NOVA — Season 38
NOVA·Season 38·2010·18 episodes

Season 38

NOVA
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19
Oct2010
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Season 38

18 episodes

  • Building the Great Cathedrals
    S38·E1

    Building the Great Cathedrals

    October 19, 2010 · 55 min

    Take a dazzling architectural journey inside those majestic marvels of Gothic architecture, the great cathedrals of Chartres, Beauvais and other European cities. Carved from 100 million pounds of stone, some cathedrals now teeter on the brink of catastrophic collapse. To save them, a team of engineers, architects, art historians, and computer scientists searches the naves, bays, and bell-towers for clues. NOVA investigates the architectural secrets that the cathedral builders used to erect their towering, glass-filled walls and reveals the hidden formulas drawn from the Bible that drove medieval builders ever upward.

  • Emergency Mine Rescue
    S38·E2

    Emergency Mine Rescue

    October 26, 2010 · 55 min

    This one-hour film chronicles the fate of the 33 miners trapped in a collapsed Chilean gold and copper mine in August 2010 and investigates the many challenges faced by both the miners and those working around the clock to bring them safely to the surface. NOVA was on-site at the San José mine in Chile by early September. Conferred special access, NOVA's film crew interviewed engineers, NASA experts, medical personnel, and key figures from the companies that provided drills and crucial rescue equipment to give a more detailed scientific account of the unfolding events. The resulting film, using footage from the scene as well as advanced animation, showcases the extraordinary feats of engineering as well as the biological and geological factors inherent in the rescue. "Emergency Mine Rescue" also examines the psychological and physiological impact of this kind of prolonged ordeal on the miners and those involved in the rescue efforts.

  • Trapped in an Elevator
    S38·E3

    Trapped in an Elevator

    November 2, 2010 · 55 min

    A documentary examining the ubiquitous transportation device as used in modern day and features a recounting of a real-life horror story of one individual's experiences when stuck in an elevator for an extraordinarily long period of time.

  • Dogs Decoded
    S38·E4

    Dogs Decoded

    November 9, 2010 · 55 min

    "Dogs Decoded" reveals the science behind the remarkable bond between humans and their dogs and investigates new discoveries in genetics that are illuminating the origin of dogs—with surprising implications for the evolution of human culture. Other research is proving what dog lovers have suspected all along: Dogs have an uncanny ability to read and respond to human emotions. Humans, in turn, respond to dogs with the same hormone responsible for bonding mothers to their babies. How did this incredible relationship between humans and dogs come to be? And how can dogs, so closely related to fearsome wild wolves, behave so differently?

  • Secrets of Stonehenge
    S38·E5

    Secrets of Stonehenge

    November 16, 2010 · 55 min

    Dated to the late Stone Age, Stonehenge may be the best-known and most mysterious relic of prehistory. Every year, a million visitors are drawn to England to gaze upon the famous circle of stones, but the monument's meaning has continued to elude us. Now investigations inside and around Stonehenge have kicked off a dramatic new era of discovery and debate over who built Stonehenge and for what purpose. How did prehistoric people quarry, transport, sculpt, and erect these giant stones? Granted exclusive access to the dig site at Bluestonehenge, a prehistoric stone-circle monument recently discovered about a mile from Stonehenge, NOVA cameras join a new generation of researchers finding important clues to this enduring mystery.

  • Quest for Solomon's Mines
    S38·E6

    Quest for Solomon's Mines

    November 23, 2010 · 55 min

    Countless treasure-seekers have set off in search of King Solomon's mines, trekking through burning deserts and scaling the forbidding mountains of Africa and the Levant, inspired by the Bible's account of splendid temples and palaces adorned in glittering gold and copper. Yet to date, the evidence that has claimed to support the existence of Solomon and other early kings in the Bible has been highly controversial. In fact, so little physical evidence of the kings who ruled Israel and Edom has been found that many contend that they are no more real than King Arthur. In the summer of 2010, NOVA and National Geographic embarked on two cutting-edge field investigations that illuminate the legend of Solomon and reveal the source of the great wealth that powered the first mighty biblical kingdoms. These groundbreaking expeditions expose important new clues buried in the pockmarked desert of Jordan, including ancient remnants of an industrial-scale copper mine and a 3,000-year-old message with the words "slave," "king," and "judge."

  • Secrets Beneath the Ice
    S38·E7

    Secrets Beneath the Ice

    December 28, 2010 · 55 min

    Almost three miles of ice buries most of Antarctica, cloaking a continent half again as large as the United States. But when an Antarctic ice shelf the size of Manhattan collapsed in less than a month in 2002, it shocked scientists and raised the alarming possibility that Antarctica may be headed for a meltdown. Even a ten percent loss of Antarctica's ice would cause catastrophic flooding of coastal cities unlike any seen before in human history. What are the chances of a widespread melt? "Secrets Beneath the Ice" explores whether Antarctica's climate past can offer clues to what may happen. NOVA follows a state-of-the-art expedition that is drilling three-quarters of a mile into the Antarctic seafloor. The drill is recovering rock cores that reveal intimate details of climate and fauna from a time in the distant past when the Earth was just a few degrees warmer than it is today. As researchers grapple with the harshest conditions on the planet, they discover astonishing new clues about Antarctica's past—clues that carry ominous implications for coastal cities around the globe.

