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All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Why Is It So

    • November 6, 1960
    • CBC

    First program in a new series on science. This program looks ahead to some of the subjects to be examined in the ensuing weeks. Seen are: Dr. J.W.R. Steacie, President of the National Research Council, discussing changing attitudes to science; Dr. Wilder Penfield, of the Montreal Neurological Institute, describing his work with the human brain; and Dr. Abraham Hoffer, University of Saskatchewan, discussing mental illness.

  • S01E02 The Roar of the Crowd : Brain Surgery

    • November 13, 1960
    • CBC

    A look at research on the human brain at the Montreal Neurological Institute under Dr. Wilder Penfield. Program includes: host Lister Sinclair and Dr. Donald Ivey on the basic scientific data on the brain and epilepsy research; Penfield talks about epilepsy and the measurement of electrical discharges in the brain; Dr. Allan Elliott demonstrates the effect of a chemical on the nervous system; Dr. Herbert Jasper explains his research on electrical brain activity; Dr. Penfield, relates his accidental discovery of electrical stimulation of memory; and film footage of open brain surgery to cure epilepsy performed by Professor Rasmussen.

  • S01E03 The future of science

    • November 20, 1960
    • CBC

    This week's program will probe the attitudes and working habits of the scientist, and try to decide where the future of science lies.

  • S01E04 Schizophrenia

    • November 27, 1960
    • CBC

    Presents a study of the most prevalent of mental diseases, schizophrenia.

  • S01E05 Engineering

    • December 4, 1960
    • CBC

    This show will discuss Engineering as a Science.

  • S01E06 Man as an Environment

    • December 11, 1960
    • CBC

    Members of the plant and animal kingdom will be shown at work and at war. Films for the show were collected by science writer Maurice Constant. They show that man is the most successful of animals in changing his environment. He also has the power, through drugs, of protecting himself from bacilli which find his body a salubrious environment. The audience will see body cells under attack by viruses and bacilli, and will see drugs actually working within the body to destroy harmful, living bacteria. These rare films, made by the advanced techniques of microphotography, were shot in Canadian, U.S., European and Japanese laboratories. Dr. Donald Ivey is host.

  • S01E07 Science Fiction

    • December 18, 1960
    • CBC

    In this program, American scientist and science fiction writer Isaac Asimov examines a selection of brief science fiction plots by Toronto writer Rod Coneybeare in an attempt to explain how this kind of fiction confuses the public about the potential and motives of science.

  • S01E08 A special Christmas edition

    • December 25, 1960
    • CBC

    The program takes a light-hearted look at the scientific aspects of a modern Christmas. For instance, ingenious new methods of turkey carving will be demonstrated; flashing and bubbling tree lights will be explained; complex Christmas toys will be demonstrated. Our host, Dr. Donald Ivey, welcomes Iris associate from the department of physics at the University of Toronto, Dr. Patterson Hume, to the program. John Livingstone, the director of the Audubon Society of Canada, will also be on the program. In addition, sketches by George Feyer will be seen and a series of puzzles and optical illusions will be presented.

  • S01E09 The Aurora-Borealis

    • January 1, 1961
    • CBC

    An examination of scientific theories about the aurora borealis or the Northern Lights. Includes: readings from historical literature describing the phenomenon; Dr. B.W. Curie, Physics, University of Saskatchewan, relates folk theories about the aurora, the beinning of his own scientific studies, and the extent of scientifically certain knowledge about the aurora; Dr. Ray Montalbetti explains theories of the aurora and their inadequacies; Dr. Peter Forsyth, Physics, University of Saskatchewan, discusses scientific knowledge of the aurora gained through radio techniques. Includes some graphic illustrations and simulations.

  • S01E10 Man as an Environment - Human Body

    • January 8, 1961
    • CBC

    An examinaton of the human body as an environment for the billions of tiny organisms living within it. Includes film footage of: underwater life - crab, octopus, eel; amoeba; human cells; blood circulation; breathing; digestion (animated simulation); white corpuscles; tapeworm organism; fungus; skin lice; malarial organism; skin bacteria; plague bacteria; cholera organism; flu and polio virus; white corpuscles; antibodies; and penicillin attacking alien organisms in the human body.

  • S01E11 Kept Alive

    • January 15, 1961
    • CBC

    An examination of the newest methods of "quick freezing" animal tissues and organs by immersion in -321 Fahrenheit liquid nitrogen. Dr. Louis Rey shows and discusses his experiments on this subject in Paris.

  • S01E12 Physics and Games - Laws of Probability

    • January 22, 1961
    • CBC

    An examination of the laws of probability and their uses in science. Co-hosts Professor Donald Ivey and Professor Patterson Hume demonstrate the laws of probability in games of chance such as coin-flipping and dice-throwing. A geiger counter is used to demonstrate that radioactive material can be located in a similar manner to the prediction of the outcome of games of chance.

  • S01E13 The Face of the Moon

    • January 29, 1961
    • CBC

    Donald MacRae, Professor of Astronomy at David Dunlap Observatory, Richmond Hill, explains what man knows about the moon and how he knows it. The program includes detailed photographs of the moon never before seen on television. Professor MacRae also explains how some popular folk tales about the moon actually have some basis in scientific fact, and compares the two methods for determining what he know about the moon, radio and optical astronomy.

  • S01E14 Hibernation

    • February 5, 1961
    • CBC

    An examination of the phemonena of winter hibernation and how its study may assist those with heart defects.

  • S01E15 Man and His Environment

    • February 12, 1961
    • CBC

    An examination of how man adapts to the various environments on earth - the arctic, the tropics, the desert - and what the consequences are for man and for the other living organisms sharing his environment. The film was shot in remote areas of the world.

  • S01E16 Eclipse

    • February 19, 1961
    • CBC

    A special half-hour Eurovision program from the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Yugoslavia, covering the eclipse of the sun by the moon shortly after dawn on 15 February 1961. After a a partial eclipse is seen in Britain and in the following minutes as the moon's shadow races across Southern Europe at several thousand miles per hour, television broadcast units in France, Italy and Yugoslavia, in succession, show the sun's disc for the period, lasting approximately 1.25 minutes, during which it becomes totally eclipsed. The commentators are Tom Margerison in Britain, Hugh Butler in France, Colin Ronin in Italy and Patrick Moore in Yugoslavia.

  • S01E17 Animal Communication

    • February 26, 1961
    • CBC

    An examination of the various forms and modes of animal communication. Sound, colour, odour, pattern, and movement together or separately can tell animals much about their enemies, the source of food and the mood of a prospective mate. John Livingston, executive director of the Audubon Society of Canada, explains what constitutes communication in animal communities. Dr. Bruce Falls of the Zoology Department at the University of Toronto describes how scientists have worked to understand the nature of bird songs and calls. He demonstrates equipment he uses to study bird calls and shows how birds stake out their nesting territories by means of their calls.

  • S01E18 The Speed of Light

    • March 5, 1961
    • CBC

    This program shows how the speed of light is measured and what it means. Although light's speed in a vacuum seems a universal absolute, research now suggests the presence of varieties of light that move even faster.

  • S01E19 Monotony

    • March 12, 1961
    • CBC

    Dr. John Zubec of the University of Manitoba explains some of his experiments and studies on boredom and its effects on the human mind.

  • S01E20 The Chemical Senses

    • March 19, 1961
    • CBC

    Dr. R. Wright of the British Columbia Research Council discusses his theory of how our senses of taste and smell work, and how they serve the biological system. Film demonstrates these functions in animals and humans. Includes a demonstration of shark repellant.

  • S01E21 The Mohole : Earth's Crust

    • April 2, 1961
    • CBC

    Dr. J. Tuzo Wilson, University of Toronto, talks with host Dr. Donald Ivey about the nature of the earth's core beneath its crust and the ways scientists have of finding out about it. Dr. William Bascom, National Academy of Science (U.S.) and head of Project Molhole, talks about the project, an attempt to drill through the ocean floor to penetrate the earth's crust. He discusses technical problems and what scientists hope to learn from the project. Includes: film footage of volcanoes; scientific research on earthquakes; oil-will drilling on land and off-shore; and animated graphic simulation of volcanos and earthquakes.

  • S01E22 Laws of Conservation

    • April 16, 1961
    • CBC

    Hosts Dr. Patterson Hume and Dr. Donald Ivey of the University of Toronto explain the laws of conservation of matter and energy.

  • S01E23 Photosynthesis

    • April 23, 1961
    • CBC

    How plants live is one of the classic problems confronting biochemists. Guest Professor R.G.S. Bidwell, Department of Zoology, University of Toronto, demonstrates the way in which simple inert matter is raised to the complexity and reactivity that is the essence of life through experiments with radio-active plants.

  • S01E24 Physics of Clouds

    • April 30, 1961
    • CBC

    Drs. Stewart Marshall and W.F. Hitschfield of the Stormy Weather Group at McGill University explain what clouds are and how they form. The program makes use of film shot in Alberta and at the Puy de Dome Observatory in southern France. Includes time-lapse photography of clouds flowing like turbulent water over the mountains and valleys of southern France.

  • S01E25 The Sources of Science

    • April 7, 1961
    • CBC

    What is science and where does it come from? Through a study of one of the oldest scientific societies in the world, the Hoyal Society of London, this program shows science at work, and suggests the scope and nature of the life in science.

Season 2

  • S02E01 Looking Ahead

    • January 4, 1962
    • CBC

    An examination of promising areas of scientific research and some of the scientists involved. Includes plasma research being done by Dr. Morell Bachynski at the RCA Victor laboratory in Montreal for use in space exploration.

  • S02E02 Photography in Science

    • January 11, 1962
    • CBC

    A slow motion, time lapsed film examining animals, plants, ice, blood, solar eclipses, cells, rockets, the setting sun and the habits of eagles.

  • S02E03 To Educate a Scientist

    • January 18, 1962
    • CBC

    Dr. Patterson Hume and Dr. Donald Ivey of the University of Toronto illustrate methods developed by the Physics Science Study Committee, and initiated by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the National Science Foundation, to teach physics using simple, homemade apparatus. They also discuss whether students should make their own scientific apparatus.

  • S02E04 The Situation Is Fluid

    • January 25, 1962
    • CBC

    Donald Crowdis of the Nova Scotia Science Museum discusses liquids, how detergents remove dirt, and how one liquid passes through another.

  • S02E05 Gallstones

    • February 1, 1962
    • CBC

    Donald Crowdis, Director of the Nova Scotia Museum of Science hosts this show on gallstones. A.J. Harding Range, professor of medical surgery at the Charing Cross Hospital Medical School explains what gallstones are, how they are formed, and how they are removed. Includes footage of the bacterologists at work in the Charing Cross laboratories, with comments by Range on the research being done on gallstones. Dr. N.C. Tanner of the Charing Cross Hospital performs a gallstone operation.

  • S02E06 The Upper Mantle Project

    • February 8, 1962
    • CBC

    Program guest J. Tuzo Wilson, Professor of Physics, University of Toronto, and host Lister Sinclair look at a Canadian plan to survey that part of the earth laying immediately under the crust in an effort to learn more about the earth's formation, its landscapes and weather. Also, they show why a piece of lava is unreliable evidence of what lies beneath the earth's surface.

  • S02E07 The Physics of Music

    • February 22, 1962
    • CBC

    Host Lister Sinclair and Professor Harvey Olnick of the University of Toronto Faculty of Music explain the physics of music; how the various instruments produce sound; the physics of sound waves; oscilliscope (including a film by Dr. Hugh Lelaine of the National Research Council); quality and overtones of musical notes; and resonance (including film footage).

  • S02E08 Survival

    • March 1, 1962
    • CBC

    An appraisal of the probable effects of a large-scale nuclear blast over a North American city.[8] Dr. Tom Stonier of the Rockefeller Institute discusses what can be expected to happen to people and property as a result of such a blast and resultant fallout.

  • S02E09 Man and the Moon

    • March 8, 1962
    • CBC

    Program examines the type of surface man may find if and when he lands on the moon; it shows what is known about the moon's surface, and how this knowledge is used in the design of vehicles and other equipment for lunar exploration. Ewen Whitaker of the Lunar and Planetary Observatory of the University of Arizona describes surface details as seen through optical telescopes. Allyn Hazard of the Space General Corp. of Glendale, California discusses possible vehicles and clothing to be used by lunar explorers.

  • S02E10 Hibernating Molecules

    • March 15, 1962
    • CBC

    Hosts Dr. Donald Ivey and Dr. Patteron Hume talk about conditions at extremely cold temperatures when matter "hibernates" and molecular action slows almost to a complete stop; and how this allows the physicist to study the basic structure of matter.

  • S02E11 Monkey Curiosity

    • March 29, 1962
    • CBC

    This episode focuses on scientists' views of the nature of science. Seen are: Dr. Alfred Romer, zoologist; Dr. Harold Urey, Nobel Prize winning chemist; Dr. Margaret Mead, anthropologist; Dr. Omond Solandt, physiologist; Dr. Norman Alcock, physicist; and Dr. Harrison Brown, geochemist.

  • S02E12 Spermatozoa

    • April 5, 1962
    • CBC

    Lord Rothschild of Cambridge University describes the results of his research in the field of spermatozoa.

  • S02E13 Animals With Feathers

    • April 12, 1962
    • CBC

    Dr. William Swinton, head of the Royal Ontario Museum's Life Sciences Department, and John Livingston, executive director of the Audubon Society of Canada, trace the history of birds.

  • S02E14 Getting the Upper Hand

    • April 26, 1962
    • CBC

    A look at the Dutch Elm disease and biological efforts to control it. Host John Livingston outlines the history of the disease in Canada; explains the nature of the disease; how it is transmitted; the failure of attempts to stop it with DDT spraying; and methods of elm tree "sanitation". The technique of bilogical control and its dangers is examined including: the disastrous results of the introduction of the Indian mongoose in Trinidad to control rats; the biological control of rose aphids; and the successful campaign in Florida to eliminate the screw worm fly by the introduction of sterile males.

  • S02E15 Thinking about Math

    • May 3, 1962
    • CBC

    Host Lister Sinclair discusses the sort of thinking that goes into the science of mathematics. Using animatedfilm and studio demonstrations, he explains what mathematical logic is.

  • S02E16 The Plague

    • May 10, 1962
    • CBC

    Host Donald Crowdis traces the history of the bubonic plague - the causes, how it spread, and how it was and is treated. He tells how over a period of years, scientists discovered that the plague was really a disease of animals rather than people.

  • S02E17 Instant Heat

    • May 17, 1962
    • CBC

    Drs. Patterson Hume and Donald Ivey, of the University of Toronto are co-hosts. They show how electricity can be produced directly from heat, and vice-versa. They discuss the practical difficulties of transforming thermal energy into electrical energy.

  • S02E18 A Science Newsreel

    • May 24, 1962
    • CBC

    A Science Newsreel, film clips showing current scientific projects including the Soviet and American space programs. Host to be announced.

  • S02E19 Learning

    • June 7, 1962
    • CBC

    An examination of the young child's ability to learn, and a comparison of the human child's learning rate to that of lower animal forms such as an octopus. A group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology explains its findings on the ability of simple brains to learn. Dr. Omar K. Moore of Yale shows his laboratory for the study of child learning in Connecticut.

  • S02E20 A Bang-Up Job

    • June 21, 1962
    • CBC

    Dr. Robert Knott, G.R. Phare of the CIL Research Division, and host Lister Sinclair examine the properties, types and uses of explosives. Includes an explanation and film illustration of: ballistic pendulum; fall hammer; hydromex; cushion blasting; and shape-end charges.

  • S02E21 Out of Africa

    • June 28, 1962
    • CBC

    Naturalist John Livingston is host of this program about man's place in nature and the problems of new African nations in supplying growing populations with an adequate supply of animal protein. In a recently-filmed interview, Sir Julian Huxley discusses the change in the old balance between man and nature in Africa. Canadian freelance writer and biochemist Lillian Andrews conducts the interview. The program also includes footage of game herds in Africa.

  • S02E22 Count on Me

    • July 12, 1962
    • CBC

    Drs. Patterson Hume and Donald Ivey of the University of Toronto explain what electronic computers can do and how they do it.

  • S02E23 Blood in the Balance

    • July 19, 1962
    • CBC

    A look at the new field of ballistocardiography. Host Dr. Patterson Hume of the University of Toronto explains the principals behind ballistocardiography. Donald Crowdis of the Nova Scotia Science Museum explains the functioning of the human heart with the aid of a model. Dr. Wilhelm Josenhans of the Department of Physiology at Dalhousie University explains his research and experimental apparatus to measure the ballistics of the flow of blood in the body. Also he explains his mechanical model of the heart pumping system and discusses some of the uses of his research.

  • S02E24 Getting Us Typed

    • July 26, 1962
    • CBC

    Examines work of Dr. William Sheldon, who has spent about 30 years gathering statistics about the human physique, classifying body types, and correlating this information to medical and psychiatric studies.

Season 3

  • S03E01 Looking Ahead

    • January 6, 1963
    • CBC

    Series consultant Lister Sinclair is host on the season's opener on which he explains how scientists approach their work and how The Nature of Things will present scientific items during its 26-week run.

  • S03E02 Brainwashing

    • January 13, 1963
    • CBC

    British psychaitrist Dr. William Sargeant discusses and illustrates various brainwashing techniques such as weakening of the mind, changing patterns of behaviour, breakdown and religious cults.

  • S03E03 Tubes to Transistors

    • January 20, 1963
    • CBC

    Hosts Dr. Patterson Hume and Dr. Donald Ivey of the University of Toronto talk about the electronics age brought about by the vacuum tube and the transistor.

  • S03E04 From Water to Land

    • January 27, 1963
    • CBC

    Palaeontologist Dr. Alfred S. Romer of Harvard University explains the evolution of lungs, legs, and a new kind of egg in aquatic creatures.

  • S03E05 Chemistry of Salt

    • February 3, 1963
    • CBC

    Dr. Fred H. Knelman of Montreal, talks about the sources and chemistry of salt and the industrial applications of salt and its components.

  • S03E06 Ear Operation

    • February 10, 1963
    • CBC

    Film of an ear operation from the BBC series YOUR LIFE IN THEIR HANDS, with commentary by Dr. Hugh Barber, Toronto ear specialist. This operation is observed through the surgeon's microscope and is carried out with tiny instruments no larger than needles.

  • S03E07 The Way the Ball Bounces

    • February 17, 1963
    • CBC

    Professors Donald Ivey and Patterson Hume demonstrate the principles behind the bounce in a rubber ball, and discuss elasticity by comparing rubber and steel.

  • S03E08 Lie Detectors

    • February 24, 1963
    • CBC

    This program examines the autonomic nervous system, how it works, and what it can reveal. Dr. John Rich, a psychiatrist with Toronto and Queen's Universities is host. In police interrogations and other situations, many methods are used to determine if a subject is lying. One the more efficient methods is the monitoring of the autonomous nervous system. Under certain types of stress, respiration, perspiration, circulation and many other functions are affected.

  • S03E09 Smoking and Lung Cancer

    • March 3, 1963
    • CBC

    In cooperation with the National Cancer Institute and the Canadian Cancer Society, today's show explores the results of years of lung-cancer research in Britain and North America. Host Lister Sinclair interviews Dr. A.G. Phillips of the National Cancer Institute and Dr. Norman C. Delarue of Toronto General Hospital.

  • S03E10 Science Museum

    • March 10, 1963
    • CBC

    A report on the need for a Canadian science museum. Host Lister Sinclair visits the Deutsches Science Museum in Munich and the science section of the British Museum. Includes filmed demonstrations of how science and technology can be made meaningful to the general public.

  • S03E11 Tornadoe

    • March 24, 1963
    • CBC

  • S03E12 The Descent of Man

    • March 24, 1963
    • CBC

    Recent fossil discoveries in Africa have shed new light on the ancestry and evolution of man. In the Olduvai Gorge, Kenya, Dr. L.S.B. Leakey, renowned British anthropologist and paleontologist and a guest on this program, has unearthed fossil remains that have extended the time scale of human evolution from 500,000 to two million years or more. A deductive story in anthropology and paleontology is told as Dr. Leakey describes his finds and interprets their significance.

  • S03E13 Isaac Newton

    • April 7, 1963
    • CBC

    Lister Sinclair pays tribute to Isaac Newton. The program attempts to capture the spirit of the time through the words of Newton himself and some of his contemporaries.

  • S03E14 New Atoms for Old

    • April 14, 1963
    • CBC

    Drs. Patterson Hume and Donald Ivey of the University of Toronto explain the value of atoms and the care needed in handling them because of their radio-active properties.

  • S03E15 Car Crashes

    • April 21, 1963
    • CBC

    What happens in a car crash - to the car and to its occupants? What causes a crash? Can personality characteristics contribute to car accidents? Canadian writer Rita Greer Allen, who last year sustained a broken neck in a car crash, explores the physics and psychology of car crashes with Dr. John Rich, a psychiatrist with Toronto and Queen's Universities.

  • S03E16 April 28, 1963

    • April 28, 1963
    • CBC

  • S03E17 Bird Migration

    • May 5, 1963
    • CBC

    In this program the origins and patterns of bird migration, and the latest theories of bird orientation and navigation, are discussed with Dr. William W.H. Gunn of the Federation of Ontario Naturalists.

  • S03E18 Fact & Fiction

    • May 12, 1963
    • CBC

    Hosts Dr. Donald Ivey and Dr. Patterson Hume of the University of Toronto, contrast observation to synthesis, and compare the scientific experimenter with the scientific theoretician.

  • S03E19 Code of Life

    • May 19, 1963
    • CBC

    Dr. Louis Siminovitch, Professor of Medical Biophysics at the University of Toronto, discusses what is currently known about heredity, particularly recent study and research on the ultimate units of heredity, material called DNA. Dr. Gordon F. Whitmore, Associate Professor of Medical Biophysics at the University of Toronto, and member of the Physics Division of the Ontario Cancer Insitute is also a guest.

  • S03E20 The Chemistry of Bread

    • May 26, 1963
    • CBC

    Baking bread may be a familiar process, but it is by no means a simple one. A very great number of fundamental chemical actions are demonstrated in the baking of one loaf of bread. On today's program Dr. Fred H. Knelman of Montreal looks at bread-baking from the chemist's point of view, using illustrations ranging from stone ovens to production lines.

  • S03E21 The Infra-Red

    • June 2, 1963
    • CBC

    Detection of heatwaves by Special infra-red receptors has many industrial, military and other uses. In the animal kingdom, pit vipers (rattle-snakes and others) locate their prey by means of heat-sensitive organs. Dr. Harry Pullan of the R.C.A. research laboratories, Montreal, describes the properties of the infra-red and demonstrates technological applications.

  • S03E22 Human Overpopulation

    • June 9, 1963
    • CBC

    In the aftermath of the industrial revolution, with scientific advances offsetting human control, the human species has experienced an increase so explosive that grave doubts are now held about the future food supply. Sir Julian Huxley and Sir Charles Darwin were interviewed in England about this aspect of human biology which most scientists regard as the most critical problem of our time.

  • S03E23 Mars

    • June 16, 1963
    • CBC

    Lister Sinclair talks to leading scientists about Mars and plans for observing the planet from close range: Dr. Albert G. Wilson, a former director of the Lowell Observatory, now with the Rand Corporation, and the Chief of the Space Sciences Division at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Dr. Robert V. Meghreblian.

  • S03E24 Spiders

    • June 23, 1963
    • CBC

    Man has not ignored the spider - even before interest in them could be called scientific, spiders gave rise to constant legends and myths and were involved in medicine, art, history, and religion. This program is devoted to the subject of spiders - what they are, varieties, feeding, mating habits, milk production and legends behind some of the more notorious species including the Black Widow. Introducing and discussing the subject is freelance writer William Whitehead who has done post-graduate work on the Black Widow spiders.

  • S03E25 Hypnosis

    • June 30, 1963
    • CBC

    Dr. Martin T. Orne of the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard University Medical School discusses the subject of hypnosis. Hypnosis has become an important tool for medical science - including childbirth, surgery, dentistry, and psychotherapy. Many types and uses of hypnosis are illustrated by Orne on the program. Last show of the season.

Season 4

  • S04E01 Einstein, Man & Mathematician

    • May 5, 1964
    • CBC

    An examination of the personality and achievement of Albert Einstein. Dr. Jacob Bronowski of the Salk Institute for Advanced Biological Studies at La Jolla, California, one of the most distinguished and articulate interpreters of Einstein, shows the practicality and simplicity of Einstein's thinking. Einstein's ideas are demonstrated with the aid of models specially constructed for the show. Also includes film of Einstein's early days in Europe and a short film in which Einstein explains the relationship between matter and energy.

  • S04E02 About the Size of It

    • May 12, 1964
    • CBC

    Scientist and broadcaster William Whitehead and Dr. W.E. Swinton, Director of the Royal Ontario Museum discuss how size differences in the animal kingdom are the result of their environment and their habits. Examined in detail are the shrew, the elephant and the whale.

  • S04E03 Standards for Comparison

    • May 19, 1964
    • CBC

    Universal standards of measurements are explained in laymen's terms by Dr. Patterson Hume and Dr. Donald Ivey of the University of Toronto.

  • S04E04 Excursion Into Hell

    • May 26, 1964
    • CBC

    Centuries ago, people in warmer parts of the earth believed that a dread disease was contracted from unhealthy air generated in swamps. From this belief came the word "malaria," which means "bad air". The word is still used to describe a parasitic disease that remains one of the world's major public health problems. Efforts to find and isolate the causes of malaria make one of the greatest scientific detective stories of all time. Mosquitoes of the genus Anopheles were found to be implicated. But so far, their control is far from accomplished. Program features Dr. A. Murray Fallis, parasitologist with the Ontario Research Foundation and professor at the University of Toronto. Host is Lister Sinclair.

  • S04E05 Surgery for Parkinson's Disease

    • June 2, 1964
    • CBC

    This program shows surgical techniques used in a new treatment for Parkinson's Disease. The actual brain operation is seen, an an electric probe is inserted in the brain to destroy the area responsible for the tremors and other symptoms of the disease. Dr. R.R. Tasker, Toronto neurosurgeon, explains the technique. He is interviewed by Donald Crowlis, Director of the Nova Scotia Museum of Science.

  • S04E06 Science in Sports

    • June 9, 1964
    • CBC

    Host Lister Sinclair and guest Lloyd Percival, sports authority, discuss and demonstrate how various sporting activities can now be precisely measured and how they can thus be improved. Gordie Howe is one of the athletes shown.

  • S04E07 Lasers

    • June 30, 1964
    • CBC

    Dr. Patterson Hume and Dr. Donald Ivey explain the recent developments of the laser beam since 1960, how it works, and its potential uses in medicine, war and communications.

  • S04E08 Blood, Sea and Tears

    • July 7, 1964
    • CBC

    Man still carries around in him an isolated pool of the early Palaeozoic ocean that fed his plankton ancestors. Our blood is packaged sea water. This program is a study of the relation and functions of three salty liquids important in evolution - blood, sea water and tears.

  • S04E09 Cartography

    • July 14, 1964
    • CBC

    Host and writer Lister Sinclair talks about map projection, and the problems of taking a spherical object, the earth, and representing it in two dimensional form such as the Mercator projection and equal area projection. Many maps, both old and new, are used to show how the science of map-making has gradually developed. Sinclair also talks about projection, or perspective, in art.

  • S04E10 The World of Water

    • July 21, 1964
    • CBC

    In this program Donald Crowdis, Director of the Nova Scotia Museum of Science, talks about water, its properties and its importance as a solvent of enormous quantaties of minerals, its ability to become either an acid or a base, and its mechanical power.

  • S04E11 Immunology

    • August 4, 1964
    • CBC

    In this program Donald Crowdis, Director of the Nova Scotia Museum of Science, talks about transplants and the new study of immunology - how to make the body repress its defence system and accept foreign organs. His guests are Dr. R.E. Wilson of Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston, a member of the most experienced organ transplant surgical team in North America, and Dr. Lionel Reese, who recently performed a kidney transplant operation in London, Ontario.

Season 5

  • S05E01 Good and Evil

    • January 3, 1965
    • CBC

  • S05E02 Viruses

    • January 10, 1965
    • CBC

    Incredibly minute particles of matter called viruses are responsible for more than half the world's diseases. Never even seen until the invention of the electron miscroscope, viruses now are the object of intensive scientific scrutiny. World leader in virus research is Toronto's Princess Margaret Hospital. This program studies the work of the hospital's team, under the direction of Dr. L. Siminovitch. Special guest is Dr. K. Rozee of Connaught Laboratories.

  • S05E03 Survival

    • January 17, 1965
    • CBC

    The problem of survival in extreme climatic conditions is examined by Dr. William Whitehead.

  • S05E04 Eureka!

    • January 24, 1965
    • CBC

    Discussion and demonstration of "accidental" scientific discoveries.

  • S05E05 Flight

    • January 31, 1965
    • CBC

    Lister Sinclair looks at the artificial flight techniques of man and some of the principles of flying used by other species.

  • S05E06 The Quaking Earth

    • February 7, 1965
    • CBC

    Earthquakes & Volcanoes" Research into earthquakes and volcanic eruptions gives us much information on the earth's structure. In this program, Percy Saltzman talks with two experts on these phenomena: Dr. Walter Tovell of the Royal ontario Museum and Dr. John Hodgson, seismologist and newly-appointed Director of the Dominion Observatories.

  • S05E07 Pain

    • February 21, 1965
    • CBC

    Host Percy Saltzman and psychiatrist Dr. John Rich discuss how and why we feel pain. Shown is how the body senses and measures pain and how mental disposition affects our reaction to pain.

  • S05E08 Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics

    • February 28, 1965
    • CBC

    Professors Patterson Hume and Donald Ivey dispute Mark Twain's claim that: "There are lies, damn lies and statistics"; or in other words, "you can prove anything with statistics.

  • S05E09 Photography

    • March 14, 1965
    • CBC

    Dr. Walter Clark of the Eastman-Kodak Research Laboratory, and host Lester Sinclair explain what happens after you push the button of your camera.

  • S05E10 Bird Strikes on Aircraft

    • March 21, 1965
    • CBC

    At one time, collisions between aircraft and birds usually hurt only the birds. Now, with aircraft flying at supersonic speeds, the impact of collisions is greater. And birds ingested into the engines have caused a number of crashes. The Nature of Things looks at what is being done to eliminate bird strikes on aircraft.

  • S05E11 The Pacemakers

    • March 28, 1965
    • CBC

    For the first time ever on television, part of the remarkable "pacemaker" heart operation is shown being performed at the Toronto General Hospital.

Season 6

  • S06E01 Animals and Man

    • October 3, 1965
    • CBC

    A series studying the animal kingdom, and man's place in it, through comparisons of anatomy, function, and behavior.

  • S06E02 Animals on Land

    • October 10, 1965
    • CBC

    How animals get from place to place, including burrowing, crawling, climbing trees, running, and jumping.

  • S06E03 Animals In The Water

    • October 17, 1995
    • CBC

    "Animals In The Water" studies fish, crocodiles, seals and whales.

  • S06E04 Animal Adaptation (1)

    • October 24, 1965
    • CBC

    A look at how animals have developed special means of coping with the environments — the long neck of the giraffe, the coat of the polar bear.

  • S06E05 Animal Adaptation (2)

    • October 31, 1965
    • CBC

    A look at the process of natural selection by which animals have developed special means of coping with their environments: the long neck of the giraffe, the coat of the polar bear, the digging claws of the mole.

  • S06E06 Animals and Food

    • November 7, 1965
    • CBC

    How animals locate, obtain, process and eat food using "anatomical tools": beaks, claws etc.

  • S06E07 Animals as Engineers (1)

    • November 14, 1965
    • CBC

    Animals modify their environments in many ways: by building nests, damming streams, by breaking down forests.

