Hikarix
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Deadly Peaks

01997

Documentaries by Katia and Maurice Krafft feature some of the amazing footage shot by the renowned volcanologists, who perished in 1991 while filming a volcano in Japan. The duo documented more active and erupting volcanos than any other scientists in the world, and their dedication shows in Deadly Peaks and Killer Volcanos, two educational films that capture the scientists on the edge of a hot ash blast and floating on a lake of sulfuric acid. The films visit Mount Kilimanjaro and examine some of the less-known dangers such as carbon monoxide gas that builds under crater-formed lakes. They also take an in-depth look at the eruption of Mount St. Helens and the lengths to which people will go to save their communities. Venturing to places where most people would never dare, the Kraffts gave their lives to promote the study of volcanos and left behind a legacy of courage in the name of science. --Shannon Gee

My Dad and the Volcano
Encounters at the End of the World
Vecinos del volcán
Iceland: The Quest for Origins
Sols volcaniques du parc national Albert
Les Eaux souterraines
Voyages au centre de la Terre : Dans les pas de Jules Verne
Face of the Earth
Lava Land - Glowing Hawaii
Ring of Fire
La Soufrière: Waiting for an Inevitable Catastrophe
Underwater Iceland
Elementa
Krakatoa: The Last Days
Fire of Love
Russia - In the Realm of Tigers, Bears and Volcanoes
Lost World Of Pompeii
¡Vivan las Antipodas!
Julia Bradbury's Iceland Walk
Into the Inferno