Inside Nature's Giants - Season 3 Episode 3 The Camel
Season - Episode
- 
        												
4 - 1Rogue Baboon Jan 10, 2012 - 
        												
4 - 2The Hippo Apr 09, 2012 - 
        												
4 - 3The Kangaroo Apr 16, 2012 - 
        												
4 - 4The Jungle Apr 23, 2012 
- 
        												
3 - 1The Polar Bear Jun 30, 2011 - 
        												
3 - 2The Sperm Whale Aug 07, 2011 - 
        												
3 - 3The Camel Aug 30, 2011 - 
        												
3 - 4The Dinosaur Bird Sep 06, 2011 - 
        												
3 - 5The Leatherback Turtle Sep 13, 2011 - 
        												
3 - 6The Racehorse Sep 20, 2011 
- 
        												
2 - 1The Great White Shark Jun 08, 2010 - 
        												
2 - 2The Monster Python Jun 15, 2010 - 
        												
2 - 3The Big Cats Jun 22, 2010 - 
        												
2 - 4The Giant Squid Oct 14, 2010 
- 
        												
1 - 1The Elephant Jun 29, 2009 - 
        												
1 - 2The Whale Jul 06, 2009 - 
        												
1 - 3The Crocodile Jul 13, 2009 - 
        												
1 - 4The Giraffe Jul 20, 2009 
- 
        												
0 - 1Giant Squid Oct 14, 2010 - 
        												
0 - 2Polar Bear Jun 30, 2011 - 
        												
0 - 3Sperm Whale Jul 08, 2011 - 
        												
0 - 4Rogue Baboon Jan 10, 2012 
Overview
The BAFTA-winning Inside Nature's Giants team returns for a new series, heading deep into the Australian Outback to explore the ultimate desert survivor: the camel. We don't think of Australia as the home of camels, but in the middle of this vast island there are over a million feral dromedaries roaming around. European settlers introduced them over a century ago to help build Australia's railways and explore the Outback. But with the advent of roads, cars and trucks, camels were no longer needed, so their owners released them into the desert. Mark Evans and Joy Reidenberg brave the baking desert to dissect a camel. They uncover the secret of the camel's hump and investigate how its elastic legs, stretchy lips and pedestal are among the many surprising adaptations that enable the camel to thrive in such a dry and hostile environment.
                    