  • S06E08 Animals as Engineers (2)

    • November 21, 1965
    • CBC

    Program shows how animals modify their environments in many ways; by building nests, damming streams, and by breaking down forests.

  • S06E09 Animal Hands and Tools

    • November 28, 1965
    • CBC

    Man is known as the "toolmaker", although certain other animals do use tools.

  • S06E10 Animal Vision and Smell

    • December 5, 1965
    • CBC

    Different combinations of the senses are dominant in the activities of different animals: vision and smell in insects, smell and hearing in most mammals, vision and touch in the higher primates, including man.

  • S06E11 Animal Territory and Aggression

    • December 12, 1965
    • CBC

    A look at the various ways animals and man defend their homes and their young.

  • S06E12 Animal Social Behavior

    • December 19, 1965
    • CBC

  • S06E13 December 26, 1965

    • December 26, 1965
    • CBC

  • S06E14 Animal Learning

    • January 2, 1966
    • CBC

    How much of animal behavior is inherent, and how much is learned?

  • S06E15 January 9, 1966

    • January 9, 1966
    • CBC

  • S06E16 January 16, 1966

    • January 16, 1966
    • CBC

  • S06E17 Man and Animals

    • January 23, 1966
    • CBC

    Man, the animal species, as he might be described by an objective zoologist from another planet: what is he, his anatomy, his reproduction, his behavior and his ecology. A summary of the entire series.

Season 7

  • S07E01 The Sun

    • June 20, 1966
    • CBC

    An examination of the sun from various points of view. Includes discussion with illustrative film footage of: archeological remains; architecture; art; Eleusinian mysteries; the Greek god Apollo; a Hindu temple to the sun god with astrological wheel; Latvian summer festival; the Egypttian sun god Aton-Re; the beliefs of North American, South American and Australian native peoples; and nudists frolicking in the forest. The program makes use of the view of J.G. Grazer, author of "The Golden Bough", that primitive myth and magic were a primitive form of science.

  • S07E02 Natural History of the Niagara Gorge

    • June 27, 1966
    • CBC

    The famous Niagara Falls had their origins at Queenston 12,000 years ago. Since then, they have receded seven miles. This program tells the natural history of the falls, the Niagara River and the gorge, showing how the shoreline has changed the falls. Dr. Walter Tovell, curator of geology at the Royal Ontario Museum, and an expert on the Niagara, tells the story of Father Hennepin, the first white man to see the falls in 1678, talks about the rock stratification observable in the gorge and shows many unusual filmed shots of the falls.

  • S07E03 Air and Water Pollution

    • July 4, 1966
    • CBC

    This program explores the serious problem of pollution, which results when more waste materials are poured into the air and water than these elements have the capacity to deal with, a situtation which has resulted in city smog and the "death" of numerous bodies of water.

  • S07E04 The Battle Against Biting Insects

    • July 11, 1966
    • CBC

    An examination of some of the most sophisticated methods of pest control such as: unbalancing the insects' nutrition; killing them by ultrasonic or other shock waves; sterilizing the males through ionizing radiation or light flashes; drowning the larvae in traps; or interferring with mating and egg-laying by light, colour or electricity.

  • S07E05 Air Conditioning - Natural and Man-Made

    • July 18, 1966
    • CBC

    This program considers many aspects of controlling human environment to regulate pressure, humidity, and temperature, from underwater diving gear to the air-conditioning of space capsules. New designs and techniques for regulating air in large buildings are also noted.

  • S07E06 The Physics of Sailing

    • July 25, 1966
    • CBC

    The scientific study of the physics of sailing, is a fairly new field. This program looks at scientific efforts to understand why sailing ships do what they do. At Britain's University of Southampton two wind tunnels are used to study both sail and hull action. The program includes exciting film of ships in action, as well as wind tunnel and radio-controlled model experiments.

  • S07E07 Epidemics

    • August 1, 1966
    • CBC

    Not so many years ago, summer's warmth brought the chilling fear of polio and typhus epidemics. These dread diseases have been largely eliminated by modern medicine. But newer "epidemics" not caused by germs or viruses, have replaced them as killers. This program, written by Jack Hutchinson, looks at food poisoning, highway and water accidents from the standpoint of the scientist seeking their "cure".

  • S07E08 Summer Storms

    • August 8, 1966
    • CBC

    A look at the activities of the Stormy Weather Group, scientists at Montreal's McGill University and Macdonald College who study the pheonomena of summer storms, especially, the capricious Prairie hailstorms. A visit to Dorval Airport provides a look at the weather reading systems which, with the aid of weather satellites, give instant readings of weather fronts and continental cloud cover.

  • S07E09 Fishing and the Splake

    • August 15, 1966
    • CBC

    Science is developing new and better fish, the splake for instance, a product of the cross-breeding of the lake and speckled trout. At Maple, Ontario, biologists of the Department of Lands and Forests developed this new fish for seeding in Lakes Ontario and Huron. This program shows how they did it and how they hope to beat the vicious lamprey eel, which preys on the oridinary lake trout.

  • S07E10 The Value of our Parks

    • August 22, 1966
    • CBC

    This program examines Canada's great national parks and their ecological importance in maintaining habitats vital to various plants and animals. Seen are: Point Pelée Park; Algonquin; Banff; and Jasper.

  • S07E11 Forest and Fires

    • August 29, 1966
    • CBC

    This program deals with forest succession. Scientists have recently learned a great deal about the way in which new stands of forest grow - including the discovery that certain trees, like the jack pine, can only renew themselves in burnt over areas. D.H. Burton of the Department of Lands and Forests reports on studies of the impact of forest fires, logging, and the browsing of deer on the growth of a forest; also the controlled use of forest fires to reseed areas. R.O. Standfield of the Department of Lands and Forests explains the effects on forest wildlife, of controlled burning, and the use of chemical pesticides.

  • SPECIAL 0x1 Galapagos: Darwin

    • September 4, 1966
    • CBC

    First episode of a five-part series on the Galapagos islands. This episode looks at the life and work of Charles Darwin, with emphasis on his historic five-year voyage as resident naturalist aboard the ship Beagle, his stopover at the Galapagos, and his lifetime spent evaluating the results of the trip.

  • S07E12 Water on the Level

    • September 5, 1966
    • CBC

    There has been great alarm recently over the declining level of water in bodies of water as enormous as the Great Lakes. This program examines the water cycle and analyzes some of the factors that cause water levels to vary: increasingly heavy use by industry and public; droughts; climatic changes; damming; and diversion.

Season 8

Season 9

  • S09E01 Thomas Edison

    • September 26, 1968
    • CBC

    Thomas Edison wasn't merely a lone inventful genius. He invented the modern research team that makes possible the technology shaping our world. Edison was the captain of an organized research group whose method was to attack systematically every aspect of a problem. Among the more than 600 inventions he and his team produced were the gramophone and the incadescent light bulb. This program examines Edison's inventions, methods and impact on our life. Much of it was filmed at his original Menol Park Laboratories, preserved in Dearborn, Michigan.

  • S09E02 Human Engineering

    • October 3, 1968
    • CBC

  • S09E03 Materials

    • October 10, 1968
    • CBC

    A review of the history of man's oldest materials: wood, stone, iron, bronze and glass; and an examination of modern materials and design.

  • S09E04 Structure

    • November 7, 1968
    • CBC

    Defying the force of gravity, man has strewn his structures across the earth. This program looks at some of them, from simple structures of column and beam to the vast Roman arched aqueducts, the stone needles of Milan's Gothic cathedral, cantilever and suspension bridges, and the miracles of graceful design wrought by modern precast concrete and reinforced steel.

  • S09E05 Communications

    • November 14, 1968
    • CBC

    Much of this program deals with the basic communications problem of getting a signal through noise. Includes gesture, speech, code, braille, telegraph, radio, television, laser beams, computers and power grid monitors to space communications and satellites.

  • S09E06 Canals and Tunnels

    • November 21, 1968
    • CBC

    The great engineers of the past - men like de Lesseps of Suez fame and Panama infamy and Bradley - whose canals were the arteries of the industrial revolution, sacrificed the health and fortune, and sometimes the lives, of themselves and others, to build the first great canals and tunnels. Their story and the story of all kinds of modern canals and tunnels used for transportation are told. Includes historic footage.

  • S09E07 Central Power

    • November 28, 1968
    • CBC

    One test of civilization is the ability to organize sources of energy. Central power was something new in 1876, when Paris became the "City of Light". By 1879, Edison had developed the incandescent bulb. The program looks at more modern developments, including use of natural steam, ocean tides, and nuclear power. Also looks at attempts to tame fusions and harness the sun itself. The film also reviews what happened when the lights went out all over eastern North America in November 1965, illustrating our dependence on central power.

  • S09E08 Man and Machines

    • December 5, 1968
    • CBC

    The Greek inventor, Alexander the Hero, first defined the five basic devices which make all machines possible: the lever, the wedge, the wheel, the pulley and the screw. They all contribute to the conversion of energy into usable power. This film examines the development of these principles into such everyday examples as the nutcracker, and more complex machines such as the automated typesetter, computers and an automatic pilot.

  • S09E09 Land and Water

    • December 12, 1968
    • CBC

    This program shows how man changes his environment by shaping the land he lives on, reclaiming land from the sea, making new lakes and rivers. The Netherlands is a prime example of what reclamation can accomplish. The film shows some of the Dutch techniques and accomplishments.

  • S09E10 Man Aloft

    • December 19, 1968
    • CBC

    This film looks, sometimes whimsically, at examples of old and modern flying machines. Bush planes, barnstormers, gliders and war planes are seen, and the program concludes with a look at the present and possible future at airports, supersize jets and passenger aircraft. Includes historic footage of man's early attempts to fly, and the explosion of the Graf Zeppelin.

  • S09E11 Portable Power

    • December 26, 1968
    • CBC

    Man's first "portable power" device was part of his own body, the energy from the contraction of long molecules in the presence of sugar: muscle power. Muscle power was amplified with primitive levers, and later by the use of domesticated beasts. Some of the modern portable power devices seen in this film are portable nuclear reactors, internal combustion engines, rockets and fuel cells.

  • S09E12 Machines and Man: Transportation

    • January 2, 1969
    • CBC

    Are the problems of urban transportation insurmountable? The traffic jams which are a regular feature of city life make it appear so. This program examines the many cures being considered for the hardening of vehicular arteries: faster vehicles, mass transit methods, supersonic subways, bigger and better expressways, air transport, better control and direction of traffic. Over all this, however, lies a Malthusian gloom inspired by the population explosion of both people and automobiles.

  • S09E13 Machine and Man: Systems Engineering

    • January 9, 1969
    • CBC

    A system, according to the Oxford dictionary, is a whole composed of parts in orderly arrangement, according to some scheme or plan. A sailing ship is a system; so is the U.S. manned space program. Both are analysed in this program which examines the organization of systems.

  • S09E14 The Rocky Mountains

    • CBC

    The beautiful, vast tracts of land in the western Mountain parks of the West Coast and the Rocky Mountains are gradually being destroyed ... by camp sites, roads and towns. As they are opened, their animal life gradually disappears. Now biologists and naturalists are attempting to save plant life and animals, such as the Rocky Mountain Bighorn, elk, moose and goats.

Season 10

  • S10E01 Danger: Man At Work - In the Balance

    • September 24, 1969
    • CBC

    Part one of a six-part series on pollution. This program shows how the comparatively new science of ecology has shown that the fate of life on earth lies in the balance - unless man stops taking from nature without giving anything back.

  • S10E02 Danger: Man At Work - The Urban Crisis

    • October 1, 1969
    • CBC

    Part two of a six-part series on pollution. The ways man has succeeded, and failed, to duplicate in his cities the checks and balances of the natural environment. At its best, the city is a marvel of controlled environment, protecting people from the elements and offering them a broad spectrum of choice in style of living. At its worst, the city is noisy, dirty, crowded, hot and monotonous. This program looks at how man must try to make urban life a part of the global cycle of nature, or perish.

  • S10E03 Danger: Man At Work - Water

    • October 8, 1969
    • CBC

    The third program in a six-part series about pollution. This program shows how water is distributed throughout our environment, how it purifies itself, and how man has maltreated it. Canadian examples of water pollution shown in this program include the industrial waste which is wiping out the salmon of the St. John and Miramichi Rivers in New Brunswick; and the mounting danger to British Columbia's Fraser River.

  • S10E04 Danger: Man At Work - Air Pollution

    • October 15, 1969
    • CBC

    Fourth program in a six-part series on pollution. The program show the history of air pollution from the advent of coal-burning in the 14th Century, through the Industrial Revolution. Only quite recently has pollution increased in volume to the point where life on earth is threatened. Incomplete combustion of fuels, vehicle exhausts, smog and wastes from industry are all contributing.

  • S10E05 Danger: Man At Work - Pesticides

    • October 22, 1969
    • CBC

    Fifth in a six-part series on pollution. All pesticides are poisonous in greater or lesser degrees. Most experts regard them as short-term solutions to pest control. They kill not only the pests, but also necessary beneficial organisms, such as the oxygen-producing phyto-plankton of the ocean, which renew approximately 70 per cent of the world's oxygen supply. The program investigates long-term effects of such substances as DDT, possible alternatives to chemical pesticides - including non-poisonous biological methods of pest control.

  • S10E06 Danger: Man At Work - The Global Crisis

    • October 29, 1969
    • CBC

    Final program of a sub-series on pollution and conservation. This program offers statements and observations by experts on the extent of pollution in the world today and what can be done to improve it. Included are: former U.S. Secretary of Interior Stuart Udall; ecologist Lamont Cole; and Roland Clement of the US National Audobon Society.

  • S10E07 The Ages of Man: A Day in the Life of a G.P. (1)

    • November 5, 1969
    • CBC

    A 24-hour day in the life of a young family physician, Dr. Reg Perkin, covering everything from his 7 am jogging to his 10 am tonsillectomy operation; his afternoon office hours; his occasional duty on emergency call at Toronto's South Peel Hospital; his Thursday afternoon golf; and relaxation with his family at home. The film is also an examination of the direction medical training and health services are taking in Canada.

  • S10E08 The Ages of Man: A Breath of Life (2)

    • November 12, 1969
    • CBC

    Every year, over 12,000 Canadians are born with serious inherited defects. Maureen McChesney, 12, is one. A victim of cystic fibrosis, she must sleep in a special mist tent, take 110 pills and submit to three hours of special medical treatment every day. The program focuses on Maureen and her treatment and looks at genetics research and some other diseases transmitted through inheritance, including muscular dystrophy, hemophilia, and mongolism. It shows what medicine tries to do when there is a suspicion of genetic damage in the foetus, and how those born with genetic defects are assisted.

  • S10E09 The Ages of Man: The Attack on Cancer (3)

    • November 26, 1969
    • CBC

    This program focuses on the research into the effects of drugs on cancers in mice being conducted by the internationally renowned cancer team at Toronto's Princess Margaret Hospital. Written by the head of the team, Dr. Bob Bruce, who also appears on the program, the film begins with a human patient with a tumour which has passed beyond the stage where it can be treated by either surgery or radiation. At the end we see the patient again, after successful treatment with drugs. Also J.W. Meakin of the Princess Margaret Hospital appears.

  • S10E10 The Ages of Man: Drugs

    • December 10, 1969
    • CBC

    A study of how medical researchers are using animals to determine the effect of drugs such as marijuana and LSD, and even liquor, on man.

  • S10E11 The Ages of Man: The Cell (5)

    • December 17, 1969
    • CBC

    The theme of biology for the past 20 years has been the origin of biological constancy. The theme of the next 20 years will be the origin of biological diversity. This program explains why it is essential to understand the complicated mechanism of the normal cell before we can really understand what happens when cancerous cells run riot. The film focuses on the distinguished and internationally known work of Dr. James Till and Dr. B. McCullough of the Princess Margaret Hospital, and is written by them.

  • S10E12 The Ages of Man: Arthritis (6)

    • December 24, 1969
    • CBC

    One quarter of all Canadians will be affected some time in their lives by arthritis. This program looks at a case of rheumatoid arthritis, the drug treatments available, and some of the therapeutic aids to assist a person suffering from the disease. The film focuses largely on research into the cause and nature of arthritis. In the show are: Dr. D.A. Gordon, Wellesley Hospital; Dr. N.S. Taichman, University of Toronto Medical Centre; and Dr. I. Broder, Toronto Western Hospital.

  • S10E13 The Ages of Man: Science Decade (7)

    • December 31, 1969
    • CBC

    This program is a brief review of the main achievements of science over the past ten years, and attempts to anticipate some of the advancements which may be expected in the seventies. The remarks of many eminent Canadian scientists are linked by the comments of Dr. Isaac Asimov. Among the topics are: progress in the earth sciences; research into the fundamental particles of matter; ecology; pollution control; DNA; the origins of life; the understanding of the physical basis of memory; computers; astronomy; astrophysics; space flight; and progress in medicine, particularly in transplants. The latter portion features Dr. Pierre Grondin, Canada's first heart transplant surgeon.

  • S10E14 The Ages of Man: Heart Disease (8)

    • January 7, 1970
    • CBC

    A look at the coronary thrombosis which kills three out of ten adults; heart research in Canada.

  • S10E15 The Ages of Man: Transplants (9)

    • January 15, 1970
    • CBC

    History and research in the field of organ transplants.

  • S10E16 The Ages of Man: A Definition of Death (10)

    • January 22, 1970
    • CBC

    When is a man dead? Canadian physicians discuss the medical, ethical and legal questions involved with death, organ transplants and maintaining physical life after the death of the brain. (Last of the series).

  • S10E17 Wild Africa: As It Was (1)

    • February 25, 1970
    • CBC

    A look at the luxuriant parks and reserves where various species of wild animals and birds still survive.

  • S10E18 A Sense of Time (1)

    • March 19, 1970
    • CBC

    First in a three-part series visiting some of Canada's 700 museums in an attempt to show how people of all ages use them for self-discovery, a sense of communication with the past and a greater awareness of what has shaped today's world.

  • S10E19 Wild Africa: Something New (2)

    • March 25, 1970
    • CBC

    Africa as it was during the 18th and 19th centuries. Final program in this season's series.

  • S10E20 A Sense of Time (2)

    • March 26, 1970
    • CBC

    Second in a series of three programs on Canada's museums. This program presents views from adults — those who feel that the past has no relevance to their lives, and others who find themselves culturally enriched by the past. Includes a visit to the Royal Ontario Museum.

  • S10E21 A Sense of Time (3)

    • April 2, 1970
    • CBC

    A look "backstage" at the Ontario Science Center, the Royal Ontario Museum and Old Fort Henry.

  • S10E22 Oceanography

    • May 14, 1970
    • CBC

    Recent advances in oceanography.

  • S10E23 Continental Drift

    • May 21, 1970
    • CBC

    The theory that the Earth's continents are moving is examined.

  • S10E24 Sense Substitution

    • May 28, 1970
    • CBC

    Research on new electronics and mechanical devices to help the blind and deaf realize true sensory perception.

  • S10E25 Physical Sciences: Stellar Evolution

    • June 4, 1970
    • CBC

    The latest observations of astronomers have turned up new kinds of stars; mysterious emanations from deep in space called pulsars and quasars.

  • S10E26 Physical Sciences: Making Waves

    • June 11, 1970
    • CBC

    Research into the physics of sound and hearing has caused increasing alarm among scientists and physicians about the effects of high noise levels upon people, and the destructive psychological and physical effects of constant noise pollution.

  • S10E27 Physical Sciences: Energy Conversion

    • June 18, 1970
    • CBC

    The physics of energy and the problem of producing large quantities of energy with little pollution form the basis of this program.

  • S10E28 Physical Sciences: Laser

    • June 25, 1970
    • CBC

    The qualities of laser and normal light are contrasted. Final program in the series.

Season 11

  • S11E01 The Last Stand: Western Mountain Parks (1)

    • November 2, 1970
    • CBC

    The first in a four-part series entitled The Last Stand. The series looks at a variety of areas in the world set aside as specially protected areas of wilderness and natural wildlife. The first program is about western mountain parks and the work being done by biologists and scientists to save mountain wildlife.

  • S11E02 The Last Stand: The Everglades of Florida (2)

    • November 9, 1970
    • CBC

    The Everglades, unique in the world, are dependent entirely on water. But the beautiful birds and animals in the park are threatened by land development and a new airport, whose drainage policies are drying up the area.

  • S11E03 The Last Stand: Point Pelee (3)

    • November 16, 1970
    • CBC

    The third in a four-part series entitled "The Last Stand." Point Pelee is a tiny peninsula in southwestern Ontario, jutting into Lake Erie, which contains a fresh water marsh full of wildlife of all kinds. It is also the last stronghold of the southern deciduous forest in Canada and contains southern species of plants and animals not found anywhere else in the country.

  • S11E04 The Last Stand: The Southwestern Desert (4)

    • November 23, 1970
    • CBC

    The last in a four-part series entitled The Last Stand. This program looks at the Sonoran Desert in the U.S. Southwest and in Mexico. It contains an enormous variety of animal life and represents adaptation by both plant and animal life to a harsh environment where competition is keen and only the most successful can survive.

  • S11E05 A Sense of Time: The Age of the Universe (1)

    • December 7, 1970
    • CBC

    The first in a three-part series entitled "A Sense of Time". This episode examines past and present ideas on the questions of how old is the universe.

  • S11E06 A Sense of Time: The Age of the Earth (2)

    • December 14, 1970
    • CBC

    This program focuses on a new geophysical concept of our planet.

  • S11E07 A Sense of Time: The Age of Man (3)

    • December 21, 1970
    • CBC

    Planet Earth has supported life for some three billion years; but Man, characterized by his powers of thought and other other intelligent faculties, has shown the greatest development during his 500,000-years existence. Can he assume his role of responsibility to protect his life-giving biosphere?

  • S11E08 The Great Lakes (1)

    • February 1, 1971
    • CBC

    Sociologists tell us that the Great Lakes are the basis for the civilization around them. If the lakes fail, so will we. The program explores the concept that we must cease to think of land and water as separate worlds, and instead treat them as a unity with an international plan for management.

  • S11E09 The Great Lakes (2)

    • February 8, 1971
    • CBC

    Immediate implementation of pollution control in our Great Lakes is urgently needed if we are to preserve our most vital waterway. But what are the implications of such action?

  • S11E10 Population Problems: Everybody's Baby (1)

    • February 15, 1971
    • CBC

    Population: Everybody's Baby" examines the projected consequences of overpopulation and-the controversy surrounding population control.

  • S11E11 Population Problems: Tomorrow's Child (2)

    • March 1, 1971
    • CBC

    Featuring a national opinion poll on public attitudes in Canada towards population growth.

  • S11E12 Who Help Themselves

    • March 15, 1971
    • CBC

    Dealing with the McGill University Settlement Mental Health Unit project in Montreal.

  • S11E13 Psychiatry: Heavy Night

    • March 22, 1971
    • CBC

    Second in a series on the development and potential of psychiatry for the masses, focusing on informal youth clinics established in a low-income area of Montreal.

  • S11E14 Psychiatry: Street Fighting Mad

    • March 29, 1971
    • CBC

    A visit to Montreal's Allan Memorial Institute, where a disturbed teenager responds to treatment.

  • S11E15 Psychiatry: Human Potential

    • April 5, 1971
    • CBC

    A look at Vancouver-area encounter groups.

Season 12

  • S12E01 Banting, Best and Insulin

    • October 4, 1971
    • CBC

    Season opener: The Nature of Things looks at the discovery of insulin by Dr. Frederick Banting and Dr. Charles Best and deals with the current Canadian research into diabetes.

  • S12E02 Cancer in Canada

    • October 11, 1971
    • CBC

    Chances of recovery by a cancer patient in Canada are examined. Guests: Dr. James Till, Toronto's Princess Margaret Hospital, and Dr. Robert Taylor of the National Cancer Institute.

  • S12E03 Parkinson's Disease

    • October 25, 1971
    • CBC

    A look at research which may bring hope to sufferers of a crippling disorder that affects those on the older side of the generation gap. Guests include Dr. Oleh Hornykiewicz, a pioneer in the discovery of the drug L-DOPA.

  • S12E04 The Living Arctic

    • November 29, 1971
    • CBC

    The Nature of Things presents the first part of its highly acclaimed White Paper special on the vast Arctic regions of Canada.

  • S12E05 The Fur Trade

    • December 13, 1971
    • CBC

    A look at the endangered species of animals used in the fur trade, focusing on the Canadian market.

  • S12E06 The Harp Seal

    • January 3, 1972
    • CBC

    The life history of the seal, currently the object of the great spring seal hunt; the physiology and behavior of this unusual Arctic animal, plus an examination of its 8,000-mile migration from Hudson Strait to the Gulf of St. Lawrence and back. Also a look at the seal's unique adaptation for deep diving, currently under study by biologists at the University of Guelph in Ontario.

  • S12E07 Grouse Country

    • January 10, 1972
    • CBC

    The world of the colorful bird family admired by hunters and birdwatchers alike.

  • S12E08 The Polar Bear

    • January 17, 1972
    • CBC

    Pictorial life history of the Arctic animals throughout the seasons.

  • S12E09 Lobsters and the Sea

    • January 24, 1972
    • CBC

    A glimpse into the world of the most unusual, amusing inhabitant of our oceans and seas — the lobster.

  • S12E10 Vanishing Peoples: Yanomami

    • January 31, 1972
    • CBC

    Documentary look at the Yanomami, a fast-vanishing Indian tribe inhabiting the tropical rainforest of the Upper Orinoco River in southeastern Venezuela and Northern Brazil.

  • S12E11 The Blue Holes of Andros

    • May 15, 1972
    • CBC

    With Dr. George Benjamin, a Canadian research chemist and the world's foremost authority on Bahamas' "blue-holes" (underwater caves). A visit to the vast network of mysterious underwater limestone caves found offshore from the island of Andros.

Season 13

  • S13E01 Vanishing Peoples: Lacandons, The Mayas of Mexico

    • November 6, 1972
    • CBC

    Season opener: The Lacandons, the last surviving descendants of the Mayas, live in the rain forest of southern Mexico and cling to ancient beliefs and traditions. Narration is by Mia Anderson and the voice of Chan K'in is by Chief Dan George.

  • S13E02 The Sexes (1)

    • November 20, 1972
    • CBC

    Examines male and female roles in society and presents a scientific study of the known biological facts about sex differences in humans.

  • S13E03 The Sexes (2)

    • November 27, 1972
    • CBC

    This program looks at hormonal changes during puberty, and the socially originated attitudes leading to differences between the sexes.

  • S13E04 Acupuncture

    • December 4, 1972
    • CBC

    This ancient and traditional art of healing has been widely practiced in China for over 5,000 years. Its recent rebirth as a successful treatment for many diseases is explored in this program

  • S13E05 Ice Lovers (R)

    • January 29, 1973
    • CBC

    A life history of the harp seal, examining the behavior and physiology of this unique little Arctic mammal and its unusual 800-mile migration each year from Hudson Strait to the Gulf of St. Lawrence

  • S13E06 Think Before You Eat

    • March 5, 1973
    • CBC

    A surprising look at the eating habits of Canadians; food and nutrition, the so-called well-balanced diet and problems of over-eating are analyzed.

  • S13E07 Stockholm '72: Politics for Survival

    • March 12, 1973
    • CBC

    A fascinating "retrospective look" at last summer's World Conference on The Human Environment, held in Stockholm and attended by delegates of nearly every country of the world.

  • S13E08 Cities for People

    • March 19, 1973
    • CBC

    A film about recent changes in urban planning in Toronto, Montreal and other major Canadian cities and the return of the modern urban centre into a place for people, culture and activity. Comments by leading planners and glimpses of some European cities' efforts to curb growing problems.

  • S13E09 Migration: Animals in Cycle

    • March 26, 1973
    • CBC

    This program takes a look at the migratory habits of birds and animals, with recent findings in animal studies reinforced with fascinating film footage of many species in their natural habitats.

  • S13E10 Old Enough

    • April 2, 1973
    • CBC

    A black comedy .. . an unusual departure from this series' regular format, this film depicts obvious absurdities in a subjective interpretation of a 1970 M.I.T. computer study forecasting economic, social and political collapse of the entire world by no later than the year 2020, Introductory comments all by Dr. Donald Chant of the University of Toronto's Pollution Probe.

  • S13E11 Recycling: The Garbage Ouroboros

    • April 9, 1973
    • CBC

    The Garbage Ouroboros. A comprehensive examination of the form of pollution fast becoming public enemy number one in North America: garbage. Recycling, a universal process of nature, offers the most likely alternative to this growing municipal headache; but is it feasible? Canadian and U.S. experts give their opinions and Ouroboros, a solid waste reduction unit in Hamilton, is visited.

Season 14

  • S14E01 Puffins, Predators and Pirates

    • November 26, 1973
    • CBC

    The puffin, a bird with a multi-colored beak and the physique of a plump penguin, is subject of The Nature of Things series, which makes its season debut Monday at 10 p.m. The program, Puffins, Predators and Pirates, was filmed on Great Island, off the east coast of Newfoundland, site of the puffins' nesting grounds in North America. A documentary, biological study which reveals the plight of one of the world's last puffin colonies on Great Island off the eastern coast of Newfoundland.

  • S14E02 The Club of Rome

    • December 3, 1973
    • CBC

    This group of thinkers, the Club of Rome, thinks western society is on the verge of chaos, social and political, which could reduce our civilization to ruins

  • S14E03 Ellesmere Island

    • December 10, 1973
    • CBC

    On Ellesmere Island, located 600 miles from the North Pole, oil has been discovered. Island inhabitants, new and old, are seen in this half-hour film.

  • S14E04 Anybody's Child

    • December 17, 1973
    • CBC

    Documentary about emotionally disturbed children living in a family environment as an alternative to institutional treatment

  • S14E05 A Comet's Tale

    • January 7, 1974
    • CBC

    Czech astronomer Dr. Luboš Kohoutek, discoverer of the current heavenly phenomenon Comet Kohoutek 1973 f, is among the participants in this full-hour special. Roy Bonisteel is host of the program which examines comets from a scientific viewpoint, and heavenly signs and portents of doom from psychological and historical perspectives.

  • S14E06 The First Inch

    • January 14, 1974
    • CBC

    What goes on in the very top layer of soil is often too small to see with the naked eye. When photographed under a microscope, that first inch of soil reveals itself to be one of the most vital of the life cycles affecting man. The tiny, invisible hordes of bacteria, plant eaters, parasites and predators are the subject of this program.

  • S14E07 The Serious Business of Play

    • January 21, 1974
    • CBC

    Play is nature's method of learning about environment and about life for the young. This episode explores our world of play and its importance for survival.

  • S14E08 Out of the Mouths of Babes

    • January 28, 1974
    • CBC

    Little children learn languages, especially their own, with astonishing ease. Why this is so is the subject of this film.

  • S14E09 The Joy of Effort

    • February 4, 1974
    • CBC

    How the laws of physics are being applied to athletic endeavors, and coaches being taught how to use science rather than just "common sense" to help athletes get the most out of their bodies.

  • S14E10 Therapeutic Family

    • May 6, 1974
    • CBC

    A report on an experimental project to place emotionally disturbed or mentally ill children in a family-type environment.

Season 15

  • S15E01 And God Created Great Whales

    • October 9, 1974
    • CBC

    A documentary showing the behaviour of killer whales in the wild, in the waters off Vancouver Island.

  • S15E02 Children's Hospital

    • October 23, 1974
    • CBC

    Story of a child's stay in Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children.

  • S15E03 The Heimaey Eruption: Iceland 1973

    • October 30, 1974
    • CBC

    A film on the volcanic eruption off the south coast of Iceland in 1973.

