The Great Book of Nature

The Great Book of Nature (Italian: Il Grande Libro della Natura) is an Italian-North Korean animated series produced by Mondo TV and SEK Studio in 1999. It is composed of non- sequential episodes hosted by a bear, this series features various kind of creatures, such as fish, insects and birds, while depicting their different habitats - whether sea, land or sky. At the end of each episode, the audience is treated to instructive sets of questions and answers that teach young viewers about a given creature's various kind of behaviours.[1] There are 54 different episode of it of different stories.[2] Before being compiled into a television series, the animated shorts were likely used as theatrical propaganda cartoons in North Korea.

The Great Book Of Nature
Created byOrlando Corradi
Music byJohn Sposito
Country of originItaly
North Korea
Original language(s)English, Italian
No. of episodes54
Production
Producer(s)Orlando Corradi
Running time26 Minutes
Production company(s)Mondo TV
Release
Original networkRai 2
Original releaseJune 7, 1999 (1999-06-07) 
August 25, 2000 (2000-08-25)
External links
Website

This show was telecast in India in Just Kids! on Sahara TV, and also in Russia on TRK Petersburg (St-Petersburg, 3ch VHF1) to winter-spring (or January–March for Sure) 2004 and Moscow channel "Stolica" (VHF3) to Spring (December–January) 2004-2005.

This show was shown in various countries in different languages after Mondo TV went public.[3]

Episodes

  • The Hedgehog
  • The Raccoon
  • The Monkey
  • The Bear
  • The Rabbit
  • The Wolf
  • The Turtle
  • The Red Fox
  • The Squirrel
  • The Brown Bear
  • The Rat
  • The Wild Cat
  • The Hare
  • The Butterfly
  • The Bee
  • The Dragonfly
  • The Red Ant
  • The Hornet
  • The Fly
  • The Ladybird
  • The Duck
  • The Magpie
  • The Swan
  • The Woodpecker
  • The Crow
  • The Sparrow
  • The Goldfinch
  • The Robin
  • The Stork
  • The Frog
  • The Sea Turtle
  • The Goat
  • The Pig
  • The Rooster
  • The Bull
  • The Domestic Goat
  • The Chicken
  • The Horse
  • The Cuttle Fish
  • The Octopus
  • The Crab
  • The Fighting Fish
  • The Golden Fish
  • The Killer Whale
  • The Dolphin
  • The Dragon
  • The Winged Horse
  • The Cat
  • The Dog
  • The Bulldog
  • The Greyhound
  • The Poodle
  • The Cocker Spaniel
gollark: I²*S*, and maybe, but probably don't do it too often without good filters.
gollark: Apparently the "RMT" (remote control interface) thing it has might be helpful: https://docs.espressif.com/projects/esp-idf/en/latest/esp32/api-reference/peripherals/rmt.html
gollark: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SSiRkpgwVKY (with an ESP8266 though).
gollark: I think I read that the ESP32's I²S hardware could do something vaguely PWM-like up to 80MHz.
gollark: I don't know *that* much. It just seems like it might require a lot of routing table entries on every node to work.

References


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