Horizon

All Episodes 1964 - 2022
TV-PG

  • 2018-01-11T21:00:00Zs at 2018-01-11T21:00:00Z on BBC Two
  • 1964-02-04T21:00:00Z
  • 1h
  • 49d 13h 36m (1,190 episodes)
  • United Kingdom
  • English
  • Documentary
Horizon tells amazing science stories, unravels mysteries and reveals worlds you've never seen before.

1314 episodes

It is Christmas Day in the house of Hastings. The time (the 1830s), the place (a suburban Victorian home), and the atmosphere (after the pudding with the children waiting to be entertained) are ripe for father to stun his audience with his knowledge of the world of natural philosophy. It is a world of exploding biscuit tins, unpredictable hard-boiled eggs, singing drainpipes, and enough amateur science to make young enthusiasts reach for their bunsen burners, and mothers for their smelling salts.

In this special episode, Horizon reports on Erich von Däniken and his theories about astronauts visiting Earth long ago.

1980-01-28T21:00:00Z

Special 3 The Mind's Eye

Special 3 The Mind's Eye

  • 1980-01-28T21:00:00Z1h

This special episode of Horizon shows the latest advances in research into how the visual eyesight system of humans and animals work.

1982-12-25T21:00:00Z

Special 4 25 Years in Space

Special 4 25 Years in Space

  • 1982-12-25T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon special episode recalls the highlights of the past 25 years of the space age.

In the first part of this special two-part series, Horizon reports on the yellow rain problem in South-east Asia.

1984-07-21T20:00:00Z

Special 6 Beyond the Moon

Special 6 Beyond the Moon

  • 1984-07-21T20:00:00Z1h

In this special episode, Horizon brings you a report on space exploration and exploitation. The first half of this episode looks back at the Apollo 11 moon landing, and second the second half looks at the future plans of the space program.

This is the second part, of a two-part special series. In this episode, Horizon looks at the history of germ warfare and the research still continuing today in military labs under deceptive name of defensive biology.

Horizon celebrates twenty one years of work, achievement, and awards with a birthday compilation of highlights from past episodes.

This report by Horizon looks into how the apparitions of Halley's comet came to be predicted so accurately.

Special on Halley's comet

This Horizon special follows the 20 months preparation of the five astronauts who are to man the American space shuttle Discovery launching on the 29th of September in 1988. This is the first shuttle flight since the Challenger disaster in January 1986.

This Horizon special explores the production and processes behind the scenes of the new five pound note to be launched on the 7the June, 1990, in Britain. It considers the design and production of money and the intricate techniques developed to prevent forgeries.

This Horizon special episode is part one of a three part series on the projects, cosmonauts, and engineers involved in the Soviet Union space program.

This Horizon special episode is part two of a three part series on the projects, cosmonauts, and engineers involved in the Soviet Union space program.

This Horizon special episode is the last part of a three part series on the projects, cosmonauts, and engineers involved in the Soviet Union space program. In this episode, two Soviet cosmonauts risk their lives earlier this year in a dangerous space walk to try and repair their stricken craft.

This Horizon special program explores what happened when the "Giotto" explorer spacecraft passed within 100 kilometres of Halley's Comet.

This documentary by Horizon reveals the disturbing discoveries made in over 40 inspections looking for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.

1992-10-12T20:00:00Z

Special 18 The Truth About Sex

Special 18 The Truth About Sex

  • 1992-10-12T20:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon brings you the results of a landmark survey about sex.

1993-10-31T21:00:00Z

Special 19 Assault on the Male

Special 19 Assault on the Male

  • 1993-10-31T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon special looks at the mysterious changes in wildlife that has been reported in the USA and that man's reproduction may also be adversely effected.

Horizon celebrates its 30th birthday by checking on some of the scientific predictions of last three decades.

1995-02-14T21:00:00Z

Special 21 Twice Born

Special 21 Twice Born

  • 1995-02-14T21:00:00Z1h

In this special episode, Horizon examines the use of foetal surgery for life saving operations.

First part of a two-part drama looking at the work and life of Albert Einstein. Mixes archival material with dramatised sequences. Looks at his turbulent private life and the six month period in which he worked out the size of atoms, the quantum theory of light and invented the Special Theory of Relativity.

1996-03-18T21:00:00Z

Special 23 Einstein: Fame

Special 23 Einstein: Fame

  • 1996-03-18T21:00:00Z1h

This is the second part of a two-part Horizon series on Albert Einstein looking at Einstein's life and work. This program deals with the break up of his first marriage, his second marriage to his cousin, and the completion of the General Theory of Relativity which replaced Newton's view on gravity.

First part of a two-part investigation into BSE. Looks into the scientific confusion and official bungling surrounding the problem, which allowed BSE to spread into the human population. Includes an interview with Sir Richard Southwood, Chairman of the first Government advisory committee, who reconsiders evidence they first weighed up in 1988.

This is part two of a two-part Horizon series on Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE), more commonly known as "mad cow" disease, and how it is transmitted to humans, becoming CJD (Creutzfeldt Jakob disease), how many people are at risk, and what the chances are of finding a cure.

An update on the earlier 1992 episode, and the continuing story of the Carbon 60 molecule.

Follows archeologist Natalya Polosmok as she journeys to the Altay Mountains in southern Siberia to search for traces of an ancient people known as the Pazyryk. * Polosmok and her team discover and unearth a wooden tomb surrounded by the frozen remains of six horses, uncovering a 2,400-year-old woman dubbed the Siberian Ice Maiden. * The Ice Maiden is buried alone, lying as if asleep, in a wood coffin with a headdress and a mirror. An afterlife meal, a yak horn vessel and a wooden table are also found outside the coffin. Archeologists record the Ice Maiden's height, and discover a hole in her skull and peat packed in her body. *They use radiocarbon dating, tree-ring chronology and biological testing to determine the age of the remains and time of death. *The body is excavated and taken to Moscow for preservation and facial reconstruction. Another mummy, and other skeletons, are discovered elsewhere. *The program concludes by raising the question of who has rights to the ancient graves.

In this second part of the Ice Mummies trilogy, attention turns to Ötzi, the Neolithic man plucked with an ice pick and some not inconsiderable brute force from an Alpine glacier. Once again, as with the Ice Maiden, an impressive set of relationships are on display in the vicinity of the leathery character and his bedraggled belongings. By far the most important man in Ötzi's life is Konrad Spindler, whose chance identification of the age of the mummy upon its discovery catapulted him to stardom and a life of analysis and scientific monitoring. Spindler is fiercely defensive of Ötzi, like Frankenstein and his monster, although the relationship is much less emotional than Natalia and her Ice Maiden. A bewildering array of more minor characters emerge during the course of the film, my particular favourite being a yodeling mountain dweller, included as a representation of how Ötzi has effected the local population. All varieties of archaeological life appear in this film, from Professors zur Nedden and Seidler, whose double act hints at the Muppets Stadtler and Waldorf, to an extra from This is Spinal Tap, Hanspeter Schrattenthaler, whose bare chest and rock star poses suggest he dearly wishes his copper axe were a guitar. Also worthy of mention is the lovable Harm Paulsen, who lives and works in a reconstruction of a Neolithic village and whose lilting Danish tones express some of the more human elements of the sad demise of Ötzi, such as the family he may have left behind, providing a stark contrast to the strictly 'scientific' views of Spindler.

This is the bizarre and fascinating story of the remains of Inca culture, frozen for posterity high in the mountains of the Andes. Evidence has emerged of sacrifice to the mountain gods, whose existence dominated the civilization over 500 years ago. The film traces the frozen bodies of children uncovered by archaeologists in South America, and follows an archaeological expedition to a high-altitude sacred site in search of ritual remains and another body. How did they come to be there? Why did they go to their deaths willingly? What was the religious framework that dictated their sacrifice to fierce gods?

This is part one of a three-part Horizon special about the scientists and others who became explorers in the earth's final frontier, Antarctica.

This is part two of a three-part Horizon special about the scientists and others who became explorers in the earth's final frontier, Antarctica.

This is part three of a three-part Horizon special about the scientists and others who became explorers in the earth's final frontier, Antarctica.

1998-01-08T21:00:00Z

Special 34 Crash

Special 34 Crash

  • 1998-01-08T21:00:00Z1h

This programme traces the lessons learned from a century of road fatalities. How have car makers learnt to predict the injuries their designs will inflict, and how have doctors learnt to patch up the damage to the frail human body?

1998-03-29T20:00:00Z

Special 35 Darwin: The Legacy

Special 35 Darwin: The Legacy

  • 1998-03-29T20:00:00Z1h

1999-01-04T21:00:00Z

Special 36 Longitude

Special 36 Longitude

  • 1999-01-04T21:00:00Z1h

In this documentary special, Horizon explores how to solve the problem of sailors being unable to pin-point their exact east-west position on the globe.

Horizon presents a three-part series focusing on weight-gain, dieting, and eating disorders. In this episode, there is scientific proof that we are not always in control of our appetites and weight, and introduces the hormone called Leptin.

Horizon presents a three-part series focusing on weight-gain, dieting, and eating disorders. In this episode, Horizon examines the shift away from invasive dieting methods to more natural weight-loss strategies, based on products already present in the food we eat.

Horizon presents a three-part series focusing on weight-gain, dieting, and eating disorders. In this episode, Horizon looks at the eating disorders called Anorexia and Bulimia.

1999-10-28T20:00:00Z

Special 40 Atlantis Uncovered

Special 40 Atlantis Uncovered

  • 1999-10-28T20:00:00Z1h

This is part one of a two-part special Horizon series about Atlantis. In this episode, Horizon explores the mystery of whether Atlantis really did exist. Was there really, about 12,000 years ago, a fabulous city whose people had already evolved into a sophisticated civilization with culture and society, writing, astronomy, religion, monument-building, while everyone else was still living in the Stone Age?

1999-11-04T21:00:00Z

Special 41 Atlantis Reborn

Special 41 Atlantis Reborn

  • 1999-11-04T21:00:00Z1h

This is part two of a two-part special Horizon series about Atlantis. In this episode, Horizon puts Graham Hancock's controversial theories about the past to the test, dissecting his evidence for a lost civilization.

Will we find the magic formula that allows us to live forever in the 21st Century?

Ancient diseases we thought we had defeated are returning to haunt us, and plagues of new viruses and bacteria are now emerging.

Will we ever be able to hand-pick genes to manufacture our own tailor-made baby?

2000-06-10T20:00:00Z

Special 45 Inside the Internet

2001-01-11T21:00:00Z

Special 46 Life on Mars

Special 46 Life on Mars

  • 2001-01-11T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores how the search for Martians is hotting up.

2001-01-18T21:00:00Z

Special 47 Destination Mars

Special 47 Destination Mars

  • 2001-01-18T21:00:00Z1h

Tantalising new evidence has emerged that life could exist on Mars. But to find out for sure humans will have to journey to this dry, frozen planet.

In August 2000, the Russian submarine, the Kursk, sank with the loss of 118 lives. It was a tragedy which shocked the world. But to many the tragedy remains incomprehensible, for the Kursk had been built to be unsinkable. How could this submarine have foundered?

In this documentary, Horizon reports on a skeleton was found 50 years ago in Southern Italy. The bone structure suggests the owner was an ancient athlete.

A team of doctors conducts potentially life-saving experiments in Horizon's 'death zone' This two-part special follows a team of doctors conducting a series of groundbreaking experiments as they climb Everest, the world's highest peak. From their laboratory tents, pitched in -25&degC conditions, the experts use their own bodies for medical tests. They push themselves to the limit to better understand the human body's behaviour in a low-oxygen environment. The team hopes their work will lead to new, life-saving treatments for intensive care patients suffering from hypoxia, a shortage of oxygen in the body.

A team of doctors conducts potentially life-saving experiments in Horizon's 'death zone' This two-part special follows a team of doctors conducting a series of groundbreaking experiments as they climb Everest, the world's highest peak. From their laboratory tents, pitched in -25&degC conditions, the experts use their own bodies for medical tests. They push themselves to the limit to better understand the human body's behaviour in a low-oxygen environment. The team hopes their work will lead to new, life-saving treatments for intensive care patients suffering from hypoxia, a shortage of oxygen in the body.

Professor Jim Al Khalili delves into over 50 years of the BBC science archive to tell the story behind the emergence of one of the greatest theories of modern science, the Big Bang. The remarkable idea that our universe simply began from nothing has not always been accepted with the conviction it is today and, from fiercely disputed leftfield beginnings, took the best part of the 20th century to emerge as the triumphant explanation of how the universe began. Using curious horn-shaped antennas, U-2 spy planes, satellites and particle accelerators, scientists have slowly pieced together the cosmological jigsaw, and this documentary charts the overwhelming evidence for a universe created by a Big Bang.

First of a two-part special. Ten volunteers have come together for an extraordinary test. Five are 'normal' and the other five have been officially diagnosed as mentally ill. Horizon asks if you can tell who is who, and considers where the line between sanity and madness lies.