  • S15E04 Traveller From an Antique Land

    • November 6, 1974
    • CBC

    An ancient Egyptian mummy rests at Pennsylvania University Museum far from where she had been prepared to spend eternity . This is the subject of a scientific autopsy that several doctors have practiced to see what they could find in terms of disease it are thousands of years and comparing them with patients today.

  • S15E05 Mind and Hand

    • November 20, 1974
    • CBC

    What happens when a person makes a voluntary movement? Some say the human behavior is involuntary and is based on past experience. The whole question is explored on The Nature of Things.

  • S15E06 Frogs, Snakes and Turtles

    • December 4, 1974
    • CBC

    Several species of turtles , frogs and snakes are endangered . this documentary will examine the important role these animals play in the ecological balance.

  • S15E07 Discovery on Charlton Island

    • December 11, 1974
    • CBC

    Documentary on the discovery of an archaeological site Charlton in the Island in the Bay Hudson.

Season 16

  • S16E01 Ears to Hear

    • October 29, 1975
    • CBC

    The show is to explain how we help deaf children today live more Interesting life through devices more modern.

  • S16E02 Sable Island

    • November 5, 1975
    • CBC

    Documentary on horses living in the wild in an island off Nova Scotia.

  • S16E03 Water's Edge (1)

    • November 12, 1975
    • CBC

    Unique life forms in a pond.

  • S16E04 Water's Edge (2)

    • November 19, 1975
    • CBC

    Visible and microscopic life at the edge of a pond.

  • S16E05 Prairie Grasslands

    • November 26, 1975
    • CBC

    Documentary on prairie dogs and one colony in particular in South Dakota.

  • S16E06 The Differences are inherited

    • December 10, 1975
    • CBC

    A study of the genetics of fruitflies.

  • S16E07 Shelter: A Question of Control

    • December 17, 1975
    • CBC

    The program shows how psychological experiments support those who believe that community and citizen control over their own environment is essential to the well being of city dwellers.

Season 17

  • S17E01 Noah's Park

    • December 22, 1976
    • CBC

    The work of a group of naturalists who are attempting to create a refuge for biblical animals by restocking a park with the species that inhabited the land in Bible times. (Season Debut)

  • S17E02 Close-up Look at a Coral Reef

    • December 29, 1976
    • CBC

    Close-up look at a coral reef. Through the use of micro-photography, viewers are afforded a look at the unique way in which a reef is formed.

  • S17E03 Birthright Newborn

    • January 5, 1977
    • CBC

    A fascinating study of the newborn human. The film features many prominant people in the limited field of newborn research, and many surprising discoveries that have been made. The human infant is born with.a surprising number of abilities and reflexes.

  • S17E04 Children of the Buffalo

    • January 19, 1977
    • CBC

    "Children of the Buffalo" documents the daily lives of the Toda tribe of Southern India. Toda culture centers on the raising of water buffalo, requiring religious rituals for almost every dairy activity from milking to churning butter. Also: a study of Toda marriage rituals and funeral rites.

  • S17E05 Geriatric Medicine

    • January 26, 1977
    • CBC

    Geriatric medicine and some aspects of research into the biology of aging. Dr. Ronald Cape, who leads a clinic at the University of Western Ontario attempts to dispel some of the myths concerning old age and senility.

  • S17E06 The Wind and its Power

    • February 9, 1977
    • CBC

    The wind and its power, and how winds are generated. Processes of air circulation, the effect of wind on man-made structures. Sailboats, windmills and wind turbines used for generating electricity.

  • S17E07 Funk Island

    • February 16, 1977
    • CBC

    A look at Funk Island off the north-east coast of Newfoundland which is the breeding habitat for huge populations of sea birds.

  • S17E08 Development in the Florida Everglades

    • September 30, 1977
    • CBC

    A 1970 report on land development in the Florida Everglades that threatened the survival of wildlife

Season 18

  • S18E01 The People You Never See

    • December 14, 1977
    • CBC

    The series' 18th season starts with "The People You Never See," a report on victims of cerebral palsy. The program looks at a wheelchair-bound 12-year-old girl who continues to attend school, using a symbol board to communicate; and three disabled adults who have achieved a certain amount of independence despite the disease.

  • S18E02 The Evolution of Flight

    • December 21, 1977
    • CBC

    Pedestrian malls, car-free zones and multipurpose subway systems are examined in a study of urban planning and urban renewal.

  • S18E03 The Geese of Wascana

    • December 28, 1977
    • CBC

    Visit to the marshes of Regina where Canada Geese spend the winter on open water.

  • S18E04 Radiation (1): In Sickness and in Health

    • January 4, 1978
    • CBC

  • S18E05 Radiation (2): Nuclear Power

    • January 11, 1978
    • CBC

    A look at the advantages and dangers of nuclear energy, focusing special attention on the problem of waste disposal.

  • S18E07 The Cry of the Gull / Island of Monkeys

    • January 18, 1978
    • CBC

    The Cry of the Gull examines the effect of chemical pollutants on Lake Ontario wildlife.[203][204] Island of Monkeys studies individual development and group dynamics in a troop of rhesus monkeys in the natural observable environment of Cayo Santiago near Puerto Rico.

  • S18E08 Space Shuttle

    • January 25, 1978
    • CBC

    A look at the next development in space research: establishing a space colony supporting 10,000 people in an Earth-like environment.

  • S18E09 Twins (1): and then There Were Two

    • February 1, 1978
    • CBC

    This is the first of a two-part report which looks at both the scientific and human side of twins. The possibility of telepathy between twins is discussed.

  • S18E10 Twins (2): Matching Genes

    • February 8, 1978
    • CBC

    Part two of a two-part study of twins and the research being conducted. This program shows how scientists use the phenomenon of twins to discover more about mankind in general, particularly in the field of genetics.

  • S18E11 February 15, 1978

    • February 15, 1978
    • CBC

  • S18E12 When Men Play Gods

    • February 22, 1978
    • CBC

    The creation of new organisms using a technique called recombinant DNA.

  • S18E13 Patterns of Pain / The Gannets of Bonaventure

    • March 8, 1978
    • CBC

    Two films featured: Patterns of Pain explores the perception of pain in our nervous systems; The Gannets of Bonaventure looks at the largest breeding colony of gannets in North America, on Bonaventure Island; and informs of threats to the colony from pollution and tourist traffic.

  • S18E14 Skin Trade

    • March 31, 1978
    • CBC

Season 19

  • S19E01 Evolution Update

    • September 24, 1978
    • CBC

  • S19E02 Clockwork Atom

    • October 1, 1978
    • CBC

  • S19E03 This Will do for Today

    • October 8, 1978
    • CBC

  • S19E04 Island of Monkeys

    • October 15, 1978
    • CBC

    A study of individual development and group dynamics in a troop of rhesus monkeys in the natural observable environment of Cayo Santiago near Puerto Rico.

  • S19E05 The Dogon

    • October 29, 1978
    • CBC

    The cliff-dwelling Dogon farmers and their unique culture are studied in their homeland near the Niger River in Mali.

  • S19E06 Toward The Sun

    • November 5, 1978
    • CBC

    The current efforts in both the United States and Canada to harness the sun as a major resource of heat and power are examined.

  • S19E07 Portrait Of A Market: Sololá

    • November 12, 1978
    • CBC

    The activities of the economic and social center of Sololá, located on Lake Atitlán in Guatemala, are viewed.

  • S19E08 Sleep (1)

    • November 26, 1978
    • CBC

    Volunteers undergo an experiment at the Montefiore Sleep Lab in New York which monitors their sleeping-awakening cycles in an attempt to learn more about the body's biological time system.

  • S19E09 Dreams (2)

    • December 3, 1978
    • CBC

    Analysis of dreams is viewed at several institutions established expressly for that purpose, and those who participate in the experiments are shown as they make notations and give recollections of what they dreamed.

  • S19E10 Charlie

    • December 17, 1978
    • CBC

    "Charlie," a profile of paleontologist Charles Sternberg, who discovered and catalogued dinosaur fossils in the Badlands of Alberta. Footage shows early digs near Red Deer River Valley, where the paleontologist and other workers unearthed lizard and dinosaur remains. Now in his 90s, Sternberg still lectures.

  • S19E11 The Search: Smallpox Eradication

    • December 24, 1978
    • CBC

    "The Search" follows World Health Organization medical teams on their campaign to vaccinate the Somali against smallpox. Most of the natives of this African country are nomads, and the program focuses on the difficulty of containing outbreaks of the deadly disease, a chore that involves house-to-house searches in which everyone is treated.

  • S19E12 The Cajuns

    • December 31, 1978
    • CBC

    The history and culture of the descendants Acadians from Nova Scotia living along the Bayou Lafourche in Louisiana. Established Caluns was there since the mid-18th century after being deported have still kept their French language and their traditions despite the US pressures that live there.

Season 20

  • S20E01 Flying Circus of Physics

    • October 24, 1979
    • CBC

    Dr. David Suzuki visits an unusual professor who conducts a Flying Circus Of Physics, examines soft contact lenses made for extended periods of use and reports on the latest immunological efforts to treat severely afflicted children. - Premiere with David Suzuki as Host.

  • S20E02 Hypnosis / India's Sacred Cows / Ultra Sound Scanner

    • October 31, 1979
    • CBC

    Dr. David Suzuki reports on the use of hypnosis as a medical application and the use of ultra-sound waves for X-rays, and presents the film "Sacred Cows," dealing with the importance of domestic cattle to the Indian economy.

  • S20E03 Parenthood / Puppets and Surgery

    • November 14, 1979
    • CBC

    Scientists Dr. Patrick Steptoe and Dr. David Bevie are interviewed and the status of parenthood and a unique connection between puppets and surgery are examined.

  • S20E04 Madagascar: Island of the Moon

    • November 7, 1979
    • CBC

    "Madagascar: Island of the Moon" examines some of the rare animal species found on the world's fourth-largest island (now known as the Malagasy Republic). Most of the footage is devoted to the island's lemurs, early primates that have flourished on Madagascar and evolved into several species. Among the animals shown are the ring-tailed lemur, the mouse lemur.

  • S20E05 Contact

    • November 21, 1979
    • CBC

    A one-hour film about a new method of treatment for autistic children, hitherto thought to be hopeless cases. Filmed in Toronto, it shows how techniques developed in the U.S. by Barry and Suzi Kaufman, themselves parents of an autistic Child, have been adopted for use in an experimental program headed by Fern Levitt, a 24-year-old psychology graduate of York University.

  • S20E06 Deep Diving Memory

    • November 28, 1979
    • CBC

    The host David Suzuki show us the changes physiological caused by diving and examines the mystery memory.

  • S20E07 Arctic Oil

    • December 5, 1979
    • CBC

    This report on oil exploration in the Canadian Arctic examines the technological and environmental problems associated with drilling in the Far North. It also focuses on how and where decisions about northern development are made. Among those interviewed are Jake Epp, Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development; Environment Minister John Fraser; and Mr. Justice Thomas Berger, author of a 1977 report on the Mackenzie Valley pipeline.

  • S20E08 Clinical Trials

    • December 12, 1979
    • CBC

    Topics include Clinical Trials; Folk Medicine and Magnetic Bacteria.

  • S20E09 Left Brain, Right Brain

    • December 19, 1979
    • CBC

    The brain's two halves or hemispheres differ both in anatomical structure and in the bodily functions they control. "Left Brain, Right Brain" is a report on recent studies into the functional differences between the two halves. Studies include administering verbal and motor tests to a subject after one hemisphere has been anesthetized, tracing blood-flow activity in the two halves as different tasks are performed and testing a patient who has had the nerve connections between the two halves severed.

  • S20E10 Dust Storms / Oysters / Science Fairs

    • December 26, 1979
    • CBC

  • S20E11 Memories From Eden

    • January 2, 1980
    • CBC

    A one-hour film on modern zoos. Traditionally, zoos have been little more than prisons for their occupants; today, special environments are being created which provide much better for the welfare of animals and increase the enjoyment of visitors.

  • S20E12 Crocodile City

    • January 9, 1980
    • CBC

    Tonight's topics include Crocodile City; High Altitude Physiology; and Magnetic Bacteria.

  • S20E13 The Lacandons

    • January 23, 1980
    • CBC

    Title of tonight's program is "The Lacandons" - a North American Indian program.

  • S20E14 Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang

    • February 6, 1980
    • CBC

    A documentary about Paul Jacobs, an American freelance investigative journalist who sets out to prove the relationship between low-level nuclear radiation or fallout and the increased incidences of cancer. Between 1957 and 1978, Jacobs interviewed persons who had been exposed to fall-out from bomb tests in Nevada.

  • S20E15 Roger Tory Peterson; Portrait of a Birdwatcher

    • February 13, 1980
    • CBC

    The story of naturalist Peterson, his work and his love of nature, narrated by John Livingston, photography by Rudolf Kovanic.

  • S20E16 High altitude Physiology / The Vision of Galileo / Dust Storms

    • February 27, 1980
    • CBC

    Among the segments is "Galileo," a film that chronicles the life of the Italian astronomer, mathematician and physicist through visits to the cities where he lived and worked, and demonstrations of his experiments. Another segment focuses on how the human body adapts to life high above sea level, and includes a report on some of the equipment that enables mountain climbers and airplane pilots to survive at high altitudes. Also; how weather in one part of the world can affect regions thousands of miles away.

  • S20E17 The Chiricahuas / The Making of Violins / Seal Psychology

    • March 5, 1980
    • CBC

    The Chiricahuas, the making of violins, and seal psychology are among the topics covered.

Season 21

  • S21E01 Mount St. Helen

    • October 8, 1980
    • CBC

    (Season Premiere) David Suzuki highlights the eruption of the Mount St. Helens volcano, the uses of hovercraft by the Canadian Coast Guard, new types of radar and the effects which a baseball has when it spins through the air.

  • S21E02 Cystic Fibrosis / Whooping Crane / Cold-Water Survival

    • October 15, 1980
    • CBC

    A report on cystic fibrosis, a genetic respiratory ailment that afflicts young people; and a profile of one of its victims, 24-year-old nurse Susan McKellar. Other segments examine the International Crane Foundation's efforts to save the whooping crane from extinction; and research into cold-water survival techniques.

  • S21E03 The Bare Necessity / Manatees / Ludhiana

    • October 22, 1980
    • CBC

    Three films are featured: The Bare Necessity, dealing with the human skin; Manatees, concerning a unique vegetarian creature which lives in coastal waters, and Ludhiana, a profile of an Indian city which serves as the home base for 12,000 different business enterprises.

  • S21E04 Tar Wars

    • October 29, 1980
    • CBC

    Documentary film on the tar sands Atabaska.

  • S21E05 Alternate Car Fuel / Surface Tension / Science Fair

    • November 5, 1980
    • CBC

    Scheduled items include Alternate Car Fuel; Surface Tension and Science Fair.

  • S21E06 Chinese Culture (1)

    • November 12, 1980
    • CBC

    The first of two hours filmed in China examines traditional aspects of Chinese culture- herbal medicine, acupuncture, language- and provides a look at some of the country's famous landmarks, such as the Great Wall and the Imperial Palace in Peking.

  • S21E07 Modern China (2)

    • November 19, 1980
    • CBC

    The professional and recreational activities of the Chinese people are examined in a tour of their homes, factories and parks, as well as the palaces which were formerly the homes of Emperors.

  • S21E08 Survival Instincts of the Insect World / Sickle Cell Anemia

    • November 26, 1980
    • CBC

    A magazine edition features items about the survival instincts of the insect world and the research currently being conducted in regard to sickle cell anemia.

  • S21E09 Invisible Astronomy

    • December 3, 1980
    • CBC

    Host David Suzuki visits the Algonquin Park Observatory and the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico as he reports on the use of radio astronomy and the search for extraterrestrial intelligent life. The work of the National Research Council in studying unusual wave formations, recent developments in the exploration of outer space through radio astronomy, and a visit with scientist Joel Hildebrand of the University of California are featured.

  • S21E10 Prenatal Diagnosis of Spina Bifida / Amniocentesis

    • December 10, 1980
    • CBC

    Scheduled: Reports on prenatal diagnosis of spina bifida, Tay-Sachs disease and Down's syndrome using amniocentesis, ultrasonography and fetoscopy; the use of chinchillas in researching damage to human ears caused by exposure to noise.

  • S21E11 One of the Family

    • January 7, 1981
    • CBC

    A film from OECA about a Toronto family whose youngest child, a boy, was born with cerebral palsy. Produced by Christa Singer. Also, "Oyster Culture" and a report on the American Association for the Advancement of Science convention held in Toronto.

  • S21E12 Structure of Birds Eggs / Newfound land Oil

    • January 14, 1981
    • CBC

    Magazine edition featuring the following items - a report from State University of New York at Buffalo on the structure of birds' eggs and how their porosity enables the growing chick to breathe inside the egg; film shows how oxygen enters the egg through the multitude of small holes and how this differs in small eggs and large; also, research into the incubating behaviour of herons and terns and how this affects the development of their eggs and chicks. Newfound land Oil. A look at the social and ecological changes occurring in some of the fishing villages of Newfoundland where oil exploration surveys are being conducted.

  • S21E13 Poisoned Playgrounds / Charlie

    • January 28, 1981
    • CBC

    Poisoned Playgrounds - A report by producer Heather Cook on the use of pesticides in an Ontario community and the action taken by parents when insecticide spraying at a school proved hazardous to children's health. Charlie - A repeat of a film first telecast December 17, 1978 about a Canadian archaeologist.

  • S21E14 The Moving Still

    • February 11, 1981
    • CBC

    A look at the history of scientific photography from its beginnings in 1837 to the present-day use of high-speed cameras.

  • S21E15 Sri Lanka: Island of Serendib

    • February 18, 1981
    • CBC

    The island paradise of Sri Lanka is visited in a comprehensive study that examines the dangers its wildlife faces from cultural and technological changes.

  • S21E16 Tar Sands

    • March 4, 1981
    • CBC

    Documentary about the oil sands.

  • S21E17 Blackfly / Desalination / Memory - Come to think of it / Dr. Karl Illmensee

    • March 11, 1981
    • CBC

    Blackfly: A look at the life cycle of the blackfly, and its effects in northern Canada and Africa. Desalination: A practical method of desalination using reverse osmosis is presented. Memory - Come to think of it (repeat): A look at recent research into the brain's memory capacities. Dr. Karl Illmensee: A look at the work being done by Dr. Karl Illmensee (de) at the University of Geneva to study the possibility of causing cancerous cells to revert back to normal cells.

  • S21E18 The Foxes' Earth

    • March 25, 1981
    • CBC

    For centuries the people of the village of Huasicancha in Peru lived under the domination of others, from the last of the Inca rulers to the Spanish conquerors and subsequent regimes. How the people finally rose up to reclaim the poor land they farmed at a subsistence level is told in this documentary.

  • S21E19 The Last of Life / The Cajuns

    • April 1, 1981
    • CBC

    The Last of Life: A look at geriatric medicine and some aspects of research into the biology of aging. The Cajuns: The descendants of Nova Scotia's Acadians and their lifestyle are profiled at their adopted home, the Bayou Lafourche in southern Louisiana.

Season 22

  • S22E01 Reconnective Surgery / Shark Vision / Batteries

    • October 14, 1981
    • CBC

    David Suzuki examines reconnective surgery and the vision capabilities of sharks, visits an irrigation project in India and explains the functions of batteries. The micro-surgery segment was taped in China and features Dr. Chen Chung Wei of the 6th People's Hospital in Shanghai. Dr. Chen is credited with pioneering the techniques now being practiced at Toronto's General hospital.

  • S22E02 Rabies in Ontario / Island of Coral / Hazards of Microwave Ovens

    • October 21, 1981
    • CBC

    Steps being taken to combat rabies in Ontario, an Island of Coral which provides a home for some of the world's most unique creatures, and the advantages and hazards of microwave ovens.

  • S22E03 Edge of the Cold

    • October 28, 1981
    • CBC

    David Parer's Australian examination of the wildlife on Macquarie Island, narrated by Sir Edmund Hillary.

  • S22E04 Waterproof Frog / The Piano / In the Sub-Nuclear Kitchen / The Record

    • November 4, 1981
    • CBC

    Waterproof Frog: A look at the unique frog Phyllomedusa which lives in the arid Gran Chaco region of central South America. The frog protects itself against water loss by coating its body with a waxy secretion. The Piano: A program about the history and science of the piano. In the Sub-Nuclear Kitchen: A brief look at particle physics and the huge particle accelerator at the European Centre for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva. The Record: A history of the phonograph record.

  • S22E05 The Thoroughbred : A Magic Way of Going

    • November 11, 1981
    • CBC

    A study of the genetic and biological development of thoroughbred horses, tracing the history of the animal from the time that horses were small creatures to the sleek, larger size animals they are today.

  • S22E06 Twins - And Then There Were Two

    • November 18, 1981
    • CBC

    This is a special edition based on two half hour programs that first aired in 1978. Producer Heather Cook has revised and updated the original programs to include the latest research data in studies that have been continuing over long periods at various medical centres and universities in North America. The program explains how cells divide to produce twins and the differences between fraternal twins and identical twins.

  • S22E07 A Natural Turn of Events / Kidney Transplant / Kelp

    • December 9, 1981
    • CBC

    A Natural Turn of Events: Construction in Toronto has led to the creation of a long spit of land - the Leslie Street Spit - which is turning into a prime nesting location for many kinds of birds, and also for migrating Monarch butterflies. Kidney Transplant: Kidney dialysis and transplants, with Dr. Michael Robinette of the Toronto General Hospital. Kelp: A look at kelp harvesting in China, and the products that can be made from it.

  • S22E08 Microscope: Making It Big / Desert Doctors / Polar Bear Pass

    • January 6, 1982
    • CBC

    Microscope: Making It Big: A look at the history and present development of the microscope. Desert Doctors: A look at the mobile hospitals used to treat people inexpensively in India's Rajisthan Desert. Polar Bear Pass: A look at Polar Bear Pass, an important oasis of arctic wildlife on Canada's Bathurst Island.

  • S22E09 Tipping the Scales

    • January 13, 1982
    • CBC

    The various factors which influence human weight are examined through reports on eating habits, diets, and basic metabolism.

  • S22E10 An Island Shall a Monster Make / Philip Morrison on Nuclear War

    • January 20, 1982
    • CBC

    A magazine edition highlights the giant lizards on the island of Mona near Puerto Rico, and physics professor Philip Morrison's work on the atomic bomb as a team member on the Manhattan Project.

  • S22E11 Aspirin / Windy Bay / Fluorescent Light

    • January 27, 1982
    • CBC

    Aspirin: An examination of how the common drug aspirin may have widespread application in combating heart and circulatory system diseases. This depends on its action, only recently appreciated, of inhibiting blood clotting. Windy Bay: A look at Windy Bay, on Lyell Island in the Queen Charlotte Islands, one of the last areas of virgin rainforest on the Canadian west coast. Windy Bay is now threatened by clearcut logging even though it has been suggested as a priority site for international conservation. Fluorescent Light: How fluorescent lights work and how they are manufactured.

  • S22E12 Hanuman Langurs: Monkeys of India / A Helping Hand / Formation Flight

    • February 3, 1982
    • CBC

    Hanuman Langurs: Monkeys of India: A look at the social organization and adaptation to human settlements of Hanuman langurs, social monkeys who are named for the monkey god Hanuman. A Helping Hand: A look at myoelectric prostheses, artificial limbs which, while being powered by batteries, are actually controlled by amplified muscle electricity. Formation Flight: Examining the reasons why large birds tend to fly in formation.

  • S22E13 Jute Plastic / Honeybees / Hildebrand

    • February 24, 1982
    • CBC

    "Jute Plastic." Bangladesh is the world's chief supplier of jute fibre for use in the manufacture of twine, burlap, tarpaulin and carpet-backing. This item shows how jute is harvested and processed for export, and how synthetic fibres are now threatening the economy of Bangladesh which depends on jute production for much of its income. "Honeybees." The life and social order of a honeybee colony - the role of drone, queen and worker bees, their feeding and how they communicate. "Hildebrand." A follow-up to last season's report on Dr Joel Hildebrand of the University of California at Berkeley, who in Dec. 1981 celebrated his 100th birthday at his office on the campus where he is still very active in teaching and research.

  • S22E14 Mind's Eye / Tide Mill / Colour It Snake

    • March 10, 1982
    • CBC

    Mind's Eye: A report on recent research into how the brain constructs vision from the information supplied by the eyes. Tide Mill: A look at a grist mill at Ealing in England which for two centuries has run on tidal power. Colour It Snake: A discussion of the ways in which the basic pigments in snake scales are arranged to produce colour patterns fitting various survival needs.

  • S22E15 The Asteroid and the Dinosaur

    • March 24, 1982
    • CBC

    An examination of the theory advanced by physicist Luis Alvarez and others that an asteroid impact was responsible for the sudden total extinction of the dinosaurs over sixty million years ago.

  • S22E16 Waves / The Harp Seal / Blackfly

    • March 31, 1982
    • CBC

    Waves: An update of the program "Freak Waves" originally broadcast in December 1980. A further look at research being done into wave formations that can destroy oil rigs on the open sea. The Harp Seal (repeat): The development of the Harp Seal is traced, from birth through nursing to its eventual migration northward. Blackfly (repeat): A look at disease and other problems caused by blackflies.

Season 23

  • S23E01 Gutenberg Revisited / Diving Birds / Tulips

    • October 20, 1982
    • CBC

    Gutenberg Revisited: A look at new developments in microelectronic information processing, focusing on the Telidon system, a Canadian invention offering two-way interactive television. Diving Birds: A look at adaptations in aquatic birds such as ducks and geese which allow them to make long dives under water. Tulips: An overview of the tulip industry in Holland.

  • S23E02 Northern Games / Geothermal Energy / Ships of the Desert / Coriolis Effect

    • October 27, 1982
    • CBC

    Northern Games: A look at the traditional games of the Inuit as they are practised 800 km north of the Arctic Circle, by youth in competition from communities across the North. Geothermal Energy: A look at how geothermal energy has been adapted to supply human needs on Iceland. Ships of the Desert: An exploration of the dromedary camel, adapted for life in the desert. Coriolis Effect: A brief explanation of the coriolis effect - what it is, how it is demonstrable, and its effect on weather.

  • S23E03 Bring Back My Bonnie

    • November 3, 1982
    • CBC

    A look at recovery after strokes. In previous years, strokes were frequently fatal, and brain damage was seen as permanent. Now, all this is changing. It has been found that with therapy many stroke victims can recover some or even most of the functions they have lost.

  • S23E04 Long Point

    • November 10, 1982
    • CBC

    Long point marsh is a sandspit on the Northern shore of Lake Erie. Discovered in 1670 by French explorers, this wildlife area has kept many of it's original features and is now an important habitat for many species of animals and migrating birds.

  • S23E05 Living in a Sunhouse / Brittle Bones / DIAL

    • November 17, 1982
    • CBC

    Featured: Solar techniques to improve the thermal efficiency of a house; treatment methods for fragile bones (osteoporosis); and a laser system called DIAL (Differential Absorption Lidar) that measures levels of environmental pollution.

  • S23E06 Japan: The Superachievers (1)

    • November 24, 1982
    • CBC

    The landmarks of Japanese science and technology since the end of World War II are highlighted in the first of two related programs. The ancient craft of Samurai swordmaking and computer based steel production are also examined.

  • S23E07 Japan: The Nation Family (2)

    • December 1, 1982
    • CBC

    The everyday life of Japanese workers is traced through their values, their leisure activities and the mechanization of their factories.

  • S23E08 Edge of the Cold (2)

    • December 15, 1982
    • CBC

    The Australian Broadcasting Corporation produced four half-hour films about the Macquarie Islands. This episode of The Nature of Things compiles two of them. The first was originally entitled 'Man the Hunter, Man the Keeper.' The second was originally entitled 'The Dominant Male.' The program looks at the delicate ecological balance which must be maintained for the populations of elephant seals and seabirds on the Macquarie Islands. Narrated by Sir Edmund Hillary.[347] The other two episodes were compiled into a Nature of Things broadcast of 28 October 1981.

  • S23E09 To Be or Not to Be

    • December 22, 1982
    • CBC

    Numerous questions raised by new genetic testing techniques designed to identify fetal disorders are addressed. The evolving techniques of fetal diagnosis such as amniocentesis, ultrasound and fetoscopy are also considered.[349][350] This is a revised version of 'Prenatal Diagnosis' which was originally broadcast on December 10, 1980.

  • S23E10 The Fragile Mountain

    • December 29, 1982
    • CBC

    An examination of the measures being taken by a Himalayan mountain community that is trying to avoid a flood disaster, such as that which devastated northern India in 1978.

  • S23E11 Newborn

    • January 12, 1983
    • CBC

    A look at the first moments of an infant's life and its adaptation to the outside world.

  • S23E12 Decade of Delay / RH Laboratory / Hawaii Telescope

    • January 19, 1983
    • CBC

    Decade of Delay: A look at what can be done to make cars safer, and an inquiry into why it is not being done. RH Laboratory: A visit to the special Rh. laboratory in Winnipeg, which was the world pioneer in combating Rh disease, an infant condition that results from the presence or absence of the rhesus factor in individual blood cells. Hawaii Telescope: A look at the telescope and observatory erected by a joint venture of Canada and France on Mauna Kea volcano in Hawaii.

  • S23E13 Water: Friend or Foe?

    • January 27, 1983
    • CBC

    Holland's Delta Project, a task involving difficult measures to reclaim land from the sea, is detailed.

  • S23E14 The Gentle Giants / Ancient Diseases / Water Weeds

    • February 2, 1983
    • CBC

    The Gentle Giants: A film on the gray whales who live off the pacific coast of North America. Ancient Diseases: A look at paleopathology and what can be learned about the past of man and the history of diseases through the autopsy of ancient human remains. Water Weeds: A look at an experimental project in Listowel, Ontario, using cattails to purify sewage. The cattails thrive in sewage where they also filter out some industrial contaminants as well as deal with organic compounds.

  • S23E15 Magnet Earth

    • March 2, 1983
    • CBC

    A one-hour film from the BBC series Horizon exploring the effects of the Earth's magnetic field on animals and, to a lesser extent, humans.

  • S23E16 On The Track of the Wild Otter

    • March 30, 1983
    • CBC

    The social life of one of nature's shyest creatures is examined in a year-round study of its behavior.

Season 24

  • S24E01 Swimming / Diabetes: Beating the Needle / Glass Eyes

    • October 5, 1983
    • CBC

    Season Premiere: Dr. David Suzuki profiles veteran Canadian swimmer Dan Thompson, the lifestyles of diabetics and the manufacturing of glass eyes.

  • S24E02 Cobra: India's Good Snake / Blue Babies / High Flight

    • October 12, 1983
    • CBC

    Cobra: India's Good Snake: Ignorance and superstition surround the cobra, threatening the members of this species which is helpful to man. Blue Babies: David Suzuki talks with cardiologist Peter Olley of the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto concerning the pharmaceutical and medical treatment of infants born with a congenital heart defect. High Flight: Research is beginning to uncover the reasons why birds can fly at high altitudes that would cause brain damage in humans.

  • S24E03 Animal Imposters

    • October 19, 1983
    • CBC

    The clever methods of various creatures either to hunt or to avoid being hunted are examined in locations including Central America and Australia.

  • S24E04 Spas: Magic or Medicine?

    • October 26, 1983
    • CBC

    The host David Suzuki visit some of these stations in Japan and elsewhere in the world and lay eyes on the therapies that are available there. In addition, it will parallel between the American attitude toward this form of treatment and that of the inhabitants of other countries.

