Episode
Nature: Ichkeul: Between the Desert and the Deep Blue Sea
Overview
A freshwater lake in Tunisia that turns salty every summer.
Details
- Series
- Nature
- Season
- Season 5
- Episode
- Episode 10
- Air date
- 1987-02-08
- Runtime
- 53 min
Episode context
Ichkeul: Between the Desert and the Deep Blue Sea is Episode 10 in Season 5 of Nature. It aired on 1987-02-08. The runtime is 53 min.
Previous / Next
More episodes from this season
Episode 8: Leopard: A Darkness in the Grass
The activities of an elusive female leopard are traced over a two-day period on the hot plains of Africa.
Episode 12: In the Shadow of Fujisan: Bird of Happiness
A look at the crane, Japanese symbol of longevity, true love and happiness.
Episode 7: Cats
An examination of the behavior of man’s feline friends.
Episode 13: In the Shadow of Fujisan: Long Live the Turtle
Hunters and egg poachers threaten the existence of the giant loggerhead turtle.
Episode 6: Pantanal: Prairie of the Great Waters
A look at how the Pantanal's wildlife species cope with the annual cycle of flood and drought which transforms the marshy prairie from a dry savannah into the world's largest freshwater wetland – a 36,000 square-mile area that encompasses Southwestern Brazil and parts of Bolivia and Paraguay.
Episode 14: America's Wild Horses
Following the wild mustangs of America’s West.
Episode 5: Galapagos: The Ocean Travelers
A look at the Galapagos Islands’ many birds, include the waved albatross, blue-footed booby, frigate bird and the ground finch; also, man’s relationship with the islands’ changing environment.
Episode 15: Holy Land: A Wilderness Like Eden
An exploration of the Rift Valley that sweeps North from Kenya to Turkey, where prophets said their god first planted a garden.
Episode 4: Galapagos: Cold on the Equator
Marine iguanas, cormorants, green turtles, sea lions, and sperm whales are among the animals that thrive in the cold waters surrounding the equatorially located Galapagos Islands.
Episode 16: Holy Land: Sweet Water, Bitter Sea
The unusual life in the salty Dead Sea, where the desert plunges 1,200 feet below sea level.