  • Deadliest Earthquakes
    S38·E8

    Deadliest Earthquakes

    January 11, 2011 · 55 min

    In 2010, several epic earthquakes delivered one of the worst annual death tolls ever recorded. The deadliest strike, in Haiti, killed more than 200,000 people and reduced homes, hospitals, schools, and the presidential palace to rubble. In exclusive coverage, a NOVA camera crew follows a team of U.S. geologists as they enter Haiti in the immediate aftermath of the tragedy. The team hunts for crucial evidence that will help them determine exactly what happened deep underground and what the risks are of a new killer quake. Barely a month after the Haiti quake, Chile was struck by a quake 100 times more powerful, unleashing a tsunami that put the entire Pacific coast on high alert. In a coastal town devastated by the rushing wave, NOVA follows a team of geologists as they battle aftershocks to measure the displacement caused by the earthquake. Could their work, and the work of geologists at earthquake hot spots around the U.S., one day lead to a breakthrough in predicting quakes before they happen? NOVA investigates compelling new leads in this profound scientific conundrum.

  • Making Stuff: Stronger
    S38·E9

    Making Stuff: Stronger

    January 19, 2011 · 55 min

    What is the strongest material in the world? Is it steel, Kevlar, carbon nanotubes, or something entirely new? NOVA kicks off the four-part series "Making Stuff" with a quest for the world's strongest substances. Host David Pogue takes a look at what defines strength, examining everything from steel cables to mollusks to a toucan's beak. Pogue travels from the deck of a U.S. naval aircraft carrier to a demolition derby to the country's top research labs to check in with experts who are re-engineering what nature has given us to create the next generation of strong stuff.

  • Making Stuff: Smaller
    S38·E10

    Making Stuff: Smaller

    January 26, 2011 · 55 min

    How small can we go? Could we one day have robots taking "fantastic voyages" in our bodies to kill rogue cells? The triumphs of tiny are seen all around us in the Information Age: transistors, microchips, laptops, cell phones. Now, David Pogue takes NOVA viewers to an even smaller world in "Making Stuff: Smaller," examining the latest in high-powered nano-circuits and micro-robots that may one day hold the key to saving lives.

  • Making Stuff: Cleaner
    S38·E11

    Making Stuff: Cleaner

    February 2, 2011 · 55 min

    Can innovations in materials science help clean up our world? In "Making Stuff: Cleaner," David Pogue explores the rapidly developing science and business of clean energy and examines alternative ways to generate it, store it, and distribute it. Is hydrogen the way to go? What about lithium batteries? Does this solve an energy problem or create a new dependency? Pogue investigates the latest developments in bio-based fuels and in harnessing solar energy for our cars, homes, and industry in a program full of the stuff of a sustainable future.

  • Making Stuff: Smarter
    S38·E12

    Making Stuff: Smarter

    February 9, 2011 · 55 min

    "Making Stuff: Smarter" looks at materials that respond to their environments and even learn, such as an airplane wing that changes shape as it flies. Scientists are turning to nature in developing such "smart" stuff. Sharkskin, for instance, has inspired a substance that, when sprayed in hospitals, could eliminate antibiotic-resistant bacteria. David Pogue visits a scientist who has even created a material that can render objects invisible. "Smarter" concludes with a vision of the ultimate in "life-like" stuff: programmable matter that could create a duplicate of a human being.

  • Smartest Machine on Earth
    S38·E13

    Smartest Machine on Earth

    February 9, 2011 · 55 min

    Augmenting human intelligence is a lot tougher than it looks, and the promise of "Hal" from 2001: A Space Odyssey is still just a fantasy. But scientists are edging closer with machines like "Watson," an IBM computing system that is gearing up for a first-of-its-kind challenge: taking on human contestants on the game show Jeopardy! With a brain the size of 2,400 home computers and a database of about 10 million documents, will Watson be able to compute its way to victory? Given the complexity of human language, could any computer truly understand it? It remains to be seen if this amalgam of circuits and silicon can really take us closer to the dream of a fully developed artificial intelligence, a truly "conscious" machine. Win or lose, the difficulty of mimicking the human thought process with software is showing artificial-intelligence researchers that there's more than one way to be "intelligent."