  • S24E05 The Cathedral Engineers / Neem: A Natural Insecticide / Bluebird Trails

    • November 2, 1983
    • CBC

    The Cathedral Engineers: Shot on location in France and New York City, the program looks at the history and philosophy of European gothic cathedrals. Neem: A Natural Insecticide: Products of the neem, one of the world's most useful trees, are used to make everything from soap to insecticide. Bluebird Trails: Pushed out of prime nesting sites by the introduction of the english sparrow and starling in 1900, the North American bluebird is making a comeback thanks to specially constructed bluebird boxes built across eastern North America.

  • S24E06 Salmon on the Line

    • November 9, 1983
    • CBC

    This hour-long program documents the reasons for the decline of some species of pacific salmon. The life cycles, spawning, and migration of various types of pacific salmon are studied.

  • S24E07 Bishnois and the Antelope / Cyclosporin / Freezing Water

    • November 16, 1983
    • CBC

    Bishnois and the Antelope: a Hindu sect known as the Bishnois live on the edge of the Rajasthan desert in northwestern India. Strict vegetarians, they have an awareness of ecology which makes them protectors of their environment. Cyclosporin: A new anti-rejection drug cyclosporin is being used to treat transplant patients. Freezing Water: A look at what happens when water is frozen.

  • S24E08 Footsteps on the Moon / Salamanders / Iron Age Village

    • November 23, 1983
    • CBC

    The moon's role in man's history, the anatomy of salamanders, and the discovery of an iron-age village are highlighted.

  • S24E09 Snappers / Inside Out / Samurai Armour

    • December 7, 1983
    • CBC

    Featured: the snapping turtle is profiled; a look at technology which enables doctors to examine the interior of the body without surgical intervention, and a visit to a Japanese craftsman's workshop where Samurai armour is made.

  • S24E10 Flight Simulators / Beating The Blues

    • December 21, 1983
    • CBC

    Tonight's topics: Flight Simulators - A visit to Montreal where a Canadian company produces sophisticated devices to train pilots for normal flight and for a number of situations that can occur in the air, including the wind-Shear phenomenon and other emergency conditions. And, Beating The Blues - A report on the effects of severe depression and methods of treatment used to combat specific kinds of depression.

  • S24E11 Maps: From Quill to Computer / Mountain Gophers / Japanese Silk Weaving

    • January 4, 1984
    • CBC

    Maps: From Quill to Computer: The history of mapmaking, from early clay tablets to state-of-the-art renditions. Mountain Gophers: a look at the Columbian ground squirrel found in the area of the Rocky Mountains, their mating and territorial habits and methods of communication with each other. Japanese Silk Weaving: A look at the production of silk, from cocoon to fabric.

Season 25

  • S25E01 Pain in the Back / Mobile Computers / The Birdmappers: Bird Atlas

    • October 10, 1984
    • CBC

    Season Premiere: Treating chronic back pain; mobile data terminals for emergency personnel; and individuals tracking birds in Ontario and observing their behaviour so that a bird atlas can be published.

  • S25E02 Kunde Hospital / Computer Choreology / Periscope Camera

    • October 17, 1984
    • CBC

    A visit to Kunde Hospital, built in a remote Himalayan village by New Zealand explorer Sir Edmund Hillary; a look at the use of computers for dance notation which record a dancer's movement; and a camera that can perform complex film tracking shots through miniature sets.

  • S25E03 Prairie Waters

    • October 24, 1984
    • CBC

    An exploration of Manitoba's Delta Marsh and its animal, bird and plant life.

  • S25E04 The Miracle of Life

    • October 31, 1984
    • CBC

    Host David Suzuki presents film footage of the reproductive process of mitosis, the first division of an egg that initiates the process of reproducing life. The story follows the development of the human fetus from conception until it enters the outside world.

  • S25E05 Chinese Wall Paintings / Erie Ice / Fly Fishing

    • November 7, 1984
    • CBC

    Chinese Wall Paintings: Observing the detailed and time-consuming work involved in restoring two large fourteenth century wall paintings owned by the Royal Ontario Museum. Erie Ice: A look at the formation of ice ridges that can force themselves down into the lake bottom, carving huge gouges when they shift. Fly Fishing: A look at the sport of fly fishing, examining the life cycle of the brook trout and the mayfly and showing how detailed knowledge of the river ecosystem is necessary for successful angling.

  • S25E06 Sexual Encounters of the Floral Kind

    • November 14, 1984
    • CBC

    A look at how various species of plant life lure insects and animals to effect the pollination process.

  • S25E07 Drought in Africa / Where the Bay Becomes the Sea / Insect Communication

    • November 28, 1984
    • CBC

    Drought in Africa: A brief look at the drought conditions in Ethiopia and the need for solutions at the village level. Where the Bay Becomes the Sea: A documentary about the fragile and complex marine ecosystem in the Bay of Fundy. The film traces relationships within the food chain - from tiny plankton to birds and seals and finally to whales and humans.[397] Insect Communication: A look at the hearing and sound-producing mechanisms of insects, used for attracting a mate, defining territory, and defending against bats.

  • S25E08 Making Moves / Orchids / Juggling

    • December 12, 1984
    • CBC

    Tonight's topics "Making Moves" Nerve-controlled movement is one of evolution's great innovations. We take if for granted until we're faced with its loss as are victims of spinal chord injuries. Research into basic nerve-muscle mechanisms hold promise for the recovery of movement after spinal chord injuries. And, Orchids and Juggling.

  • S25E09 Voices in the Wind

    • December 26, 1984
    • CBC

    A historical look at the evolution of the pipe organ.

  • S25E10 Dinosaurs: Remains to be Seen

    • January 9, 1985
    • CBC

    Tonight: "Dinosaur" The vanished world of a highly specialized species, the dinosaur. is pieced together with evidence from fossilized footprints, bones and pollen, and from habitats such as the Everglades.

  • S25E11 CPR: Reversing Sudden Death / Catching the Wind / Environmental Sculpture

    • January 16, 1985
    • CBC

    CPR: Reversing Sudden Death: a British Columbia campaign to teach cardiopulmonary resuscitation to the general population. Catching the Wind: An examination of the skill and scientific expertise required for world-class sailing. Environmental Sculpture: In his studio in Oakville, sculptor Joseph Patriska creates art which urges government and industry to commit to a cleaner environment.

  • S25E12 The Great Lakes: Troubled Waters

    • January 23, 1985
    • CBC

    David Suzuki takes a look at the potential hazards of pollution and mismanagement of one of the world's greatest sources of fresh water — the Great Lakes.

  • S25E13 A Planet for the Taking Overview / Blue Babies / High Flight

    • January 30, 1985
    • CBC

    Tonight, an overview of the provocative series A PLANET FOR THE TAKING that begins on CBC Television Wednesday, February 6. This preview introduces viewers to a new perspective on our human role in nature. Also, Blue Babies - infants born with a heart defect are sometimes unable to receive sufficient oxygen. And, High Flight - research into the workings of bird lungs.

  • S25E16 The Year of the Rat

    • CBC

  • S25E17 Dark Meat, White meat

    • CBC

    The Difference Between Dark Meat and White meat

Season 26

Season 27

  • S27E01 Cars of the Future

    • October 8, 1986
    • CBC

    David Suzuki is the host of this award-winning science show which begins its 27th season. What will the car of the future be like? Faster? Sleeker? Will it be built by humans — or machines? Will it continue to pollute and kill? Join David Suzuki for an eye-opening ride through the fact and fantasy of the machine we love. And hate.

  • S27E02 Restless Sky; Rotation; Handcraft in History

    • October 15, 1986
    • CBC

    Clouds, and the atmospheric forces that create weather; an illustration of the principle of rotation; traditional methods and modern techniques employed in making paper in Nepal.

  • S27E03 The Niagara Escarpment: A Rock Video

    • October 22, 1986
    • CBC

    A look at the dangerous and beautiful Niagara Escarpment, a limestone spine that runs northward from Niagara Falls through the densely populated province of Ontario.

  • S27E04 The Blood of Our Children

    • October 29, 1986
    • CBC

    Bereaved Argentinian women whose persistence and courage have enlisted help from American geneticists and forensic scientists in identifying the victims of their former government's persecution; ultrasonic sound and kidney stones; ambitious curbside recycling programs.

  • S27E05 Herbal Plants

    • November 5, 1986
    • CBC

    A look at the therapeutic use of plants over the years to cure illnesses and maintain good health, and how the deteriorating number of plant species in the world may prove to be a medical, as well as environmental, loss to humanity.

  • S27E06 Stunning Sounds

    • November 12, 1986
    • CBC

    A look at how some animals, including the snapping shrimp and possibly the whale, use sound waves to stun their prey.

  • S27E07 Women of Kerala / Vortex

    • November 26, 1986
    • CBC

    Describes a program in Kerala, a state in southern India, where a combination of contraception, voluntary sterilization, increased education, a lowered rate of infant mortality, and the extension of health care to impoverished rural areas has produced a dramatic decrease in the birth rate. Also, scientific and technical research focused on the vortex.

  • S27E08 The Familiar Face of Love

    • December 10, 1986
    • CBC

    An exploration into the psychological and social forces which form our ideas and feelings about the opposite sex.

  • S27E09 Caribou Drowning in Niagara / Teflon Knee

    • December 17, 1986
    • CBC

    Topics: an investigation into the senseless drowning of 10.000 caribou in Limestone Falls in the wilderness of Labrador in 1984. And, Teflon Knee.

  • S27E10 The Sexual Life of Plants

    • December 24, 1986
    • CBC

  • S27E11 Conducting

    • January 7, 1987
    • CBC

    The language behind the gestures of a symphony conductor; and Canada's oldest residential environment education program, the Toronto Island Public and Nature Science School.

  • S27E12 Math

    • January 14, 1987
    • CBC

    A visit to a classroom where an innovative approach is taken in teaching math, and children are encouraged to invent their own math problems to solve by creating games and puzzles.

  • S27E13 January 21, 1987

    • January 21, 1987
    • CBC

  • S27E14 January 28, 1987

    • January 28, 1987
    • CBC

  • S27E15 The Chemistry of Fire

    • February 4, 1987
    • CBC

    The chemistry of fire; and a look at two species of cormorants noted for their fishing abilities.

  • S27E16 Saving Children From Dehydration

    • February 18, 1987
    • CBC

    A simple solution of sugar, salt and water is saving millions of children's lives in Third World countries from diarrhea and subsequent dehydration, which causes more deaths than famine.

  • S27E17 March 4, 1987

    • March 4, 1987
    • CBC

  • S27E18 AIDS

    • March 11, 1987
    • CBC

    This journey into the human immune system focuses on various aspects of the AIDS virus, from its origin in history to the psycho-social impact on its victims and society.

  • S27E19 The Breathing Sea

    • CBC

    The leading role occupied by the plankton is not limited to food intake to the various forms of marine life which He is the food but also by its photosynthetic action. It turns esssential the production of oxygen of our planet.

Season 28

Season 29

Season 30

  • S30E01 History of Rubber

    • September 27, 1989
    • CBC

    Season premiere: History of rubber. Includes its cultivation from wild trees.

  • S30E02 Balancing Act / Kids Go Wild

    • October 4, 1989
    • CBC

    A look at the human sense of balance; the Toronto Island Public and Natural Science School.

  • S30E03 Euthanasia in Canada

    • October 11, 1989
    • CBC

  • S30E04 Coming to Grips with the Grippe

    • October 25, 1989
    • CBC

  • S30E05 A Sky Full of Planes

    • November 15, 1989
    • CBC

    Report on the problems of air traffic at airports in Toronto and Atlanta and about the fixes that require it.

  • S30E06 Falcons by the Sea / Milkweed

    • November 22, 1989
    • CBC

    Researchers struggle to protect a reserve for peregrine falcons; the milkweed plant is part of a complex living network.

  • S30E07 Rare Breeds

    • December 6, 1989
    • CBC

    The conservation of rare breeds of farm animals, and the feeding behaviour of the phalarope, an unusual shorebird.

  • S30E08 Howe Sound: Poisoned Waters

    • December 13, 1989
    • CBC

    Folder on two paper mills in British Columbia that pollute with impunity Howe Sound a few kilometers north of Vancouver.

  • S30E09 Kingdom of the Ice Bear

    • December 19, 1989
    • CBC

  • S30E10 Kingdom of the Ice Bear (2)

    • December 26, 1989
    • CBC

  • S30E11 Little Wars

    • January 3, 1990
    • CBC

    The human invests a lot in the war games, such as poker or other more elaborate games. Mathematical analysis of these games allowed the discovery of elements that could help resolve quickly armed conflict.

  • S30E12 Powerful Medicine

    • January 17, 1990
    • CBC

  • S30E13 30th Anniversary Special

    • February 7, 1990
    • CBC

  • S30E14 Northern Development

    • February 21, 1990
    • CBC

  • S30E15 Turning to Dust

    • March 14, 1990
    • CBC

    Host David Suzuki and narrator Angela Fusco present this program on the deterioration of paper in old books around the world. At least one-third of the world's books are turning into particles and dust as they become embrittled. This program describes various methods of book preservation, including re-binding, photocopying, de-acidification and creating micro-fiche copies.

  • S30E16 Pretence of Performance

    • March 21, 1990
    • CBC

  • S30E17 Temagami: The Last Stand

    • March 28, 1990
    • CBC

  • S30E18 The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge

    • June 20, 1990
    • CBC

    The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, a wilderness against the Canada/U.S. border that is the calving grounds of caribou, is threatened by the U.S. Department of the Interior's plans to develop the land for oil

  • S30E19 Extinction of the Black Rhino

    • August 1, 1990
    • CBC

    The reasons behind the impending extinction of the black rhino are explored

  • S30E20 Through the Looking Glass

    • September 5, 1990
    • CBC

    Film clips from three decades reflect changing views of the world.

Season 31

  • S31E01 The Green Quiz

    • October 3, 1990
    • CBC

    Season premiere: This special quiz from The Nature of Things tests viewer's knowledge of the environment, touching on topics ranging from global warming and the population explosion to compost boxes and toxic chemicals in the home.

  • S31E02 Crying Wolf

    • October 10, 1990
    • CBC

    The controversial issue of wolf control in Canada.

  • S31E03 Ghana Recycling Car Parts / Yukon Arctic Summer

    • October 17, 1990
    • CBC

    Ghana prospers by recycling car parts, and Herschel Island, off the Yukon coast, shelters life during the brief Arctic summer.

  • S31E04 You Must Have Been a Bilingual Baby

    • October 31, 1990
    • CBC

    The acquisition of a second long in young children and adults.

  • S31E05 The Bug Man of Ithaca

    • November 7, 1990
    • CBC

    A look at Cornell University's Professor Tom Eisner and his study of the insect world.

  • S31E06 A Change of Heart

    • November 14, 1990
    • CBC

    Documentary about the operation of the heart transplant is not as uncommon before, but that remains a difficult step for both the patient and the doctor. We can follow two patients and their doctors teams for a period of 7 months at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal.

  • S31E07 Chaos, science and the unexpected

    • November 21, 1990
    • CBC

    Examines what is predictable and what is random in nature, and the state of chaos which is between the two, including fractal geometry.

  • S31E08 Vietnam - After the Fire

    • November 28, 1990
    • CBC

    The efforts of the Vietnamese to restore their environment greatly poisoned by the use of various toxic products, such Agent Orange, a high content of dioxin herbicide used during the war with the Americans.

  • S31E09 Haida Gwai: Islands of the People

    • December 12, 1990
    • CBC

    Documentary about the Haida people of British Columbia who is desperately trying to preserve its environment against encroachment forestry companies.

  • S31E10 The Sisterhood

    • January 2, 1991
    • CBC

    Observation of the social organization of the hyena, in which the female predominates.

  • S31E11 Salt of the Earth

    • January 9, 1991
    • CBC

    Reportage on the place of salt in the world.

  • S31E12 The Day of Reckoning

    • January 16, 1991
    • CBC

    The importance increasingly great for IT as a tool for dissemination of knowledge.

  • S31E13 The Cholesterol Factor

    • January 30, 1991
    • CBC

    Folder on the cholesterol produced Biochemical which, when ingested in large quantities , is a factor binds to coronary heart disease.

  • S31E14 Second Wind

    • February 20, 1991
    • CBC

    Susan McKellor profile who suffers from cystic fibrosis, hereditary disease whose gene was recently discovered. Mother of two children and career woman, energy and enthusiasm she has is a source of inspiration for the people around her.

  • S31E15 Here be Dragons

    • March 6, 1991
    • CBC

    Documentary about the crocodile that lives in the Serengeti plain on the banks of the Grumeti River, Africa.

  • S31E16 Revolution Down on the Farm

    • March 20, 1991
    • CBC

    Documentary about the degradation North-America's Grasslands.

  • S31E17 Putting You in the Pictures / Marmots

    • March 27, 1991
    • CBC

    PUTTING YOU IN THE PICTURES The story of four Canadian inventors who have developed the IMAX system and its successor, the OMNIMAX. MARMOTS Short documentary on the marmot, an endangered species.

Season 32

  • S32E01 The Debate on Animal Research Issues

    • October 2, 1991
    • CBC

    Season Premiere - Visits to research facilities in Canada, the United States and Great Britain highlight the debate on animal research issues.

  • S32E02 The Grizzly Bear: Losing Ground

    • October 9, 1991
    • CBC

    Documentary about the precarious situation of grizzly bears in Canada.

  • S32E03 Air Crash

    • October 16, 1991
    • CBC

    Folder on research conducted by the experts of air safety when an aircraft accident occurs.

  • S32E04 Post Mortem

    • October 30, 1991
    • CBC

    Advances in forensics that uses new techniques including DNA identification.

  • S32E05 Hooked on Oil (R)

    • November 13, 1991
    • CBC

    The oil addiction of the industrialized world. .

  • S32E06 25 hour Clock

    • November 20, 1991
    • CBC

    Documentary on our biological clock.

  • S32E07 The Human Tide

    • November 27, 1991
    • CBC

    Since 1950, the human population of the world has doubled to nearly five and a half billion people. The major factor behind our assault on the environment is the rapidly accelerating growth of the human population. The world population is exploding and we must find a way to control our numbers.

  • S32E08 Running for their Lives

    • December 4, 1991
    • CBC

    A portrait of the life of the wild dog by photographer Hugh Miles that includes the forces threatening the extinction of Africa's most endangered carnivore.

  • S32E09 Lasers: Brighter Than the Sun

    • January 15, 1992
    • CBC

    Lasers have uses in communications, education, medicine, manufacturing and war.

  • S32E10 Seasons of the Sea

    • January 22, 1992
    • CBC

    The life cycles of the animals living in the giant kelp forests off the coast of California.

  • S32E11 A Toxic Journey

    • February 5, 1992
    • CBC

    Documentary on the inhabitants of the three cities that are urging the government to act against industrial pollution.

  • S32E12 Burgess Shale

    • March 11, 1992
    • CBC

    Documentary on marine fossils buried the in the Rocky Mountain feet.

  • S32E13 Connecting Flights: Shorebird Migration

    • March 18, 1992
    • CBC

    Documentary on migratory birds.

  • S32E14 April 29, 1992

    • April 29, 1992
    • CBC

    Title to be confirmed.

  • S32E15 Animals in Research, Breaking the Habit

    • CBC

    Anthropologist Dr. Shirley Strum reveals the social behavior of a troop of African olive baboons known as the ``Pumphouse Gang.''.

Season 33

  • S33E01 The Last Survivors

    • November 4, 1992
    • CBC

    Alberta ranchers fear that a bison herd in Wood Buffalo National Park carries communicable diseases.

  • S33E02 Living With Stress

    • November 11, 1992
    • CBC

    Examining the relationship between illness and stress.

  • S33E03 If Caribou Could Vote

    • November 18, 1992
    • CBC

    Environmentalists, the oil industry and politicians debate drilling for oil in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

  • S33E04 The Elements

    • November 25, 1992
    • CBC

    Poet Roger McGough explains the chemical elements.

  • S33E05 Back Street Bandits / Milkweed

    • December 2, 1992
    • CBC

    Raccoons thrive in Toronto; scientists study natural interactions dependent upon milkweed.

  • S33E06 End of the Line

    • December 16, 1992
    • CBC

    Overfishing and other man-made problems threaten the oceans.

  • S33E07 Toys

    • December 23, 1992
    • CBC

    Toys play a role in childhood development and help children learn to cope with a complex world.

  • S33E08 In the Company of Moose

    • January 6, 1993
    • CBC

    Gisele Benoit observes moose.

  • S33E09 The Mystery of the Mind

    • January 20, 1993
    • CBC

    How memory works, and the role it plays in our lives.

  • S33E10 Monkey Business

    • January 27, 1993
    • CBC

    Anthropologist Dr. Shirley Strum reveals the social behavior of a troop of African olive baboons known as the ``Pumphouse Gang.''.

  • S33E11 Diabetes: Blood Sugar, Sweat and Tears

    • February 3, 1993
    • CBC

    New research addresses the causes of diabetes and its treatment.

  • S33E12 Baboons

    • February 16, 1993
    • CBC

    The life cycle of the baboon.

  • S33E13 Coral Reefs: Rain Forests of the Sea

    • February 24, 1993
    • CBC

    A natural park protecting one of the world's last remaining undamaged coral reefs is located off the coast of Egypt.

  • S33E14 Pumping Hormones

    • March 24, 1993
    • CBC

    Scientists study the role of hormones in disease prevention and treatment.

  • S33E15 The Hidden World of the Bog

    • March 31, 1993
    • CBC

    Close-up photography shows the plants and animals that inhabit the bogs of the world, including orchids, mosses and carnivorous plants.

  • S33E16 A Climate for Change

    • May 30, 1993
    • CBC

    Global warming may cause rising sea levels and agricultural disaster.

  • S33E17 Elephant Seals

    • CBC

    An elephant-seal pup learns to swim, dive, sleep under water and recognize food.

  • S33E18 No Spare Parts

    • CBC

    Small workshops use recycled automobile parts and traditional crafting skills to produce machinery of great benefit to the local people.

Season 34

  • S34E01 Vitamins: Hype or Hope

    • October 6, 1993
    • CBC

    Season premiere: Examines vitamins and possible vitamin therapies in the future.

  • S34E02 End of the Line

    • October 13, 1993
    • CBC

    David Suzuki updates a report on overfishing and other man-made threats to the oceans.

  • S34E03 The Pyramid Builders

    • October 20, 1993
    • CBC

    Stonemasons and laborers try to construct a pyramid exactly the way it was done 4,000 years ago.

  • S34E04 The Living City

    • October 27, 1993
    • CBC

    Alternatives to sprawling suburbs.

  • S34E05 The shoreline doesn't stop here anymore

    • November 10, 1993
    • CBC

    Looks at the eroding power of shorelines and examines how much of this erosion is natural and how much of it is human-induced.

  • S34E06 Living Color

    • November 17, 1993
    • CBC

    Color: how it is perceived and how it affects everyday life.

  • S34E07 What's in a Neem?

    • December 1, 1993
    • CBC

    The Nature of Things devotes a full hour to discussing the current and possible uses of this tropical tree.

  • S34E08 Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh

    • December 15, 1993
    • CBC

    Ladakh is a desert land high in the western Himalayas that is now experiencing rapid modernisation and "development" that is degrading both the environment and the culture. Ancient Futures examines the root causes of environmental and social problems and compels the viewer to re-examine what is meant by "progress".

  • S34E09 The Invaders

    • January 5, 1994
    • CBC

    A look at some species which have dramatically altered habitats. Starlings, murderous African bees, sea lamprey and Zebra Mussels are in the numbers.

  • S34E10 Greening Business

    • January 19, 1994
    • CBC

    Modern farming techniques are causing soil erosion, increased usage of pesticides, and increased reliance on chemical fetilizers which are potentially harmful to humans and the environment. Instead we pursue organic farming techniques which preserve the ecosystems of the world.

  • S34E11 Crater of the Rain God

    • January 26, 1994
    • CBC

  • S34E12 Allergies: Nothing to Sneeze at

    • February 2, 1994
    • CBC

    Investigates various types of allergies and the research into the possible causes and cures of them.

  • S34E13 Wolves of the Sea

    • February 9, 1994
    • CBC

  • S34E14 Tiger Crisis

    • February 16, 1994
    • CBC

  • S34E15 Tiger Crisis (2)

    • February 23, 1994
    • CBC

  • S34E16 Songbirds

    • March 2, 1994
    • CBC

  • S34E17 Tuberculosis: The Forgotten Plague

    • March 9, 1994
    • CBC

  • S34E18 Water

    • March 30, 1994
    • CBC

  • S34E19 Memory: The Past Imperfect

    • March 20, 1994
    • CBC

    The unique ability of the memory to store, classify and retrieve human experience with great efficiency; the relationship between memory and perception.

  • S34E20 The Advanced Material World

    • CBC

    Looks at companies big and small that have made concern for the environment part of their planning.

Season 35

  • S35E01 Easy Targets

    • October 6, 1994
    • CBC

    Season premiere: An in-depth look at the child abuse, its victims, its perpetrators and its prevention.

  • S35E02 Shadows in a Desert Sea

    • October 20, 1994
    • CBC

    A profile of life within the Sea of Cortez; a stretch of water between the Baja Peninsula and the coast of Mexico.

  • S35E03 Lives in Limbo

    • October 27, 1994
    • CBC

    The Nature of Things examines Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and talks with the world's leading experts, doctors, researchers and victims about this illness which causes a life of misery for those afflicted.

  • S35E04 Highway to cyberia

    • November 3, 1994
    • CBC

    Looks at advances in information technology which make travelling on the ìnformation highway' part of our daily lives. Part 1 discusses the efforts of the entertainment industry to capitalize on the potential market made possible. Then the effect of Internet on social structures is discussed. The final part introduces the interplay of the video game industry and the new technology.

  • S35E05 The Trouble With Malaria

    • November 17, 1994
    • CBC

    Imagine what it would be like if large parts of the world were too disease ridden to be travelled through safely. That troubling scenario could become a reality far sooner than we think. Malaria, a tiny parasite transmitted by the bite of a mosquito, has reached epidemic proportions in areas of Asia, South America and Africa. Yet, in western countries, where most health dollars are spent, malaria gets little attention.

  • S35E06 Arthritis: Living Out of Joint

    • January 12, 1995
    • CBC

    Report on Arthritis: causes, effects and possible treatments.

  • S35E07 The Tides of Kirawira

    • February 2, 1995
    • CBC

    A look at the fish and wildlife that lives off the waters of the Grumeti River, Africa. This river dries up completely during the dry season of the Serengeti plains and creatures, insects, wildlife, depend on the precise time where the rain will return to bring the waters of the river.

  • S35E08 February 9, 1995

    • February 9, 1995
    • CBC

  • S35E09 February 12, 1995

    • February 12, 1995
    • CBC

  • S35E10 A Head for Figures: When Numbers are a Matter of Life and Death

    • March 23, 1995
    • CBC

    Most of us sees the study of numbers and statistics as incomprehensible or simply boring. However these mathematical abstractions ideas have an impact on us all.

Season 36

  • S36E01 Where The Heron Finds Its Home

    • October 12, 1995
    • CBC

    North America's Great Blue Heron is being discovered by biologists to be a sensitive indicator of the state of our wetlands. If herons are abundant, the wetlands they inhabit form a healthy ecosystem.

  • S36E02 Alternative Medicine: Teaching New Doctors Old Tricks

    • October 19, 1995
    • CBC

    Interviews with doctors regarding alternative medicine. Topics include acupuncture, homeopathy, ayurveda, and aboriginal medicine.

  • S36E03 Martin Gardner: Mathemagician

    • October 26, 1995
    • CBC

    Introduces Martin Gardner, the American mathematician and his influence on not only leading mathematicians, computer scientists, but card-sharks, jugglers and circus stars as well.

  • S36E04 Mysteries of the Ocean Wanderers: Albatross

    • November 2, 1995
    • CBC

  • S36E05 Back Pain: Back to the Basics

    • November 9, 1995
    • CBC

  • S36E06 The Struggle of the Gwich'in

    • December 7, 1995
    • CBC

    The struggle of the Gwich'in people of Alaska to preserve the environment of those in developing oil fields.

  • S36E07 The Island of the Ghost Bear

    • January 11, 1996
    • CBC

    The White Bear habitat off the coast of British Columbia.

  • S36E08 Cheetah and Lions

    • January 25, 1996
    • CBC

    The leading cause for the death of the cheetah : the lion.

  • S36E09 Why Sex?

    • February 1, 1996
    • CBC

    Sexual reproduction has been the driving force behind numerous traits and characteristics, including the human propensity to feel love.

  • S36E10 National parks: forever wild?

    • February 8, 1996
    • CBC

    Explores the crises faced by Canada's national parks as they attempt to steer a path between the competing interests of tourism, ecology and business.

  • S36E11 Food or Famine?

    • February 15, 1996
    • CBC

    (Episodes order to be confirmed) - Is the human population going to outstrip the earth's food supply? This is the central question in this provocative new two-hour special. Side effects of recent food surpluses include environmental problems such as soil erosion, salinization and chemical pollution. Food or Famine looks at projects in North America, Chile, Indonesia, Africa and India that are participating in a worldwide movement to return to agricultural methods based on sound ecological principles. But as the world population continues to increase, new crops with higher yields will have to be developed. This special also examines the worldwide imbalance between food consumption and production.

  • S36E12 The Child Who Couldn't Play

    • February 22, 1996
    • CBC

    We look at autism, a mysterious disorder that impedes normal development in humans and looks at new developments in its treatment. It was once believed that autism was caused by remote, cold parents; most often the mother was blamed. Today, autism is recognized as a partly genetic biological disorder, but its cause is still a mystery. The Child Who Couldn't Play examines the latest research on autism. At the Princeton Child Development Institute, the results of the science-based approach to autism attract professionals from around the world. Of the children under the age of five who are treated, over half progress to regular school classrooms. Winner of the Chris Award, Columbus International Film and Video Festival 1996; International Health & Medical Film Festival finalist.

  • S36E13 Learning to Love Creepy Crawlies

    • February 29, 1996
    • CBC

    In this video entomologist and Harvard Professor E.O. Wilson discuss the vital role insects play in ecology and in all life on earth. If insects disappeared, the natural world as known now would collapse in a matter of months. Insects are an integral part of life. They pollinate most of the world's flowering plants, break down organic wastes to produce soil, and they are a source of food for many animals and plants.

  • S36E14 The Natural History of a Point of View: John Livingston

    • March 7, 1996
    • CBC

    Naturalist John Livingston explores the roots of the ecological movement and illuminates modern environmentalism. He pleads for recognition and the intrinsic value of nature.

  • S36E15 Echo of the Elephants: The Next Generation

    • March 14, 1996
    • CBC

  • S36E16 Dealing with Drugs: Update

    • March 21, 1996
    • CBC

    Updated documentary, presented in 1991, on drug consumers.

  • S36E17 The Great Buffalo Delta

    • March 28, 1996
    • CBC

    Visit the area of Peace and the Athabasca River in northern Alberta, dens herds of bison and wolf packs.

Season 37

  • S37E01 Skin Deep: The Science of Race

    • October 3, 1996
    • CBC

    An exploration into the issue of race and how it determines physical well-being and defines social groups.

  • S37E02 Three Gorges Dam

    • October 10, 1996
    • CBC

  • S37E03 Vanishing Wetlands

    • October 24, 1996
    • CBC

    The program documents what is now the most threatened biological community in the world, the wetlands. It shows the effects of industrial development, levees, and dams in Illinois, Mississippi and Ontario and documents successful efforts to restore wetlands in both rural and urban areas.

  • S37E04 Paul Ehrlich and the Population Bomb

    • October 31, 1996
    • CBC

  • S37E05 Pelican and Cormorants: Prairie Scapegoats

    • November 14, 1996
    • CBC

    The growing populations of pelicans and cormorants on the prairie lakes of Canada are blamed for the collapse of inland fishery.