Second part of the special documentary considering where the line between sanity and madness lies as ten volunteers come together for an extraordinary test. With five 'normal' volunteers and five who have been officially diagnosed as mentally ill, Horizon asks if you can tell who is who.

Professor Brian Cox takes a look through nearly 50 years of BBC archive at the story of man's relationship with the Moon.

In the wake of the swine flu outbreak, virologist Dr Mike Leahy goesw back over 50 years of BBC archives to explore the history of pandemics: waves of infectious diseases caused by bacteria, viruses or parasites. Inspired primarily by the Horizon back catalogue, he works his way through the diseases that have been tackled head-on through the 20th Century: polio, malaria, smallpox, AIDS, and up to the present day with SARS and the H5N1 bird-flu virus. Each pandemic episode tells us something about the world and our place within it. In his trip through the ages and the archives, Dr Leahy charts science's ongoing battle with nature and questions which one is winning. He makes a reasonable fist of the exercise, but is somewhat up against it as his source material can be patchy - first triumphant about man's successes and then defeatist when the previous triumph didn't work out quite as planned, etc.

The intriguing possibility of life on Mars has fuelled man's quest to visit the Red Planet. Drawing on 45 years of Horizon archive, space expert Dr Kevin Fong presents a documentary on Earth's near neighbour. Man's extraordinary attempts to reach Mars have pushed technological boundaries past their limit and raised the tantalising prospect of establishing human colonies beyond our own planet. While the moon lies 240,000 miles away, Mars is at a distance of 50 million miles. Reaching the moon takes three days, but to land on Mars would take nearly eight months, and only two thirds of the missions to Mars have made it. The BBC has been there to analyse the highs and lows - including the ill-fated British attempt, the Beagle. Horizon has explored how scientists believe the only way to truly understand Mars is to send people there. If and when we do, it will be the most challenging trip humanity has ever undertaken.

In a Horizon special, naturalist Sir David Attenborough investigates whether the world is heading for a population crisis. In his lengthy career, Sir David has watched the human population more than double from 2.5 billion in 1950 to nearly seven billion. He reflects on the profound effects of this rapid growth, both on humans and the environment. While much of the projected growth in human population is likely to come from the developing world, it is the lifestyle enjoyed by many in the West that has the most impact on the planet. Some experts claim that in the UK consumers use as much as two and a half times their fair share of Earth's resources. Sir David examines whether it is the duty of individuals to commit not only to smaller families, but to change the way they live for the sake of humanity and planet Earth.

Dr Susan Jebb takes a look through nearly fifty years of amazing BBC archive of mankind's relationship with what we eat, charting the shift from the malnutrition of the past to today's obesity epidemic. This is the story of our attempt to control nature through the wholesale industrialisation of food production in our search for enough to eat, and the consequences of that massive shift in our diet on the shape of our bodies, and the diseases that kill us. From the BBC's original eccentric scientist Magnus Pyke comparing the virtues of artificial additives to a Beethoven sonata, to the tragic side effects of diet pills, Horizon and the BBC have covered it all. On her journey through the decades, Dr Jebb explores how scientists have played a crucial role both in transforming the way our food is produced, but also in attempting to understand the biological mechanisms that determine why it is that some of us have become so large.

As the Pope ends his visit to Britain, historian Dr Thomas Dixon delves into the BBC's archive to explore the troubled relationship between religion and science. From the creationists of America to the physicists of the Large Hadron Collider, he traces the expansion of scientific knowledge and asks whether there is still room for God in the modern world.

Dallas Campbell delves into the Horizon archive to discover how our understanding of intelligence has transformed over the last century. From early caveman thinkers to computers doing the thinking for us, he discovers the best ways of testing how clever we are - and enhancing it.

Professor Iain Stewart examines the powerful geological forces that unleashed the devastating Japanese earthquake, and explores how the release of this power of the planet brought Japan to the brink of a nuclear meltdown. He follows moment by moment how the earthquake was generated under the Pacific Ocean, travelled to the Japanese mainland, and the rare conditions that unleashed a tsunami. He also reveals the latest science behind earthquakes - from why we can't predict them, to what causes some of them to reach such power. Iain shows why our civilisation has developed such a dangerous relationship with earthquakes, and why millions of us continue to live in earthquake zones across the world.

In 2011, after more than 30 years of service, America's space shuttle will take to the skies for the last time. Its story has been characterised by incredible triumphs, but blighted by devastating tragedies - and the BBC and Horizon have chronicled every step of its career. This unique and poignant Horizon Guide brings together coverage from three decades of programmes to present a biography of the shuttle and to ask what its legacy will be. Will it be remembered as an impressive chapter in human space exploration, or as a fatally flawed white elephant?

Our understanding of the world around us is better now than ever before. But are we any closer to knowing how its all going to end? Dallas Campbell delves into the Horizon archive to discover how scientists have tried to predict an impending apocalypse - from natural disaster to killer disease to asteroid impact - and to ask: when Armageddon arrives, will science be able to save us?

Child psychologist Laverne Antrobus delves into the Horizon archive to find out how science has shaped our approach to parenting and education over the last fifty years. From lessons in motherly love to tough discipline to bribery tactics, she asks what's the best approach when it comes to bringing up children. Laverne also explores how extreme behaviour can sometimes be explained by underlying neurological problems and discovers whether children learn best in a more child-centred environment.

Dallas Campbell explores how mankind's understanding of dinosaurs has developed since the 1970s. He reveals how technological advances led to scientists revising their theories about how the creatures might have lived, as well as gaining new insights into the reasons for their extinction. The presenter also explores the genetic links between modern birds and the prehistoric lizards.

Horizon goes behind the scenes at CERN to follow one of the most epic and expensive scientific quests of all time: the search for the Higgs particle, believed to give mass to everything in our universe. However, the hunt for Higgs is part of a much grander search for how the universe works. It promises to help answer questions like why we exist and is a vital part of a Grand Unified Theory of nature. At the heart of the pursuit of the elusive particle is the same feature that makes snowflakes beautiful and human faces attractive: the simple and enchanting idea of symmetry.

Dallas Campbell looks back through the Horizon archives to find out what science can tell us about our best friend the dog, and whether new thinking should change the way we treat them. From investigating the domestic dog's wild wolf origins to discovering the remarkable impact that humans have had on canine evolution, Dallas explores why our bond with dogs is so strong and how we can best use that to manage them.

2012-04-03T20:00:00Z

Special 69 The Hunt for AI

Special 69 The Hunt for AI

  • 2012-04-03T20:00:00Z1h

Marcus Du Sautoy wants to find out how close we are to creating machines that can think like us: robots or computers that have artificial intelligence. His journey takes him to a strange and bizarre world where AI is now taking shape. Marcus meets two robots who are developing their own private language, and attempts to communicate to them. He discovers how a super computer beat humans at one of the toughest quiz shows on the planet, Jeopardy. And finds out if machines can have creativity and intuition like us. Marcus is worried that if machines can think like us, then he will be out of business. But his conclusion is that AI machines may surprise us with their own distinct way of thinking.

Engineer Jem Stansfield looks back through the Horizon archives to find out how scientists have come to understand and manipulate the materials that built the modern world. Whether it is uncovering new materials or finding fresh uses for those man has known about for centuries, each breakthrough offers a tantalising glimpse of the holy grail of materials science - a substance that is cheap to produce and has the potential to change the world. Jem explores how a series of extraordinary advances has done just that - from superconductors to the silicon revolution.

Kevin Fong looks back through 40 years of Horizon archives to explore what science has revealed about methods of perception. He discovers why babies use touch more than any other sense, how vision can easily be tricked, and the ways technological advancements are getting closer to being able to replace human faculties if they fail.

Is there any way to slow or even prevent the ravages of time? Veteran presenter Johnny Ball looks back over the 45 years that Horizon - and he - have been on air to find out what science has learned about how and why we grow old. Charting developments from macabre early claims of rejuvenation to the latest cutting-edge breakthroughs, Johnny discovers the sense of a personal mission that drives many scientists and asks whether we are really any closer to achieving the dream of immortality.

Horizon goes behind the scenes at NASA as they countdown to the landing of a 2.5 billion-dollar rover on the surface of Mars. In six days time, the nuclear-powered vehicle - the size of a car - will be winched down onto the surface of the Red Planet from a rocket-powered crane. That's if things go according to plan: Mars has become known as the Bermuda Triangle of space because so many missions there have ended in failure. The Curiosity mission is the most audacious - and expensive - attempt to answer the question: is there life on Mars?

Dallas Campbell looks back through almost 50 years of the Horizon archives to chart the scientific breakthroughs that have transformed our understanding of the universe. From Einstein's concept of spacetime to alien planets and extra dimensions, science has revealed a cosmos that is more bizarre and more spectacular than could have ever been imagined. But with every breakthrough, even more intriguing mysteries that lie beyond are found. This great journey of discovery is only just beginning.

On a bright, cold morning on 15th February 2013, a meteorite ripped across the skies above the Ural mountains in Russia, distintegrating into three pieces and exploding with the force of 20 Hiroshimas. It was a stark reminder that the Earth's journey through space is fraught with danger. A day later, another much larger 143,000-tonne asteroid passed within just 17,000 miles of the Earth. Presented by Professor Iain Stewart, this film explores what meteorites and asteroids are, where they come from, the danger they pose and the role they have played in Earth's history.

Transplant surgery has now reached incredible heights, from achieving full face transplants to growing organs in the lab. This Horizon Guide looks back at the extraordinary odds doctors and patients have had to overcome to achieve these amazing breakthroughs. What we now take for granted has been a hard won struggle, both for the patients who were willing to gamble their lives and the doctors who faced ethical and medical dilemmas in the name of progress. Michael Mosley looks through the Horizon archive, identifying the key turning points for transplant surgery to explore how far science can go in its bid to prolong life.

Liz Bonnin delves in to the world of invention, revealing the people and technologies set to transform all our lives. She examines the conditions that are promising to make the 21st century a golden age of innovation and meets some of the world's foremost visionaries, mavericks and dreamers.

Changes in the weather, pesticides, and even a virus have all all been blamed for the ongoing mass deaths of bees Bill Turnbull meets the scientists who are fitting minute radar transponders on to bees to try to find answers.

It was hoped that Comet ISON could be the brightest and most spectacular comet for a generation. After travelling towards the sun for ten thousand years, it appeared to have been disintegrated by the heat and tidal forces of the sun in early December 2013. But ISON's tail of vapourised gas and water, hundreds of millions of kilometres long, may give insights into some of the greatest mysteries of science.

To celebrate its 50th birthday, Horizon invites the public to play a role in tackling the greatest challenges facing science today. This special episode of Horizon launches the £10 million Longitude Prize 2014 - a prize developed by Nesta, with Technology Strategy Board as funding partner, to find solutions to a new scientific challenge.

Liz Bonnin presents a Horizon special about a rare and beautiful event in our solar system, one that we should all be able to see for ourselves - the transit of Venus across the face of the sun. It will start just before midnight of the 5th of June, and won't happen again for more than a century.

Comet ISON could well be the brightest and most spectacular comet for a generation. It should appear above the eastern horizon from December 2013 as a glorious streak across the sky. ISON has been travelling towards the sun for ten thousand years and will make only one orbit through its corona before disappearing off into the outer solar system. But as well as providing a great spectacle, ISON's tail of vapourised gas and water, hundreds of millions of kilometres long, will give insights into some of the greatest mysteries of science; it will help explain the origins of the solar system, whether earth's water was delivered on comets and even whether we are alone in the universe.

Playful pets, fearsome fighters or deadly hunters? Millions of us have cats in our homes, yet we know very little about them. In this series, Liz Bonnin joins forces with some of the world's top cat experts to conduct a groundbreaking scientific study. With GPS trackers and cat cameras, we follow 100 cats in three very different environments to find out what they get up to when they leave the cat flap. In the first programme we discover how our cats see, hear and smell the world with the senses of their wild ancestors, and why this could be making life difficult for them in the modern world.

The second episode of this unique scientific study reveals the wild side of pet cats. Using GPS trackers and cat cameras, they show how these felines transform from pampered pet to purring predator as soon as they leave the cat flap. Liz Bonnin and some of the world's top cat experts put Ozzy and Smudge under surveillance to find out who is king of the street and reveal why, no matter how hard we try, we can't keep our cats' hunting instincts under control.

In the final episode of this groundbreaking scientific study, Liz Bonnin and a team of scientists reveal the secret language of our cats, the surprising conversations they have when we are asleep, and why they meow to us but not each other. We rig a house with cameras and cat trackers to discover if four cats living under one roof all get on as well as we would like to think. And we find out why living alongside us is making life difficult for our 21st-century cats.

Instead of reaching for the latest fad diet, the best way to lose weight successfully is a personalised approach - diets tailored to your individual biology and psychology. In a groundbreaking national experiment, Dr Chris van Tulleken and Professor Tanya Byron join a team of leading experts to put 75 overweight volunteers on diets designed to tackle the specific reasons why they eat too much. The volunteers are put through a series of tests at a residential clinic to understand how their genes, hormones and psychology influence their eating behaviour. They are then put on the diets the experts believe are best suited to them. Can science succeed where other diets have failed?