  • Crash of Flight 447
    S38·E14

    Crash of Flight 447

    February 16, 2011 · 55 min

    On June 1, 2009, Flight AF447, an Air France Airbus A330 flying from Rio de Janeiro to Paris, disappeared over the Atlantic Ocean with the loss of all 228 lives. How could a state-of-the-art airliner with elaborate electronic safety and navigation features and a faultless safety record simply fall out of the sky? NOVA assembles a team of seasoned pilots, engineers, and safety experts to examine the evidence that emerged in the weeks following this horrific disaster. What led Flight 447's crew to fly straight into a towering thunderstorm? With expert testimony, satellite weather images, and messages transmitted by the doomed plane's computer system, NOVA pieces together the fatal chain of events.

  • Venom: Nature's Killer
    S38·E15

    Venom: Nature's Killer

    February 23, 2011 · 55 min

    Over the millennia, thousands of creatures have developed that most sophisticated of biological and chemical weapons: venom. These complex chemicals can scramble your brain signals, paralyze your muscles, puncture your blood cells, even begin digesting you from within. But nature's most potent toxins might also contain the keys to a new generation of advanced drugs. Such drugs might help doctors treat heart attacks, cancer, diabetes, and other serious illnesses. Follow NOVA crews as they join scientists on a dangerous quest to track down and capture the world's most venomous animals - to find out both how they can kill us, and how they can save us.

  • Japan's Killer Quake
    S38·E16

    Japan's Killer Quake

    March 30, 2011 · 55 min

    In its worst crisis since World War II, Japan faces disaster on an epic scale: a death toll likely in the tens of thousands, massive destruction of homes and businesses, shortages of water and power, and the specter of nuclear meltdown. With exclusive footage, NOVA captures the unfolding human drama and offers a clear-headed investigation of what triggered the earthquake, tsunami, and subsequent nuclear crisis. Can science and technology ever prevent devastation in the face of overwhelmingly powerful forces of nature?

  • Power Surge
    S38·E17

    Power Surge

    April 20, 2011 · 55 min

    Can emerging technology defeat global warming? The United States has invested tens of billions of dollars in clean energy projects as our leaders try to save our crumbling economy and our poisoned planet in one bold, green stroke. Are we finally on the brink of a green-energy "power surge," or is it all a case of too little, too late? From solar panel factories in China to a carbon capture-and-storage facility in the Sahara desert to massive wind and solar installations in the United States, NOVA travels the globe to reveal the surprising technologies that just might turn back the clock on climate change. NOVA will focus on the latest and greatest innovations, including everything from artificial trees to green reboots of familiar technologies like coal and nuclear energy. Can our technology, which helped create this problem, now solve it?

  • How Smart Are Animals?
    S38·E18

    How Smart Are Animals?

    February 9, 2011 · 55 min

    Would you care to match wits with a dog, an octopus, a dolphin, or a parrot? You may think twice after watching the segments in this NOVA scienceNOW episode. While we may not be ready to send pets to Harvard, the remarkable footage and findings presented here demonstrate that many animal species are much smarter than we assume and in ways we had never imagined.

