Sir David Attenborough
An English broadcaster, natural historian and author
His extraordinary career so far
- 1926 - Born in London. Grows up on the campus of the University of Leicester where his father is principal.
- 1947 - Graduates from Clare College, Cambridge, with a degree in Natural Sciences.

- 1952 - Joins the BBC as a trainee producer. Achieves first television credit on Coelacanth, a short film in which experts discuss the significance of the rediscovery of this 'living fossil' fish off the Comoro Islands.
- 1954-1963 - Writer, presenter, sound-recordist and producer for landmark series Zoo Quest. Over the course of seven series this show visits Sierra Leone, Indonesia, Guyana and other far-flung locations.

- 1957 - Forms the BBC's Travel and Exploration Unit, producing the Quest films and flagship BBC series such as Travellers' Tales (1960) and the long-running Adventure (1961).
- 1960 - Presents The People of Paradise, a series about the anthropology and natural history of the South Pacific - the first of many programmes from Attenborough with a strong anthropological focus.
- 1963 - Presents Attenborough and Animals, his first children's series.
- 1965 - Appointed Controller of new channel BBC Two.
- 1969 - Promoted to BBC Director of Programmes.
- 1973 - Resigns from full-time position to return to film-making. Travels to South-East Asia to film Eastwards with Attenborough.

- 1979 - Life on Earth, the result of four years of research and filming, is broadcast. Expansive and ambitious, it follows the entire history of life on our planet.
- 1983 - Appointed Fellow of the Royal Society.
- 1984 - The Living Planet, the second in Attenborough's 'Life' series, explores ecology.
- 1985 - Awarded a knighthood for services to broadcasting.
- 1990 - The Trials of Life examines animal behaviour.
- 1993 - Launches the first of a portfolio of 'Life' series, exploring habitats and groups of species: Life in the Freezer focuses on the wildlife of Antarctica.

- 1995 - The Private Life of Plants makes innovative use of time-lapse photography techniques.
- 1996 - Presents Attenborough in Paradise and fulfills a childhood ambition to witness birds of paradise performing mating displays in New Guinea.
- 1998 - The Life of Birds is the first programme to use infrared cameras to capture footage of nocturnal kiwis.
- 2000 - Attenborough poses the question, why is there an environmental crisis? And investigates the science behind the debate in the three-part documentary series State of the Planet.
- 2001 - Narrates The Blue Planet, exploring Earth's oceans.

- 2002 - The Life of Mammals studies warm-blooded animals.
- 2005 - Life in the Undergrowth uses macro techniques to film invertebrates.
- 2006 - Narrates Planet Earth, a groundbreaking series filmed in high definition - and the most expensive documentary series ever made.
- 2007 - Presents two films entitled The Truth about Climate Change to discuss what he believes to be the man-made problem of global warming.
- 2008 - Life in Cold Blood concludes the 'Life' series, focusing on reptiles and amphibians.

- 2009 - Narrates Life and presents Charles Darwin and the Tree of Life.
- 2010 - First Life uses the latest fossil evidence and advanced CGI to explore the earliest known, complex organisms.
- 2011 - Frozen Planet focuses on the natural history of the polar regions and the effects of global warming.
- 2012 - David Attenborough celebrates 60 Years in the Wild with a three-part television series plus a Natural World special: Attenborough's Ark.
- 2013 - Narrates Africa. Using the latest HD cameras to capture the natural beauty of the African continent, Attenborough reveals a softer side of the Critically Endangered black rhino.

- 2014 - Behind the closed doors of London's natural history museum Attenborough uses cutting edge CGI to bring his favorite extinct animals back to life, in David Attenborough's Natural History Museum Alive.
- 2015 - Revisiting Australia's great barrier reef, Attenborough drives deep beneath the waves in a state of the art Triton submersible in three-part documentary Great Barrier Reef with David Attenborough.
- 2016 - Celebrates his 90th birthday on 8 May. A one-off television interview Inspiring Attenborough: Sir David at 90 will air on the same day. Kirsty Young, the presenter of Desert Island Discs, will interview the naturalist about his seven-decade career.

If you would like find out more about Sir David's life and his acheivements please visit his Wikipedia Page