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The Nature of Things

Season 58 2018 - 2019

  • 2018-09-24T00:00:00Z on CBC Television
  • 45m
  • 13h 30m (18 episodes)
  • Canada
  • English
  • Documentary
Hosted by the world-renowned geneticist and environmentalist, David Suzuki, every week presents stories that are driven by a scientific understanding of the world.

18 episodes

Season Premiere

2018-09-24T00:00:00Z

58x01 Equus: Story of the Horse — Origins

Season Premiere

58x01 Equus: Story of the Horse — Origins

  • 2018-09-24T00:00:00Z45m

A journey around the world and back in time, to discover why horses and humans make perfect partners.

Travel back to the moment humans tamed the horse, and learn how horsepower made history.

How did humans save the wild horse from extinction? And how did we create over 400 specialized breeds today?

From Volcanoes to Earthquakes, Scientists Reveal How Much Earth Changes in a Single Day

2018-10-22T00:00:00Z

58x05 The Real T.rex

58x05 The Real T.rex

  • 2018-10-22T00:00:00Z45m

Join an investigative journey around the world to uncover the mysteries of the most famous dinosaur super-predator: the Tyrannosaurus Rex.

2018-10-29T00:00:00Z

58x06 The Memory Mirage

58x06 The Memory Mirage

  • 2018-10-29T00:00:00Z45m

Can we trust what we remember about our own lives? Memory scientists say most memories are full of distortions and errors.

2018-11-05T01:00:00Z

58x07 Spying on Animals

58x07 Spying on Animals

  • 2018-11-05T01:00:00Z45m

Remote cameras let us bear witness to animal behaviour anywhere, anytime.

2018-11-12T01:00:00Z

58x08 The Genetic Revolution

58x08 The Genetic Revolution

  • 2018-11-12T01:00:00Z45m

Exploring the exciting, rapidly evolving world of genetic engineering.

2018-12-03T01:00:00Z

58x09 Stay-at-Home Animal Dads

58x09 Stay-at-Home Animal Dads

  • 2018-12-03T01:00:00Z45m

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.

2018-12-31T01:00:00Z

58x10 Food for Thought

58x10 Food for Thought

  • 2018-12-31T01:00:00Z45m

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.

Season Finale

2019-01-14T01:00:00Z

58x11 The Wonder of the Northern Lights

Season Finale

58x11 The Wonder of the Northern Lights

  • 2019-01-14T01:00:00Z45m

David meets with scientists who are unraveling the mysteries of the northern lights.

2019-01-21T01:00:00Z

58x12 The Power of Play

58x12 The Power of Play

  • 2019-01-21T01:00:00Z45m

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.

2019-01-28T01:00:00Z

58x13 The Nature of Invention

58x13 The Nature of Invention

  • 2019-01-28T01:00:00Z45m

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.

2019-02-18T01:00:00Z

58x14 Something in the Air

58x14 Something in the Air

  • 2019-02-18T01:00:00Z45m

2019-03-04T01:00:00Z

58x15 Laughing and Crying

58x15 Laughing and Crying

  • 2019-03-04T01:00:00Z45m

David explores the soundtrack to life.

2019-03-11T00:00:00Z

58x16 Ageing in the Wild

58x16 Ageing in the Wild

  • 2019-03-11T00:00:00Z45m

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.

2019-03-18T00:00:00Z

58x17 Turtle Beach

58x17 Turtle Beach

  • 2019-03-18T00:00:00Z45m

Scientists explore the extraordinary mass nesting behaviour of the olive ridley sea turtle, and reveal the hidden world inside a turtle nest.

2019-04-08T00:00:00Z

58x18 Remarkable Rabbits

58x18 Remarkable Rabbits

  • 2019-04-08T00:00:00Z45m

David learns about rabbits and hares.

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