It is time to see if personalised dieting will work in normal life. The volunteers have been given one of three diets to follow - based on their genes, their hormones and their psychology. But now they are back at home, trying to stick to their personalised diets with all the stresses and temptations of real life. Dr Chris van Tulleken and Professor Tanya Byron discover how our genetic makeup can make temptation difficult to resist, how understanding the brain reveals what makes us comfort eat and what science can tell us about why we make disastrous food choices.

So far the volunteers have successfully been losing lost weight, but now the honeymoon period is over. It is the final two months of the diet, and their minds and bodies are fighting back. Dr Chris van Tulleken and Professor Tanya Byron find out if the new personalised diets will help them stay on course, and the experts reveal the scientific secrets to permanent dieting success.

Today, the topic of climate change is a major part of daily life, yet 40 years ago it was virtually unheard of. Since then, Horizon and the BBC have followed scientists as they have tried to unpick how the climate works and whether it is changing. Dr Helen Czerski delves into this unique archive to chart the transformation of a little-known theory into one of the greatest scientific undertakings in history. It has been a constantly surprising journey of discovery that has revolutionised our understanding of climate, and seen scientists face unprecedented controversy and criticism.

There are about 600 murders each year in the UK. So, what drives people to kill? Are some people born to kill or are they driven to it by circumstances? Michael Mosley delves into the BBC archives to chart scientists' progress as they probed the mind of the murderer to try to understand why people kill, and to find out whether by understanding murder we can prevent it.

On the 15th December, Tim Peake will launch into space to be Britain's first astronaut on board the International Space Station. For the past two years, Tim has been filming a video diary for Horizon showing the risks, pressures and rigorous training required to launch into space. Horizon also talks exclusively to his wife and two children as they prepare to wave him goodbye on his voyage to space. From training in the Soyuz capsule, centrifuges, space station mockups, virtual reality and a huge pool to replicate spacewalks, to dealing with the physical dangers of weightlessness, witnessing his first launch and spending time away from his wife Rebecca and his two sons, this is an intimate portrait and remarkable insight into the world of an astronaut.

Comedian Jimmy Carr takes over Horizon for this one-off special programme, produced as part of BBC2's sitcom season. Jimmy turns venerable documentary strand Horizon into a chat show, with eminent laughter scientists as guests and a studio audience to use as guinea pigs. Jimmy and his guests try to get to the bottom of what laughter is, why we enjoy it so much and what, if anything, it has to do with comedy. Between them, and with the help of contributions from other scientists on film, Jimmy and guests discover that laughter is much older than our species, and may well have contributed to making us human. With professors Sophie Scott, Robin Dunbar and Peter McGraw.

The BBC's Horizon programme began in 1964, and since then has produced films looking at computer technology and the emergence of 'artificial intelligence'. Our dreams always begin with ideology and optimism, only for this optimism to be replaced with suspicion that AI machines will take over. However, as the Horizon archive shows, throughout each decade once we have learnt to live with the new emerging technology of the time, the pattern begins again. We become once more optimistic, before becoming fearful of it. The dream for decades had been for a computer with AI to be embedded within a humanoid robot, but just as scientists began to perfect machines with these qualities, something happened nobody expected. Today, AI systems power our daily lives through smart technology. We are currently experiencing a level of fear about the power of AI, but will we enter the next decade optimistic about all that AI can deliver - or fearful of its ability to control vast areas of our lives?

In an intensely personal and often surprising film for BBC Two, Alastair Campbell candidly talks about his experience living with depression and explores if radical new treatments can make a difference. Alastair is best known for his role as Tony Blair’s formidable and often contentious spin doctor, but, away from the public eye, he has been dogged by crippling bouts of depression for most of his life. Some days, just getting out of bed is too hard. Therapy and anti-depressant medication is helping him keep his head above water, but is that really the best he can hope for? Encouraged by his family, Alastair sets out on a journey to explore if cutting edge science can offer him - and the millions of people like him - the hope of one day living depression-free. As he tries to understand his depression better, he also reflects on key events in his life and asks if they could have had a negative effect on his mind.

Something peculiar has happened to Britain's weather. During the last two months we have heard frequent stories of forest fires, dried-up reservoirs and even rumours of water rationing. How much of it is true and what is the meaning of the present scare? This special report goes behind the scenes and observes that we are indeed facing the worst drought for over 200 years.

Horizon theorizes how life could be in 2002, using extracts from previous Horizon episodes.

1977-09-23T20:00:00Z

Special 102 Darwin's Dream

Special 102 Darwin's Dream

  • 1977-09-23T20:00:00Z1h

Darwin's theory of evolution transformed our view of the world. But what would he think of the progress we have made since?

An updated report on AIDS, a catastrophic collapse of the immune system that leads to a bizarre range of cancers and potentially fatal infections.

1987-04-27T20:00:00Z

Special 104 Life Story

Special 104 Life Story

  • 1987-04-27T20:00:00Z1h

A Horizon special dramatizing the race at the University of Cambridge in 1951 for the discovery of DNA.

Special 105 Sex: A Horizon Guide

  • 2013-09-11T20:00:00Z1h

Alice Roberts looks through 45 years of Horizon archive material to see how science came to understand sex, strived to solve our problems with it and even helped us do it better.

Dr Helen Czerski delves into the Horizon archive to chart the transformation of a little-known theory into one of the greatest scientific undertakings in history.

Michael Mosley uses the BBC archives to chart scientists' progress as they probed the mind of the murderer to try to understand why people kill, and whether it can help prevent it.

Documentary looking at the perception of AI from 1964 to the present day. Can we be optimistic about all that AI can deliver - or fearful of its ability to control our lives?

Astronaut Tim Peake's video diary of the two years leading up to his arrival at the International Space Station in December 2015.

Comedian Jimmy Carr takes over Horizon for this one-off special programme, produced as part of BBC2's sitcom season. Jimmy turns venerable documentary strand Horizon into a chat show, with eminent laughter scientists as guests and a studio audience to use as guinea pigs. Jimmy and his guests try to get to the bottom of what laughter is, why we enjoy it so much and what, if anything, it has to do with comedy. Between them, and with the help of contributions from other scientists on film, Jimmy and guests discover that laughter is much older than our species, and may well have contributed to making us human. With professors Sophie Scott, Robin Dunbar and Peter McGraw.

The extraordinary inside story of the biggest scientific challenge of our age - following a small band of vaccine scientists around the world who took on Covid-19 and ultimately delivered the weapon to beat it. As news of the coronavirus broke around the globe, a small group of scientists jumped into action to tackle one of the greatest medical challenges of our time: to create a vaccine against a virus no-one had ever seen before and to do so in record time, all during a deadly, global pandemic. English

The Life and Times of El Niño combines history and science to show how this meteorological monster has affected global economy and political history. As a little understood climatic event, El Niño has caused the worst ever yellow fever epidemic in America, cannibalism in China, and in more recent times, the erosion of the coral reef in Australia and severe flooding in Brazil. But, as our knowledge of El Niño grows and attempts are made to predict its worldwide effects, The Life and Times of El Niño asks - could the power of one of nature's most destructive occurrences ever be contained? The Life and Times of El Niño is a science education resource investigating both the history and science of this climatic event.

It's a macabre paradox, but almost every advance in aviation safety has been driven by a crash. After every crash, investigators determine its cause and scientists make every effort to ensure the same mistakes never happen again. Dallas Campbell delves into the Horizon archives to chart the deadly disasters that have helped make air travel today the safest it has ever been.

In the 1950s up to 8,000 people died every year on the roads in this country - a truly horrific figure. Thankfully it has now fallen to around 2,000 a year - still a terrible toll, but a vast improvement, particularly given the increase in cars on the road. Dallas Campbell looks back over decades of Horizon and BBC archive to chart the key scientific breakthroughs that have transformed road safety and saved millions of lives. However, it hasn't all been about innovative engineering and groundbreaking medical discoveries - scientists have also had to act as campaigners, persuading car manufacturers to install their life saving devices and urging the public to use them.

Playful pets, fearsome fighters or deadly hunters? Millions of us have cats in our homes, yet we know very little about them. In this series, Liz Bonnin joins forces with some of the world's top cat experts to conduct a groundbreaking scientific study. With GPS trackers and cat cameras, we follow 100 cats in three very different environments to find out what they get up to when they leave the cat flap. In the first programme we discover how our cats see, hear and smell the world with the senses of their wild ancestors, and why this could be making life difficult for them in the modern world.

The second episode of this unique scientific study reveals the wild side of pet cats. Using GPS trackers and cat cameras, they show how these felines transform from pampered pet to purring predator as soon as they leave the cat flap. Liz Bonnin and some of the world's top cat experts put Ozzy and Smudge under surveillance to find out who is king of the street and reveal why, no matter how hard we try, we can't keep our cats' hunting instincts under control.

In the final episode of this groundbreaking scientific study, Liz Bonnin and a team of scientists reveal the secret language of our cats, the surprising conversations they have when we are asleep, and why they meow to us but not each other. We rig a house with cameras and cat trackers to discover if four cats living under one roof all get on as well as we would like to think. And we find out why living alongside us is making life difficult for our 21st-century cats.

Instead of reaching for the latest fad diet, the best way to lose weight successfully is a personalised approach - diets tailored to your individual biology and psychology. In a groundbreaking national experiment, Dr Chris van Tulleken and Professor Tanya Byron join a team of leading experts to put 75 overweight volunteers on diets designed to tackle the specific reasons why they eat too much. The volunteers are put through a series of tests at a residential clinic to understand how their genes, hormones and psychology influence their eating behaviour. They are then put on the diets the experts believe are best suited to them. Can science succeed where other diets have failed?

It is time to see if personalised dieting will work in normal life. The volunteers have been given one of three diets to follow - based on their genes, their hormones and their psychology. But now they are back at home, trying to stick to their personalised diets with all the stresses and temptations of real life. Dr Chris van Tulleken and Professor Tanya Byron discover how our genetic makeup can make temptation difficult to resist, how understanding the brain reveals what makes us comfort eat and what science can tell us about why we make disastrous food choices.

So far the volunteers have successfully been losing lost weight, but now the honeymoon period is over. It is the final two months of the diet, and their minds and bodies are fighting back. Dr Chris van Tulleken and Professor Tanya Byron find out if the new personalised diets will help them stay on course, and the experts reveal the scientific secrets to permanent dieting success.

Professor Brian Cox takes a journey through the BBC science archive to explore the story of mankind's relationship with the moon, from James Burke testing Nasa equipment to Neil Armstrong's first steps on the lunar surface and the dramatic tale of Apollo 13. He also asks whether international competition could help reignite the public's enthusiasm for space travel and bring about the dawn of a new space age.

In an intensely personal and often surprising film for BBC Two, Alastair Campbell candidly talks about his experience living with depression and explores if radical new treatments can make a difference. Alastair is best known for his role as Tony Blair’s formidable and often contentious spin doctor, but, away from the public eye, he has been dogged by crippling bouts of depression for most of his life. Some days, just getting out of bed is too hard. Therapy and anti-depressant medication is helping him keep his head above water, but is that really the best he can hope for? Encouraged by his family, Alastair sets out on a journey to explore if cutting edge science can offer him - and the millions of people like him - the hope of one day living depression-free. As he tries to understand his depression better, he also reflects on key events in his life and asks if they could have had a negative effect on his mind.

BBC weatherman Peter Gibbs makes an emotional return to Antarctica, years after he lived and worked at the British Antarctic Survey's Halley Research Station. (Part One as shown on BBC News)

BBC weatherman Peter Gibbs's return to Antarctica becomes something of a rescue mission. The British Antarctic Survey reveals how it will save the Halley Research Station from being cast adrift on an iceberg. (Part Two as shown on BBC News)

Investigating the scientific facts and figures behind the biggest public health crisis in living memory as a new coronavirus takes an unprepared world by storm.

Dr Chris van Tulleken, Dr Hannah Fry and Michael Mosley examine the latest research and explore some of the big questions about the new coronavirus and the pandemic it has created.

In this third Horizon special, Dr Chris Van Tulleken is joined by his brother Xand and Dr Guddi Singh to take us through the latest developments and answer current concerns. Though the effect of the coronavirus pandemic has been devastating to many, the team reveal the breakthroughs in genetics, medicine and modelling that have provided a way out of this situation and given hope and confidence that, in the event of a future pandemic, we can take it on and win.

The extraordinary inside story of the biggest scientific challenge of our age - following a small band of vaccine scientists around the world who took on Covid-19 and ultimately delivered the weapon to beat it. As news of the coronavirus broke around the globe, a small group of scientists jumped into action to tackle one of the greatest medical challenges of our time: to create a vaccine against a virus no-one had ever seen before and to do so in record time, all during a deadly, global pandemic.

