🎬 Documentary

The Coelacanth, a dive into our origins

"A unique human adventure and a media-worthy scientific project"

⭐ 8.2/10 2013 1h 31m Dir. Gil Kébaïli

About this movie

Gombessa Expedition 1 To dive for the Coelacanth is to go back in time. In 1938, when it was known only as a fossil, a Coelacanth was discovered in South Africa in a fisherman's net. This species bears witness to an evolutionary bifurcation 380 million years ago, and bears the marks of a great event: the day the fish left the ocean for the open air. Does it hold the secret to the transition to walking on land? In 2010, a marine biologist and outstanding diver, Laurent Ballesta, took the first photographs of the Coelacanth in its ecosystem. In April 2013, divers and researchers set down their equipment at the Sodwana base camp in South Africa, in the club founded by Peter Timm (who died in 2014). Six weeks of extreme diving at depths of over 120 meters, in an attempt to film the Coelacanth with a double-headed camera, collect its DNA and tag a subject with a satellite-linked beacon...

Quick facts

Year
2013
Runtime
1h 31m
TMDB Rating
⭐ 8.2/10
Votes
7
Genre
Documentary
Director
Language
FR

Cast

🎭 Documentary 🎬 Gil Kébaïli 👤 Laurent Ballesta 👤 Gaël Clément 👤 Peter Timm
fish ocean scientific study south africa prehistoric creature scuba diving underwater photography fossil fish creature underwater world scientific research gombessa

Your reaction

Questions about The Coelacanth, a dive into our origins

The Coelacanth, a dive into our origins has a runtime of 1h 31m (1 hour and 31 minutes).
The Coelacanth, a dive into our origins was directed by Gil Kébaïli and released in 2013.
The Coelacanth, a dive into our origins is a Documentary film (2013).
The cast of The Coelacanth, a dive into our origins includes Laurent Ballesta, Gaël Clément, Peter Timm, Emmanuel Blanche, Florian Holon.
The Coelacanth, a dive into our origins has a TMDB rating of 8.2/10 based on 7 votes.

Movies Similar to The Coelacanth, a dive into our origins

Continue exploring