  • S37E06 Asthma: Air of Mystery

    • December 5, 1996
    • CBC

    A growing number of people are developing asthma, possibly caused by a combination of allergens and pollution.

  • S37E07 The Bald Eagle: Searching for Home

    • December 19, 1996
    • CBC

    Winter gathering of thousands of Bald Eagles north of Vancouver.

  • S37E08 The Friendly Atom: An Industrial History

    • February 13, 1997
    • CBC

    History of the nuclear power industry from the postwar days of fascination with the potential of the power, through the era of protests in the 60's, the accidents of the 70's and 80's, from Three Mile Island to Chernobyl, which have changed the public perception of nuclear power.

  • S37E09 Yukon to Yellowstone

    • February 20, 1997
    • CBC

    The wildlife in the Yellowstone mountainous region to the Yukon.

  • S37E10 The Barrens Quest

    • March 6, 1997
    • CBC

  • S37E11 The Day the Earth Shook

    • March 13, 1997
    • CBC

    A look at the earthquakes that occur on the same day but a year apart in different parts of the globe.

  • S37E12 Lions of Ngorongoro Crater

    • March 20, 1997
    • CBC

    The lions in the area of Ngorongoro Crater, east of Africa.

  • S37E13 Infertility

    • March 27, 1997
    • CBC

    A look on reproductive hormones and the effects on humans and animals.

  • S37E14 April 3, 1997

    • April 3, 1997
    • CBC

  • S37E16 Antibiotics: Growing Resistance

    • CBC

    Doctors fear that overuse of antibiotics will lead to resistant bacterias.

  • S37E17 On a Wing and a Song

    • CBC

    An examination of the lives of songbirds in the northern forests and a look at the scientists who work to preserve their continued existence.

Season 38

  • S38E01 Phobias: Secret Fears

    • January 8, 1998
    • CBC

    Season Opener: The Nature of Things hears firsthand from patients who are fighting to rule their fears, rather than be ruled by them.

  • S38E02 Lost in the Suburbs

    • January 15, 1998
    • CBC

    An examination of the social, economic and environmental implications of sprawl — low-density development that spreads out from the edge of cities and towns and consumes farmland, forest and wetlands.

  • S38E03 Wildlife for Sale - Dead or Alive!

    • January 22, 1998
    • CBC

    Dr. David Suzuki looks at the world-wide illegal trade in wildlife and animal parts and the harm it is causing. Also known as Animals wanted dead or alive.

  • S38E04 Not So Sweet: Living With Diabetes

    • January 29, 1998
    • CBC

    Examining new approaches to controlling and preventing diabetes; diabetic blind athlete Pam Fernandes.

  • S38E05 Little Brother Fights Back

    • February 5, 1998
    • CBC

  • S38E06 Labrador: The Way of the Caribou

    • February 26, 1998
    • CBC

  • S38E07 Hot Flash on Menopause

    • March 5, 1998
    • CBC

  • S38E08 Fisheries: Beyond the Crisis

    • March 12, 1998
    • CBC

    The citizens of the Bay of Fundy and the coast of India struggle against the policies of their government to preserve the oceans and fishes.

  • S38E09 March 19, 1998

    • March 19, 1998
    • CBC

  • S38E10 Out of the Shadows

    • April 9, 1998
    • CBC

    This program is about reconstructive surgery and looks at children with extreme facial deformities, the difficulties they encounter and the new breakthroughs in medical technology available to them.

  • S38E11 A look on Obesity

    • April 16, 1998
    • CBC

Season 39

  • S39E01 Up Close and Personal: The Ecology of David Suzuki

    • October 8, 1998
    • CBC

    The program is about the natural history of this invisible world: the things that float in the air around us, the microbes that live in the dish cloth on the kitchen counter, the fungi under our fingernails, and the visitors in the saucer under a house plant.

  • S39E02 High Society: Reefer Madness 2

    • October 15, 1998
    • CBC

    There is a growing number of people who regard marijuana (cannabis) as a benign medicine, offering relief to people suffering from a variety of illnesses, including epilepsy, arthritis, multiple sclerosis and glaucoma as well as lessening the side effects of medications and treatments given to cancer and HIV patients. CBC Television's THE NATURE OF THINGS with David Suzuki examines the medicinal uses of marijuana.

  • S39E03 Grasslands

    • November 5, 1998
    • CBC

    Over the last 200 years, the prairie grasslands of North America have undergone a radical transformation. The fertile soil, formed slowly over thousands of years, has been taken over by agriculture for crops like grain, oil seeds and forages for livestock. The buffalo have gone, replaced by millions of cattle. Breaking up the soil and removing the protective layer of grass has created severe erosion. Heavy machines compact the soil, limiting its ability to store precious moisture. Exposed to the air, soil dries to a powder and blows away. It was a frenetic period of transcontinental railway construction in the 1900s that opened the centre of the continent to millions of settlers.

  • S39E04 Good Wood

    • November 26, 1998
    • CBC

    A focus on Honduras and the important link between this country, Mexico, the US and Canada.

  • S39E05 Look Who's Talking...How Animals Communicate

    • December 3, 1998
    • CBC

    It is only recently that humans have become aware that animal communication is often elegant, elaborate and subtle. Understanding how other species communicate tells us a great deal about the history and evolution of our species.

  • S39E06 Chimps on Death Row

    • January 21, 1999
    • CBC

    Chimps are getting Hepatitis B and it is a serious health problem, which usually leads to death in the species. They pick up the disease from handlers and experimenters when held in captivity. A startling look at the use of our closest living relatives for science.

  • S39E07 Man and Dog: An Evolving Partnership

    • January 28, 1999
    • CBC

    The domestic dog has a special place in the human world. Is it by accident or design? All breeds of dogs trace their ancestry back to a common wolf-like creature that lived some 12 thousand years ago. But what was it that lead to the growth of such an extraordinary array of different progeny?

  • S39E08 Weighing the Options: Elective Scoliosis Surgery

    • February 11, 1999
    • CBC

    Scoliosis or curvature of the spine is found worldwide in about one out of every 10 people. Nearly all cases occur in adolescent females. It's a lifetime condition that can't be prevented or cured. At best it may be stabilized with bracing or surgery. but in the more severe cases, there's no telling when it may start to progress again.

  • S39E09 Escape From Earth

    • February 18, 1999
    • CBC

    In some ways Mars is like Earth: there are clouds, wind, fog and frost. But it's also as cold as Antarctica, its atmosphere is poisonous to humans, and the sky glows pink with billions of suspended dust particles. Some scientists believe the planet's ecology could be re- engineered to make it habitable for Earth's life forms. This would be humanity's greatest adventure, a mission unlike any we've ever known.

  • S39E10 How To Live To 100

    • February 25, 1999
    • CBC

    What age group is the fastest growing segment in our society? Teenagers, boomers, infants? Guess again...centenarians. People living into their 100s are not uncommon these days. Why are so many surviving longer? Is living to 100 within everyone's reach?

  • S39E11 Dead Heat

    • March 4, 1999
    • CBC

    The Spanish flu reserved its special virulence not for children and the elderly but for those in the prime of life. In just a few months it killed more people than the ones that died in World Wars I and II, Vietnam and Korea combined. In the intervening years there has always remained the threat of a similar killing plague. If it hit again, the medical profession would still have been powerless.

  • S39E12 The Pill

    • March 11, 1999
    • CBC

    In 1956, Russian tanks rolled down the streets of Budapest. Castro began fighting his way to power in Cuba and North American women kept house in an era known as the baby boom. Meanwhile, a drug trial being conducted on the island of Puerto Rico would eventually revolutionize pregnancy and be called "The Pill".

  • S39E13 Turning Down the Heat

    • April 8, 1999
    • CBC

    What is Canada's role in solar power? We're on the leading edge of fuel cell development but what about wind and solar? Most of our national wind energy output can be assessed at one glance here on the eastern slopes of the rockies. In the meantime, 40 countries around the world boast wind energy programs while Canada has none. Why do we snub a potential jobs and a new sector. David Suzuki argues that Canada has no national renewable energy policy or subsidies.

  • S39E14 Wonders of the World

    • April 15, 1999
    • CBC

    What are your wonders of the world? See what some experts have to offer as today's wonders of the world, including the bicycle and the linguistic genius of children. Tonight we'll meet three outstanding scientists and hear their very personal stories of scientific curiosity, discovery and wonder.

  • S39E15 Horses of Suffield

    • CBC

    This documentary explores the fate of the endangered wild Suffield horses of Alberta. Located near a military base close to Medicine Hat, these animals were originally domesticated but returned to the wild over generations.

Season 40

  • S40E01 Phallacies

    • October 4, 1999
    • CBC

    Season Opener: Myths and misconceptions are often born from the concealment of facts. This program brings the penis front and center for an unfettered study of the male organ's place in history, art, religion, and contemporary life.

  • S40E02 The Hidden Killer: Portrait of an Epidemic

    • October 18, 1999
    • CBC

    Imagine if a new disease suddenly began to kill off some of the healthiest young people in your community. Starting with flu-like symptoms, it soon escalates and kills its victims within hours. People literally drown as their lungs fill with fluid. In the spring of 1993, a young Navajo couple and their infant son were just beginning their life together when unexpectedly and unannounced, tragedy struck.

  • S40E03 Parkinson's: Lynda's Story

    • October 25, 1999
    • CBC

    Despite astonishing advances in many areas of modern medicine, the treatment of Parkinson's disease has changed very little since drug therapy was introduced nearly 40 years ago. Today however, doctors are gaining new insights into this complex disabling disease through the use of experimental surgery. Lynda MacKenzie has waited two years for experimental brain surgery for Parkinson's disease.

  • S40E04 Lost

    • November 8, 1999
    • CBC

    We've all felt the terror of being lost - even for just a few moments. We lose our way; a child unexpectedly vanishes in the aisles of a supermarket.

  • S40E05 Designing for Dignity: Engineering Body Parts

    • November 22, 1999
    • CBC

    A baby perfect in every detail. Every one of the billions of cells in this baby carry all of the genetic information needed to produce every part of the body. But what happens if this genetic information is incomplete, the design modified, the function altered or destroyed by trauma or disease or a body part simply wears out? Engineers world wide are working with plastics, metals and living tissues. Trying to mimic Mother Nature and return the damaged body to function and dignity.

  • S40E06 Race for the Future

    • November 29, 1999
    • CBC

    When David Suzuki was born 1936, there were two billion human beings. In his lifetime, our population has tripled. And in that time, virtually all of the modern things that we take for granted, the birth control pill, computers, jet planes, satellites -- you name it, have become a part of our daily lives. When you add all of that together, our numbers, our consumption, our technology, our economy -- we have become something never seen before on this Earth. A species so powerful we are changing the biological and physical features of the planet.

  • S40E07 Race for the Future, Part 2

    • December 6, 1999
    • CBC

    In our previous program, we saw how science and technology have presented us with a paradox -- a world in which we are increasingly powerful yet increasingly vulnerable at the same time. We looked at the consequences of our ever- increasing consumption of the earth's resources, at the growth of environmental consciousness. A world where it sometimes seemed that we had little sense of our real goals. Tonight, the stakes get higher as we travel into the future.

  • S40E08 The Sleep Famine

    • January 24, 1999
    • CBC

    A nuclear power plant whether Chernobyl or this one near Toronto, is not a place you want run by people who are half asleep. But from all over, from surgeons, police, parents, you hear the same complaint -- they're tired. They can't get enough sleep. It's been called a sleep famine. Part of the price we pay for a non-stop 24 hour a day lifestyle. Life goes on around the clock. And in our 24 hour a day, seven day a week society, one of the major victims has been sleep.

  • S40E09 Do Parents Matter?

    • February 7, 1999
    • CBC

    These are 12-year-old Americans. Like all children their age, their personalities are already well defined. We assume their personalities come from their parents but a controversial new theory says we've got it all wrong. When someone proposes an idea that runs counter to what most people think, a controversy results. The influential role of parents has rarely been questioned until now.

  • S40E10 Silent Sentinels

    • February 21, 2000
    • CBC

    Mass bleaching of coral has swept the world's tropical oceans, in places leaving hundreds of miles of coral coastline severely damaged. This program examines the issues associated with damage to corals: rising temperatures, and acidification due to increasing amounts of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

  • S40E11 Wild Goose Chase

    • February 28, 2000
    • CBC

    Wild Goose Chase explores the ways in which city-dwelling Canada Geese and arctic-nesting Lesser Snow Geese have turned the modern, human-altered landscape to their advantage.

  • S40E12 Humans: Who are We, Part 1 - The Birth of The Human Mind

    • March 13, 2000
    • CBC

    The Birth of The Human Mind takes viewers on an amazing journey back in time, exploring the use of language, tools and how our distant ancestors came to walk.

  • S40E13 Humans: Who Are We?, Part 2 - The Human Invasion

    • March 20, 2000
    • CBC

    Did we kill off our cousins, interbreed and merge with them, or did they just die out? It took five million years for an upright ape to evolve into an agile, quick-thinking and inventive human being.

  • S40E14 Weather: Dragons of Chaos

    • March 27, 2000
    • CBC

    Violent thunderstorms develop in the heat of spring and summer. The heat quickly draws large amounts of water vapour into the air. As the cloud grows, it rises high into the atmosphere. Eventually it hits a layer of cold air -- the boundary between the troposphere and the stratosphere. Blocked from rising, the cloud spreads into an anvil shape. Within the cloud, the droplets combine and grow until gravity draws them back to Earth. It takes a million droplets to make a single rain drop.

  • S40E15 The Green Zone

    • CBC

    The strip of vegetation along a waterway is called the riparian zone, the 'green zone.' This program shows that protecting a stream or restoring a river often means repairing this green riparian zone, which scientists say is as important to the river's ecosystem as the water itself.

Season 41

  • S41E01 Nuclear Dynamite

    • October 5, 2000
    • CBC

    In the spring of 1960, a village in the western Arctic was chosen as the site of a huge nuclear experiment. Five atomic bombs would be used to dig an instant harbour nearby. Over the next 30 years, the Americans and the Russians set off 150 atomic blasts, developing what they called peaceful nuclear explosions.

  • S41E02 Breath of Life

    • October 12, 2000
    • CBC

    Healthy siblings offer to donate their lungs to their sister, who is dying of cystic fibrosis.

  • S41E03 Spare Parts

    • October 19, 2000
    • CBC

    A few decades ago, you'd have been hard pressed to find many survivors of transplant surgery. Today, we have come to expect that such surgery will work. Surgeon Roy Calne is one of the pioneers who made transplant surgery a practical medical tool. He's also a painter whose works capture subjects as diverse as a tiger in the jungle and the history of these startling medical advances. When he began as a surgeon, almost all these procedures failed because of the body's refusal to accept the new organ.

  • S41E04 Lost Worlds: Wild South America

    • November 23, 2000
    • CBC

    South America; Ecuadorean volcanoes; waterfalls; Machu Picchu; Tierra del Fuego; glaciers.

  • S41E05 Lost Worlds: Wild South America: Monkey Jungles

    • November 30, 2000
    • CBC

    The tropical rain forest of Amazonia and the myriad animals that call its tree canopy home.

  • S41E06 Lost Worlds: Wild South America: The Mighty Amazon

    • December 7, 2000
    • CBC

    An examination into the rivers and tributaries of the Amazon basin and how wildlife adapts to the seasonal changes in river level.

  • S41E07 Amanda's Choice/Early-Onset Alzheimer's Disease

    • January 10, 2001
    • CBC

    Amanda's family is a carrier for a rare early-onset gene that triggers Alzheimer. It's a disease we normally associate with the elderly. In Alzheimer's, specific proteins bind to form plaque in the brain, resulting in memory loss and physical impairment. Eventually patients die from complications. A few years ago a research team at the University of Toronto isolated the specific gene associated with early-onset Alzheimer. As well, new Alzheimer drugs like Araset, trial vaccines, and improved diagnostic techniques offer new hope for patients. However, doctors are still many years away from finding a cure. Tonight we follow Amanda's powerful story as she struggles to come to terms with her family's deadly inheritance.

  • S41E08 The Secret Life of the Crash Test Dummy

    • January 17, 2001
    • CBC

    The history of the crash test dummy is traced back 50 years to its invention for the US Air Force. The dummy has saved thousands of lives. But has the time come to retire this selfless hero of countless car and airplane crashes?

  • S41E11 Lost Worlds: Wild South America: Penguin Shores

    • January 24, 2001
    • CBC

    PENGUIN SHORES is part five of the magnificent six-part BBC series Lost Worlds, covering the amazingly diverse topography of South America, and its remarkable denizens. The world's longest mountain chain stretches from the tropics to the massive Patagonian Ice Sheet of sub-Antarctica. Its icy power dominates the lives of the hardy animals that dare to call it home, making living there one of nature's greatest challenges.

  • S41E12 Lost Worlds: Wild South America: Great Plains

    • January 31, 2001
    • CBC

    Lost Worlds - A six-part series on the breath-taking natural world of South America takes viewers on a cross-continent grand tour - from the mighty Amazon to the spectacular Andean peaks and the world's driest desert - stopping to view the strange and wonderful array of animals, birds and other wildlife along the way. Produced by the BBC. Narrated by David Suzuki.

  • S41E13 Coastal Forest / Salmon Forest

    • February 7, 2001
    • CBC

    The Salmon Forest transports viewers to the breathtaking remote temperate rainforests, stretching 400 km along the B.C. coast from Vancouver Island to Alaska. The millions of spawning salmon support dense concentrations of forest life - among them grizzly bears, black bears, bald eagles, seals, otters, gulls and countless invertebrates. Much about life here still remains hidden and unknown, but THE NATURE OF THINGS joins two University of Victoria scientists to reveal the secrets of this amazing ecosystem.

  • S41E14 Fish Farming / The Price of Salmon

    • February 14, 2001
    • CBC

    On both coasts of North America, salmon have long symbolized speed, power and abundance in nature. But today salmon populations are plummeting for a variety of reasons. Aquaculture, or fish farming, seems to offer a way to satisfy the exploding demand for fresh fish. But it's controversial. David Suzuki is among the critics who question the current practices of this young industry. To explore this important issue in Europe and North America we joined forces with the BBC.

  • S41E15 Surgeons of the Future

    • February 21, 2001
    • CBC

    Medicine in the twenty-first century is venturing beyond the realm of dreams, firing our imagination and bringing new hope in the battle against disease. Technology is advancing rapidly, giving surgeons the ability to look into tissues and organs that were previously hidden. One remarkable camera can be swallowed, seeking out abnormalities during its fantastic voyage. Portable, miniaturized ultrasound systems can go to the patient, its images equal to those of larger units. Welcome to a whole new world in the medical arena.

  • S41E16 Changing Ground / Maisin People In Papua New Guinea

    • February 28, 2001
    • CBC

    On the northeast coast of Papua New Guinea, lives a tribe of 2,000 people, the Maisin. Unlike the more remote tribes, the Maisin were among the first to have contact with Europeans. It was Anglican missionaries who brought them the English language, Christianity, and a desire to see the world outside their villages. But recently something has changed their mind. The post-war generation that moved away to towns and cities as far away as Australia are deciding to come home, to live in a community without any of the modern conveniences... no running water, no electricity, no roads.

  • S41E17 Worst Case Scenario

    • March 7, 2001
    • CBC

    Albertans have traditionally been proud of their mighty petroleum industry. But lately, they have begun to question how that industry works. Nowhere is this shift more apparent than along the Clearwater River in Central Alberta, near Rocky Mountain House. There, residents are opposing Shell Canada's plans to drill a sour gas well in their area. The sour gas from the well could generate $10,000 a day in gross revenue, to meet today's high energy demands.

  • S41E18 Playing with poison: Toxic legacies

    • March 14, 2001
    • CBC

    The documentary follows an anthropologist studying communities of children who exhibit significant and disturbing neurological differences, and looks at pesticide use as the possible cause.

  • S41E19 Hospital at the End of the Earth

    • March 21, 2001
    • CBC

    The story of the Aral Sea is a modern fable that contains a dire warning about our future. Less than 40 years ago this was a sea full of fish, the air was clear, the soil rich and the climate temperate. But today the Aral Sea is one of the most tragic environmental catastrophies of the last century. The Aral Sea is dying the death of a thousand irrigation canals, silently evaporating in the desert sun. The people call the dust blowing off the former seabed the dry tears of the Aral. The new Aralkum, the new desert, covers 38,000 square kilometres. This is the legacy of the will of distant leaders to turn Central Asia into the greatest cotton producing region in the world.

  • S41E20 Ah ... the Money, the Money, the Money: The Battle for Salt Spring

    • March 28, 2001
    • CBC

    Filmmaker Mort Ransen chronicles the struggle between residents and land developers on Salt Spring Island, B.C.

  • S41E22 Desert Virus

    • CBC

  • S41E23 Amazon Jungle

    • CBC

Season 42

  • S42E01 Me, My Brain And I Unmasking The Mystery Of The Conscious Mind

    • October 2, 2001
    • CBC

    Bob thinks but doesn't feel. Christina feels but has trouble thinking. Virginia can neither think or feel as she's pulled down into a spiral of darkness that zaps her very will to survive. Kent lives within a 20-minute time span, unable to remember his past or plan for his future. Each of these people has had an injury to a part of the brain called the frontal lobes and their stories, told in Me, My Brain And I, are helping neuroscientists unravel the mystery of what makes us distinctly human.

  • S42E02 Warnings From The Wild

    • October 9, 2001
    • CBC

    All over the planet, temperature increases are affecting wildlife. Some species are spreading to new areas. For others, climate change means extinction. THE NATURE OF THINGS with David Suzuki presents Warnings From The Wild, a documentary that draws together recent evidence of the effects of the biggest climatic upheaval in 10,000 years.

  • S42E03 Touch: The Forgotten Sense

    • October 16, 2001
    • CBC

    TOUCH - THE FORGOTTEN SENSE is a film about the amazing, but often overlooked sense of touch. The film takes us on an artistic and scientific journey from a woman who has completely lost her sense of touch, to a deaf-blind child that can understand speech through his fingers.

  • S42E04 Psychopaths

    • October 23, 2001
    • CBC

    PSYCHOPATHS is a documentary that looks at the understanding of this condition in the scientific community, and what hope there is for treatment, therapy or a cure.

  • S42E05 Drug Deals: The Brave New World of Prescription Drugs

    • November 13, 2001
    • CBC

    Are our regulatory agencies doing their best to ensure drug safety? Or are they buckling to corporate pressure to market lucrative new drugs before they are adequately tested? These are questions raised in DRUG DEALS: THE BRAVE NEW WORLD OF PRESCRIPTION DRUGS.

  • S42E06 Bioterror

    • November 20, 2001
    • CBC

    Since the September 11th terrorist attack on The World Trade Center, the news has been saturated with information about a new threat, bio-terrorism. But how new is it? THE NATURE OF THINGS with David Suzuki presents BIOTERROR, an exploration of the past, present and future of bio-terrorism.

  • S42E07 Race Against Time

    • November 27, 2001
    • CBC

    It's an epidemic of staggering proportions. Thirty-six million people are infected with the HIV virus worldwide, with over 25 million of them in Africa. More than 21 million people have died of AIDS, nearly 17 million in Africa alone. THE NATURE OF THINGS with David Suzuki presents RACE AGAINST TIME, a film about the greatest challenge of the 21st century and the work of Canadian Stephen Lewis, the United Nations Special Envoy on HIV/AIDS in Africa.

  • S42E08 Return Of The Peregrine

    • December 4, 2001
    • CBC

    Adept at diving at speeds normally reserved for fighter pilots, the peregrine falcon is the fastest and most widely dispersed creature on the planet. A one-hour documentary, RETURN OF THE PEREGRINE chronicles this majestic bird of prey's journey back from the brink of extinction.

  • S42E09 Genetically Modified Foods

    • December 11, 2001
    • CBC

    In 2001 the Government of Canada approved the following genetically modified crops for food use: canola, corn, cottonseed, flax, potato, soybean, tomato, wheat, sugar beet and squash. Is enough really known about genetic engineering to ensure that genetically modified (GM) food products are safe for consumption?

  • S42E10 Living Forever

    • January 8, 2002
    • CBC

    Biologists have seen within our genes the possibility of extending human life spans to 300 years or more. In the 21st century, will scientists reach the Holy Grail? Will they find the secret of eternal youth? THE NATURE OF THINGS with David Suzuki presents LIVING FOREVER, a look at how far scientists have come in discovering the human potential for longevity.

  • S42E11 Self-Experimenters

    • January 22, 2002
    • CBC

    Most major advances in medicine and science and are made by people who push the envelope. From morphine to cardiac surgery, we owe much to the risks taken by scientists of the past who have experimented on their own bodies to make new discoveries.

  • S42E13 Morphine On Trial

    • March 5, 2002
    • CBC

  • S42E14 CYBERMAN: Canada's Original Cyborg

    • March 12, 2002
    • CBC

    Inventor creates wearable computer technology.

  • S42E15 Wired For Life

    • March 19, 2002
    • CBC

    Using pacemaker-like implants, functional electrical stimulation allows people with spinal-cord injuries to reclaim some mobility and even resume pastimes like art and sports.

  • S42E16 Intuition

    • March 26, 2002
    • CBC

    A horse buyer selects her winning choices randomly from a list, using her "gut-feeling." Upon viewing a photo, a businesswoman tells her boss that his wife is expecting a baby. An astronaut communicates telepathically from space with colleagues on earth. These and many other examples of psi-phenomena are examined in the film Intuition.

  • S42E17 Beluga Speaking Across Time

    • April 9, 2002
    • CBC

Season 43

  • S43E01 Up Close and Toxic

    • October 17, 2002
    • CBC

    Indoor pollutants that can be found close at hand.

  • S43E02 Flight of the Whooping Crane

    • October 24, 2002
    • CBC

    Operation Migration leads a flock of whooping cranes on an ultralight-led journey from Wisconsin to Florida.

  • S43E03 A Madman's Journal

    • October 31, 2002
    • CBC

    Men and women who have clinical depression discuss their experiences about the misunderstood illness.

  • S43E04 Years From Here: the Maisin visit the Stó:lo

    • November 7, 2002
    • CBC

  • S43E05 Biomimicry: Learning From Nature: Part I

    • November 14, 2002
    • CBC

    Researchers seek benign, sustainable ways to meet people's needs for food, materials, medicine and energy.

  • S43E06 Biomimicry: Learning From Nature: Part II

    • November 17, 2002
    • CBC

    Biomimics conduct research to uncover insights on how life occurs.

  • S43E07 Through the Lens: A Look Back at the Nature of Things

    • November 26, 2002
    • CBC

    Interviews with past hosts accompany clips of 43 years of the show.

  • S43E07 Recovering Krystal

    • January 3, 2003
    • CBC

    Recovering Krystal tells the dramatic story of Krystal Meade, a teenage drug addict and runaway, attending the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre (AARC). The focus of this unique alcohol and drug rehabilitation program is the treatment of the young addicts and their families. Recovering Krystal offers an insider's view of the Alberta Addiction Recovery Centre, by examining groundbreaking rehabilitation techniques.

  • S43E08 A Disease Called Pain

    • January 9, 2003
    • CBC

    Researchers question why pain becomes chronic for some people but not others.

  • S43E09 Jo'burg: A View From The Summit

    • January 16, 2003
    • CBC

    Wiki: Jo'burg; A View From the Summit marks the final episode of The Nature of Things 2002/2003 season. The Nature of Things will continue to be repeated on Sundays at 3PM (EST) on CBC.

  • S43E10 The Investigation of Swissair 111

    • April 3, 2003
    • CBC

  • S43E11 The Man Who Talks with Wolves

    • May 25, 2003
    • CBC

    A couple in northern Quebec who have opened a shelter for injured wild animals that cannot be released back into the wild.

  • S43E12 Hypnosis, A Window into the Mind

    • June 1, 2003
    • CBC

    Recent discoveries made by the scientific community with respect to the power of hypnosis.

  • S43E13 Great Natural Wonders of the World

    • June 8, 2003
    • CBC

    The world's most impressive and inspiring wild landscapes and natural marvels.

  • S43E14 The Navigators (Part I)

    • June 15, 2003
    • CBC

    Nicolas Baudin and Matthew Flinders' exploration and colonization of Terra Australis.

  • S43E15 The Navigators (Part II)

    • June 22, 2003
    • CBC

    Nicolas Baudin and Matthew Flinders' exploration and colonization of Terra Australis.

  • S43E16 S.A.R.S.-The True Story

    • June 29, 2003
    • CBC

    The World Health Organization battles to contain the SARS virus.

  • S43E17 Hotel Heliconia

    • August 17, 2003
    • CBC

    The heliconia, an exotic plant which provides a home and food for many creatures in the jungles of Latin America.

  • S43E18 Sea of Snakes

    • August 24, 2003
    • CBC

    Dr. Bryan Fry takes an up close look at a little know species of snakes known as the ``Niue Sea Krait.''.

  • S43E19 Almost Home: A Sayisi Dene Journey

    • August 31, 2003
    • CBC

    The Sayisi Dene people of Tadoule Lake in northern Manitoba are a people with a nomadic history of following and hunting the caribou. In 1956, the federal government forced them to give up their ways and move to Churchill, Manitoba. What followed was many years of hardship, more re-location, and eventually a return to their homeland.

  • S43E20 Moving Sands

    • September 14, 2003
    • CBC

    The unlikely epic of 43 km of sand and 500 years of history: Sable Island, off the shores of Nova Scotia.

  • S43E21 Easter Island: Eyes of the Moai

    • September 21, 2003
    • CBC

    Easter Island is the most remote inhabited place on our planet. For 1,500 years, this isolation has acted as both a shelter for - and a curse upon - the island's indigenous Rapa Nui people.

Season 44

  • S44E01 The Ghosts of Lomako

    • October 22, 2003
    • CBC

    The Ghosts Of Lomako follows Belgian primatologist Jef Dupain as he returns to his research camp in Upper Congo, to observe the conditions affecting the bonobo, a great ape and endangered species.

  • S44E02 The Shark Tracker

    • October 29, 2003
    • CBC

    Richard Fitzpatrick embarks on an expedition to the Great Barrier Reef in Australia in order to capture a tiger shark and insert a tracking device.

  • S44E03 The Man Who Studies Murder Part I

    • November 5, 2003
    • CBC

    Elliot Leyton reveals the motivations that drive many killers.

  • S44E04 The Man Who Studies Murder Part II

    • November 12, 2003
    • CBC

    Elliot Leyton describes the motivations that drive many killers.

  • S44E05 The Crossing

    • November 19, 2003
    • CBC

    The lives of east African animals converge at a single point on the Mara River.

  • S44E06 Canada's Amazon: A Boreal Forest Journey

    • November 26, 2003
    • CBC

    Canoe trips through the forests showcase the magnificent Nahanni River in the Northwest Territories and the more industrialized Athabasca River in Northern Alberta.

  • S44E07 The Weight of the World

    • December 3, 2003
    • CBC

    Exams obesity from a sociological perspective, rather than focusing on individuals who battle with excess fat.

  • S44E08 Corporate Agriculture: The Hollow Men

    • January 7, 2004
    • CBC

    Certain companies dominate food production and distribution in North America.

  • S44E09 Alternative Agriculture: Food For Life

    • January 14, 2004
    • CBC

  • S44E10 The Value of Life: AIDS in Africa Revisited

    • January 21, 2004
    • CBC

    This film is a follow-up to the award-winning Race Against Time in 2001, which covered Lewis on one of his first fact-finding missions in Africa. Kofi Annan had declared a war on AIDS and, at a special session of the U.N., established a Global Fund so richer countries could help poorer ones fight the disease. With the world focused on AIDS, Lewis believed the pandemic could be stopped in its tracks. But then came September 11, and the world's attention turned to homeland security and fighting terrorism. With promises of financial aid to Africa broken, Lewis's optimism turned to disbelief.