Series Premiere

1964-02-04T21:00:00Z

1x01 The World of Buckminster Fuller

Series Premiere

1x01 The World of Buckminster Fuller

  • 1964-02-04T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows the work of R. Buckminster Fuller and his research of the geodesic dome.

1964-05-30T20:00:00Z

1x02 Pesticides and Posterity

1x02 Pesticides and Posterity

  • 1964-05-30T20:00:00Z1h

Dr. Frank Darling and Dr. Eric Edson discuss different environmental priorities.

1964-06-27T20:00:00Z

1x03 A Candle to Nature

1x03 A Candle to Nature

  • 1964-06-27T20:00:00Z1h

A reconstruction of a Michael Faraday lecture last given in December 1860.

1964-07-25T20:00:00Z

1x04 Strangeness Minus Three

1x04 Strangeness Minus Three

  • 1964-07-25T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the findings of physicists at Brookhaven, Long Island, New York. Who, after two years and thousands of photographs, have identified a predicted new particle which has a unique characteristic: 'strangeness minus three'.

1964-08-22T20:00:00Z

1x05 The Air of Science

1x05 The Air of Science

  • 1964-08-22T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the work of the National Institute for Medical Research.

1964-09-21T20:00:00Z

1x06 The Knowledge Explosion

1x06 The Knowledge Explosion

  • 1964-09-21T20:00:00Z1h

Prof. Arthur C. Clarke, Derek Price and Nigel Balchin discuss the past and future of science.

1964-10-19T20:00:00Z

1x07 The Amateur Scientist

1x07 The Amateur Scientist

  • 1964-10-19T20:00:00Z1h

The work of amateur scientists.

Horizon investigates the 'Tots and Quots' and the 'Woodgeries' two groups set up by scientists before the second world war to discuss the future of science and how it effects society.

Season Finale

1964-12-14T21:00:00Z

1x09 Science, Toys and Magic

Season Finale

1x09 Science, Toys and Magic

  • 1964-12-14T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon takes a look at science in the spirit of Christmas.

Season Premiere

1965-01-06T21:00:00Z

2x01 Learning from Machines

Season Premiere

2x01 Learning from Machines

  • 1965-01-06T21:00:00Z1h

At a time when the use of teaching machines is fast expanding, Horizon looks at the principles behind them and enquires into their success

1965-01-20T21:00:00Z

2x02 The Technique of Change

2x02 The Technique of Change

  • 1965-01-20T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon profiles the Bell Laboratories in the United States. They are one of the most important research and development centers where more than 4000 scientists work with a budget of one hundred million pounds every year. Horizon investigates the possibility of setting up a similar research station in Britain.

1965-02-03T21:00:00Z

2x03 Star Gazers

2x03 Star Gazers

  • 1965-02-03T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores American plans to launch a space observatory to map the universe and learn how stars are created.

1965-02-17T21:00:00Z

2x04 Science and Art

2x04 Science and Art

  • 1965-02-17T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the relationship between science and art, and also explores artists attitudes towards science.

Horizon investigates the states of big research computers in Britain. Also, Horizon looks at the H-Bomb Detectors and how British scientists have developed a nuclear explosion detector which has changed the political outlook for nuclear test controls.

Is there a fifth force in the Universe, or must we revise our ideas about time? Horizon visits the Rutherford High Energy Laboratory where an experiment is running to settle this, and talks to Dr. Lipman.

Prof. Andrade presents a tribute to Robert Hooke: architect, astronomer, geologist, and meteorologist who discovered the cell. This episode also includes a report on a 36 year study of the cell wall by Prof. Preston.

Every day, on average, another 431 British women start taking the contraceptive pill. The manufacturers insist that it is the most carefully tested drug on the market today. But some scientists and doctors are concerned about the potential long-term effects of taking it.

Nine years after the passing of the Clean Air Act, where do we stand? Scientists are gradually finding out why dirty air Is so harmful to ill persons with Dr. P. J. Lawther of Air Pollution Research Centre at St. Bartholomew's Hospital. Whenever the things they study are too big, too far off, or too hot to handle, scientists can make a model of these-but can they be sure their models truly represent reality?

When a rubber tyre rolls fast on a wet surface it may rise on a film of water and begin to 'aquaplane.' Scientists are studying this fact which creates a real hazard to aircraft passengers and fast drivers. A new membrane developed in America holds forth the prospect of men being able to live under water.

Horizon looks at Prof. Perry Gilbert's research on captured sharks and meets with the eminent physiologist Sir Henry Dale as he celebrates his 90th birthday and looks back on his career in medical research. The eminent physiologist, who celebrates his ninetieth birthday today, looks back on his first discovery sixty years ago.

Dr. Jacob Bronowski, who a year ago took up the deputy directorship of the Salk Institute in California, discusses with Tom Rosenthal his new activities and how he feels about working in the golden West. The recent total eclipse of the sun was probably the most closely studied ever. With special film from the Pacific, Horizon examines what was done and why. For the first time deaf children can see a visual pattern of their own attempts at speech. In the programme a new machine is shown which may revolutionize the teaching of speech and language to these handicapped children.

This episode of Horizon features Dr. Joseph Needham, an eminent scientist and humanist who is perhaps the greatest living authority on China. An account of the space probe Mariner IV which will be flying past Mars tonight.

Is all science fiction merely fantasy - or can it give valuable clues to the future? A discussion between Desmond Morris and the ethologist George Schaller.

The four men who opened up a new field of physics: Max Born, Paul Dirac, Werner Heisenberg and George Thompson meet and discuss topic with John Charap at the annual science conference in Lindau, Germany.

Professor Harold Edgerton of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who has won international recognition for his achievements in ultra-high-speed photography, talks about his work and shows some of the remarkable pictures, both still and moving, that he has taken.

Horizon interviews Prof. Andrade about his collection of rare scientific books which he was about to sell.

1965-09-22T20:00:00Z

2x18 Let Newton Be

2x18 Let Newton Be

  • 1965-09-22T20:00:00Z1h

On the 300th anniversary of Isaac Newton's greatest year of discovery, one of his most ardent disciples, Prof. Julius Summer-Miller, comes from California to illustrate the excitement of seeing Newton's principles in action.

What sort of person can invent a 3-D microscope, a new way of photographing the moon, publish fifty papers on perception, and spend three weeks hunting for a minute sea creature to see how its eyes work? Cambridge psychologist Richard Gregory is a man of many facets. Tonight's film examines his inventiveness—its sources and its products. An M.R.C. team headed by Dr. D. G. Phillips has taken the first step towards answering the vital question: how do enzymes work?

1965-10-24T21:00:00Z

2x20 An Affair of the Heart

2x20 An Affair of the Heart

  • 1965-10-24T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores heart attacks and thrombosis.

1965-11-07T21:00:00Z

2x21 10,000 Tombs

2x21 10,000 Tombs

  • 1965-11-07T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon probes into the Etruscan tombs in Italy. Carlo Lerici, scientist and archaeologist, has brought past and future together. Using geophysical methods intended for mineral surveying, he has detected 10,000 unknown Etruscan tombs in ten years.

Horizon profiles the scientist, polymath, and Nobel prize winner Prof. Albert Szent-Gyorgi.

A look at some of the huge new radio telescopes which have recently started work in Britain, France, Russia, America, and elsewhere. Sir Bernard Lovell, Professor Martin Ryle, and M. Émile-Jacques Blum explain the scientific motive for this vast expenditure.

Season Finale

1966-09-25T20:00:00Z

2x24 Boys on Bubbles / Problems and Puzzles

Season Finale

2x24 Boys on Bubbles / Problems and Puzzles

  • 1966-09-25T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon re-stages highlights from Professor C. V. Boys's famous Christmas lectures on bubbles and surface tension which drew crowds to the London Institution sixty-six years ago. Then, a mathematician challenges you to solve some of the puzzles he has invented.

Season Premiere

1966-01-02T21:00:00Z

3x01 Windows of the Soul / Elixir of Youth

Season Premiere

3x01 Windows of the Soul / Elixir of Youth

  • 1966-01-02T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows experiments on the eyes being undertaken at the Department of Psychology at the University of Chicago. The purpose of the experiments are to discover if our eyes can tell us things we might prefer to keep secret. In Romania, more than forty thousand people have been given Gerovital H3, in the belief that it will make them younger.

Horizon explores an American mental hospital, observing schizophrenic patients under treatment with remarkable new drugs. The American equivalent of the British Association, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, met in Berkeley, California between Christmas and New Year.

A profile of Dr. Albert Copley, the famous hematologist, who is also known as an accomplished artist under the name of Alcopley. For a country striving to raise its productivity, the supply of applied scientists is tremendously important. Professor S. A. Tobias, an engineer, and Lord Todd, ex-chairman of the Scientific Advisory Council, discuss the problems of educating them and their importance in society.

Horizon looks at the research of dolphins being conducted at a United States naval base in Port Magu, California. The research concentrates on the dolphin's abilities of navigation. The eminent Canadian geologist, Professor Tuzo Wilson, explains his new 'Froth on the Broth' theory of the structure of the earth to David Wilson.

1966-02-27T21:00:00Z

3x05 Route 128

3x05 Route 128

  • 1966-02-27T21:00:00Z1h

North of Boston, on Route 128, a new industrial landscape based on science is developing. Here men of high intellectual qualifications are developing way-out products, including a helicopter powered by radio waves, a computer which teaches medical diagnosis, and a hair-raising way of testing driving conditions.

A remarkable Swedish film of the gradual development of the human embryo from fertilisation until birth. One man's impression of what science has done for the modern world: an animated film by Stan Vanderbeek.

Horizon looks into inventors who struggle against exploding technology, the buying power of great industries and taxation problems to make their leaps into the unknown. An account of a remarkable surgical operation recently performed in China.

Europe's heritage of pictures, statues, and buildings is being destroyed at a frightening rate by atmospheric pollution, but an American scientist has just invented a method of preserving limestone. In 1908, a vast explosion shook the Tungus district of Siberia: was it due to the biggest meteorite ever to hit the earth, or something odder?

The location of the historic city of Troy was finally pinned down by the researches of Carl Blegen. By A.D. 2,000, more than half the world's population may be living in cities. The population of some of them may exceed 60 million. This is one of the main preoccupations of the World Institute of Ekistics.

1966-05-08T20:00:00Z

3x10 Man in Space

3x10 Man in Space

  • 1966-05-08T20:00:00Z40m

Horizon travels to the spacecraft center in Houston, Texas to study astronauts in space and how they react to being in space and the stresses of launching and re-entry.

Horizon looks at the possibilities of landing a man on the planet Mars. The Editors of two leading scientific magazines, Dennis Flanagan of the Scientific American, and Nigel Calder of the New Scientist, discuss with Gordon Rattray Taylor the problems of popularizing science and placing it in a social context.

Gordon Taylor meets with Konrad Lorenz, the inventor of ethology, and interviews him about his work on animal instinct and his theories about human instinct. The world knows all about the uncanny mathematical abilities of the computer. But what happens when these machines learn to draw?

Horizon explores substitute 'phantoms' which are used in radiation studies, manned spaceflight experiments and accident research that gives valuable information on the limits of tolerance on the human body.

Dr. John Gurdon talks about the action of the chromosomes puffing when they undergo intense genetic activity. Sir Solly Zuckerman talks about his new book Scientists and War which outlines his views on the impact of science on affairs civil and military.

1966-07-17T20:00:00Z

3x15 The Lonely Children

3x15 The Lonely Children

  • 1966-07-17T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the research conducted in England and America on the problems associated with autistic children.

This episode of Horizon reports on the famous science fiction writer, H. G. Wells. An interview with John Maddox, the new editor of one of the world's most influential scientific journals, Nature, in which he discusses his ideas for bringing up-to-date the magazine's coverage of scientific events.

Horizon reports on the the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Many parents know that their child has a problem but do not have the necessary insight to deal with it. A psychiatrist uses drawings and paintings to reveal children's characters.

Horizon looks at the scientific research being carried out in the Antarctic under the guidance the Scientific Committee for Antarctic Research (SCAR) which was formed in 1856.

1966-10-24T21:00:00Z

3x19 The Athlete

3x19 The Athlete

  • 1966-10-24T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the stresses on athletes.

Christopher Chataway presents a program on the development of the rocket, first as a weapon, and then for the American space program.

1966-11-21T21:00:00Z

3x21 Sex-Change?

3x21 Sex-Change?

  • 1966-11-21T21:00:00Z1h

Doctors and psychologists talk about the problems inherent in the determination of sex.

1966-12-05T21:00:00Z

3x22 The Structure of Life

3x22 The Structure of Life

  • 1966-12-05T21:00:00Z1h

This program shows the work of Ernst Chain, one of the discoverers of antibiotics, now a Professor of Biochemistry at the Imperial College in London.

Season Finale

1966-12-19T21:00:00Z

3x23 The Wages of Science

Season Finale

3x23 The Wages of Science

  • 1966-12-19T21:00:00Z1h

The survival of Britain as an industrial power depends of science and on scientists. But are our scientists paid enough to attract them into the right jobs?

