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Discovery Channel - Lost Nuke (2004)  Movies

Posted by Tutorial at Sept. 8, 2017
Discovery Channel - Lost Nuke (2004)

Discovery Channel - Lost Nuke (2004)
HDTV | 1280 x 720 | .MKV/AVC @ 4000 Kbps | 46 min 3 s | 1.41 GB
Audio: English AC-3 384 Kbps, 2 channels | Subs: None
Genre: Documentary, History, War

In February, 1950, a U.S. Air Force bomber carrying a nuclear bomb went missing off the coast of British Columbia. More than half a century later, a Canadian expedition team travels to the remote mountain crash site in the hope of solving the mystery of the world's first lost nuclear weapon.

Zoo Wars (2018)  Movies

Posted by Without at Oct. 11, 2018
Zoo Wars (2018)

Zoo Wars (2018)
HDRip | MKV | 720x400 | AVC@2171 kb/s | English AC3@192 kb/s | 2 channels | 1 h 10 min | 1.17 GB
WEB-DL 1080p | MKV | 1920x1080 | AVC@5146 kb/s | English AC3@192 kb/s | 2 channels | 1 h 10 min | 2.61 GB
Genre: Animation

Nuke is a regular city elephant with a boring desk job yearning for great space adventures. When Nuke joins forces with rogue warrior Squeeze Whistle, a fearless space squirrel, they set off on a fur-raising adventure to rescue a princess and stop an evil mouse intent on taking over the galaxy.

Atomic Journeys: Welcome to Ground Zero (1999)  Movies

Posted by Tutorial at Sept. 18, 2017
Atomic Journeys: Welcome to Ground Zero (1999)

Atomic Journeys: Welcome to Ground Zero (1999)
DVDRip | 704 x 480 | .AVI/XviD @ 1951 Kbps | 52 min 19 s | 952 MB
Audio 1: English AC-3 384 Kbps, 6 channels | Audio 2: English AC-3 192 Kbps, 2 channels
Genre: Documentary, History

Our atomic heritage resides in sites all over the country–from the Trinity test area to natural-gas wells in Colorado–and many of them are open to the public. Plan your vacation with Atomic Journeys: Welcome to Ground Zero, a blast through memory lane narrated by the perfectly suited William Shatner. Never-before-seen footage of test explosions and top-secret and work labs explores the history of America's nuclear programs, and interviews with current and former atomic scientists and engineers give depth to sights such as "the most bombed place on Earth" in Nevada.