NFOmation.net - Your Ultimate NFO Upload Resource! Viewing NFO file: voyage.to.the.planets.s01e03.saturn.ws.pdtv.xvid-nano.nfo voyage.to.the.planets.s01e03.saturn.ws.pdtv.xvid-nano
NANO gives you what you need with... Release: Voyage.To.The.Planets.S01E03.Saturn.WS.PDTV.XViD-NANO Rls date: 2010-05-27 Source: \0 Size: 350MB Resolution: 624x352 Format: XviD Audio: 128~ kbps VBR MP3 Plot: Blast-off with Voyage To The Planets: an Australian made documentary series exploring the pleasures and pitfalls of travel to the alien planets of our own solar system. Narrated by Richard Roxburgh, this series visits the planets from a very personal perspective: that of the people who have sent probes hurtling to strange worlds, and also from the viewpoint of any one of us who might dream of making a trip ourselves. In episode three, take a trip to planetary pin-up boy, Saturn, and not only do you get a ringside seat to the greatest spectacle in the solar system, but a close encounter with two extraordinary moons. Tiny Enceladus is making all the headlines as the must-see moon these days. It's the little moon that has it all: enormous geysers of water and ice shooting into space from the South Pole point to a warm salty ocean beneath the surface and, perhaps, a real possibility of life. Even more Earth-like and yet far more alien is Titan, with a thick atmosphere and weather. Potentially an easier surface to explore even than Mars, this is the only other world we know that you could visit without a spacesuit. Rug up for the cold and fly a hot air balloon in Titanian skies, trek across vast dune fields, or row across a Titanian lake. Just don't fall in or get caught in the rain: it's liquid natural gas out here, not water, and it'll freeze you as hard as rock. This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net
NANO gives you what you need with... Release: Voyage.To.The.Planets.S01E03.Saturn.WS.PDTV.XViD-NANO Rls date: 2010-05-27 Source: \0 Size: 350MB Resolution: 624x352 Format: XviD Audio: 128~ kbps VBR MP3 Plot: Blast-off with Voyage To The Planets: an Australian made documentary series exploring the pleasures and pitfalls of travel to the alien planets of our own solar system. Narrated by Richard Roxburgh, this series visits the planets from a very personal perspective: that of the people who have sent probes hurtling to strange worlds, and also from the viewpoint of any one of us who might dream of making a trip ourselves. In episode three, take a trip to planetary pin-up boy, Saturn, and not only do you get a ringside seat to the greatest spectacle in the solar system, but a close encounter with two extraordinary moons. Tiny Enceladus is making all the headlines as the must-see moon these days. It's the little moon that has it all: enormous geysers of water and ice shooting into space from the South Pole point to a warm salty ocean beneath the surface and, perhaps, a real possibility of life. Even more Earth-like and yet far more alien is Titan, with a thick atmosphere and weather. Potentially an easier surface to explore even than Mars, this is the only other world we know that you could visit without a spacesuit. Rug up for the cold and fly a hot air balloon in Titanian skies, trek across vast dune fields, or row across a Titanian lake. Just don't fall in or get caught in the rain: it's liquid natural gas out here, not water, and it'll freeze you as hard as rock. This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net