Season Premiere

1967-01-17T21:00:00Z

4x01 Sons of Cain

Season Premiere

4x01 Sons of Cain

  • 1967-01-17T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon probes into whether aggressiveness is our birthright and can society live without violence?

Medical advances have made it possible for 'life' to be maintained in an unconscious patient who has irrevocable brain damage and who might also be dependent on artificial aids to circulation and respiration. Is it now meaningless to define 'death' as the cessation of a heart beat? Why do so many people have difficulty In communicating, or in simply getting-on with other people? Psychologists have now begun to analyse aspects of social behaviour in a way which they believe will lead to more pleasant and more effective human relationships.

In this episode, Horizon looks at a new school of mathematics and physics near Novosibirsk in Siberia, Russia. This school uses a competition held for Russian school children to qualify new students.

Horizon profiles the life of the greatest physical scientist: Michael Faraday. Crucial events of his scientific career in science are reconstructed.

1967-03-14T21:00:00Z

4x05 Migraine

4x05 Migraine

  • 1967-03-14T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at some research recently carried out into the migraine headache and the means to provide treatment for it.

1967-03-28T20:00:00Z

4x06 How Safe Is Surgery?

4x06 How Safe Is Surgery?

  • 1967-03-28T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon probes in the danger of germs and infection in the operating theater and the methods currently used to prevent contamination.

1967-04-11T20:00:00Z

4x07 Sleep and Dreams

4x07 Sleep and Dreams

  • 1967-04-11T20:00:00Z1h

Joel, a healthy young American, is reduced to a restless neurotic state after being deprived of his dreams for three nights. Mr Bates, an eighty-four-year-old ex-milk man, has never dreamed in his life, or so he says until he is woken by scientists in the middle of a dream trip to New York.

1967-04-25T20:00:00Z

4x08 The Shape of War to Come

4x08 The Shape of War to Come

  • 1967-04-25T20:00:00Z1h

Will the next major war be fought with biological and chemical weapons? What are the available weapons? What is the horror they can cause? Is there any moral justification for their use?

1967-05-09T20:00:00Z

4x09 Memory

4x09 Memory

  • 1967-05-09T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the part of the human brain devoted to memory.

1967-05-23T20:00:00Z

4x10 Masters of the Desert

4x10 Masters of the Desert

  • 1967-05-23T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the methods being used to irrigate the Negev Desert, making it fertile based on the methods of ancient civilizations.

In this the first of two programmes dealing with cancer, Horizon looks at the intensive search now going on to discover whether a virus is one of the causes of cancer in humans and at the implications of this search in the treatment for such killer diseases as leukemia.

Why is there doubt in so many people's minds about the relationship between lung cancer and smoking? Tonight's programme examines the latest scientific evidence in detail.

Horizon explores the work in the developmental field of Extra Sensory Perception (ESP).

1967-07-18T20:00:00Z

4x14 Hypnosis

4x14 Hypnosis

  • 1967-07-18T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the misconceptions that people have about what hypnosis is and looks at the medical implications of what it can do.

1967-09-12T20:00:00Z

4x15 The War of the Boffins

4x15 The War of the Boffins

  • 1967-09-12T20:00:00Z1h

During the human struggles between the British and German air forces ... another conflict was going on step by step, month by month. This was a secret war whose battles were lost or won unknown to the public: and only with difficulty is it comprehended even now by those outside the smalt high scientific circles concerned.

1967-09-26T20:00:00Z

4x17 Aspects of Alcohol

4x17 Aspects of Alcohol

  • 1967-09-26T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at a Scottish chemist's unusual application for whisky: a measure of radioactive carbon 14 used for determining how old an object is.

1967-10-10T20:00:00Z

4x18 Lords of the Sea

4x18 Lords of the Sea

  • 1967-10-10T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks into how man is learning to survive in the oceans.

1967-10-24T20:00:00Z

4x19 Will Art Last?

4x19 Will Art Last?

  • 1967-10-24T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon reports on new materials that are being used as art media by gaining inspiration from factory and industrial processes.

Horizon investigates air navigation and flight safety.

Horizon reports on the problem of exterminating the pine processionary caterpillars infestation from the pine forests of Provence, Canada.

1967-12-05T21:00:00Z

4x22 Koestler on Creativity

4x22 Koestler on Creativity

  • 1967-12-05T21:00:00Z1h

Arthur Koestler talks about the psychological theories of creativity and the role of the mind in science and art.

1967-12-12T21:00:00Z

4x23 The World of Ted Serios

4x23 The World of Ted Serios

  • 1967-12-12T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks into the life of Ted Serios who claims to have psychic powers and to be able to project images onto film using only his thoughts.

Season Finale

1967-12-24T21:00:00Z

4x24 Professor in Toyland

Season Finale

4x24 Professor in Toyland

  • 1967-12-24T21:00:00Z1h

Prof. J. Sumner-Miller asks some questions for enquiring minds on walking, singing, swimming, and flying toys.

Season Premiere

1968-01-02T21:00:00Z

5x01 An Ingenious Man - Sir H. John Baker

Season Premiere

5x01 An Ingenious Man - Sir H. John Baker

  • 1968-01-02T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on Prof. Sir John Baker who is a distinguished British engineer, tracing his career beginning from his early work on airships.

1968-01-30T21:00:00Z

5x02 Man's Best Friend

5x02 Man's Best Friend

  • 1968-01-30T21:00:00Z1h

This episode covers interviews with surgeons and research workers discussing the need for animal experimentation in medical work.

1968-02-13T21:00:00Z

5x03 Once a Junkie

5x03 Once a Junkie

  • 1968-02-13T21:00:00Z1h

In England addicts get their heroin, and often cocaine, on the National Health Service: our system has prevented the growth of a drug-based criminal world, but Americans say that our system only worked when we did not have a serious addiction problem. Now we do. Does our present system make it too easy for the casual drug experimenter to become a hard-core addict? Is there anything we can learn from the American situation?

Horizon explores the problem of increasing traffic in Britain.

1968-03-12T20:00:00Z

5x05 The Man Makers

5x05 The Man Makers

  • 1968-03-12T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon looks into the advances in medical science.

1968-03-26T20:00:00Z

5x06 Man in Search of Himself

5x06 Man in Search of Himself

  • 1968-03-26T20:00:00Z1h

This episode presents the view by G. M. Carstairs, social psychiatrist, about the pleasures and problems of life in Britain in 1968.

1968-04-09T20:00:00Z

5x07 Investigating Murder

5x07 Investigating Murder

  • 1968-04-09T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks into modern methods of crime investigation.

1968-05-07T20:00:00Z

5x08 The Equation of Murder

5x08 The Equation of Murder

  • 1968-05-07T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows reporter Paul Ferris as he examines the causes and motitives for murder.

1968-09-12T20:00:00Z

5x09 The Lindemann Enigma

5x09 The Lindemann Enigma

  • 1968-09-12T20:00:00Z1h

This is the story of the life and career of Winston Churchill's scientific advisor, Lord Cherwell, during World War II.

1968-09-19T20:00:00Z

5x10 From Field to Factory

5x10 From Field to Factory

  • 1968-09-19T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores "factory farming" techniques for chickens and other livestock.

1968-09-26T20:00:00Z

5x11 Comfort on Aging

5x11 Comfort on Aging

  • 1968-09-26T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Dr. Alex Comfort looks at the scientific evidence for old age and the problems caused by ageing.

1968-10-03T20:00:00Z

5x12 Experiments in War

5x12 Experiments in War

  • 1968-10-03T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how science is used to enhance weapons of war, tactics, and strategy.

1968-10-10T20:00:00Z

5x13 Medecine in Russia

5x13 Medecine in Russia

  • 1968-10-10T20:00:00Z1h

In 1917, Russia had fewer than twenty doctors for every million of her people. Today, the figure is over 2,000: almost twice as many as in this country. The organisational changes that were necessary to build a Health Service in the country with the largest share of the earth's surface were vast. The resulting system is very different from ours.

1968-10-17T20:00:00Z

5x14 African Medicine

5x14 African Medicine

  • 1968-10-17T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon looks into controversial medicine practices in Nigeria.

1968-10-24T20:00:00Z

5x15 The Broken Bridge

5x15 The Broken Bridge

  • 1968-10-24T20:00:00Z1h

This episode by Horizon is about Irene Kassorlas, who's new treatment for autism has produced positive results with mute children.

1968-10-31T20:00:00Z

5x16 Children Without Words

5x16 Children Without Words

  • 1968-10-31T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on speech and comprehension disorders in children, and how to educate them.

1968-11-07T20:00:00Z

5x17 The Computer Revolution

5x17 The Computer Revolution

  • 1968-11-07T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores how computers are changing our way of life.

1968-11-14T20:00:00Z

5x18 Doctor's Dilemma

5x18 Doctor's Dilemma

  • 1968-11-14T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the effects of the birth control pill on the body and how the pill can effect the changes in glucose metabolism.

This is the fictional drama about the evidence for and against the charges that Dr. Alfred Noble misused his invention of dynamite.

1968-11-28T20:00:00Z

5x20 Wheels Within Wheels

5x20 Wheels Within Wheels

  • 1968-11-28T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the possibility that our civilization as a whole can be viewed as a pattern based on the wheel.

1968-12-05T20:00:00Z

5x21 Black Man, White Science

5x21 Black Man, White Science

  • 1968-12-05T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon investigates the study of science by african americans.

1968-12-12T20:00:00Z

5x22 The Hidden World

5x22 The Hidden World

  • 1968-12-12T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon reports on the exploration and survey of the oceans of the world.

1968-12-19T20:00:00Z

5x23 The Talgai Skull

5x23 The Talgai Skull

  • 1968-12-19T20:00:00Z1h

Prof. N.W.G. MacIntosh investigates the origin of the Talgai Skull found in Australia in 1886.

In this episode of Horizon, Michael Balfour invites us to share in the mystery and magic of the "Magic Lantern".

Season Premiere

1969-01-02T20:00:00Z

6x01 Inside Every Fat Man

Season Premiere

6x01 Inside Every Fat Man

  • 1969-01-02T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon probes into the problems of obesity and investigates cures for obesity using diets and drugs.

1969-01-09T20:00:00Z

6x02 If Only They Could Speak

6x02 If Only They Could Speak

  • 1969-01-09T20:00:00Z1h

A report by Horizon examining animal intelligence and looking at the reasons why no other animal has matched man in mental ability.

Horizon investigates the importance of the eye, diseases of the eye, and current research on sight.

1969-01-23T20:00:00Z

6x04 The Years of the Locust

6x04 The Years of the Locust

  • 1969-01-23T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon reports on how in the last 2 years, the desert locust has been breeding in Southern Arabia by the Red Sea.

1969-01-30T20:00:00Z

6x05 The Gifted Child

6x05 The Gifted Child

  • 1969-01-30T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the problems associated with raising and educating children of very high intelligence.

1969-02-06T20:00:00Z

6x06 The Last of the Polymaths

This episode is a biography of the late professor J. B. S. Haldane whose life is described by his family, friends, and critics.

1969-02-13T20:00:00Z

6x07 Music and the Mind

6x07 Music and the Mind

  • 1969-02-13T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks into music therapy used in the treatment of mental disorders.

1969-02-20T20:00:00Z

6x08 Report on V.D.

6x08 Report on V.D.

  • 1969-02-20T20:00:00Z1h

This investigation by Horizon centers on the problems caused by venerial disease both in detection and cure.

1969-02-27T20:00:00Z

6x09 Extra-Sensory Perception

6x09 Extra-Sensory Perception

  • 1969-02-27T20:00:00Z1h

In scientific circles extra-sensory perception is a subject which has never failed to arouse controversy and skepticism. Cecil King, having spent a lifetime in Fleet Street, discusses, with due caution, a subject which he believes might be of primary importance to scientists in the coming century.

1969-03-06T20:00:00Z

6x10 The Drift from Science

6x10 The Drift from Science

  • 1969-03-06T20:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon examines the reason for a fall in the percentage of school children doing science.

1969-03-13T20:00:00Z

6x11 Powers of Persuasion

6x11 Powers of Persuasion

  • 1969-03-13T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about advertising, looking at how it works and the application of scientific methods to persuade us to buy.

1969-03-20T20:00:00Z

6x12 The View from Space

6x12 The View from Space

  • 1969-03-20T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks into what man has seen and done during 10 years of space exploration.

1969-03-27T20:00:00Z

6x13 The Unborn Patient

6x13 The Unborn Patient

  • 1969-03-27T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates new medical techniques to diagnose and treat unborn infants leading to a higher survival rate.

Nicholas Kurti, Professor of Physics at the Clarendon Laboratory, Oxford, specializes in the field of low temperature science. He is acknowledged among his friends as an expert in the kitchen.

1969-04-10T20:00:00Z

6x15 King Solomon's Garden

6x15 King Solomon's Garden

  • 1969-04-10T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon looks at the communication systems of animals.

Horizon investigates pollution problems in Britain with sewage and industrial wastes, and at the health risks associated with the pollution.

