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Season 1 | 30s

The forces of nature have kept Earth on the move since it was formed billions of years ago. Though we can't feel the motion, we experience the consequences ­from tidal bores surging through the Amazon rainforest to the ruinous power of hurricanes.

Extras
Researcher Oswaldo Vasquez swims with humpback whales in the Silver Banks Marine Reserve.
The rotation of our planet affects many creatures, including the humble dung beetle.
Surfer Serginho Laus rides the Prororoca Wave, a tidal wave on the Amazon River in Brazil.
After a dry summer the parched plains of the Serengeti transform into a green blanket.
The Baroarbunga volcano in Iceland spews red hot lava.
In the Dominican Republic a team of divers explore an underground cave system.
At the Kawah Ijen volcano in Indonesia, bright yellow elemental sulphur is mined.
In Catalonia, Spain, teams compete to build the tallest, most complex human towers.
Learn how Earth’s chemical elements transformed barren rock into a living world.
Learn how we experience the consequences of natural forces that keep Earth on the move.