Julia recently shared her revealing insights about being Prince George’s godmother during interviews conducted to commemorate what would’ve been Diana’s 59th birthday.
27.09.2020 - 13:30 / abcnews.go.com
Prince George a giant shark tooth fossil after a private viewing of his new documentary at Kensington Palace.Photos released by the palace showed the 7-year-old prince looking intrigued as he looked at the tooth from a carcharocles megalodon, a species that lived more than 3 million years ago and was three times the size of modern great white sharks.Attenborough, 94, found the tooth during a family holiday to Malta in the late 1960s.Attenborough, who spent his childhood collecting fossils and
.Julia recently shared her revealing insights about being Prince George’s godmother during interviews conducted to commemorate what would’ve been Diana’s 59th birthday.
Extinction: The Facts, proved just too upsetting for Prince George.
The Cambridge kids might be enormous fans of David Attenborough, but the naturalist's latest BBC documentary, Extinction: The Facts, proved just too upsetting for Prince George.
pic.twitter.com/MTQ68WnOrt— The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge (@KensingtonRoyal) October 3, 2020“Why has it come to this and you know he’s seven years old and he’s asking me these questions already, he really feels it, and I think every seven-year-old out there can relate to that.”George and his siblings, Princess Charlotte, five, and Prince Louis, two, quizzed 94-year-old Sir David Attenborough in a video recorded at Kensington Palace in August.William’s eldest son, to whom Sir David gifted a
Each year the royal family release family photos during the festive period as a way to thank fans for their support and last year was no different. Along with their individual family pictures, The Queen posed for a snap with son Prince Charles, grandson Prince William and great-grandson Prince George – who are the three future kings.
Royal fans were left gushing on Monday night as Prince William shared new photos of his three children.The 38 year old fronted an ITV documentary about protecting the environment entitled A Planet For Us All, which showed him on a global mission that was filmed over two years. Whilst many fans of the Duke of Cambridge praised him for his knowledge and passion for our planet, others concentrated more on the rare footage of his and Kate Middleton's three young children.
Sir David Attenborough about the natural world. In the cute clip, shared on the Cambridge family's official Instagram account, @KensingtonRoyal, we get a rare chance to hear Prince George, seven, and Princess Charlotte, five speak.
We learned last week that Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis got to hang out with legendary natural historian David Attenborough in the gardens of Kensington Palace. It turns out, the photos that Prince William and Kate Middleton shared of that adorable event weren't the only thing to come out of the interaction.
Prince William and Kate Middleton's are curious little children.
To celebrate the launch of the new film, A Life On Our Planet, which lands on Netflix on October 4th, Sir David Attenborough is answering questions from some famous fans.Today an adorable video has been released on the Kensington Royal official Twitter page which shows the young Cambridge royals Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis asking Sir David their burning questions about the natural world.The sweet video was filmed by Kate Middleton and Prince William in their garden it is
The children of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are speaking in public for the first time, and they’re doing it with legendary conversationist and filmmaker Sir David Attenborough.
Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis spoke on camera as they quizzed Sir David Attenborough on their pressing animal questions.Kensington Palace shared the sweet video via Instagram on Saturday, October 3.
Kate Middleton and Prince William have left fans gushing over their adorable three children as they shared a rare video of of them.The royal couple posted a video of their children Prince George,Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis asking David Attenborough questions on their social media feeds.The clip opens with Prince George, seven, saying: “Hello David Attenborough, what animal do you think will be extinct next?” To which David replies: “Well let’s hope there won’t be any because there are
A post shared by Duke and Duchess of Cambridge (@kensingtonroyal) on Sep 26, 2020 at 2:30pm PDTPrince George was seen in a photograph looking intrigued as he handled the fossilised tooth from an extinct Carcharocles megalodon – one of the most feared predators to have swum in the seas.Sir David revealed that he had found the tooth, which is 23-million-years-old, embedded in soft limestone while on holiday in Malta in the late 1960s.Speaking to the Times of Malta, Jose Herrera said: ‘There are
Prince George by veteran broadcaster and naturalist David Attenborough, who found the fossil during a holiday on the Mediterranean island in the 1960s.Culture Minister Jose Herrera said he will “get the ball rolling” to bring back the tooth to be exhibited in a Maltese museum.“There are some artifacts that are important to natural heritage which ended up abroad and deserve to be retrieved,” he told the Times of Malta.The fossil, believed to be around 3 million years old, belonged to an extinct
David Attenborough may have given Prince William and Duchess Kate ’s son Prince George a shark tooth, but Malta’s culture minister wants it back.“There are some artifacts that are important to Maltese natural heritage and which ended up abroad and deserve to be retrieved,” Jose Herrera told the Times of Malta on Monday, September 28.Herrera went on to tell the outlet that the tooth should be in a local museum, and he planned to “set the ball rolling” to get it back. His comments came two days
This week, Sir David Attenborough broke Jennifer Aniston's record as the person who got one million Instagram followers faster than anyone else. I mean, come on; he's David Attenborough, the 94-year-old natural historian who has been the voice behind pretty much every documentary that ever taught us anything about the planet we call home.