All seasons

53 seasons

Cast

Starring

Michael Bicks
crew
Daniel McCabe
crew
Mikael Agaton
crew
David Murdock
crew
Naomi Austin
crew
Miles O'Brien
crew
Stephen Sweigart
crew
Peter Jones
crew
Joseph Seamans
crew
Terri Randall
crew
Thomas Lucas
crew
Scott Tiffany
crew
C. Scott Willis
crew
Leslie Woodhead
Leslie Woodhead
crew
Nick Davidson
crew
Louise Lockwood
Louise Lockwood
crew
Marco Visalberghi
Marco Visalberghi
crew
David Sington
crew
Jonathan Challis
crew
Malcolm Clark
crew
Gisela Kaufmann
Gisela Kaufmann
crew
Gwyn Williams
crew
John Rubin
crew
Peter Yost
crew
John Hayes Fisher
crew
Nathan Williams
crew
Carl Charlson
crew
Nancy Linde
crew
Alice Harper
crew
Jeremy Llewellyn-Jones
crew
Jon Palfreman
crew
Peter Chinn
crew
Gary Johnstone
crew
Robert Zalisk
crew
Paul Olding
crew
Nick Clarke Powell
crew
David Axelrod
crew
Matthew Barrett
crew
Ben Fox
crew
David McNab
crew
Jerome Raynaud
crew
David Espar
crew
Jacinth O'Donnell
crew
Andrew Thompson
crew
David Lebrun
crew
Edward Hart
Edward Hart
crew
Annámaria Tálas
crew
Adam English
crew
Thomas Levenson
crew
Richard Burke-Ward
crew
Tom Stubberfield
crew
Mark Radice
crew
Celia Lowenstein
crew
Kate Bartlett
crew
Andrew Thompson
crew
Graham Judd
crew
Dan Child
crew
Chris Durlacher
crew
Garfield Kennedy
crew
Ricardo Preve
Ricardo Preve
crew
James Brundige
crew
Marti Louw
crew
Marian Marzynski
crew
Jo Locke
crew
Louise Osmond
crew
Rick King
crew
Hugh Thomson
crew
Adam Geiger
crew
Robert Strange
crew
Christopher 'Toby' McLeod
crew
Carolyn Bertram
crew
Wolfgang Thaler
crew
Elizabeth Arledge
crew
Oscar Chan
crew
Ben Wilson
crew
Anna Lee Strachan
crew
David Huntley
crew
Kate Dart
crew
Jackie Mow
Jackie Mow
crew
Brando Quilici
Brando Quilici
crew
Sean Varley
crew
Stéphane Bégoin
crew
Clay Bryce
crew
John Aitchison
crew
Tom Cook
crew
Owen Palmquist
crew
David Alvarado
crew
Peter Oxley
crew
Nigel Paterson
Nigel Paterson
crew
Llewellyn M. Smith
crew
Dick Bower
crew
Emily Roe
crew
Thierry Ragobert
crew
David Conover
crew
Nancy Porter
crew
Jonathan Dent
crew
Antoine de Maximy
Antoine de Maximy
crew
Tug Yourgrau
crew
Bonnie Brennan
crew
Chantal Hébert
crew
Jonathan Grupper
crew
Jill Shinefield
crew
Adrian Pennink
crew
Adam Bolt
crew
David Shadrack Smith
crew
Alex Williams
Alex Williams
crew
Gianfranco Pannone
crew
Charles Coville
crew
Chris Hale
crew
Sabin Streeter
crew
Ben Shackleford
crew
Harvey Lilley
crew
Susannah Ward
crew
Steven Latham
crew
David Chmura
crew
Randall MacLowry
crew
Lara Acaster
crew
Noel Dockstader
Noel Dockstader
crew
Andy Awes
crew
Simon Nasht
crew
Dimitri Doganis
crew
James Tovell
crew
Peter Bate
crew
Andreas Sawall
crew
Kenny Scott
crew
Andrew Cohen
Andrew Cohen
crew
Joel Olicker
crew
Ellen Giffard
Ellen Giffard
crew
Jemima Harrison
crew
Bella Falk
crew
Shinichi Murata
crew
Tetsuji Miyagawa
crew
Henry Chancellor
crew
Kelly Tyler
crew
Eleanor Grant
crew
Bill Jersey
crew
David Belton
crew
John Bradshaw
crew
Stephen Lyons
crew
Graham Russell
crew
Scott Willis
crew
Caroline Penry-Davey
crew
Alan Govenar
crew
Nick Evans
crew
Larkin McPhee
crew
Martin O'Collins
crew
Talya Tibbon
Talya Tibbon
crew
Simon Nashi
crew
Ben Finney
crew
Lisa Q. Wolfinger
crew
Michael Jorgensen
crew
David Borenstein
David Borenstein
crew
Stuart Scowcroft
crew
Amy Bucher
crew
Noel Buckner
crew
Tetsunori Kikuchi
crew
Brian Breger
crew
Serena Davies
crew
Daniel McCabe
crew
Peter Williams
crew
Jon Eastman
crew
Katie Bauer
crew
Gilles Cayatte
crew
Jason Sussberg
crew
Muffie Meyer
Muffie Meyer
crew
Miles Barton
crew
Tim Dunn
crew
Gary Hochman
crew
Jamie Lochhead
crew
Nic Young
crew
Peter Nicholson
Peter Nicholson
crew
Leif Kaldor
crew
Joby Lubman
crew
Michael Schwarz
crew
Iain Riddick
crew
Christopher Rawlence
crew
Chris Oxley
crew
Alan Ritsko
crew
Mike Beckham
crew
Josh Rosen
crew
Ingo Helbig
crew
Paul Reddish
crew
James Barrat
crew
Amir Amirani
crew
Callum Macrae
Callum Macrae
crew
Steve Greenwood
crew
Rob Whittlesey
crew
Mary Olive Smith
crew
Herbert Habersack
crew
Nick de Pencier
crew
Liz Tucker
crew
Sarah Holt
crew
Kirk Wolfinger
crew
Michael Barnes
crew
Doug Hamilton
crew
Gary Glassman
crew
Liesl Clark
crew
Rushmore DeNooyer
Rushmore DeNooyer
crew
Larry Klein
crew
Graham Townsley
crew
Julia Cort
crew
Chris Schmidt
Chris Schmidt
crew
Ian Duncan
crew
Joseph McMaster
crew
Duncan Copp
crew
Mark Davis
Mark Davis
crew
David Dugan
crew
Richard Smith
Richard Smith
crew
Gail Willumsen
crew
Oliver Twinch
crew

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