  • S44E11 Arctic Mission: The Great Adventure

    • January 28, 2004
    • CBC

  • S44E12 Arctic Mission: Lords of the Arctic

    • February 4, 2004
    • CBC

  • S44E13 Arctic Mission: People of the Ice

    • February 11, 2004
    • CBC

  • S44E14 Arctic Mission: Washed Away

    • February 18, 2004
    • CBC

  • S44E15 Arctic Mission: Climate on the Edge

    • February 25, 2004
    • CBC

  • S44E16 Minor Keys

    • March 3, 2004
    • CBC

  • S44E17 When Every Moment Counts

    • March 10, 2004
    • CBC

  • S44E18 Walking With Ghosts

    • March 17, 2004
    • CBC

  • S44E19 When is Enough, Enough?

    • March 31, 2004
    • CBC

    At the centre of Canada's vast northern watershed that drains into the Arctic Ocean is one of the greatest freshwater deltas on Earth - the Peace-Athabasca Delta. Upstream, along the Athabasca River, hidden underneath the boreal forest and muskeg wetlands, is one of the richest oil deposits in the world. The United States government recently declared Alberta's oil sands to be 'proven oil reserves.' Consequently, the U.S. upgraded its global oil estimates for Canada from five billion to 175 billion barrels.

Season 45

  • S45E01 Sex, Lies and Secrecy: Dissecting Hysterectomy

    • September 16, 2004
    • CBC

    Three-quarters of a million hysterectomies are performed annually in North America. In close to 80% of these the ovaries are removed at the time of surgery, which robs women of a natural and healthy hormonal balance, and which can result in subsequent problems. This documentary looks at the choices being made and possible less-invasive alternatives.

  • S45E02 Terrible Lizards of Oz

    • September 23, 2004
    • CBC

  • S45E03 Selling Sickness

    • September 30, 2004
    • CBC

    Selling Sickness explores the unhealthy relationships between society, medical science and the pharmaceutical industry as they promote their new miracle cures - selling not just drugs but also the latest diseases that go with them. It looks at the growing global controversy around SSRI antidepressants and follows British Psychiatrist, Dr David Healy, patients and their families as they rock the scientific establishment with accusations that aggressive drug marketing is blurring the boundaries between medical conditions and ordinary life with potentially deadly consequences.

  • S45E04 ARKTIKA: The Russian Dream That Failed

    • October 7, 2004
    • CBC

    ARKTIKA: The Russian Dream That Failed traces the ambitious and disasterous Soviet attempt to conquer a vast arctic region spanning half of the top of the world. A veil of secrecy that enveloped the Russian Arctic during the Soviet era has lifted. As hundreds of thousands of Russians evacuate the north, leaving behind a legacy of environmental destruction and nuclear waste, the story of the Soviet dream of conquering the Arctic-and its cost-can be told.

  • S45E05 Shipbreakers

    • October 14, 2004
    • CBC

    Shipbreakers takes audiences to a remote stretch of beach on the Arabian Sea where obsolete ships are disassembled into smouldering scrap metal and toxic waste.

  • S45E06 Clot Busters

    • October 21, 2004
    • CBC

  • S45E07 Killed By Care: Making Medicine Safe

    • October 28, 2004
    • CBC

    In Canada alone it's estimated that between 9,000 and 24,000 people die every year as a result of medical error. The Nature of Things presents Killed By Care: Making Medicine Safe a one hour documentary that explores the tragic consequences of medical error and the devastating impact it can have on patients, their families and on health care workers as well.

  • S45E08 Tale of a Tiny Bird

    • November 4, 2004
    • CBC

    Magic and understanding blossom when an imaginative young girl meets the King of the Songbirds. Travelling with him, to his kingdom among the dunes of Courland on the Baltic, she is granted unprecedented access to the private lives of tiny birds. She also gets a chance to observe scientists, who have devoted their lives to studying birds and their epic migratory journeys. A film rich in wonder, compassion and quiet humour.

  • S45E09 Apocalypse Cow: The Mad Cow Story (Part 1)

    • November 18, 2004
    • CBC

    APOCALYPSE COW is a two-part story about Mad Cow Disease - a rare brain disorder of cattle that has the ability to jump species. The Mad Cow epidemic started in the United Kingdom and has spread to more than 20 countries around the world. It is also a story about cover-up and greed. APOCALYPSE COW examines new information on the tangled history and origins of the outbreak, exploring its potential impact on human health.

  • S45E10 Apocalypse Cow: The Mad Cow Story (Part 2)

    • November 25, 2004
    • CBC

  • S45E11 Bhopal: The Search for Justice

    • December 9, 2004
    • CBC

    Bhopal: The Search for Justice looks at the 1984 chemical leak in Bhopal, India, which killed fifteen thousand people at the time and continues to have severe health effects on people who were in contact with the chemical cloud when the leak occurred.

  • S45E12 Forbidden Forest

    • January 6, 2005
    • CBC

    Two men concerned about forestry policies on New Brunswick lands urge company officials and the New Brunswick government to practice responsible forestry, and they propose a new, community-based forestry policy — one that is environmentally sustainable and that produces more jobs than the highly capital-intensive, mechanized techniques being used.

  • S45E13 Fighting Fire with Fire

    • May 26, 2005
    • CBC

    Two men concerned about forestry policies on New Brunswick lands urge company officials and the New Brunswick government to practice responsible forestry, and they propose a new, community-based forestry policy — one that is environmentally sustainable and that produces more jobs than the highly capital-intensive, mechanized techniques being used.

  • S45E14 Being Caribou: Part 1

    • June 2, 2005
    • CBC

    Hoping to raise awareness of the threat to the survival of the Porcupine caribou herd presented by the proposed exploitation of the oil and gas reserves in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, a husband-and-wife-team follow the herd of 120,000 caribou on foot across 1,500 kilometers of rugged Arctic tundra.

  • S45E15 Being Caribou: Part 2

    • June 9, 2005
    • CBC

  • S45E16 Whale Mission: The Last Giants

    • June 23, 2005
    • CBC

    Climb aboard the sailboat Sedna IV with Jean Lemire, and navigate due north in the waters of the perilous Atlantic Ocean to reach the distant Cape Farewell, where the captain and his crew hope to find the whales.

  • S45E17 Whale Mission: Keepers of Memory

    • June 30, 2005
    • CBC

  • S45E18 Origins of Human Aggression: The Other Story

    • July 7, 2005
    • CBC

    Examines the complex factors that affect the socialization of aggressive behavior among humans. Biological, environmental and psychological components are addressed, and guidelines for the prevention of human violence are provided.

  • S45E19 Five Seasons

    • July 14, 2005
    • CBC

    The Numurindi people from Australia's South East Arnemland have developed a culture where all things past and present, including the weather, are interrelated. This relationship extends to the animal kingdom and plant life, as well as previous generations. Five Sea sons explores this delicate relationship through the eyes of the Numurindi people who enjoy the benefits of the modern world, yet are still guided by the seasons and the traditions of the past.

Season 46

  • S46E01 Tarantula: Australia's King of Spiders

    • August 31, 2005
    • CBC

    46th Season Premiere: A close-up look at a very large spider — the tarantula.

  • S46E02 Nature Bites Back: The Case of the Sea Otter

    • September 14, 2005
    • CBC

    Examining the comeback of the sea otter in British Columbia.

  • S46E03 Earth Energy

    • October 19, 2005
    • CBC

    Sculptor, aviator, inventor, and filmmaker Bill Lishman documents his journey around the globe in search of earth's renewable energy.

  • S46E04 The Secret Life of Babies

    • November 2, 2005
    • CBC

    Ever wonder what babies think and do while they're waiting around to be born? Or young infants, who can't speak but still express a huge range of emotions? The Nature of Things presents a two-hour special that examines the amazing powers of the fetus and infant.

  • S46E05 Tsepong: A Clinic Called Hope

    • November 9, 2005
    • CBC

    Tsepong: A Clinic Called Hope looks at the situation of HIV/AIDS in Africa, and the complexity of making widespread treatment viable.

  • S46E06 Port Hope: A Question of Power

    • November 16, 2005
    • CBC

    Port Hope, Ontario has all the hallmarks of an ideal small Ontario town, with one of the loveliest main streets in Canada. But Port Hope also has one big problem — thousands of tones of radioactive waste. And now the industry that created the problem wants to introduce a new potential risk in town: the proposed production of an enriched uranium fuel. Port Hope: A Question of Power follows a community for more than a year as it struggles to find answers to questions concerning the health and safety implications of the proposed project.

  • S46E07 Memory

    • March 23, 2006
    • CBC

  • S46E08 Everyday Einstein

    • June 18, 2006
    • CBC

    Everyday Einstein provides a fast-paced and jazzy look at the extraordinary impact Einstein continues to have on our daily lives.

  • S46E09 Homo Sapiens: The Rise of Our Species (1)

    • June 25, 2006
    • CBC

    Homo Sapiens: The Rise of Our Species will introduce you to the ultimate family tree. This story is the story of each one of us. It's the story of the birth of humanity and civilization.

  • S46E10 Homo Sapiens: The Rise of Our Species (2)

    • July 2, 2006
    • CBC

    Homo Sapiens deftly employs both docu-drama and interviews with key scientists to illuminate the remarkable story of the origins and development of our species.

  • S46E11 Ghosts of Futures Past: Tom Berger in the North

    • July 9, 2006
    • CBC

    Tom Berger returns to the North to call for a balanced approach to development.

  • S46E12 Blue Buddha: Lost secrets of Tibetan Medicine

    • July 16, 2006
    • CBC

    A look at the rising interest in the ancient healing arts of traditional Tibetan medicine.

  • S46E13 Beetalker: The Secret World of Bees

    • July 23, 2006
    • CBC

    Examining how bees communicate.

  • S46E14 Cuba: The Accidental Revolution (1) Sustainable Agriculture

    • July 30, 2006
    • CBC

    Examines Cuba's response to the food crisis created by the collapse of the Soviet Bloc in 1989.

  • S46E15 Cuba: The Accidental Revolution (2) Health Care System

    • August 6, 2006
    • CBC

    In spite of the economic crisis and US embargo, the Cuban health system is an outstanding success story around the world.

  • S46E16 When Less is More

    • August 13, 2006
    • CBC

    Alarm grows over rapid and massive development taking place in Alberta's booming oil sands.

Season 47

  • S47E01 The Bear Man of Kamchatka

    • October 11, 2007
    • CBC

    Canadian bear expert Charlie Russell rescues two orphaned cubs destined for death in a squalid Russian zoo and secrets them away to his home in the remote wilds of the South Kamchatka peninsula, in the former Soviet Union.

  • S47E02 Living Forever: The Longevity Revolution

    • October 18, 2007
    • CBC

    Explorer the ongoing quest to extend human life, the cutting-edge research and the latest discoveries.

  • S47E03 Weather Report

    • October 25, 2007
    • CBC

    Climate change is irrevocably altering the world as we know it, challenging our sense of the future and the fundamental values of our industrial societies.

  • S47E04 Game Over: Conservation in Kenya

    • November 1, 2007
    • CBC

    Explore the impact of both colonial and contemporary initiatives in Kenya and how they affect the peoples who have traditionally lived off the land.

  • S47E05 The Man with the Golden Cells

    • November 8, 2007
    • CBC

    The emerging world market in living cells, where an individual's genes can be bought and sold as commodities.

  • S47E06 Rail Renaissance, LHC: to the Heart of Matter, Suzuki Nation

    • November 15, 2007
    • CBC

    Witness the exciting lead up to the launch of the new High Speed One service out of St. Pancras Station, in London. A look at the Large Hadron Collider, the largest and most sophisticated machine ever constructed by science. And an interview with musician and environmentalist, Sarah Harmer.

  • S47E07 Climate Change I: An Uncertain Future

    • November 22, 2007
    • CBC

    Now that climate change is an accepted, if inconvenient, truth, how are we coping? David Suzuki takes a first-hand look at how climate change is affecting Canadians where it really hurts: in their ability to make a living.

  • S47E08 Climate Change II: Hot Times in the City

    • November 29, 2007
    • CBC

    Hot Times in the City takes the pulse of three major Canadian cities: Vancouver, Toronto and Halifax, as they grapple with one of the planet's greatest threats to human health: global warming.

  • S47E09 Counterfeit Drugs / Lunokhod / Andrew Ference

    • December 6, 2007
    • CBC

    A look into the multi-billion dollar underworld of counterfeit drugs, the tale of the Lunokhod a self-propelled robot on the Moon that could be controlled from the Earth and an interview with Boston Bruins' defenseman, Andrew Ference.

  • S47E10 Edge of Eden - Living with Grizzlies

    • January 6, 2008
    • CBC

  • S47E11 The Science of the Senses: Hearing

    • January 10, 2008
    • CBC

    In Hearing, episode one of The Science of the Senses, finding the answer to that question will take us on a journey through the ear, into the brain and right into the heart of the human psyche.

  • S47E12 The Science of the Senses: Touch

    • January 17, 2008
    • CBC

    In The Science of the Senses: Touch we will take a journey through the skin, into the subcutaneous world of our sensory receptors and up into the brain as we explore the hidden language of our most essential sense.

  • S47E13 The Science of the Senses: Smell/Taste

    • January 24, 2008
    • CBC

    In this episode of The Science of the Senses, we explore how smell combines with taste, somewhere in our brain, to create the perception of flavour. Most people wrongly assume that taste dominates. But what actually allows us to differentiate one food from another beyond the basics of sweet, sour, salty, savory and bitter, is the aroma.

  • S47E14 The Science of the Senses: Sight

    • January 31, 2008
    • CBC

    This episode takes viewers on a fascinating tour of our visual world, from the moment light enters our eyes, to the way this information is transformed into electrical impulses and decoded by our brain - the domain of "visual perception". The act of "seeing" takes an immense amount of brainpower, more than 65% of the brain's neural pathways.

  • S47E15 Wild China: Heart of the Dragon

    • June 22, 2008
    • CBC

    Explores how China's 1.3 billion people interact with their extraordinary wildlife and landscapes.

  • S47E16 Wild China: Shangi-La

    • June 28, 2008
    • CBC

    Beneath billowing clouds in China's far southwest, rich jungles nestle below towering peaks and jewel-coloured birds and ancient tribes share forested valleys where wild elephants still roam.

  • S47E17 Wild China: The Tibetan Plateau

    • June 29, 2008
    • CBC

    Explore the vast windswept wilderness in one of the world's most remote places - the size of Western Europe.

  • S47E18 Wild China: Land of the Panda

    • July 5, 2008
    • CBC

    Travel across China's heartland where its Han people are the centre of a 5,000-year-old civilization.

  • S47E19 Wild China: Beyond the Great Wall

    • July 12, 2008
    • CBC

    Warrior nomads, bizarre wildlife and extreme weather conditions are found beyond the Wall, built by China's emperors.

  • S47E20 Wild China: Tides of Change

    • July 13, 2008
    • CBC

    China's coast is an area of huge contrast-from futuristic modern cities jostling traditional seaweed-thatched villages to ancient tea terraces and wild wetlands where rare animals still survive.

  • S47E21 Antarctic Mission: Islands at the Edge

    • July 20, 2008
    • CBC

    The SEDNA IV sails across the Polar Front, an area where cold turbulent Antarctic waters meet warmer water from the north - one of the earth's last great refuges for wildlife.

  • S47E22 Antarctic Mission: Window on a Changing Climate

    • July 27, 2008
    • CBC

    Antarctica's inhabitants are telling us that their world is changing in complex and subtle ways. The once successful colonies of diminutive Adelie penguins are declining because of increased snowfall - one of the unexpected consequences of a warmer climate.

  • S47E23 Antarctic Mission: The Great Ocean of Ice

    • August 3, 2008
    • CBC

    A cold and mysterious world that is home to some of the toughest and most unusual creatures on the planet: giant ribbon worms, dragon fish, and ancient sponges.

  • S47E24 Antarctic Mission: The Last Continent

    • August 30, 2008
    • CBC

    Follow mission leader Jean Lemire and his crew as they endure 17 months on the expedition to measure the threat posed by global warming in the Antarctic - a place where the Earth is particularly vulnerable.

Season 48

  • S48E01 The Hobbit Enigma

    • October 16, 2008
    • CBC

    One of the greatest controversies in science today: just what did scientists really find when they uncovered the tiny, human-like skeleton of a strange creature on the Indonesian island of Flores in 2003? Since the discovery was made public a bitter dispute has split the world of anthropology.

  • S48E02 Rodney's Robot Revolution

    • October 23, 2008
    • CBC

    Has the time come to meet an artificially intelligent robot? Engineer and inventor Rodney Brooks thinks so. Forget about all those shiny robotic home-helpers of the past-Brooks is out to design a robot that can think for itself!

  • S48E03 The Adventurers: The Last Nomads

    • October 30, 2008
    • CBC

    Linguist Ian Mackenzie has tracked the last true nomadic hunting and gathering people on earth - the Penan of Borneo. Their way of life is quickly disappearing as aggressive logging interests swallow up their forest habitat.

  • S48E04 The Adventurers: The Everlasting Oasis

    • November 6, 2008
    • CBC

    University of Toronto archaeologist Tony Mills travels to the eastern desert of Egypt where he and other archaeologists have unearthed an untouched marvel: a site of over 500,000 years of uninterrupted human habitation.

  • S48E05 The Adventurers: Story Told in Stone

    • November 13, 2008
    • CBC

    Archeologist Edmundo Edwards pulls back the vines and trees of the jungle to find huge stone cities that sprawled across the interiors of Tahiti, Raivavae and the Marquesas Islands.

  • S48E06 The Suzuki Diaries: Europe

    • November 16, 2008
    • CBC

    David Suzuki and his daughter Sarika head out on a road trip across Europe to see sustainability in action and meet the people who are working towards restoring the equilibrium between human needs and planetary limits.

  • S48E07 The adventurers: The Lost People of Baja

    • November 20, 2008
    • CBC

    Canadian paleo-pathologist Eldon Molto is leading the search for clues of the mysterious Pericu people of Baja California, Mexico - a fierce, primitive tribe that disappeared over a century ago, after being exposed to European disease. They left virtually nothing behind but their bones.

  • S48E08 The Brain that Changes Itself

    • November 27, 2008
    • CBC

    Based on the best-selling book by Toronto psychiatrist and researcher Dr. Norman Doidge, a look at how we view the human mind.

  • S48E09 Gone Sideways

    • January 8, 2009
    • CBC

    A light-hearted look at serendipity in science, from life-saving cancer cures to the x-ray machine and the discovery of North America.

  • S48E10 Black Wave: The Legacy of the Exxon Valdez

    • January 15, 2009
    • CBC

    A saga about what happens when ordinary people struggle for justice against a huge corporation that has destroyed both their environment and their livelihoods.

  • S48E11 Supercar: Building the Car of the Future

    • January 29, 2009
    • CBC

    Engineering professor Brian Fleck on a quest to meet the engineers, designers and even students who are trying to build the car of the future.

  • S48E12 Living City: A Critical Guide

    • February 5, 2009
    • CBC

    What's wrong with Canada's cities? What's right? Award-winning urban affairs columnist Christopher Hume takes a cross-country journey to explore the sustainability, viability and liveability of Canada's population centres.

  • S48E13 Inuit Odyssey

    • February 12, 2009
    • CBC

    Canadian Arctic anthropologist Niobe Thompson takes us on a visually stunning journey across the North, tracing the origins of the modern Inuit.

  • S48E14 American Savannah

    • June 13, 2009
    • CBC

    Our lawns are one of our simplest pleasures. Grass is a luxury that represents relaxation, freedom, time off and of course, time away from the world of tarmac and concrete. A wild and quirky ride into the world of one of America's longest-standing obsessions, the perfect lawn.

  • S48E15 Arctic Meltdown: A Changing World

    • June 20, 2009
    • CBC

    From new companies rushing to claim the Arctic's plentiful resources to the effect climate change has had on animals as well as plant life. As the Arctic meltdown continues at an ever accelerating pace, who will protect it?

  • S48E16 Arctic Meltdown: The Arctic Passages

    • June 27, 2009
    • CBC

    Until recently, only a few ships braved travel through these ice-strewn waters. More and more ships cross these seas each year and with more traffic come higher risks.

  • S48E17 Arctic Meltdown: Adapting to Change

    • July 4, 2009
    • CBC

    A look at two different Arctics - one that is the storybook land of ice, snow and polar bears and the other that is covered with petroleum plants and pipelines carrying fossil fuels.

Season 49

  • S49E01 A Murder of Crows

    • October 11, 2009
    • CBC

    A rare and intimate glimpse into the inner life of one of the most intelligent, playful and mischievous species on the planet.

  • S49E02 Mini Monsters of Amazonia

    • October 18, 2009
    • CBC

    A look at the astonishing and complex relationships of the "mini monsters", insects of the Membracidae family - treehoppers that live amid one of the richest ecosystems on the planet, one so mysterious most people don't even know that it exists.

  • S49E03 Broken Tail's Last Journey

    • October 25, 2009
    • CBC

    A personal quest to discover the truth behind the disappearance of a captivating tiger, one of the world's leading tiger cameramen, tracks the escape and subsequent wanderings of a male tiger, named Broken Tail, from Ranthambore National Park.

  • S49E04 Darwin's Brave New World: Origins

    • November 1, 2009
    • CBC

    The extraordinary and often harrowing story of Charles Darwin's 30-year struggle to piece together the mystifying puzzle he saw in nature, and publish his theory on the evolution of life on earth.

  • S49E05 Darwin's Brave New World: Evolutions

    • November 8, 2009
    • CBC

  • S49E06 Darwin's Brave New World: Publish and Be Damned

    • November 15, 2009
    • CBC

    After labouring in secret for twenty years, Charles Darwin is almost trumped by the obscure, young naturalist Alfred Wallace. Shocked that someone else is drawing the same conclusions he once did while travelling through the Southern Hemisphere, Darwin is convinced by his friends to complete his masterwork and publish post-haste.

  • S49E07 Suzuki Diaries: Coastal Canada

    • November 22, 2009
    • CBC

    A father and daughter set out with hope on a journey of discovery to Canada's three coasts determined to find solutions for a troubled ocean and look signs of a sustainable future.

  • S49E08 To Bee or Not to Bee

    • January 7, 2009
    • CBC

    Could bees be an early warning sign of a larger problem with our ecology? Are they the canary in the coal mine for the health of planet earth?

  • S49E09 Bugs, Bones & Botany: The Science of Crime

    • January 21, 2010
    • CBC

    Meet nature's detectives; how bugs, plants, bones ... even dust can be formidable enemies of crime.

  • S49E10 The Downside of High

    • January 28, 2010
    • CBC

    Is today's strong pot damaging young minds? That provocative question is at the heart of this new documentary on recent science discoveries about marijuana and mental illness.

  • S49E11 Bat & Man

    • February 4, 2010
    • CBC

    Bats are scientifically extraordinary creatures. Now scientists have begun unlocking the secrets of the bat and are developing potential medical therapies based on their discoveries.

  • S49E12 My Nuclear Neighbour

    • February 11, 2010
    • CBC

    What would you do if you discovered a nuclear plant might be built right next door? Two women from Peace River Alberta journey into Ontario's nuclear heartland, to find out for themselves about life with a nuclear neighbour.

  • S49E13 Uakari: Secrets of the Red Monkey

    • February 18, 2010
    • CBC

    A journey into the rainforests of the Peruvian amazon to investigate the mysterious Red Uakari monkey, never before filmed in the wild.

  • S49E14 One Ocean: Birth of an Ocean

    • March 4, 2010
    • CBC

    Explore the ocean's tumultuous history and how the ocean transformed the earth into the livable, blue planet it is today.

  • S49E15 One Ocean: Footprints in the Sand

    • March 11, 2010
    • CBC

    Ancient traditional fisheries, over-development and the places of recovery that can give us hope for a healthy future ocean all intersect.

  • S49E16 One Ocean: Mysteries of the Deep

    • March 18, 2010
    • CBC

    Starting in the deepest part of the ocean, take a secret and magical world of bizarre creatures and new discoveries deep beneath the surface.

  • S49E17 One Ocean: The Changing Sea

    • March 25, 2010
    • CBC

    Explore some of the most stunning underwater locations in the world and set sail on a scientific race to predict the fate of the global ocean.

  • S49E18 Masters of Space

    • April 1, 2010
    • CBC

    Is space becoming a new war zone? A revealing look at the fine line between space-faring and space warfare.

Season 50

  • S50E01 Aliens of the Deep Sea

    • September 23, 2010
    • CBC

    The octopus is a close cousin of the oyster and snail. And yet, even by human standards the multi-limbed creature is considered highly intelligent. From Spain to Vancouver Island to Capri, Italy, scientists are testing the brain-power of the mysterious and mythic octopus.

  • S50E02 Changing Your Mind

    • September 30, 2010
    • CBC

    Once thought to be incapable of fundamental change, our growing awareness of the adult brain's capacity for neuroplasticity is opening new doors to treatments for diseases and disorders once thought incurable.

  • S50E03 For the Love of Elephants

    • October 14, 2010
    • CBC

    An intimate look at the bond that is formed between humans and baby orphaned elephants at the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust rehabilitation centre just outside of Nairobi, Kenya.

  • S50E04 Geologic Journey 2: Tectonic Europe

    • October 21, 2010
    • CBC

    Traverse the Eurasian plate across Europe — from Iceland, where new land is formed - to the Alps, where old land is destroyed.

  • S50E05 Geologic Journey 2: Along the African Rift

    • October 28, 2010
    • CBC

    For millions of years the East African Rift has been widening at the seams, tearing the African plate in two.

  • S50E06 Geologic Journey 2: The Western Pacific Rim

    • November 4, 2010
    • CBC

    Focusing on the Asia-Pacific side of The Pacific Rim of Fire, which stands as a living testament to the beauty and danger that powerful geologic forces can deliver. The Pacific Rim is home to half of the world's active volcanoes and ninety percent of the world's earthquakes, yet nearly 800 million people continue to live within its violent edge.

  • S50E07 Geologic Journey 2: The Pacific Rim: Americas

    • November 18, 2010
    • CBC

    Nick Eyles continues to explore the Pacific Rim, this time looking at the west coast of North America.

  • S50E08 Geologic Journey 2: The Collision Zone: Asia

    • November 25, 2010
    • CBC

    The fiery unpredictability of Indonesia’s volcanoes at one end, the massive Himalayas at the other and millions of years of tectonic tension in between. The collision zone of the old world is about to be the hub of the new. India, the Himalayas and the island arc of Indonesia - these lands will form the centre of the world’s next supercontinent.

  • S50E09 When North Goes South

    • December 2, 2010
    • CBC

    Learning and discussing the consequences of magnetic pole inversion.

  • S50E10 Code Breakers

    • January 13, 2011
    • CBC

    Who were the first peoples of North America? Anthropologist Niobe Thompson embarks on a voyage of scientific discovery, using the latest in DNA analysis techniques to unlock the secrets behind humanity's earliest appearance in the Americas.

  • S50E11 Tipping Point: The Age of the Oil Sands

    • January 27, 2011
    • CBC

    Tipping Point: The Age of the Oil Sands is a two-hour visual tour de force, taking viewers inside the David and Goliath struggle playing out within one of the most compelling environmental issues of our time

  • S50E12 The Last Grizzly

    • February 3, 2011
    • CBC

    Filmmaker Jeff Turner documents grizzly bears in the Northern Cascades of British Columbia.

  • S50E13 Return of the Prairie Bandit

    • February 10, 2011
    • CBC

    Revisiting the 2009 release of nearly extinct black-footed ferrets in Saskatchewan to see what happened.

  • S50E14 Raccoon Nation

    • February 24, 2011
    • CBC

    Is your garbage can making raccoons smarter? Stunning footage shot in the deep, dark of night combines with groundbreaking research in this fascinating documentary to explore the remarkable ways that city life is changing raccoons.

  • S50E15 The Real Avatar

    • March 3, 2011
    • CBC

    In James Cameron's film, Avatar, an alien tribe on the distant planet of Pandora fights the human invaders bent on mining their forest home. Instead of Pandora, think Peru.

  • S50E16 Force of Nature: The David Suzuki Movie

    • March 13, 2011
    • CBC

    David Suzuki, scientist, educator, broadcaster and activist, delivers what he describes as 'a last lecture' interwoven with scenes from his life and lifetime – the major social, scientific, cultural and political events of the past 70 years.

  • S50E17 Save My Lake

    • March 17, 2011
    • CBC

    Is it too late to save one of the largest freshwater lakes in the world?

  • S50E18 50 Years of the Nature of Things

    • March 24, 2011
    • CBC

    A celebration of half a century of a landmark science and natural history series, and an unrivaled Canadian institution.

Season 51

  • S51E01 The Nano Revolution: Welcome to Nano City

    • October 13, 2011
    • CBC

    The Nature of Things explores an exciting new technological frontier - the world of nano materials and systems in our everyday lives.

  • S51E02 The Nano Revolution: More Than Human

    • October 20, 2011
    • CBC

    Looking at the use of nanotechnology in medical treatments.

  • S51E03 The Nano Revolution: Will Nano Save the Planet?

    • October 27, 2011
    • CBC

    Looking at the use of nanotechnology to solve pollution and environmental issues.

  • S51E04 Jungle Prescription

    • November 10, 2011
    • CBC

    One of the most powerful hallucinogenic drugs on the planet is in a tea made from medicinal plants: it's called ayahuasca. There are studies around the world that say that this indigenous cure may also provide answers as to how to treat Western drug addicts.

  • S51E05 Emperor's Lost Harbour

    • November 17, 2011
    • CBC

    In Istanbul, Turkey, workers building a railway tunnel make a remarkable discovery - an ancient harbour, buried and shrouded in mystery ...until now. Will archaeologists be able to uncover the treasures of the past before it is buried again?

  • S51E06 Myth or Science

    • November 24, 2011
    • CBC

    Scientist Jennifer Gardy turns her critical eye towards the myths, lies, misunderstandings and errors behind the headlines, putting the science of the daily news to the test both in the lab and on the streets.

  • S51E07 Waking the Green Tiger

    • December 1, 2011
    • CBC

    By declaring that nature must be conquered in the name of progress, ChairmanMao ushered in an era of environmental degradation for China. Now, passionateactivists strive to preserve their natural wonders, educate their compatriots andencourage public debate. A look at the brave souls at the forefront of China's new revolution.

  • S51E08 The Autism Enigma

    • December 8, 2011
    • CBC

    A fresh perspective on autism research with the developing "Bacterial Theory" of autism. The fastest-growing developmental disorder in the industrialized world, autism has increased an astounding 600 per cent over the last 20 years. Science cannot say why. Some say it's triggered by environmental factors and point to another intriguing statistic: 70 per cent of kids with autism also have severe gastrointestinal symptoms. Could autism actually begin in the gut? The Autism Enigma looks at the progress of an international group of scientists who are studying the gut's amazingly diverse and powerful microbial ecosystem for clues to the baffling disorder.

  • S51E09 Programmed to be Fat?

    • January 12, 2012
    • CBC

    New science links man-made chemicals to the global obesity epidemic. Man-made chemicals may be programming us to be fat - before we're even born.

  • S51E10 Surviving :) The Teenage Brain

    • January 19, 2012
    • CBC

    A look at the science deep within the teenage brain and a celebration of evolution's masterpiece - the years that bring us judgment, adaptation and innovation. In short the years that make us human.

  • S51E11 Mysteries of the Animal Mind

    • January 26, 2012
    • CBC

    Scientists explore the mysteries of animal consciousness and find growing evidence of compassion, cooperation, altruism, empathy, intelligence and communication in all sorts of different species.

  • S51E12 The American Tiger

    • February 2, 2012
    • CBC

    Most tigers today are privately owned - experts estimate that the number of tigers living in the United States is nearly double of those in the wild. What's life like for the American tiger?