1969-05-01T20:00:00Z

6x17 Shark

6x17 Shark

  • 1969-05-01T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon examines our attempts to understand one of the oldest inhabitants of the sea, the shark.

Sebastian Z. de Ferranti gives the Royal Society lecture for 1969 on technological development.

1969-05-22T20:00:00Z

6x19 After Apollo

6x19 After Apollo

  • 1969-05-22T20:00:00Z1h

The US spent $40 billion to put man on the moon, yet the real objectives of the space program remain obscure.

1969-05-29T20:00:00Z

6x20 Discovery

6x20 Discovery

  • 1969-05-29T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the research being carried out in the fields of botany, astronomy, biochemistry, meteorology, and zoology.

1969-06-05T20:00:00Z

6x21 Machines and People

6x21 Machines and People

  • 1969-06-05T20:00:00Z1h

The Honorable A. W. Benn addresses young art and technology students on the implications of increased technology.

1969-09-15T20:00:00Z

6x22 Science on Safari

6x22 Science on Safari

  • 1969-09-15T20:00:00Z1h

The Honorable A. W. Benn addresses young art and technology students on the implications of increased technology.

1969-09-22T20:00:00Z

6x23 A True Madness

6x23 A True Madness

  • 1969-09-22T20:00:00Z1h

Schizophrenia is an unsolved mystery of modern medicine. Horizon looks at some of the possible explanations and their relevance not only to schizophrenics but to the mystery of the human mind.

1969-09-29T20:00:00Z

6x24 Problems of Pain

6x24 Problems of Pain

  • 1969-09-29T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon reports on the problems of pain, and the theory put forward that pain is closely connected with personality.

1969-10-06T20:00:00Z

6x25 Four Fast Legs and a Nose

Horizon explores "man's best friend", the dog, and examines its origins and how its special relationship with men came about.

1969-10-13T20:00:00Z

6x26 Father of the Man

6x26 Father of the Man

  • 1969-10-13T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates surveys being carried out on British children to test Freud's theories.

1969-10-20T20:00:00Z

6x27 Master of the Microscope

6x27 Master of the Microscope

  • 1969-10-20T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Roman Vishniac talks about his study of living things in their natural habitat as his life's work.

1969-10-27T20:00:00Z

6x28 C.E.R.N.

6x28 C.E.R.N.

  • 1969-10-27T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the research into high-energy physics carried on at C.E.R.N. laboratory located near Geneva, Switzerland.

1969-11-03T20:00:00Z

6x29 Snap, Crackle and Bang

6x29 Snap, Crackle and Bang

  • 1969-11-03T20:00:00Z1h

The props for this programme are pistols, muskets and, above all, explosives. For 30 years now these are what Colonel Brian Shaw, marksman and lecturer in chemistry, has been using in his now famous lecture on explosives. He gave it once again for Horizon before an invited audience at University College, London.

1969-11-10T20:00:00Z

6x30 Cancer Now

6x30 Cancer Now

  • 1969-11-10T20:00:00Z1h

A report on current research into cancer and the subsequent knowledge and problems it brings.

For some time now rhinos have been disturbing the workers in the Tanzanian sugar plantation and ripping open the plastic water pipes to get at the water. These incidents, and the hunting of the rhinos by helicopter, are typical of the increasing conflict between wildlife and man for land in East Africa.

1969-11-24T20:00:00Z

6x32 Fit to Live?

6x32 Fit to Live?

  • 1969-11-24T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the limits of survival under extreme and normal environmental conditions.

1969-12-01T20:00:00Z

6x33 Don't Cackle, Lay Eggs

6x33 Don't Cackle, Lay Eggs

  • 1969-12-01T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the development of the Dutch nation's continuing fight against the encroachment of the sea.

1969-12-08T20:00:00Z

6x34 How Much Do You Drink?

6x34 How Much Do You Drink?

  • 1969-12-08T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how drinking affects human behavior.

1969-12-15T20:00:00Z

6x35 A Game of War

6x35 A Game of War

  • 1969-12-15T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon covers a simulated war game of a Middle East crisis, with different teams playing the roles of the major parties involved.

1969-12-22T20:00:00Z

6x36 Bread

6x36 Bread

  • 1969-12-22T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the problem of feeding the growing world population.

Season Finale

1969-12-29T20:00:00Z

6x37 For the Safety of Mankind

Season Finale

6x37 For the Safety of Mankind

  • 1969-12-29T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigate the dilemma of whether a scientist should put his loyalty to mankind before his loyalty to his country.

Season Premiere

1970-01-05T20:00:00Z

7x01 Just Another World

Season Premiere

7x01 Just Another World

  • 1970-01-05T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon centers on the study of the moon rock samples brought back to the earth by the Apollo 11 flight to the moon.

1970-01-12T20:00:00Z

7x02 Henry Royce, Mechanic

7x02 Henry Royce, Mechanic

  • 1970-01-12T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the history of the life and work of Sir Henry Royce, co-founder of the firm Rolls Royce Royce.

This is the first part of a two-part episode on diseases afflicting people today. Horizon looks at the issue of stress on the body.

This is the second part of a two-part episode on diseases afflicting people today. Horizon looks at the causes of coronary heart disease and modern techniques of treatment and cure.

1970-02-02T20:00:00Z

7x05 Sex and Sexuality

7x05 Sex and Sexuality

  • 1970-02-02T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon exams the current scientific research into human sexual behavior.

1970-02-16T20:00:00Z

7x06 Whose Coast?

7x06 Whose Coast?

  • 1970-02-16T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon reports on how much of the sea coast around Britain is becoming polluted.

1970-02-23T20:00:00Z

7x07 A Much Wanted Child

7x07 A Much Wanted Child

  • 1970-02-23T20:00:00Z1h

This episode deals with the problems of infertility and showing the investigations being carried out.

1970-03-02T20:00:00Z

7x08 The Expert Witness

7x08 The Expert Witness

  • 1970-03-02T20:00:00Z1h

Sir Bernard Spilsbury, a forensic pathologist, talks about the role of the scientific witness in the criminal courts.

1970-03-09T20:00:00Z

7x09 After the Iron Age

7x09 After the Iron Age

  • 1970-03-09T20:00:00Z1h

A look at some of the work carried out in Britain into the development of new materials for industry.

This episode of Horizon looks at the question of the treatment of criminals in Britain.

1970-03-23T20:00:00Z

7x11 The World Outside

7x11 The World Outside

  • 1970-03-23T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the Mental Health Service in Britain.

This episode surrounds the two channels of human communication - verbal and non-verbal.

A Horizon investigation into the research done in Britain and the USA to support the 'Continental Drift' theory.

1970-04-20T20:00:00Z

7x14 A Case of Priority

7x14 A Case of Priority

  • 1970-04-20T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon looks at the National Health Service of Britain and the enormous demands that are imposed on it.

1970-04-27T20:00:00Z

7x15 The Fretful Elements

7x15 The Fretful Elements

  • 1970-04-27T20:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon looks into meteorological research in Britain and America.

1970-05-11T20:00:00Z

7x16 One Man's Meat

7x16 One Man's Meat

  • 1970-05-11T20:00:00Z1h

An investigation by Horizon reveals information about the use of artificial additives and preservatives in the manufacture of modern processed foods.

1970-07-06T20:00:00Z

7x17 Only Skin Deep

7x17 Only Skin Deep

  • 1970-07-06T20:00:00Z1h

On this episode of Horizon, the science behind the cosmetic industry and the social and psychological importance of beauty and fragrance is revealed.

1970-07-13T20:00:00Z

7x18 Wolves and Wolfmen

7x18 Wolves and Wolfmen

  • 1970-07-13T20:00:00Z1h

This a a report by Horizon on the research in the USA and Canada into the habits of the wolf in its natural surroundings and in captivity.

1970-08-10T20:00:00Z

7x19 A Measure of Uncertainty

7x19 A Measure of Uncertainty

  • 1970-08-10T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the use and role of statistics in modern society and how they are needed for planning.

1970-08-17T20:00:00Z

7x20 The Manhunters

7x20 The Manhunters

  • 1970-08-17T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reveals new evidence found by archaeologists that have now traced our origins back to the extinct ape man of Africa.

1970-08-24T20:00:00Z

7x21 Don't Get Sick in America

In this episode, Horizon reports on how the TV series "Man and Science Today" compares the British National Health System with the private health system in the USA.

1970-08-31T20:00:00Z

7x22 Crown of Thorns

7x22 Crown of Thorns

  • 1970-08-31T20:00:00Z1h

The population explosion of the Crown of Thorns starfish is investigated by Horizon.

1970-09-07T20:00:00Z

7x23 Noah's Ark in Kensington

7x23 Noah's Ark in Kensington

  • 1970-09-07T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you the history and modern day functions of the Natural History museum in Kensington, Britain.

1970-09-14T20:00:00Z

7x24 Virus

7x24 Virus

  • 1970-09-14T20:00:00Z1h

This is an episode on problems dealing with viral diseases such as measles.

1970-09-21T20:00:00Z

7x25 Water, Water

7x25 Water, Water

  • 1970-09-21T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the work of scientists as they unravel the problems of providing us with water.

In this story, Horizon investigates the issue of controversial animal experiments between anti-vivisectionists and scientists.

1970-10-05T20:00:00Z

7x27 A Child for a Lifetime

7x27 A Child for a Lifetime

  • 1970-10-05T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the future of 30,000 children in Britain that are mentally retarded.

Horizon reports on the work of the British Nature Conservancy and how scientists are trying to find out about nature.

1970-11-02T20:00:00Z

7x29 Million Ton Tanker

7x29 Million Ton Tanker

  • 1970-11-02T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon reports on the revolution in the size of oil tankers showing present and future planned methods of construction.

1970-11-09T20:00:00Z

7x30 The Insect War

7x30 The Insect War

  • 1970-11-09T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at problems caused by the rapid reproduction rate of insects and their increasing resistance to pesticides.

1970-11-16T20:00:00Z

7x31 The Savage Mind

7x31 The Savage Mind

  • 1970-11-16T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on Professor Claude Levi-Strauss who has been studying and analyzing the so-called primitive man for more than 30 years.

1970-11-23T20:00:00Z

7x32 Tanks

7x32 Tanks

  • 1970-11-23T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon investigates the history of tanks in the last fifty years and the dominant role they have played in land warfare.

1970-11-30T20:00:00Z

7x33 Mind the Machine

7x33 Mind the Machine

  • 1970-11-30T20:00:00Z1h

In this story, Horizon investigates the artificial intelligence of computers by watching a chess game.

1970-12-07T20:00:00Z

7x34 Square Pegs

7x34 Square Pegs

  • 1970-12-07T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines some of the techniques used by the boom industry of Management Selection.

Horizon investigates the work of geologists and seismologists trying to predict the date of the next great earthquake in San Francisco, California.

Horizon reports on some of the pure scientific research work carried out at the Smithsonian Tropical Research institute.

Season Finale

1970-12-28T20:00:00Z

7x37 The Gargantuan Triumph of Science

Season Finale

7x37 The Gargantuan Triumph of Science

  • 1970-12-28T20:00:00Z1h

This episode by Horizon is a dramatized reconstruction from original transcripts of the inquiry into the Tay Bridge disaster.

Season Premiere

1971-01-04T20:00:00Z

8x01 Wildlife - The Last Great Battle

Season Premiere

8x01 Wildlife - The Last Great Battle

  • 1971-01-04T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon looks a the efforts of zoos to save animal species from extinction by breeding enough to ensure their survival in captivity

1971-01-18T20:00:00Z

8x02 Great Ormond Street

8x02 Great Ormond Street

  • 1971-01-18T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon looks at the renowned British hospital for children, Great Ormond Street, and the Institute of Child Health.

Horizon explores the island of New Guinea and its cultural changes going on there.

1971-02-01T20:00:00Z

8x04 Rumors of War

8x04 Rumors of War

  • 1971-02-01T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon looks at the growing arsenal of nuclear weapons over the last 25 years and the effects it has on the arms race.

The first of a two-programme investigation in which Horizon and Man Alive have combined forces. This episode investigates the facts about drug abuse and experimental work undertaken in this area.

Kuru is a unique disease of the people of New Guinea. Horizon goes with Prof. E. J. Field to find out why.

Horizon interviews ecologists that claim that man is irrevocably destroying its habitat.

1971-03-15T20:00:00Z

8x08 What Kind of Doctor?

8x08 What Kind of Doctor?

  • 1971-03-15T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates medical student training at the St. Thomas hospital in London, England.

Horizon explores the causes, and looks for way to prevent car accidents

1971-04-05T20:00:00Z

8x10 The Wood

8x10 The Wood

  • 1971-04-05T20:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon looks at the long term ecological study of the forest at Wytham Wood, Oxon, in England.

1971-04-12T20:00:00Z

8x11 The Measure of Man

8x11 The Measure of Man

  • 1971-04-12T20:00:00Z1h

In 1971, Horizon reviews the life and work of Prof. Hans Eysnck, the most controversial psychologists of the time.

