish has been found in Australian rocks of Early Ordovician age. So, the first chapter in the vertebrate evolution starts with the ancient Arandaspis, a fish about 6in/15cm long with no jaws, no teeth and no fins other than a tail. It did, however, have gills and a stiffening rod of cartilaginous material (the notochord) that served as a backbone. w1tv 10 minutes. http://w1tv.sites.uol.com.br

Channels: Pets & Animals 

Added: 5064 days ago by blogpost_biz

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Black Hiker with Blair Underwood

A black man tries to enjoy a scenic hike.

Channels: Funny 

Added: 5066 days ago by blogpost_biz

Runtime: 01:00 | Views: 744 | Comments: 0

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"Sneezing Baby Panda" for Charity!

Laughing at a viral video is fun, but helping is even better. Spend a few minutes on SocialVibe, and we'll make a donation to the charity of your choice! http://www.socialvibe.com/sneezingpanda?aaid=112&engage=true&rs=yt004

Channels: Funny 

Added: 5067 days ago by blogpost_biz

Runtime: 01:00 | Views: 840 | Comments: 0

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Fastest animals on Earth in slow motion - Animal Camera - BBC

Learn how the fastest animals on the planet move with the help of some truly awe-inspiring slow motion wildlife camera technology. See the amazing movements of a water balloon when it is popped, a lizard on the attack, and a crab with a fearsome punch. Great animal video from BBC wildlife show Animal Camera. Hosted by Steve Leonard.

Channels: Pets & Animals 

Added: 5067 days ago by blogpost_biz

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Into the lion's den! - extreme animals - BBC wildlife

See this amazing video of an understandably terrified Steve Leonard walking into a dangerous king lion's den before the lion changes its mind and goes for the attack! Would you be brave enough to attempt to cuddle a creature with powerufl paws, razor sharp claws and gnashing teeth? From the BBC

Channels: Pets & Animals 

Added: 5067 days ago by blogpost_biz

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Animal hypnosis and trances - BBC

Watch these weird and wonderful images of animal hypnosis in this BBC clip. When in danger, animals will often fall into a trance-like state to avoid capture.

Channels: Pets & Animals 

Added: 5067 days ago by blogpost_biz

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Elephant mating, fighting & pregnancy - BBC Animals

From the creation of a fertile egg in a female matriarch, to the battles to find a mate, to the long biological journey to fertilisation, this amazing short video from BBC wildlife show 'Animals: The Inside Story' charts the incredible story of reproduction in the elephant world.

Channels: Pets & Animals 

Added: 5067 days ago by blogpost_biz

Runtime: 01:00 | Views: 981 | Comments: 0

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