  • S51E13 MS Wars: Hope, Science and the Internet

    • February 9, 2012
    • CBC

    Multiple sclerosis patients use social media to engage in an unprecedented battle with the Canadian medical establishment for access to a controversial treatment.

  • S51E14 Suzuki Diaries: Future City

    • February 16, 2012
    • CBC

    In a new installment of Suzuki Diaries, David and his daughter, Sarika, set out to discover whether some of Canada's biggest cities are ready for the challenges of the future.

  • S51E15 Journey to the Disaster Zone: Japan 311

    • February 23, 2012
    • CBC

    Prior to the anniversary of the devastating Japanese earthquake and tsunami, David Suzuki travels to the areas most affected by the disaster to learn how the catastrophe is helping to change the mind-set of people.

  • S51E16 The Perfect Runner

    • March 15, 2012
    • CBC

    Anthropologist Niobe Thompson explores the evolutionary past of humans.

  • S51E17 Smarty Plants: Uncovering the Secret World of Plant Behaviour

    • March 22, 2012
    • CBC

    A luscious exploration of the natural world, Smarty Plants effortlessly integrates pioneering science with a light hearted look at how plants behave, revealing a world where plants are as busy, responsive and complex as we are.

  • S51E18 Polar Bears: A Summer Odyssey

    • April 8, 2012
    • CBC

    Shot over twelve months, this blue chip wildlife documentary tells the story a young polar bear's epic migration through the icy waters of Hudson Bay and his subsequent adventures on land, where he must spend the ice-free season. It is his first summer alone without his mother to guide and feed him. His struggle to survive is set against the biggest environmental story of our time: climate change.

Season 52

  • S52E01 The Buffalo Wolves

    • October 18, 2012
    • CBC

    Wolves and Buffalo follows the fortunes of one pack of wolves, the Delta Pack. Will the pups survive their first year? Will the packs alpha animals retain their pack position to breed again next year? As they try to bring down the buffalo to keep themselves and their new pups alive what will the future hold for these ancient warriors?

  • S52E02 Babies: Born to be Good?

    • October 25, 2012
    • CBC

    Psychologists have made breakthroughs in our understanding of what babies might be thinking, and what they could possibly know about justice, helping, honesty, fairness. Even before they learn to talk!

  • S52E03 Nuts About Squirrels

    • November 8, 2012
    • CBC

    Through the use of robotic squirrels, GPS tracked acorns and scientists, the world of urban squirrels is revealed.

  • S52E04 Planet Hunters

    • November 15, 2012
    • CBC

    Are we alone in the universe? We may be very close to finding out. The Holy Grail of space science is the discovery of a planet just like ours: the right size, the right orbit around its sun, not too hot, not too cold – in the area dubbed the Goldilocks Zone. For millennia humans studying the stars had no idea if there were any other planets outside our solar system, let alone ones similar enough to ours to sustain life. The first extra-solar planet – or exoplanet – was only discovered in 1995. Now, a new space-based telescope has discovered thousands more, and some of them may be just like Earth.

  • S52E05 The Norse: An Arctic Mystery

    • November 22, 2012
    • CBC

    Buried under the tundra on a windy cape of Baffin Island lies one of the most important archeological finds in Canada. An untrained eye would miss it—but not scientist Pat Sutherland. Her new work here at the place they call Nanook will likely change history. This new documentary film reveals an archeological site that proves Europeans made contact with Native North Americans centuries before the arrival of Christopher Columbus.

  • S52E06 Lights Out!

    • December 6, 2012
    • CBC

    How the light between dusk and dawn cancels the healthy benefits of the absence of light.

  • S52E07 David Suzuki's Andean Adventure

    • January 10, 2013
    • CBC

    In unexpected places, David Suzuki finds radical new ideas about energy, the environment, and doing things differently. Will they catch on? UPDATE: Unfortunately in August 2013, Ecuador cancelled the pioneering conservation plan that attempted to raise funds from the international community instead of drilling for oil in a pristine corner of the Yasuni national park. Drilling is set to commence in 2016.

  • S52E08 Zapped: The Buzz About Mosquitoes

    • January 17, 2013
    • CBC

    People struggle to combat a blood-sucking little insect that is both delicate and deadly.

  • S52E09 Shattered Ground

    • February 7, 2013
    • CBC

    Fracking, while a bonanza for gas and oil production, is caught in a backlash of suspicion and alarm. What’s happening underground it seems can shatter more than just rock.

  • S52E10 Meet the Coywolf

    • February 14, 2013
    • CBC

    There is a new hybrid species which is part wolf, part coyote.

  • S52E11 The Fruit Hunters (1): Evolution of Desire

    • February 21, 2013
    • CBC

    A journey through nature, commerce and adventure, The Fruit Hunters takes us from the dawn of humanity to the cutting of edge of modern agriculture — a series that will change not just the way we look at what we eat, but what it means to be human. The Fruit Hunters' first episode, "The Evolution of Desire," explores the origins of fruit's diversity and tells the story of humanity and fruit's intimate co-evolution. Every variety of fruit has a story, the story of the person who cultivated an individual plant, and then shared something wonderful with the world. To preserve this diversity is to retain this living memory. A passionate few, the fruit hunters, fight to preserve this diversity in a world increasingly dominated by economically driven monoculture. Richard Campbell and Noris Ledesma, the "Indiana Joneses of fruit," travel around the world searching for exotic fruit at their source: the local's market. We follow them on a mission to Bali, in search of the elusive white-fleshed mangoes, which they hope to preserve before it is erased by industrialization and urbanization. Meanwhile, in the picturesque hills of Umbria, Italy, Isabella Dalla Ragione, an arboreal archaeologist, searches for heirloom varieties of fruit by investigating Renaissance paintings for clues. We also discover the underground network of the Rare Fruit Council International and meet Ken Love, Hawaii's fruit guru. Fruit hunting with Ken Love in Hawaii is like getting a tour of Willy Wonka's chocolate factory. In this episode, we'll meet the people who have dedicated their lives to preserving fruit's vital genetic diversity for coming generations.

  • S52E12 The Fruit Hunters (2): Defenders of Diversity

    • February 28, 2013
    • CBC

    A journey through nature, commerce and adventure, The Fruit Hunters takes us from the dawn of humanity to the cutting of edge of modern agriculture — a series that will change not just the way we look at what we eat, but what it means to be human. Supermarkets are stocked with fruit year round in a global permanent summertime, but despite its accessibility, have we lost the diversity that makes it so special? The second episode of The Fruit Hunters will look at what happens when we abandon the Garden of Eden for an industrialized monoculture. In lush jungles of Borneo, Bala Tingang, an elder of one of the last hunter-gatherer tribes, lives of the wild fruits that are the key to his tribe's survival. And yet, all around the world, natural diversity is being replaced with monocultures, plantations of only one variety, bred for long shelf life and transportability rather than their taste or health properties. Not only is this lost of diversity impoverishing our taste buds, but it has catastrophic implications for our food security. In the vast uniform banana fields of Honduras, Juan Aguilar, a banana scientist, frantically tries to breed a banana resistant to a deadly fungus. The common export banana now has so little genetic variety that it is extremely susceptible to disease. Yet with the help of fruit hunters around the world, perhaps we can reintroduce some of that diversity in a world increasingly dominated by economics. Searchers and explores such as Richard Campbell and Noris Ledesma scour the globe for rare exotic fruit with the hopes of broadening our selection at home. We also meet creators and inventors such as Floyd Zaiger and Bob Bors who use traditional breeding techniques to patiently create wondrous new fruits. Though their methods may vary, all of the fruit hunters share one thing — an obsession and love of fruit, and diversity.

  • S52E13 Billion Dollar Caribou

    • March 21, 2013
    • CBC

    The conservation of the caribou and their environment is much-contested territory.

  • S52E14 The Beaver Whisperers

    • March 28, 2013
    • CBC

    The national symbol has a new role as an ecological superhero.

  • S52E15 The Beetles Are Coming

    • April 4, 2013
    • CBC

    In the wake of global warming, a beetle apocalypse is unleashed in the forests of western Canada.

  • S52E16 The Man Who Tweeted Earth

    • April 25, 2013
    • CBC

    Through pictures, music and poetry, Canadian Commander Chris Hadfield brings us a view of earth from space that we’ve never seen before. Chris Hadfield made us love space again. Tweeting, snapping photos and regularly connecting with folks back home as he hurtled around the earth aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Hadfield is the first Canadian commander ever of one of the most complex and sophisticated examples of human technology ever built. From the moment Hadfield arrived at the ISS for his five-month mission, he transformed the way we connect to space. Millions followed his every move. His YouTube videos were instantly viral. The Queen and Captain Kirk sent him messages. But even though Hadfield made it look like fun, a whole lot of serious science happened up there. Equipment on the ISS measures solar matter to further our understanding of space. Research that can only be done in zero gravity could radically change how medical diagnoses happen on earth. And tests to figure out how to make space travel safer and more efficient (with a view to making it to the red planet one day).

Season 53

  • S53E01 Carpe Diem: A Fishy Tale

    • October 3, 2013
    • CBC

    Asian Carp are here to stay - and within 100 km of invading the Great Lakes. Despite best efforts in shooting, electrocuting, poisoning and angling them, they multiply like rabbits. It makes them a substantial threat to fresh water eco-systems.

  • S53E02 Ticked Off: The Mystery Of Lyme Disease

    • October 10, 2013
    • CBC

    Lyme disease, a mysterious tick-borne illness, has become one of the fastest-spreading vector borne diseases in North America. Explore how climate change has hastened the spread this devastating disease, one that is often misdiagnosed and mistreated, and is mired in media controversy.

  • S53E03 Myth or Science 2: The Quest for Perfection

    • October 17, 2013
    • CBC

    The intrepid Dr. Jennifer Gardy is back to do whatever it takes to put health and science claims to the grindstone and help us in our quest for perfection.

  • S53E04 Brain Magic: The Power of Placebo

    • October 24, 2013
    • CBC

    Brain Magic: The Power of Placebos pulls back the curtains on the proof that placebos can have powerful – and real – effects on our mind and body.

  • S53E05 Invasion of the Brain Snatchers

    • October 31, 2013
    • CBC

    We like to believe we're in control. But if what we're discovering about parasites is anything to go by, who is really in control is a lot more complicated, and a lot more interesting, than we ever imagined. So let "The Nature of Things with David Suzuki" help you get over the ick factor, and explore the world of parasites. So let "The Nature of Things with David Suzuki" help you get over the ick factor, and explore the world of parasites. Scientists have collected hundreds of examples of parasites that brainwash their hosts. And now researchers are starting to untangle these parasites' evolutionary tricks of the trade. In the coastal estuaries of California, Professor Kevin Lafferty of the United States Geological Survey introduces us to a flatworm that lives in three hosts - a snail, a fish and a bird. This parasite's influence is so profound that it tips the balance of the local ecosystem

  • S53E06 Untangling Alzheimer’s

    • November 14, 2013
    • CBC

    David Suzuki has a very personal interest in the disease of Alzheimer's because his mother died of it. We join David on an intimate journey as he explores the newest breakthroughs in understanding this devastating disease as well as his own chances of contracting the cruel condition.

  • S53E07 A Dog’s Life

    • November 21, 2013
    • CBC

    An exploration of the senses, mind and behaviour of our four-legged friends.

  • S53E08 Survival of the Fabulous

    • November 28, 2013
    • CBC

    Gay filmmaker Bryce Sage has had a big question on his mind ever since he came out of the closet-how is evolution compatible with the existence of gay men? Bryce sets out on a very personal journey to find out if scientists have come up with a definitive answer to this gay conundrum.

  • S53E09 Where Am I?

    • December 5, 2013
    • CBC

    Explore the skills we use to find our way around. Some of us seem to always know where we are, while others rarely do. What makes the difference?

  • S53E10 The Great Butterfly Hunt

    • January 2, 2014
    • CBC

    Canadian scientist Fred Urquhart unravels the mystery of the monarch's winter home.

  • S53E11 How to Be a Wild Elephant

    • January 9, 2014
    • CBC

    Orphan elephant Sities must learn how to be a wild elephant when she leaves the safety of a Kenyan sanctuary to begin her journey back to freedom.

  • S53E12 Secrets in the Bones - The Hunt for the Black Death Killer

    • January 16, 2014
    • CBC

    The quest to solve a great mystery in history: Identify the Black Death killer and unlock secrets that could save millions of lives.

  • S53E13 Trek of the Titans

    • January 30, 2014
    • CBC

    A rare look at the leatherback turtle as it migrates between the chilly waters off Eastern Canada and the sunny beaches of the Caribbean.

  • S53E14 The Allergy Fix

    • February 27, 2014
    • CBC

    Scientists are attacking food allergies in new and inventive ways, driven by the alarming increase in the number of people, particularly children, who suffer from them – and can die from them.

  • S53E15 Wild Canada: The Eternal Frontier

    • March 13, 2014
    • CBC

    A remarkable journey across Canada’s natural landscapes revealing the surprising influence early humans had on the land and its wildlife.

  • S53E16 Wild Canada: The Wild West

    • March 20, 2014
    • CBC

    From the Rockies to the Pacific, western Canada has astonishing wildlife and landscapes, some of which have been influenced by early humans.

  • S53E17 Wild Canada: The Heartland

    • March 27, 2014
    • CBC

    From the prairies to Canada's vast boreal forest that stretches almost from coast to coast, we reveal a huge wilderness of extremes that has been shaped over millennia by both humans and wildfires. Here pronghorn antelope, the fastest hoofed land animal on earth, still haunt the grasslands, the elusive wolverine thrives in the icy remote northern forests and beaver share their cozy lodges with grateful muskrats.

  • S53E18 Wild Canada: Ice Edge

    • April 3, 2014
    • CBC

    From polar bear cubs making their first discovery of ice to a caribou calf 'dancing' in the chilly spring air to eider ducks diving under the ice to find mussels, we witness the extremes and wonders of life in the far north.

  • S53E19 Making Wild Canada

    • April 10, 2014
    • CBC

    Making the incredible Wild Canada series. Meet Jeff Turner, the series director, and see stories from the field.

Season 54

  • S54E01 Stonehenge Uncovered

    • October 9, 2014
    • CBC

    The biggest archaeological survey ever conducted of the Stonehenge landscape finds new evidence of a lost civilization.

  • S54E02 Gorilla Doctors

    • October 16, 2014
    • CBC

    A team of veterinarians provide extreme medical care to save the wild mountain gorillas of Africa from extinction.

  • S54E03 Dreams of the Future

    • October 23, 2014
    • CBC

    Dr. Jennifer Gardy explores current scientific research that will impact us all in the future looking at everything from 3D printing body parts to driverless car and tree cloning.

  • S54E04 The Cholesterol Question

    • October 30, 2014
    • CBC

    If high cholesterol equals heart attacks, why do half of the victims have “normal” levels?

  • S54E05 Decoding Desire

    • November 6, 2014
    • CBC

    From preening peacocks to promiscuous primates, what do animals reveal about our own sexual behaviour? Explore how sexual diversity and the experience of pleasure itself may be the key to species survival.

  • S54E06 Chasing Snowflakes

    • November 13, 2014
    • CBC

    Scientists are unraveling the delicate mysteries of the snowflake. And what they’re learning is amazing.

  • S54E07 The Secret Life of Pigeons

    • November 20, 2014
    • CBC

    A look at the often misunderstood pigeon, big city birds maligned with a low rent reputation of their intelligence.

  • S54E08 Two of a Kind

    • November 27, 2014
    • CBC

    Director Leora Eisen asks why her identical twin was diagnosed with leukemia and she wasn't. A look at how twins are solving medical mysteries as researchers examine the differences between them.

  • S54E09 Myth or Science 3: You Are What You Eat

    • January 8, 2015
    • CBC

    Jennifer Gardy takes an extraordinary scientific journey to put food claims to the test and discover if they’re science fact or science fiction.

  • S54E10 The Lion in Your Living Room

    • January 15, 2015
    • CBC

    Despite that cats are the most-popular pet in the world, very little is known about them.

  • S54E11 Mystery of the Monsoon

    • January 29, 2015
    • CBC

    A look at the vast season weather system that permeates and unifies India, shaping the conditions of existence for its billion-plus inhabitants.

  • S54E12 The Kung Fu Meerkats

    • February 5, 2015
    • CBC

    A close-up look at a family of meerkats faced with surviving some of Africa's toughest drought conditions in the Kalahari desert.

  • S54E13 The Great Human Odyssey: Rise of a Species

    • February 12, 2015
    • CBC

    Like other kinds of human who once shared our world, Homo sapiens should have died away. Discover how our species faced near extinction in Africa, and then found a place to rebuild. Explore the birth of language and art at archeological excavations scientists are now calling “the cradle of the human mind”.

  • S54E14 The Great Human Odyssey: The Adaptable Ape

    • February 19, 2015
    • CBC

    How did we become our planet’s only global species, at home in every environment on Earth. Learn how our ancestors found a way through the deserts and out of Africa. Explore the meeting of Neanderthals and humans. And discover how we survived the Ice Age.

  • S54E15 The Great Human Odyssey: Journey’s End

    • February 26, 2015
    • CBC

    Early humans eventually colonized Australia, the South Pacific, and the Americas. But how did our ancestors master the oceans? Learn how new discoveries in ancient DNA research are changing our understanding of the earliest sea voyages, from Easter Island to the Bering Strait.

  • S54E16 The Antibiotic Hunters

    • March 5, 2015
    • CBC

    Increasing resistance to antibiotics has been called “the most pressing global health problem of our time”. A new documentary travels to an ocean reef, a rainforest canopy, a frigid cave and even the mouth of a giant lizard – all in the urgent search for new antibiotics.

  • S54E17 Safe Haven for Chimps

    • March 12, 2015
    • CBC

    The touching story of how some very special chimpanzees find sanctuary and a new family when they are retired from a life in the lab.

  • S54E18 SongbirdSOS

    • March 19, 2015
    • CBC

    'It seems inconceivable that we have lost almost half the songbirds that filled our skies only 40 years ago. SongbirdSOS takes a journey with the birds to discover why this is happening and what we can do about it.

  • S54E19 Spirit Bear Family

    • March 26, 2015
    • CBC

    Canada’s top nature documentarians spend a season with the fabled Spirit Bear of BC’s Great Bear Rainforest, capturing a mother spirit bear and her cubs.

  • S54E20 Jellyfish Rule!

    • April 2, 2015
    • CBC

    No brains, no backbone, no problem! 600 million years ago jellyfish ruled the oceans. Now these mysterious and magnificent creatures may be taking over the oceans once again. Only this time, they’re doing it with our help.

  • S54E21 Franklin’s Lost Ships

    • April 9, 2015
    • CBC

    Last summer, 170 years after it left England, one of Sir John Franklin’s lost ships, HMS Erebus, was found in the Canadian Arctic. Our cameras were on board to witness this extraordinary underwater

Season 55

  • S55E01 Moose: A Year in the Life of a Twig Eater

    • October 15, 2015
    • CBC

    High up in Canada’s Rockies, by a crystal-clear lake rimmed with old-growth forest, a moose is born. At the best of times, the odds are stacked against this leggy 35-pounder surviving its first year, as normally less than 50 percent do, but now that number is sinking even lower. Moose populations across many parts of North America are in steep decline and scientists believe one big reason is that fewer moose calves are surviving their first year. If the population continues on this trajectory, scientists believe that moose could be gone from many parts of North America within the next 50 years. It has never been more important to understand what happens in the first year of a moose’s life.

  • S55E02 The Curious Case of Vitamins and Me

    • October 22, 2015
    • CBC

    We all think we know vitamins – and we’re told they’re essential – but why do really need them and why can’t we produce them on our own? These are a few questions on the mind of intrepid filmmaker and health-freak Bryce Sage who travels from Washington, D.C. to San Francisco to get to the bottom of the vitamin mystery.

  • S55E03 It Takes Guts

    • October 29, 2015
    • CBC

    Eat less, move more. That’s been the mantra of the weight loss movement for decades. But as those who have fought the battle of the bulge will tell you, there’s a lot more to obesity than just too much junk food or too little willpower. Even when genes are taken into account, scientists have struggled to explain why one person can eat cake and stay skinny, while another munches on carrots and can’t shed a pound.

  • S55E04 Giraffes: The Forgotten Giants

    • November 5, 2015
    • CBC

    Everyone on the planet knows what a giraffe is. “G” is for Giraffe in the alphabet and “Sophie” the Giraffe teething toys can be found in the hands of practically every newborn baby. But, most people don’t know much about giraffes, or that these iconic creatures of wild Africa, with their long necks, cinnamon spotted coats, flirty lashes and loping gait are disappearing at an alarming rate. Two hundred years ago there were a million giraffes, in 2000 there were 140,000 roaming Africa’s plains and forests. Now, fifteen years later, their numbers have plummeted to less than 80,000.

  • S55E05 Sonic Magic: The Wonder and Science of Sound

    • November 12, 2015
    • CBC

    Sound surrounds us. Whether it's sound we choose to hear, like the music we play in our headphones, or sound we'd rather do without, like the noise of the city, we live in a sonic world that we seldom think twice about.

  • S55E06 Puffin Patrol

    • November 19, 2015
    • CBC

    It’s spring on the North Atlantic and millions of Atlantic Puffins are making their way home to breed. These glorious little clown-like birds are full of contradictions. They spend eight months of the year living alone at sea, but they are extremely social when they return to land, living in jam-packed colonies. On Gull Island, just south of St John’s, Newfoundland, it’s breeding season for over 300,000 pairs of North Atlantic puffins. The birds get right down to business, using their shovel-like beaks and their big feet to dig new burrows to protect their single precious egg.

  • S55E07 Manufacturing the Wild

    • November 26, 2015
    • CBC

    With the natural world disappearing, new wild spaces for the creatures that vanished long ago are more important than ever.

  • S55E08 Ocean Magic at Night

    • January 7, 2016
    • CBC

    Cameraman and marine biologist Rick Rosenthal captures for the first time on camera Earth's biggest migration — the nightly movement of billions of animals from the ocean's depths to its surface and back. Ocean Magic at Night reveals for us the habitat of the dark open ocean. It is a world without solid objects, like deep space, whose bizarre inhabitants live out their lives suspended in darkness between the surface and the abyss. Each evening they travel up towards the surface to feed, and at dawn back down again to the safety of deep, dark water. Locating this migration in the vast emptiness of the open ocean, and at night, is not easy. When he ultimately succeeds, Rick's camera exposes a world inhabited by alien species of exceptional beauty.

  • S55E09 Myth or Science 4: In the Eye of the Storm

    • January 14, 2016
    • CBC

    Dr. Jennifer Gardy is back. The intrepid scientist and detective who put her body on the line in Myth or Science 1, 2 and 3 returns to continue her mission to put science claims to the test and discover – once and for all -- whether they’re myth or science.

  • S55E10 Wasted

    • January 21, 2016
    • CBC

    Filmmaker Maureen Palmer set out to make a documentary following her partner Mike Pond — a psychotherapist and an alcoholic five years sober — as he searched for the best new evidence-based addiction treatments. The intent was to help others battling substance use disorders.

  • S55E11 Call of the Baby Beluga

    • January 28, 2016
    • CBC

    One day in Quebec, a baby beluga whale washes up on a gravel beach along the St. Lawrence River. Unexpectedly, she is vigorously alive. A scientific team decides to take unusual steps to try to save her.

  • S55E12 Eagles Next Door

    • February 4, 2016
    • CBC

    In possibly the world’s single greatest conservation success story, Bald Eagles have gone from the brink of extinction to numbers never before seen in just fifty years. The eagle has landed...in our backyards. Nesting on hydro towers, construction beams, in suburban parks, and urban neighbourhoods, bald eagles are an exotic reminder of the wilderness that surrounded many of our cities’ landscapes. These majestic predators epitomize survival. Their story is one of opportunism and adaptation in the face of a rapidly changing ecological landscape. We follow the unfolding story of a single breeding pair in the suburbs of Vancouver, Canada, over the course of a year. Via the social media phenomena known as ‘nestcams’ we are able to witness their amazing lifecycle, and understand the adaptations they’ve made to be successful in the city. Wildlife biologists, conservationists, rescuers, and online nestcam fans illuminate the lives of our newly arrived wild neighbours. Stunning landscape shots and intimate close-ups leave the viewer in awe of this special bird. Exclusive nestcam footage of this year’s dramatic breeding, hatching, and fledging season brings unparalleled understanding and access.

  • S55E13 Trapped in a Human Zoo

    • February 11, 2016
    • CBC

    This is the story of the incredible journey of eight Inuit who came from Labrador in 1880, to Europe lured by promises of adventures and wealth, only to realize they had been trapped in a world that time has today forgotten; the world of human zoos. Thirty-five thousand indigenous people from around the world were recruited for these zoos.

  • S55E14 Wolverine: Ghost of the Northern Forest

    • February 25, 2016
    • CBC

    Filmmaker Andrew Manske goes in search of the elusive wolverine.

  • S55E15 The Equalizer

    • March 3, 2016
    • CBC

    Every year, athletes keep going higher, farther and faster, shattering previous world records and setting new ones. But are today’s record holders really better than those of the past? Or do modern athletes get their edge from their high tech gear? Top sports scientist Steve Haake sets off on a journey to investigate.

  • S55E16 While You Were Sleeping

    • March 10, 2016
    • CBC

    For thousands of years, we’ve regarded sleep as nothing more than an annihilation of consciousness. But there is one compelling fact that has always stood in the way of that view.

  • S55E17 My Brain Made Me Do It

    • March 17, 2016
    • CBC

    le say, ‘It was beyond my control’ or ‘I couldn’t stop myself’. We like to think that we’re all ultimately in control of our actions. But how true is this really?

  • S55E18 Suzuki@80

    • March 24, 2016
    • CBC

    David Suzuki is celebrating his 80th birthday in March, and we’re planning a very special program. After more than 50 years in the public eye, you may think you’ve seen Suzuki in just about every way possible: almost naked, confronting industry, skateboarding down the street, and even buried up to his neck in a bog. No wonder we all think we know who he is, but in this deeply personal show you’ll meet a David you haven’t seen before.

  • S55E19 Pets, Vets and Debts

    • March 31, 2016
    • CBC

Season 56

  • S56E01 Pompeii's People

    • October 6, 2016
    • CBC

    Buried under the ash of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD, then forgotten for more than 1,500 years, ancient Pompeii’s new life began with its discovery in the 18th century. Since then, this vast city has been a subject of fascination for historians and archaeologists alike, a unique and fascinating window into Roman life, unlike anywhere else on earth.

  • S56E02 Conversations With Dolphins

    • October 13, 2016
    • CBC

    Dolphin experts research the species' intelligence and one scientist is creating tools to communicate with them.

  • S56E03 Running on Empty

    • October 20, 2016
    • CBC

    Forget Hollywood, Disneyland and Silicon Valley. Get ready to see a very different California. Deep in the grip of an epic drought, the Golden State is looking a lot like the Dust Bowl these days. And there’s no shortage of finger-pointing and drought shaming.

  • S56E04 The Brain's Way of Healing

    • October 27, 2016
    • CBC

    The Brain's Way of Healing is about neuroplasticity’s next step — healing the mind and the body. It’s revolutionary and in some instances shocking — we’ll see people’s lifelong afflictions cured almost miraculously.

  • S56E05 Destination: Mars

    • November 3, 2016
    • CBC

    The race to get to Mars is on, seizing the imagination of the world. Every month there seems to be a new revelation.

  • S56E06 Vital Bonds

    • November 17, 2016
    • CBC

    Take a fascinating journey inside the evolving science of transplants, where breakthrough discoveries are tackling the organ shortage and transforming the future of medicine.

  • S56E07 Think Like an Animal

    • November 24, 2016
    • CBC

    New research debunks old myths about how animals think.

  • S56E08 I Got Rhythm: The Science of Song

    • December 1, 2016
    • CBC

    The latest in science research reveals how music affects the body and brain.

  • S56E09 The Secret Life of Owls

    • January 12, 2017
    • CBC

    We all recognize the trademark hoots of the Great Horned Owl. But how many of us have seen one up close? The Great Horned Owl lives all over the Americas, from rural countryside to bustling cityscapes. Yet it’s rare to catch a glimpse of this elusive bird of prey. The Secret Life of Owls gives us a window into the life of this amazing species and introduces us to some passionate owl experts along the way.

  • S56E10 PTSD: Beyond Trauma

    • January 19, 2017
    • CBC

    Trauma continues to overwhelm some people, and they are unable to move beyond it.

  • S56E11 Myth or Science: The Secrets of Our Senses

    • January 26, 2017
    • CBC

    Dr. Jennifer Gardy, the intrepid science sleuth, returns to CBC’s The Nature of Things with the fifth in the very popular Myth or Science series. Once again she tackles the health and science claims we all wonder about, to discover whether they’re science fact or science fiction.

  • S56E12 The Great Wild Indoors

    • February 9, 2017
    • CBC

    The wild world of insects inside homes.

  • S56E13 Body Language Decoded

    • February 16, 2017
    • CBC

    The affects of body movement and the impression it can have on people.

  • S56E14 Cracking Cancer

    • February 23, 2017
    • CBC

    At age 33, Zuri Scrivens discovered she had breast cancer. She endured a mastectomy, radiation, chemo and hormone therapy. But within 9 months, Zuri’s cancer was back - and had spread to her liver and lymph nodes. Her disease was now considered incurable, and she faced the very real prospect she’d never see her toddler grow up.

  • S56E15 Dad and the Dandelions

    • March 2, 2017
    • CBC

    A filmmaker studies the cancer that killed his father.

  • S56E16 White Wolves: Ghosts of the Arctic

    • March 9, 2017
    • CBC

    A family of Arctic wolves fight to survive in Canada's far north.

  • S56E17 ADHD: Not Just for Kids

    • March 16, 2017
    • CBC

    The telltale signs of ADHD.

  • S56E18 Fox Tales

    • March 23, 2017
    • CBC

    Red foxes have the ability to create a home in almost any environment by adapting their behaviour.

Season 57

  • S57E01 The Wild Canadian Year (1) - Spring

    • September 24, 2017
    • CBC

    The first days of spring sees Arctic fox pups take their first steps and black bear cubs learn to climb trees after the long cold days of winter while female caribou make the dangerous trek to reach their calving grounds.

  • S57E02 The Wild Canadian Year (2) - Summer

    • October 1, 2017
    • CBC

    Summer is the second chapter in the spectacular landmark series THE WILD CANADIAN YEAR, revealing dramatic wildlife stories and showcasing Canadian landscapes at the peak of their splendour.

  • S57E03 The Wild Canadian Year (3) - Fall

    • October 8, 2017
    • CBC

    As fall begins, young northern gannets leap off cliffs, chipmunks gather supplies and prairie rattlesnakes give birth.

  • S57E04 The Wild Canadian Year (4) - Winter

    • October 15, 2017
    • CBC

    Lynx hunt hares in the forest while wolves and caribou clash on the tundra.

  • S57E05 The Wild Canadian Year (5) - Making the Wild Canadian Year

    • October 22, 2017
    • CBC

    A behind-the-scenes look at the endurance and technical skills that went into the making of ``The Wild Canadian Year.''

  • S57E06 Lost Secrets of the Pyramid

    • October 29, 2017
    • CBC

    Who built them and how? New archaeological discoveries uncover the greatest mysteries of the Egyptian pyramids.

  • S57E07 Into the Fire

    • November 5, 2017
    • CBC

    Investigating the powerful secrets of fire.

  • S57E08 Secrets from the Ice

    • November 19, 2017
    • CBC

    Melting ice in the Yukon reveals ancient treasures.

  • S57E09 What Trees Talk About

    • November 26, 2017
    • CBC

    Trees have the ability to work together to transform the world.

