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Berkeley Groks Science Show is a weekly science programme broadcast on radio stations throughout the USA. Each programme provides an in-depth look at recent developments in the world of science and technology and examine the effects of these discoveries on our daily lives. Each episode features an interview with a leading scientist, researcher or science writer discussing stimulating work in their field, as well as humorous, entertaining segments. Each new show is available as a podcast and past episodes are archived as MP3 files on The Internet Archive
Oxford Scientific, now part of Getty Images, are leading producers of natural history films and photographs. The site has separate areas for images and video footage, and resources on a particular topic can be sifted by whether they are rights ready or rights free. Previews use QuickTime.
The BBC, the bfi National Film and Television Archive, Channel 4 and the Open University have set up the Creative Archive Licence Group to make audiovisual archive content available for download under the terms of the Creative Archive Licence - a single, shared user licence scheme for the downloading of moving images, audio and stills. Moving image and sound content is freely available for download and non-commercial reuse, one users have signed into the Creative Archive Licence. Initial content from the BBC (including natural history, geographical locations, colours and the weather) and the British Film Institute (mostly silent film material) is now available, in Windows Media, QuickTime and MPEG-1 formats.
Part of the Internet Archive, which also covers archived moving images (The Internet Moving Images Archive), audio and software, the Wayback Machine holds cached versions of thousands of websites and billions of pages, allowing users to look at sites that are no longer available or at earlier versions of ones that are still around. An invaluable resource that, due to the gigantic nature of the holdings, is slightly hampered by the fact that no list of the holdings can be easily provided. This means inevitably that correct recall of the URL in question is necessary, or failing that, searching for it on the web first.
These time-lapse films of flowering plants have been subdivided by specific flower as well as by specific processes like Germination, Tropism, Circadian Responses and others. The movies require QuickTime to be viewed. The site also holds a detailed guide on how to undertake time-lapse photography.
You are currently searching in Moving Image Gateway. Search all the BUFVC's collections for 'Botany' in All fields.