This report by Horizon explores care for the aged, for both medical and welfare services in Britain.

1971-05-03T20:00:00Z

8x13 Darwin's Bulldog

8x13 Darwin's Bulldog

  • 1971-05-03T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the famous protagonist of "The Origin of Species," Thomas Henry Huxley.

1971-05-10T20:00:00Z

8x14 The Secret

8x14 The Secret

  • 1971-05-10T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon examines how cells organize to become complex organs, and bodies.

At the moment, legal abortions in the UK are being performed at the rate of over 90,000 a year and it is considered that the number is likely to rise. But why are so many people not prepared to use contraceptives? Are the contraceptives themselves at fault or is it part of a deep-rooted attitude to sex? A drug is now being tested which makes it possible for a woman to procure her own abortion in the first few weeks of pregnancy.

1971-05-24T20:00:00Z

8x16 Tastes of Foods to Come

8x16 Tastes of Foods to Come

  • 1971-05-24T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on food technology now experimenting with meat substitutes.

Within 20 years vertical take-off airliners could be hovering over Hampstead and Dulwich before landing, one a minute, day and night, at a Thames-side V-port. Horizon looks at what could be one of the great environmental debates of the century to have, or not to have, aircraft flying in and out of city centres.

1971-06-07T20:00:00Z

8x18 A Case of Depression

8x18 A Case of Depression

  • 1971-06-07T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how to treat depressive illneses.

1971-06-14T20:00:00Z

8x19 The Total War Machine

8x19 The Total War Machine

  • 1971-06-14T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon reports on the development of the aircraft bomber throughout periods of war.

1971-06-21T20:00:00Z

8x20 The Dinosaur Hunters

8x20 The Dinosaur Hunters

  • 1971-06-21T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the field of palaeontology, the study of dinosaurs.

1971-09-27T20:00:00Z

8x21 Your Country Needs You?

8x21 Your Country Needs You?

  • 1971-09-27T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon looks at Britain's civil defense program, and to see if it is adequate in the event of a nuclear war.

1971-10-04T20:00:00Z

8x22 Rheumatism

8x22 Rheumatism

  • 1971-10-04T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates rheumatism, and looks at why this disease is under-researched.

Can new born babies solve complex problems? Horizon works with psychologists to see how they measure this capacity.

1971-10-18T20:00:00Z

8x24 One Liverpool or Two?

8x24 One Liverpool or Two?

  • 1971-10-18T20:00:00Z1h

Do city planners in Liverpool have unrealistic expectations? Horizon looks into the development and planning process of Liverpool, England.

This is a two part episode of Horizon. First, Horizon looks at the life of centenary Ernest Rutherford, followed by a report of the Cavendish Labratory in Cambridge, England.

1971-11-01T21:00:00Z

8x26 The Fierce People

8x26 The Fierce People

  • 1971-11-01T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores a primitive tribe of Yanomamo Indians living in southern Venezula.

1971-11-15T21:00:00Z

8x27 The Men Who Painted Caves

This episode of Horizon looks in the ancient cave paintings found in France.

1971-11-22T21:00:00Z

8x28 The Crab Nebula

8x28 The Crab Nebula

  • 1971-11-22T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon reports on how the Crab Nebula was discovered, and continuing observation of the space encounter.

1971-11-29T21:00:00Z

8x29 Can Venice Survive?

8x29 Can Venice Survive?

  • 1971-11-29T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the continuing problem of the city of Venice, Italy sinking into the sea.

1971-12-06T21:00:00Z

8x30 Willingly to School?

8x30 Willingly to School?

  • 1971-12-06T21:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon is about Prof. Hean Piaget and her child center education theory.

1971-12-20T21:00:00Z

8x31 The Periscope War

8x31 The Periscope War

  • 1971-12-20T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the history of the submarines, from pre-World War I to today's nuclear powered submarines.

Season Finale

1971-12-27T21:00:00Z

8x32 Patently Absurd

Season Finale

8x32 Patently Absurd

  • 1971-12-27T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon investigates strange new inventions.

Season Premiere

1972-01-03T21:00:00Z

9x01 The Missing Link

Season Premiere

9x01 The Missing Link

  • 1972-01-03T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode of Horizon, you find out how feasible it is to build a 35 mile long tunnel between Britain and France.

Horizon explores the American Navajo indian tribe of New Mexico, in the United States.

1972-01-17T21:00:00Z

9x03 How Much Do You Smell?

9x03 How Much Do You Smell?

  • 1972-01-17T21:00:00Z1h

Why do humans have such a poor sense of smell as compared to animals? Horizon investigates why.

1972-01-31T21:00:00Z

9x04 The Parasite of Paradise

9x04 The Parasite of Paradise

  • 1972-01-31T21:00:00Z1h

This story by Horizon reports on Malaria in the country of Gambia, in West Africa.

Horizon investigates reports of strange phenomena and about what the scientific theory is about these phenomena.

Horizon explores if a doctor's treatment of the patient is always in the best interest of the patient.

1972-02-21T21:00:00Z

9x07 How They Sold Doomsday

9x07 How They Sold Doomsday

  • 1972-02-21T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon looks the the ecological movement, and the resistance against the movement in Britain, and the USA.

1972-02-28T21:00:00Z

9x08 For Love or Money?

9x08 For Love or Money?

  • 1972-02-28T21:00:00Z1h

In this report by Horizon, the effect of boring jobs on industrial relations is looked at, along with work and job satisfaction.

1972-03-06T21:00:00Z

9x09 Whales, Dolphins and Men

9x09 Whales, Dolphins and Men

  • 1972-03-06T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the life of whales and dolphins, and how they interact with man.

1972-03-13T21:00:00Z

9x10 What Is Race?

9x10 What Is Race?

  • 1972-03-13T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the various conceptions of "race" that have arisen since the 17th century.

Horizon investigates the use of hydroelectric power in Africa, at Lake Kariba, Lake Volta, and Lake Nasser.

1972-03-27T20:00:00Z

9x12 Survival in the Sahara

9x12 Survival in the Sahara

  • 1972-03-27T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon follows the expedition of two German naturalists exploring the Northwestern desert of the Sahara in Africa.

1972-04-10T20:00:00Z

9x13 Mind Over Body

9x13 Mind Over Body

  • 1972-04-10T20:00:00Z1h

This story by Horizon is about American research into techniques for controlling bodily functions with the mind.

1972-04-17T20:00:00Z

9x14 Out of Volcanoes

9x14 Out of Volcanoes

  • 1972-04-17T20:00:00Z1h

In this report, Horizon looks at the various aspects of volcanoes and explaining the views of some vulcanologists.

Horizon presents a study of Thomas Alva Edison and his achievements as an inventor.

1972-05-08T20:00:00Z

9x16 Rail Crash

9x16 Rail Crash

  • 1972-05-08T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reviews the history of train accidents and the new safety precautions to prevent them.

Horizon investigates the threat to the Snowdonia National Park in Britain, from mining companies.

1972-06-12T20:00:00Z

9x18 Sorry I Opened My Mouth

9x18 Sorry I Opened My Mouth

  • 1972-06-12T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on modern research in the prevention of tooth decay.

1972-07-03T20:00:00Z

9x19 The Way We Move

9x19 The Way We Move

  • 1972-07-03T20:00:00Z1h

How do muscles contract and how are they are controlled from the brain through nerve fibers are the subjects of this Horizon episode.

This episode of Horizon explores bacteria and other creatures that live on our skin and in our hair.

1972-07-24T20:00:00Z

9x21 Sex Can Be a Problem

9x21 Sex Can Be a Problem

  • 1972-07-24T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode by Horizon, we take a look at sexual problems, particularly for impotence, frigidity, and premature ejaculation.

1972-07-31T20:00:00Z

9x22 The Surgery of Violence

9x22 The Surgery of Violence

  • 1972-07-31T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the development and techniques of brain surgery from the 1950's to present-day in Britain and the USA.

1972-10-12T20:00:00Z

9x23 Hospital, 1922

9x23 Hospital, 1922

  • 1972-10-12T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reconstructs a day in the life of the old Charing Cross Hospital in Britain just fifty years ago.

This episode of Horizon looks the how the ice age physically shaped the British landscape.

This episode of Horizon illustrates the ideas of Prof. W.G. Hoskins on the development of the English landscape from Iron Age times to the present.

1972-11-02T21:00:00Z

9x26 Shadows of Bliss

9x26 Shadows of Bliss

  • 1972-11-02T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports that High Energy Physics shows a pattern of thought that challenges the very roots of commonplace belief.

1972-11-09T21:00:00Z

9x27 The Billion-Dollar Marsh

9x27 The Billion-Dollar Marsh

  • 1972-11-09T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about the east coast marshes of America, called the "Wetlands" and the effects of urban development on the wildlife.

Horizon investigates the research that is going into the ageing process to find out its causes and possible prevention.

This epidsode of Horizon reports on how a group of zoologists at Oxford Scientific Films in England makes films.

1972-11-30T21:00:00Z

9x30 Fire

9x30 Fire

  • 1972-11-30T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon documents fire prevention, and fire fighting.

1972-12-07T21:00:00Z

9x31 Alaskan Pipe-Dream

9x31 Alaskan Pipe-Dream

  • 1972-12-07T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon centers on the exploitation of oil in Alaska, and the effects of it on the Eskimoes and the local wildlife.

1972-12-21T21:00:00Z

9x32 Their Life in Your Hands

9x32 Their Life in Your Hands

  • 1972-12-21T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on people suffering from kidney diseases and the current forms of treatment.

Season Finale

1972-12-28T21:00:00Z

9x33 Navigating Europe

Season Finale

9x33 Navigating Europe

  • 1972-12-28T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon documents how in Europe, they are using water canals for industrial transport, as an alternative to roads.

Season Premiere

1973-01-04T21:00:00Z

10x01 Epidemic

Season Premiere

10x01 Epidemic

  • 1973-01-04T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines sources of infection that have, and could still, cause epidemics in Britain.

1973-01-11T21:00:00Z

10x02 Worlds in Collision

10x02 Worlds in Collision

  • 1973-01-11T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon features Immanuel Velikovsky and his theories about the solar system.

1973-01-18T21:00:00Z

10x03 The Military Necessity

10x03 The Military Necessity

  • 1973-01-18T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines the doctrines and military strategies of the rival alliances of NATO and the Warsaw Pact countries.

1973-01-25T21:00:00Z

10x04 The Curtain of Silence

10x04 The Curtain of Silence

  • 1973-01-25T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks into the problem of deafness in Britain.

1973-02-01T21:00:00Z

10x05 Crime Lab

10x05 Crime Lab

  • 1973-02-01T21:00:00Z1h

A jewel robbery, a hit-and-run, and the Case of the Skeleton in the Sand Dunes illustrate the work of forensic scientists and the police they assist. How do they discover the characteristics of an individual bullet as it enters a body? How are blood stains identified or microscopic flakes of paint? How do voiceprints and lie-detectors work? The crime labs of Britain and America have different priorities and different techniques. Each can learn from the other. They also have different success rates. Britain's is currently better. But how long can we hold out against a rapidly rising tide of drugs and violence? What can we learn from American experience?

How easy is it to get sterilized? Should there be abortion on demand? Do we need a free contraceptive service? Our average family size is 2.5. To avoid a social and population crisis it needs to be 2.1. Aberdeen, one of the few cities to have a fully comprehensive family planning service, has already successfully cut its birth rate. The Government plan to withdraw this kind of free service. But, in the light of Aberdeen's success, should the Government be made to reconsider?

In this documentary by Horizon, we look at chemical warfare and the associated environmental problems that have given science a bad name.

Horizon explores how to make the future livable and prevent the effects of urban sprawl.

Horizon explains acupuncture theories and examines its validity in modern medicine.

1973-03-22T20:00:00Z

10x10 What Time Is Your Body?

10x10 What Time Is Your Body?

  • 1973-03-22T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon illustrates the Circadian Cycle of your body clock as it relates to physical and mental efficiency.

1973-04-05T20:00:00Z

10x11 Survival of the Weakest

10x11 Survival of the Weakest

  • 1973-04-05T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon investigates the chances of survival and chances of a normal life for babies who are born underweight.

This Horizon documentary shows the work of the Cambridge Coral Starfish Research Group off of Port Sudan in the Red Sea.

In this report, Horizon studies the problem of backache and investigates some remarkable new spine research.

1973-05-03T20:00:00Z

10x14 Airport

10x14 Airport

  • 1973-05-03T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon covers Heathrow Airport in England and in particular, the work which is being done to make it safe.

Horizon looks at the phenomena of memory and some recent discoveries about it made by scientists.

1973-05-24T20:00:00Z

10x16 What a Waste!

10x16 What a Waste!

  • 1973-05-24T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the various ways of dealing with the growing problem of garbage.

1973-06-07T20:00:00Z

10x17 The Laws of the Land

10x17 The Laws of the Land

  • 1973-06-07T20:00:00Z1h

In the episode, Horizon investigates modern intensive farming methods.