  • S57E10 Jumbo: Life of an Elephant Superstar

    • January 7, 2018
    • CBC

    An inspection of the bones of 19th-century phenomenon Jumbo the Elephant reveals secrets about the world's first animal superstar.

  • S57E11 Ice Bridge

    • January 14, 2018
    • CBC

    It is widely believed that the first migrants to North America arrived approximately 14,000 years ago, having trekked across a land bridge spanning the Bering Strait from Siberia to Alaska. However, extraordinary new evidence supports an explosive new theory of another trip to the New World.

  • S57E12 Mommy Wildest

    • January 21, 2018
    • CBC

    Lions, elephants, and baboons: Three sisterhoods of the savannah, where the mothers rule, and the daughters inherit the wilderness.

  • S57E13 Champions vs. Legends

    • January 28, 2018
    • CBC

    What if the greatest elite athletes – present and past – could compete against each other on a level playing field? If competitive conditions were made equal, would today’s stars come out on top? Or would they be beaten by the heroes of the past? Renowned sports scientist Steve Haake investigates whether today’s winter sports champions are really better than those of the past or whether they get their edge from modern sports technology.

  • S57E14 The Science of Magic

    • March 18, 2018
    • CBC

    Explore why magic is a unique tool for gaining new insights into human cognition, neurobiology, and behaviour.

  • S57E15 Myth or Science: The Power of Poo

    • April 1, 2018
    • CBC

    In Myth or Science: The Power of Poo intrepid scientist, Jennifer Gardy, goes on a journey to find out. Her goal: discover whether poo is simply waste to be banished, or a valuable byproduct that has the power to revolutionize our health.

  • S57E16 The Kingdom: How Fungi Made Our World

    • April 8, 2018
    • CBC

    Hidden from sight is a kingdom that rules life on land. It’s an alien world with the largest and oldest organisms alive today. It is the 5th Kingdom of fungi.

Season 58

  • S58E01 Equus: Story of the Horse — Origins

    • September 23, 2018
    • CBC

    A journey around the world and back in time, to discover why horses and humans make perfect partners.

  • S58E02 Equus: Story of the Horse — First Riders

    • September 30, 2018
    • CBC

    Travel back to the moment humans tamed the horse, and learn how horsepower made history.

  • S58E03 Equus: Story of the Horse - Chasing the Wind

    • October 7, 2018
    • CBC

    How did humans save the wild horse from extinction? And how did we create over 400 specialized breeds today?

  • S58E04 A Day In The Life of Earth

    • October 14, 2018
    • CBC

    From Volcanoes to Earthquakes, Scientists Reveal How Much Earth Changes in a Single Day

  • S58E05 The Real T.rex

    • October 21, 2018
    • CBC

    Join an investigative journey around the world to uncover the mysteries of the most famous dinosaur super-predator: the Tyrannosaurus Rex.

  • S58E06 The Memory Mirage

    • October 28, 2018
    • CBC

    Can we trust what we remember about our own lives? Memory scientists say most memories are full of distortions and errors.

  • S58E07 Spying on Animals

    • November 4, 2018
    • CBC

    Remote cameras let us bear witness to animal behaviour anywhere, anytime.

  • S58E08 The Genetic Revolution

    • November 11, 2018
    • CBC

    Exploring the exciting, rapidly evolving world of genetic engineering.

  • S58E09 Stay-at-Home Animal Dads

    • December 2, 2018
    • CBC

    In nature, dads often get a bad rap. There are lots of male animals that are absentee fathers, and who provide little to nothing in the way of “child care.” But there are some unsung heroes in the animal kingdom: fathers who fly solo after moms leave them behind with the kids. Why do these devoted dads raise their young all by themselves? Scientists are just beginning to uncover the answers to this evolutionary mystery. The male seahorse is well known for being the parent to get “pregnant,” holding the fertilized eggs in his stomach pouch while they develop. And this devoted dad isn’t alone. A distant relative, the broad-nosed pipefish also becomes a pregnant papa, carrying his brood until they hatch and swim away. Emperor penguin fathers have incredible endurance. They suffer through some the harshest conditions on Earth while balancing a fragile egg on their feet! In the fierce winter storms of Antarctica, they brave the cold, wind and darkness to protect their precious cargo until it hatches in the spring. Other fathers go a step further, nurturing their kids even after they’re born. The brilliant-thighed poison dart frog acts as the family minivan, packing up his tadpoles on his back to transport them to a larger pool when their own pool dries up.

  • S58E10 Food for Thought

    • December 30, 2018
    • CBC

    When it comes to diet, we swallow a lot of advice. Food for Thought sorts through the latest science to create a new recipe for health.

  • S58E11 The Wonder of the Northern Lights

    • January 13, 2019
    • CBC

    David meets with scientists who are unraveling the mysteries of the northern lights.

  • S58E12 The Power of Play

    • January 20, 2019
    • CBC

    From youngsters fooling around to adults having a laugh, playing is a fact of human life. However, new findings in animal behaviour show us that play is no laughing matter. Evolutionary biologists believe it’s one of the keys to survival. And, as they’re learning, it’s not just people and pets that play, but reptiles, amphibians and insects, too. The Power of Play takes us around the world to meet the people who are turning play science into one of the most promising areas of research today. One scholar we’re introduced to is Stuart Brown, a California psychiatrist known as the “grandfather” of play research. Brown recognised play was essential to human nature as far back as 1966, finding that playing freely as a child is a key to being mentally healthy as an adult.

  • S58E13 The Nature of Invention

    • January 27, 2019
    • CBC

    Behind every invention is an inventor with a fascinating story. Broadcaster and author Britt Wray has spent years in the lab studying synthetic biology and now wants to meet inventors to find out what inspires them, and what makes them tick.

  • S58E14 Something in the Air

    • February 17, 2019
    • CBC

  • S58E15 Laughing and Crying

    • March 3, 2019
    • CBC

    David explores the soundtrack to life.

  • S58E16 Ageing in the Wild

    • March 10, 2019
    • CBC

    Humans have long been obsessed with “eternal youth”. By 2021, the anti-ageing industry is expected to be worth over $330 billion, with many wacky and unorthodox methods proposed for staying youthful and extending our time on Earth. In Ageing in the Wild, viewers get a glimpse at how species in the animal kingdom live long and healthy lives.

  • S58E17 Turtle Beach

    • March 17, 2019
    • CBC

    Scientists explore the extraordinary mass nesting behaviour of the olive ridley sea turtle, and reveal the hidden world inside a turtle nest.

  • S58E18 Remarkable Rabbits

    • April 7, 2019
    • CBC

    David learns about rabbits and hares.

Season 59

  • S59E01 She Walks with Apes

    • September 20, 2019
    • CBC

    The epic story of three legendary women who fought to save the great apes — and inspired a generation.

  • S59E02 Grasslands: A Hidden Wilderness

    • September 27, 2019
    • CBC

    Canada's prairies are among the world's most endangered, least protected ecosystems, but there are people working to keep them wild.

  • S59E03 Takaya: Lone Wolf

    • October 4, 2019
    • CBC

    The remarkable story of a solitary wolf living against the odds and his close bond with renowned wildlife photographer Cheryl Alexander.

  • S59E04 Living Colour

    • October 11, 2019
    • CBC

    A captivating exploration of the science of colour, including a look at people and animals who experience it in fascinating ways.

  • S59E05 First Animals

    • October 25, 2019
    • CBC

    For most of its existence, planet Earth has been a brutal, inhospitable, toxic nightmare, until a half billion years ago when – KABOOM! – life suddenly appeared. First Animals, a new documentary from The Nature of Things, takes you back to the Cambrian Explosion through newly-discovered fossils that tell us more about our own origins. Renowned evolutionary biologist Maydianne Andrade is our guide, showing us how complex – and dangerous – life among the first animals really was. “The information embedded in this rock is evolution’s raw data,” says Andrade. “We see how the first guts digested food, how the first eyes processed images, how the first hunters tracked down their prey. “These are the very early building blocks of animal evolution.” High up a mountainside in a British Columbia fossil bed, Andrade joins a team from the Royal Ontario Museum, led by paleontologist Jean-Bernard Caron. They are literally exposing hundreds of new fossils every day.

  • S59E06 BE AFRAID: The Science of Fear

    • November 1, 2019
    • CBC

    There's still so much we don't know about fear. Could it be good for you? What would life be like without it?

  • S59E07 Under Thin Ice

    • November 8, 2019
    • CBC

    In the Arctic, life thrives on the ice and under it. But for how long? Extreme diver Jill Heinerth investigates.

  • S59E08 Seals of Sable

    • November 15, 2019
    • CBC

    On the remote shores of Sable Island, N.S., we meet the world’s largest breeding colony of grey seals and the people who study them.

  • S59E09 Dinosaur Cold Case

    • January 10, 2020
    • CBC

    The accidental discovery in Alberta of one of the best-preserved dinosaurs ever opens a prehistoric cold case to uncover the secrets of its mysterious death.

  • S59E10 Pass the Salt

    • January 17, 2020
    • CBC

    In 1977, health experts declared a war on sodium. We sift through a mountain of salt science for a grain of truth.

  • S59E11 Nature's Cleanup Crew

    • January 31, 2020
    • CBC

    An introduction to the unsung animal heroes who clean up messes in the urban spaces they share with humans.

  • S59E12 Kingdom of the Tide

    • February 7, 2020
    • CBC

    Sarika Cullis-Suzuki takes us on a personal and intimate journey to discover the spectacular and surprising world of the intertidal zone, and reveal how it holds the key to the health of the world’s oceans and our own survival.

  • S59E13 Accidental Wilderness: The Leslie Street Spit

    • February 14, 2020
    • CBC

    One of the world's most incredible urban wildernesses. It offers a fascinatingly vivid account of the push-pull relationship at play in humankind's transformation of natural environments...and a reminder of nature's power when left to it's own devices.

  • S59E14 Listening to Orcas

    • February 21, 2020
    • CBC

    Scientists uncover the complex and emotional lives of the ocean’s most intelligent predators.

  • S59E15 Aging Well Suzuki Style

    • February 28, 2020
    • CBC

    David Suzuki takes us on a journey to learn how to live better and age well.

  • S59E16 Reef Rescue

    • March 6, 2020
    • CBC

    Scientists are racing against time to save the world’s coral reefs before they’re lost forever.

  • S59E17 A Bee's Diary

    • March 13, 2020
    • CBC

    7 weeks, 8,000km, countless adventures...and 1 gram of honey. The life of a single bee, through her own eyes.

Season 60

  • S60E01 Rebellion

    • November 6, 2020
    • CBC

    Global temperatures are rising and so are we: millions of young people rise up to demand their right to a livable planet.

  • S60E02 Kids vs. Screens

    • November 13, 2020
    • CBC

    How screens affect our children's development, learning abilities and mental health.

  • S60E03 Wild Australia: After the Fires

    • November 20, 2020
    • CBC

    Signs of life and hope emerge from the scorched landscapes of the worst wildlife disaster in modern history. of life and hope emerge from the scorched landscapes of the worst wildlife disaster in modern history.

  • S60E04 The Covid Cruise

    • November 27, 2020
    • CBC

    3,711 passengers and crew. 14-day quarantine. 1 deadly infectious disease. Coronavirus aboard the Diamond Princess cruise ship.

  • S60E05 Searching for Cleopatra

    • January 8, 2021
    • CBC

    Uncovering the truth about the richest and most powerful woman in world history.

  • S60E06 Wild Canadian Weather: Cold

    • January 15, 2021
    • CBC

    Canadians push the limits of cold endurance while baby harp seals brave icy water and flying squirrels cuddle.

  • S60E07 Wild Canadian Weather: Rain

    • January 22, 2021
    • CBC

    Rain brings unexpected benefits for spadefoot toads, grizzlies, and whitewater kayakers - but too much can be deadly.

  • S60E08 Wild Canadian Weather: Wind

    • January 29, 2021
    • CBC

    The invisible element that shapes our lives; falcons, butterflies and spiders hitch a ride, while Canadians harness, and harvest, the wind.

  • S60E09 Wild Canadian Weather: Sun

    • February 5, 2021
    • CBC

    The driving force behind all weather, sunlight creates a banquet for blue whales, helps vultures soar, and is essential for training some extreme athletes.

  • S60E10 Making Wild Canadian Weather

    • February 12, 2021
    • CBC

    Crews go to great lengths to get amazing shots of wildlife people and weather. Working with scientists is essential.

  • S60E11 The Real Neanderthal

    • February 19, 2021
    • CBC

    Neanderthals weren't brutish or dim-witted. New discoveries reveal they were more human than we ever thought!

  • S60E12 Kingdom of the Polar Bears: Part 1

    • February 26, 2021
    • CBC

    Veteran polar bear guide Dennis Compayre goes on a remarkable journey into the world of a polar bear mom and her newborn cubs as they leave the safety of their den for the first time.

  • S60E13 Kingdom of the Polar Bears: Part 2

    • March 5, 2021
    • CBC

    Veteran polar bear guide, Dennis Compayre watches as a mother bear teaches her young cubs to hunt and discovers how they are struggling to adapt to a rapidly warming Arctic.

  • S60E14 The Last Walrus

    • March 12, 2021
    • CBC

    A filmmaker explores one man’s quest to save a walrus, as the debate around marine mammal captivity evolves in Canada.

Season 61

  • S61E01 Inside the Great Vaccine Race

    • November 5, 2021
    • CBC

    The inside story of the high-stakes race to defeat a killer virus and save millions of lives.

  • S61E02 Nature's Big Year

    • November 12, 2021
    • CBC

    When humanity hits pause, nature reboots; scientists discover the surprising ways pandemic lock downs affected our planet.

  • S61E03 The Machine That Feels

    • November 19, 2021
    • CBC

    The ever-growing and mysterious world of Artificial Intelligence.

  • S61E04 The New Human

    • November 26, 2021
    • CBC

    Disappearing tendons? Longer legs? Artificial body parts? What will humans look like in the future?

  • S61E05 Chef Secrets: The Science of Cooking

    • January 7, 2022
    • CBC

    The secret ingredient to becoming a better cook? Science! Top chefs and culinary experts explain the chemistry, physics and microbiology of cooking

  • S61E06 Curb Your Carbon

    • January 14, 2022
    • CBC

    The easy and effective ways we can all fight climate change ... and turn down the heat.

  • S61E07 In Your Face

    • January 21, 2022
    • CBC

    Two eyes, a nose, a mouth. We see faces everywhere and in everything, but what we don’t always appreciate is that our ability to recognize and distinguish faces is a superpower unique to humans. In the documentary In Your Face from The Nature of Things, neuroscientists and experts illuminate the fascinating science behind human facial recognition; while computer scientists and others reveal the promise – and the dangers – of the rapidly-changing world of facial recognition technology.

  • S61E08 Ice and Fire: Tracking Canada's Climate Crisis

    • January 28, 2022
    • CBC

    Goodbye backyard ice rinks, mountain glaciers and forest biodiversity: what Canada might lose due to climate change.

  • S61E09 Why We Dance

    • February 25, 2021
    • CBC

    It may surprise you to learn that you are a dancer. In fact, we are all dancers. This film takes us into the beating heart of why humans simply must dance.

  • S61E10 Carbon: The Unauthorized Biography

    • March 4, 2021
    • CBC

    The key element of life on Earth, it has the power to build and destroy.

  • S61E11 How the Wild Things Sleep

    • March 11, 2022
    • CBC

    Unraveling the secrets of the most extreme sleepers of the animal kingdom. Why and how do animals sleep? How do they deal with sleep deprivation? And do animals dream?

  • S61E12 The Teenager and Lost Maya City

    • March 18, 2022
    • CBC

    A young Canadian is going on the adventure of a lifetime. He believes he knows the location of a lost Maya city and he’s heading to Mexico to find it.

  • S61E13 The Musical Animal

    • March 25, 2022
    • CBC

    We know that humans are a musical species. We sing, we dance, we groove. But are we the only musical species?

  • S61E14 The Science of Success

    • April 1, 2022
    • CBC

    Success has little to do with performance, winners and losers are chosen by society. Now, scientists have discovered the secret to predicting success.

Season 62

  • S62E01 Last of the Right Whales

    • January 6, 2023
    • CBC

    Last of the Right Whales follows the whale migration from the only known calving grounds in the waters of the southeastern U.S. to the shifting feeding grounds around the Bay of Fundy, Gulf of St. Lawrence and New England coast. Meet the people committed to saving a species that is still struggling to recover from centuries of hunting, and who are trying to make room for the whales in our modern world.

  • S62E02 Rat City

    • January 13, 2023
    • CBC

    Remarkable superpowers make rats the evolutionary heroes of the animal kingdom.

  • S62E03 Science & Cannabis

    • January 20, 2023
    • CBC

    Is cannabis a medical cure-all or snake oil? Scientists distinguish the medicine from the myths.

  • S62E04 Secret Agents Of The Underground Railroad

    • February 3, 2023
    • CBC

    How staff at a luxury hotel in Niagara Falls, NY helped ferry enslaved people to freedom.

  • S62E05 Walking With Ancients

    • February 10, 2023
    • CBC

  • S62E06 Apocalypse Plan B

    • February 17, 2023
    • CBC

    Some scientists are proposing radical ways to cool our warming planet – but others say it’s time to restore nature on a global scale.

  • S62E07 True Survivors

    • February 24, 2023
    • CBC

    How have humans survived extreme environmental change in the past? And what will it take to survive what’s next?

  • S62E08 Grizzly Rewild

    • March 3, 2023
    • CBC

    Five orphaned grizzly bear cubs get a second chance at life in the wild, but can they survive without their mother? A groundbreaking study follows the bears to find out if rewilding works.

  • S62E09 Bug Sex

    • March 10, 2023
    • CBC

    Broken genitals and cannibalism. Welcome to the weird and wonderful world of how bugs get busy.

  • S62E10 War for the Woods

    • March 17, 2023
    • CBC

    Thirty years after historic logging protests on Vancouver Island, the battle to protect old growth forests is still raging.

  • S62E11 The Secrets of Friendship

    • March 24, 2023
    • CBC

    Step into the world of “friendship detectives,” who are unravelling the mysteries of social behaviours in humans and other animals.

  • S62E12 Woodpeckers: The Hole Story

    • March 31, 2023
    • CBC

    Inside the secret and rhythmic world of one of nature’s best lumberjacks.

  • S62E13 Suzuki Signs Off

    • April 7, 2023
    • CBC

    After 44 years, David Suzuki is retiring as host of The Nature of Things. In his final episode, he explores new ways of expressing his ideas, meets up with some neighbours, shows us how global problems are being expressed in his own backyard, and attempts to reconcile the two great influences in his life: science and Indigenous culture.

Season 63

  • S63E01 A User's Guide to the Voice

    • January 4, 2024
    • CBC

    The human voice is a very sophisticated communication tool, but most lack knowledge of how to unlock its potential.

  • S63E02 Mystery of the Walking Whale

    • January 11, 2024
    • CBC

    Sarika Cullis-Suzuki travels back in time to solve the evolutionary mystery of the walking whale.

  • S63E03 Butt Seriously

    • January 18, 2024
    • CBC

    Anthony Morgan shines a light where the sun doesn't usually shine; why humans have butts, their evolution and how to keep them healthy.

  • S63E04 Jawsome: Canada's Great White Sharks

    • January 25, 2024
    • CBC

    Shark nerds are on a mission to reveal the JAWSOME lives of Canada's Great White Sharks.

  • S63E05 I Am the Magpie River

    • February 1, 2024
    • CBC

    A pristine river in Quebec is granted rights through legal personhood, protecting it and those who call it home.

  • S63E06 Love Hurts: The Science of Heartbreak

    • February 8, 2024
    • CBC

  • S63E07 Secret World of Sound: Hunters and Hunted

    • February 15, 2024
    • CBC

  • S63E08 Secret World of Sound: Love and Rivals

    • February 22, 2024
    • CBC

    Sound is used to impress, find a mate, and fight off a rival. In the forests of eastern Australia, the male lyrebird, one of the greatest mimics of the natural world, attempts to wow a female with his complex song – including the sounds of other birds and a car alarm. In the vast grasslands of Alberta, male sharp-tailed grouse gather to put on an elaborate dance routine to attract a female – complete with rattling tail feathers and popping neck sacks. And on the west coast of Washington State, a fish called the male plainfin midshipman attempts to convince a female to lay her eggs in his nest by singing her a love song.

  • S63E09 Secret World of Sound: Finding a Voice

    • February 29, 2024
    • CBC

    Using the latest technology, "Sounds of Nature" brings viewers to a world beyond their own, discovering secrets hidden until now; director: Bridget Appleby.

  • S63E10 Hairy Tales

    • March 7, 2024
    • CBC

    A hair-raising journey into the salon, the lab, a remote Chinese village, a baby nursery and even a wildlife sanctuary to explore the surprising new research at the root of it all.

  • S63E11 Little Sapiens

    • March 14, 2024
    • CBC

    Sarika Cullis-Suzuki uncovers what it was like to grow up in prehistoric times and how kids once lived, played and learned tens of thousands of years ago.

  • S63E12 Fluid: Life Beyond the Binary

    • March 28, 2024
    • CBC

    Popular nonbinary Canadian comedian and TV sitcom creator Mae Martin explores the science of gender and sexual fluidity.

  • S63E13 Secrets of the Jurassic Dinosaurs

    • April 4, 2024
    • CBC

  • S63E14 Lost World of the Hanging Gardens

    • April 11, 2024
    • CBC

    ISIS destroyed thousands of ancient artefacts and buildings in Mosul. Now, archeologists are making incredible discoveries in the wreckage.

Additional Specials

  • SPECIAL 0x2 Galapagos: The Islands

    • September 11, 1966
    • CBC

    A survey of the animal and plant life of the Galapagos archipelago including: a look at the geological origins of the islands, their geography and climate; and an explanation of the generally accepted theory of how these volcanic islands, owned by Ecuador, first became populated by plants and animals.

  • SPECIAL 0x3 Galapagos: New Beings

    • September 18, 1966
    • CBC

    An exploration of the scientific phenomenon known as "adaptive radiation", the way in which a small founding group of a plant or animal species can give rise to a number of new species, and the way in which a new environment encourages this proliferation - Darwin's "natural selection" in action. Oceanic islands are the best places to see the process at work, and the Galapagos provide the best of all demonstrations. The program looks at the many forms of animal and plant life in the islands, with particular attention to the evolution of the species unique to them.

  • SPECIAL 0x4 Galapagos: Ways of Survival

    • September 25, 1966
    • CBC

    Apart from their external appearance, animals go through behavioural and physiological changes to adapt themselves to different environments: for example, acquiring the ability to drink salt water. Galapagos examples seen in this program include sea lions, sea birds and the marine iguana, a cold-blooded reptile which has adapted itself to endure the cold waters of the sub-Antarctic Humboldt current.

  • SPECIAL 0x5 Galapagos: Living Laboratory

    • October 2, 1966
    • CBC

    This final program in the series looks at some of the endangered species in the Galapagos islands, and at the impact of human settlement on the native creatures. The Galapagos are a living laboratory of incalculable value for the study of evolution.

  • SPECIAL 0x6 Audubon

    • March 18, 1969
    • CBC

    A study of the life and work of Jean Jacques Audubon, the great painter-naturalist who captured the beauty of American wildlife on canvas.

  • SPECIAL 0x7 The Cree of Paint Hills

    • March 24, 1974
    • CBC

    A special documentary of the Cree inhabitants of Paint Hills, on the eastern shore of James Bay in Quebec.

  • SPECIAL 0x8 The Mendi

    • October 8, 1974
    • CBC

    It was not until 1930 that the outside world knew that there were people living in the highlands of Papua, New Guinea. In 1950 the first contact was made with a group of 55,000 Mendi, part of a million inhabitants of the New Guinea highlands, formerly not known to exist. The Australians have since built an airstrip, a hospital, schools, a hotel and other permanent buildings there, but the Mendi have kept their culture intact. A CBC film crew directed by Nancy Archibald has recorded some of the ancient culture and lifestyle of the Mendi and the results are presented in this special one-hour documentary.

  • SPECIAL 0x9 The Arctic Islands: A Matter of Time

    • March 14, 1976
    • CBC

    A special about concern for the ecological future of the Arctic islands.

  • SPECIAL 0x10 The Vietnamese People's Struggle

    • November 28, 1990
    • CBC

    The Vietnamese people's struggle to rehabilitate their land after a decade of bombing and herbicides.

  • SPECIAL 0x11 Voices in the Forest

    • February 3, 1991
    • CBC

    David Suzuki and The Nature of Things take on the powerful forest industry, examining environmentally questionable forestry practices.

  • SPECIAL 0x12 James Bay: The Wind that Keeps on Blowing

    • March 24, 1991
    • CBC

  • SPECIAL 0x13 Dealing with Drugs

    • November 24, 1992
    • CBC

    Documentary about drug problems in Toronto, Amsterdam , Liverpool and New York.

  • SPECIAL 0x14 Wild Australasia: (1) Wild Australasia

    • July 4, 2004
    • CBC

    This first program of the series is a sweeping introduction to the natural wonders of Australia and reveals why its natural history has become so distinctive and strange.

  • SPECIAL 0x15 Wild Australasia: (2) Desert Heart

    • July 11, 2004
    • CBC

    Australia is the driest inhabited continent on earth, but its huge desert centre is no barren wasteland - it's full of stunning landscapes and surprising wildlife.

  • SPECIAL 0x16 Wild Australasia: (3) Southern Seas

    • July 18, 2004
    • CBC

    The seas Down Under stretch from the dazzling topics to the wild, southern ocean and are full of surprises.

  • SPECIAL 0x17 Wild Australasia: (4) Gum Tree Country

    • July 25, 2004
    • CBC

    "The Bush" is the classic Australian landscape - and these weird and magical gum tree woodlands are home to the most famous Aussie animals.

  • SPECIAL 0x18 Wild Australasia: (5) Island Arks

    • August 1, 2004
    • CBC

    The seas Down Under contain a string of exotic islands, from tropical New Guinea to icy New Zealand, each with its own stunning landscapes and unique wildlife.

  • SPECIAL 0x19 Wild Australasia: (6) New World

    • August 8, 2004
    • CBC

    Australia is famously full of the weirdest animals, living undisturbed for almost 50 million years. But they are no longer alone here: people have also come to live in this land.

  • SPECIAL 0x20 Dope: Scientists and Sleuths Battle for the Soul of Sport

    • August 10, 2004
    • CBC

    Drug detection experts are determined to ensure Athens Olympics 2004 is run clean, by probing to expose drug-designing chemists, dealers, crooked coaches and athletes who are prepared to do anything to win.

  • SPECIAL 0x21 Passion & Fury: The Emotional Brain - Anger

    • March 22, 2005
    • CBC

    Uncover the startling discoveries researchers make when they scan the brains of sociopaths and learn about the scientific studies that may answer the question: does biology dictate destiny? See how these studies are being put to use in helping young people cope with anger at an early age.

  • SPECIAL 0x22 Passion & Fury: The Emotional Brain - Love

    • March 29, 2005
    • CBC

    Anthropologists dissect this emotion to its core: lust, romantic love and attachment. How we are aroused is explored: smell and tone of voice play into attraction and compatibility. Peel back the layers of the most profound expression of our humanity.

  • SPECIAL 0x23 Passion & Fury: The Emotional Brain - Fear

    • May 11, 2005
    • CBC

    What triggers fear, our physiological reactions, and what purpose it serves are studied. Scientists investigate how our brain assesses the need for fight or flight.

  • SPECIAL 0x24 Passion & Fury: The Emotional Brain - Happiness

    • May 18, 2005
    • CBC

    Drawing a distinction between the lasting state of happiness and the pursuit of instant pleasure, the program explores the evolutionary role of happiness, and asks what happens in the brain, and possibly in our genes, that make some people happy and others sad.

  • SPECIAL 0x25 Stephen Lewis: The Man Who Couldn't Sleep

    • December 6, 2006
    • CBC

    Stephen Lewis criss-crosses Africa in a relentless effort to motivate response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic there.

  • SPECIAL 0x26 Wild Caribbean: Hurricane Hell

    • June 10, 2007
    • CBC

    Every year the Caribbean paradise is turned into a hurricane hell. From the beginning of June until the end of November its hurricane season in the islands. With winds of over 150 mph, 5 metre storm surges and torrential rain, the destruction caused by hurricanes makes them one of the most feared forces of nature.

  • SPECIAL 0x27 Build Green

    • June 17, 2007
    • CBC

    In a refreshing hour, Build Green advises making the sun, the wind, and the rain – along with dirt, straw, and sewage – your friends. By building a house using innovative practices and materials, you'll be doing the earth a favour too.

  • SPECIAL 0x28 Wild Caribbean: Reefs and Wrecks

    • June 24, 2007
    • CBC

    The clear blue waters that surround the Caribbean islands are home to some of the world's most stunning underwater treasures. Coral reefs form beautiful underwater gardens visited by angels, horse eye jacks, blue tangs and stingrays.

  • SPECIAL 0x29 Wild Caribbean: Treasure Island

    • July 22, 2007
    • CBC

    Take the island hop of your life. Discover the rich variety of islands that are the Caribbean, and what forces have shaped this violent paradise.

  • SPECIAL 0x30 Wild Caribbean: Secret Shores

    • July 29, 2007
    • CBC

    The Caribbean is not just the islands. We explore the least known Caribbean, that area beyond the Sea. A journey along the greatest Caribbean shoreline of all, that of Central America.

  • SPECIAL 0x31 Cuttlefish, the brainy bunch

    • August 12, 2007
    • CBC

    Imagine an alien with three hearts, blue blood and a doughnut shaped brain. In an instant it could become invisible, or switch on electrifying light shows. Then imagine this bizarre creature was real, and somehow connected to us.

  • SPECIAL 0x32 Mystery of the Giant Sloths Cave

    • August 19, 2007
    • CBC

    Today's sloths rank highly among the most surprising creatures of the animal kingdom: living suspended to the Amazon rainforest's trees, they move about extremely slowly, as if from a world where time flows differently.

  • SPECIAL 0x33 Geologic Journey: (1) The Great Lakes

    • September 9, 2007
    • CBC

    Discover the roots of a long vanished mountain range, explore the remains of an inland tropical sea and trace the story of a dramatic flood.

  • SPECIAL 0x34 Geologic Journey: (2) The Rockies

    • September 16, 2007
    • CBC

    Geologic Journey: The Rockies tells the story of the great spine of stone that runs from the Canadian North to the southern United States. As the camera takes the audience on a highwire tour through the peaks of the Rockies – in both Canada and the USA – craggy rock faces and dangerous ice reveal the growth pangs of the mountain building era. The pristine beauty of the Canadian Rockies gives way to the ghost towns and gold mines that litter the mountains in Colorado – a telltale clue to the different geologic forces at work in the Canadian range and their American cousins. This episode is an illustration of how nothing ever stays the same, not even the Rockies. Despite the appearance of timelessness and permanence, geologists are discovering how these rocks will meet their end – a sobering perspective on time, place and the enormity of the earth’s Geologic Journey.

  • SPECIAL 0x35 Geologic Journey: (3) The Canadian Shield

    • September 23, 2007
    • CBC

    The largest - and one of the oldest - expanses of ancient rock on the planet has riches of gold and diamonds under it's crust.

  • SPECIAL 0x36 Geologic Journey: (4) The Appalachians

    • September 30, 2007
    • CBC

    The fabled Appalachian Mountains contain a geologic puzzle, a rich legacy, and a scarcely known threat.

  • SPECIAL 0x37 Geologic Journey: (5) The Atlantic Coast

    • October 7, 2007
    • CBC

    The dramatic story of volcanic outpourings, massive rifting of continents and the bursting forth of a new ocean - the Atlantic.