听 |
The Team
|
|
Coast is presented by a team of experts, led by Neil Oliver.
The team are Neil Oliver, Nicholas Crane, Alice Roberts, Miranda
Krestovnikoff and Mark Horton, Hermione Cockburn and Dick Strawbridge.
|
The Coast team have complementary skills, meaning that between them they
can investigate anything from exploring the connection between a coastal
village and the birth of deep coal mining in Britain; go in search of
the biggest sharks in British waters; examine an 1800 year old skeleton
to tell us more an ancient community; discover evidence of a tsunami that
once devastated this coast and investigate an engineering project where
soon a fifth of our gas will be shipped in from the gulf.
Neil Oliver
|
Neil is an archaeologist and author. His fieldwork has spanned
the millenniums 聳 from Stone Age remains in Scotland to Second
World War fortifications. If it's been buried in the ground during
the last 10,000 years, Neil's dug it up!
His passion for digging things up led him and his friend, Tony
Pollard, to excavating battlefields from the Anglo-Zulu wars of
1879 in South Africa and their work was discovered by the 大象传媒. This
led to them doing the same thing for 大象传媒 TWO in Two Men in a Trench
series. Together they brought British battles back to life 聳
from Bannockburn in 1314 to the Second World War.
He has presented the 'The Face of Britain' on Channel 4 and last
summer took part in Time Team's, Big Royal Dig digging up the gardens
at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh. He has been working
on a series called The History Detectives for 大象传媒 TWO to be transmitted
later in the year, and this summer he is presenting some stories
for The One Show on 大象传媒 ONE.
Also a journalist, Neil has written for publications including
The Guardian, The Scotsman and The Sun. Last year he published his
first book about the First World War called 'Not Forgotten' and
he has written 'Coast: From the Air' which will be available from
March 2008.
Neil lives in Glasgow with his partner and two children, Evie and
Archie.
|
Alice Roberts
|
Alice is a medical doctor and an expert in anatomy. She teaches
anatomy at the University of Bristol and is also involved in research
on human skeletal remains, both archaeological and forensic. At
present Alice is researching joint disease in ancient human remains
and in ape skeletons.
Archaeology is a passion for Alice, and she has been on many excavations.
Alice also has other talents; she is a skilled artist and a keen
surfer, which she loves.
In 2001 she joined Channel 4's Time Team after working and reporting
on the bones that they had found on their digs. She presented on
Extreme Archaeology and a health series for 大象传媒 TWO called Don't
Die Young and wrote a book to accompany the series.
Alice 34, shares her life with a "dirty field archaeologist"
and a dirtier border terrier called Bob.
|
Mark Horton
|
Mark is a reader in Archaeology at the University of Bristol. He
has a particular interest in history and maritime archaeology, and
runs one of the few postgraduate programmes devoted to this.
He has wide ranging archaeological interest of historical periods
in both Britain and overseas and has conducted excavations in Zanzibar,
Egypt, the Caribbean, as well as numerous sites in Britain. He is
currently writing a book on his twenty years of excavations in Zanzibar.
Mark has presented and contributed to numerous TV archaeology programmes,
from the 大象传媒 TWO series Time Flyers and the 大象传媒 Scotland documentary
on the Darien Disaster which was awarded the Archaeological Programme
of the Year in 2004. He was also involved in the early days of Time
Team and has contributed to many archaeology programmes on the Discovery
and History Channel, for which he has just finished filming a programme
on Christopher Columbus.
A keen sailor, Mark spends his spare time sailing his historic
26ft Maurice Griffiths designed yacht or dinghy sailing in Gloucestershire.
He also has a rotting dhow in Lamu, Kenya.
.
|
Miranda Krestovnikoff
|
Miranda is a Zoologist, she started her television career as a
researcher in the 大象传媒's prestigious Natural History Unit. Since
then she has presented several television series, including 大象传媒
TWO's Hidden Treasure and History Mysteries, Channel 4's Wreck Detectives
and also makes guest appearances on 大象传媒 ONE's Countryfile.
Miranda is currently working on many programmes. She has finished
filming a landmark series for the 大象传媒 called The Nature of Britain,
presented by Alan Titchmarsh, due to be transmitted this Autumn.
Miranda is currently presenting 'Countrylife' a wildlife and countryside
series for ITV and this summer she is filming a series for about
the wildlife in the River Thames.
Her passion for wildlife started at an early age by observing birds
and bugs in the garden and keeping a veritable menagerie at home.
She is an experienced diver and active outdoor girl, enjoying sailing,
swimming and cycling, making regular appearances at dive shows and
clubs. Miranda also writes for DIVER magazine, and her first book
called 'An Eyewitness Guide to Scuba Diving' was published last
year.
Her love away from diving and wildlife is music. Miranda sings
and plays the flute in an orchestra in Bristol.
Miranda, 34, lives just outside Bristol with her husband and daughter.
|
Nicholas Crane
|
Nick is a geographer and a journalist. Besides regularly writing
for The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph, he is the author
of nine books and has even found time to undertake a 10,000 kilometre
mountain walk across Europe, from the Atlantic to the Black Sea.
Gripped by the pedestrian bug he has also attempted to walk in a
straight line along the length of England.
These epic expeditions have been the subject of two of his widely
acclaimed books: Two Degrees West 聳 An English Journey, and
Clear Waters Rising 聳 A Mountain Walk Across Europe. His most
recent book is Mercator: The Man Who Mapped the Planet.
Nick is also known as Map Man after presenting the 大象传媒 TWO series
of the same name. He is currently filming a new series for the 大象传媒
called Great British Journeys to be transmitted in the Autumn and
is writing a book to go with the series.
|
Hermione Cockburn
|
|
Hermione Cockburn is an earth scientist and extremely passionate
about communicating her subject. She has studied landscapes all
over the world including Africa and Antarctica and is an Associate
Lecturer with the Open University teaching environmental science
in Scotland.
She won the 大象传媒 Talent "Science on Screen" competition
in 2002 and has since contributed to a range of programmes. On 大象传媒
TWO she co-presented What the Ancients Did for Us and Rough Science.
Hermione is a big fan of 大象传媒 Radio 4 and regularly presents "Science
at 9" features like The Good, The Bad and The Ugly, Shifting
Sands and The Gift of a Goat for Radio 4. She is currently recording
a series called The Secret Life of a Reservoir for Radio 4 and is
presenting The Nature of Britain for 大象传媒 ONE in Scotland, in the
Autumn.
Hermione lives in Edinburgh, arguably the city with the best glacial
landscape in Britain, if not the world!
|
Dick Strawbridge
|
|
Engineer Dick Strawbridge is a retired Lieutenant Colonel with
over 20 years experience in the Army. He was awarded the MBE in
1993 for services in Northern Ireland.
His engineering background and experience have resulted in him
presenting many programmes for 大象传媒 TWO - Geronimo, Crafty Tricks
of War and Its Not Easy Being Green. He has also presented Scrapheap
Challenge for Channel 4, The Big Idea for Sky and The Re-Inventors
for UKTV History.
Dick is currently working on many programmes to be transmitted
this summer on the 大象传媒; Saving Planet Earth and Building Britain.
He is also filming a series called Fix The World, for National Geographic
and is writing a book about various ways of being sustainable.
|
|
听 |
|
|
Tel: 0870 900 7788
for a free Open University 聯Discover Your Coast聰 pack - or
visit .
The 大象传媒 is not responsible for the content of external
links.
|
|