Horizon takes a realistic look at the new ideas and technology threatening Britain's railway system.

1973-06-21T20:00:00Z

10x19 The Telly of Tomorrow?

10x19 The Telly of Tomorrow?

  • 1973-06-21T20:00:00Z1h

In this Horizon documentary, it deals with the expansion of television in Britain and the USA, especially with the growth of cable television.

1973-07-05T20:00:00Z

10x20 How Does It Hurt?

10x20 How Does It Hurt?

  • 1973-07-05T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode of Horizon, you will find that many people suffer chronic pain and yet others cannot feel anything.

This report by Horizon examines the work of Sir Alister Hardy who has set up a research unit to examine religious experience.

Horizon presents a portrait of Konrad Lorenz and a review of his career and personal interests.

1973-10-01T20:00:00Z

10x23 Stretch Up Tall

10x23 Stretch Up Tall

  • 1973-10-01T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon takes a look at the medical and educational treatment of spastics in Britain.

1973-10-08T20:00:00Z

10x24 Gilding the Lily

10x24 Gilding the Lily

  • 1973-10-08T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary on the developments in botany resulting in new flowers and the mass production of plants from single cells.

In this episode of Horizon, Prof. John Taylor of the London University looks at the effects of gravity and the forces it exerts on the universe.

1973-10-22T20:00:00Z

10x26 What's so Big About Us?

10x26 What's so Big About Us?

  • 1973-10-22T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the plight of the Pygmies, on the verge of extinction as a racial group.

This Horizon documentary is a biography of the Danish nuclear physicist, Nils Bohr, and his efforts to internationally control atomic energy.

1973-11-05T21:00:00Z

10x28 Carry on Smoking

10x28 Carry on Smoking

  • 1973-11-05T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the rise in the number of people who smoke and the real health risks.

1973-11-26T21:00:00Z

10x29 Air Crash Detective

10x29 Air Crash Detective

  • 1973-11-26T21:00:00Z1h

In this report, Horizon investigates why airplanes crash and shows accident investigators at work analyzing a film of an actual crash.

1973-12-03T21:00:00Z

10x30 An Element of Mystery

10x30 An Element of Mystery

  • 1973-12-03T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon documents the sources, uses, and properties of the element mercury and examines its role in modern society.

1973-12-17T21:00:00Z

10x31 Digging Up the Future

10x31 Digging Up the Future

  • 1973-12-17T21:00:00Z1h

Can we ever hope to wipe out diseases like influenza and small-pox? Will our weather get better - or worse? Is it possible to grow anything useful on large areas of moorland in this country? Diseases, climate and soil structure alter so slowly that patterns in them can only be found by studying how they've changed over hundreds and thousands of years. Dating methods, which slot all the changes into place, are the most important scientific tools for analyzing the past. And the news they give can advise - and warn - us about the future.

Season Finale

1973-12-24T21:00:00Z

10x32 Kula, a Reason for Giving

Season Finale

10x32 Kula, a Reason for Giving

  • 1973-12-24T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the inhabitants islands east of New Guinea who have evolved a system of intercommunication called the Kula.

Season Premiere

1974-01-07T21:00:00Z

11x01 A Matter of Self-Defense

Season Premiere

11x01 A Matter of Self-Defense

  • 1974-01-07T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon explains how our body fights infections and cancers and brings us up-to-date on recent research in immunology.

This episode of Horizon is about various experiments on migratory birds and homing pigeons to try and discover how they navigate.

1974-01-21T21:00:00Z

11x03 Never Too Late to Learn

11x03 Never Too Late to Learn

  • 1974-01-21T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the British Open University and how it operates.

1974-01-28T21:00:00Z

11x04 The Great Fish Hunt

11x04 The Great Fish Hunt

  • 1974-01-28T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how Britain has hunted fish in the past and how improved fish catching techniques have severely reduced fish stocks.

1974-02-04T21:00:00Z

11x05 Pedal Power

11x05 Pedal Power

  • 1974-02-04T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about the history of the bicycle and the possibility of it being able to ease the traffic problems in Britain.

1974-02-11T21:00:00Z

11x06 The Writing on the Wall

11x06 The Writing on the Wall

  • 1974-02-11T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon looks at connections between crime and poor housing design in the USA.

Horizon investigates reports of abuse of the Colorado river in the USA.

1974-03-04T21:00:00Z

11x08 The Future Goes Boom

11x08 The Future Goes Boom

  • 1974-03-04T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines the British Hudson Institute's methods and predictions for the future of economics.

In this Horizon episode, we look at attempts by scientists to solve the energy crisis of future by building nuclear fusion reactors.

1974-04-22T20:00:00Z

11x10 The First Ten Years

11x10 The First Ten Years

  • 1974-04-22T20:00:00Z1h

In this report, Prof. John Maynard Smith looks back at some of the subjects Horizon has presented since 1964.

Horizon looks back at the discovery and the development of anesthesia.

1974-05-06T20:00:00Z

11x12 The Hunting of the Quark

This Horizon episode is about the search for quarks, thought to be the substance of which electrons, protons, and neutrons are made of.

1974-05-13T20:00:00Z

11x13 A Noah's Ark for Europe

11x13 A Noah's Ark for Europe

  • 1974-05-13T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates captive animal breeding to prevent extinction of animal species in the wild.

Horizon reports on bridges in Britain...how safe are they?

1974-06-10T20:00:00Z

11x15 Search for Life

11x15 Search for Life

  • 1974-06-10T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary about the origins of life which attempts to find out what happened in the one billion years before fossil evidence begins.

1974-06-10T20:00:00Z

11x16 The Secrets of Sleep

11x16 The Secrets of Sleep

  • 1974-06-10T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the subject of sleep in Britain and the USA.

1974-06-24T20:00:00Z

11x17 Who Needs Skills?

11x17 Who Needs Skills?

  • 1974-06-24T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode of Horizon, you learn about transferring the basis of modern industry production from human skills to computer programmed machines.

1974-07-01T20:00:00Z

11x18 Hills of Promise

11x18 Hills of Promise

  • 1974-07-01T20:00:00Z1h

In this report, Horizon presents the state of hill farming in Wales.

This documentary of Horizon reports on the discovery of the structure of DNA in 1953 by Dr. Francis Crick and Prof. James Watson.

1974-07-15T20:00:00Z

11x20 The Immigrant Doctors

11x20 The Immigrant Doctors

  • 1974-07-15T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon reports on the rising number of imigrant doctors working in the National Health System of Britain.

1974-07-22T20:00:00Z

11x21 Mines, Minerals and Men

11x21 Mines, Minerals and Men

  • 1974-07-22T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the technological and economic reasons for the mining revival in Britain.

1974-07-29T20:00:00Z

11x22 What Price Steak?

11x22 What Price Steak?

  • 1974-07-29T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the beef crisis and rising prices.

1974-08-05T20:00:00Z

11x23 Listen and Be Loyal

11x23 Listen and Be Loyal

  • 1974-08-05T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you a report by Tom Harrison on anti-nazi propaganda in Britain during World War II.

1974-08-12T20:00:00Z

11x24 Adam or Eve?

11x24 Adam or Eve?

  • 1974-08-12T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon investigates the role that hormones play in the stages of mammalian sexual development.

1974-09-02T20:00:00Z

11x25 An Unholy Scramble

11x25 An Unholy Scramble

  • 1974-09-02T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates some of the risks and problems involved in bringing oil from the North Sea ashore.

1974-10-28T21:00:00Z

11x26 Do as You Are Told

11x26 Do as You Are Told

  • 1974-10-28T21:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon explores how far people are prepared to suppress their own moral scruples in the face of necessity to obey authority.

Horizons reviews the scientific work of Americans in the field of research in communication with animals.

1974-11-11T21:00:00Z

11x28 The Other Way

11x28 The Other Way

  • 1974-11-11T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents Dr. Schumacher's theory that use of modern technology could make the working week a creative experience.

Sixty years ago a Dutch scientist discovered a phenomenon that overturned the electrical rule book. By cooling certain metals to incredibly low temperatures he found they could continue to carry an electric current for ever, even when the power supply was switched off. Today, developments of these metals - called superconductors-have led to trains that fly, magnets that could depollute rivers and machines that promise cheaper power.

1974-12-09T21:00:00Z

11x30 Joey

11x30 Joey

  • 1974-12-09T21:00:00Z1h

This story by Horizon reconstructs the true life story of Joey Deacon.

1974-12-16T21:00:00Z

11x31 The Neglected Harvest

11x31 The Neglected Harvest

  • 1974-12-16T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the developments and research in forestry which may now help to overcome shortage of timber.

This documentary by Horizon reports on the development of cinematographic special effects from 1890's to date.

Season Finale

1974-12-30T21:00:00Z

11x33 The Lysenko Affair

Season Finale

11x33 The Lysenko Affair

  • 1974-12-30T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a dramatized documentary on the rise to power of Trofim Denisovich Lysenko, a young Ukrainian agriculturalist.

Season Premiere

1975-01-20T21:00:00Z

12x01 The Killer Dust

Season Premiere

12x01 The Killer Dust

  • 1975-01-20T21:00:00Z1h

This investigative report by Horizon covers an investigation into the deaths of people who inhaled asbestos dust at Acre Mill, Yorkshire, England.

1975-01-27T21:00:00Z

12x02 A Time to Be Born

12x02 A Time to Be Born

  • 1975-01-27T21:00:00Z50m

Investigates the growing tendency in hospitals to induce childbirth by injecting hormones into mothers. The practice has become increasingly widespread in recent years, and this film asks if induction is desirable, necessary, and safe.

1975-02-10T21:00:00Z

12x03 The Unsafe Sea

12x03 The Unsafe Sea

  • 1975-02-10T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon examines the problems of ship safety in the English Channel.

1975-02-17T21:00:00Z

12x04 The Change of Life

12x04 The Change of Life

  • 1975-02-17T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the symptoms of menopause and the various degrees in which it occurs.

1975-02-24T21:00:00Z

12x05 Project Fido

12x05 Project Fido

  • 1975-02-24T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon shows the peril to man of the ever increasing dog population in the western world.

1975-03-10T21:00:00Z

12x06 The Planets

12x06 The Planets

  • 1975-03-10T21:00:00Z1h

By the end of 1974, Mars, Venus, Mercury and Jupiter had all been visited by spacecraft. For the first time scientists saw in sharp detail the continents, mountains, valleys and volcanoes of other worlds. Tonight's programme shows how these geological features give clues to the way the planets evolved; how they have helped scientists in their attempt to reach back 5,000 million years to understand the formation of the solar system itself.

1975-04-07T20:00:00Z

12x07 The Long, Long Walkabout

This report by Horizon covers an investigation by a group of Australian scientists that looks into the origins and history of the Australian Aborigines.

1975-04-14T20:00:00Z

12x08 The Overworked Miracle

12x08 The Overworked Miracle

  • 1975-04-14T20:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon describes the resistance to antibiotics, fast growing in all countries, and the dangers it could mean for the future.

Horizon investigates the life and work of the great engineer, Isambard Kingdom Brunel.

1975-04-28T20:00:00Z

12x10 A Spoonful of Roughage

12x10 A Spoonful of Roughage

  • 1975-04-28T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the effect of fibre in diet on the diseases of western world.

1975-05-05T20:00:00Z

12x11 Brain Poison

12x11 Brain Poison

  • 1975-05-05T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents an investigation into the effects on health of lead in the urban atmosphere.

1975-05-12T20:00:00Z

12x12 The Bulldog's Last Bark?

This is a Horizon report on the building of the British military deterrent from the first decision to make it in 1941 until the present state of lethargy.

1975-05-19T20:00:00Z

12x13 Benjamin

12x13 Benjamin

  • 1975-05-19T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon follows the progress of Benjamin Pile, born on 22 November, 1974, at Oxford in Britain.

1975-06-02T20:00:00Z

12x14 The McMaster Experiment

12x14 The McMaster Experiment

  • 1975-06-02T20:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon covers an experiment at McMaster University Medical School, in Ontario, Canada.

1975-06-09T20:00:00Z

12x15 The Glazed Outlook

12x15 The Glazed Outlook

  • 1975-06-09T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the attempts by the University of Newcastle in England to define and create an ideal living and working environment.

1975-06-16T20:00:00Z

12x16 The Three Chord Trick

12x16 The Three Chord Trick

  • 1975-06-16T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the psychology of music, as it explains why music has such a powerful emotive effect in every society.

This report by Horizon brings you scientists that are using Antarctica as a giant natural lab to study who has polluted Earth most; man or nature.

1975-06-30T20:00:00Z

12x18 Strange Sleep

12x18 Strange Sleep

  • 1975-06-30T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the discovery of gaseous anaesthetic from 1840 until the early years of 20th century.

Horizon reports on the history of superconductivity, from discovery, to the present.

1975-07-14T20:00:00Z

12x20 How Do You Read?

12x20 How Do You Read?

  • 1975-07-14T20:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon reports on the reading process; how it works for the fluent, and how it should be taught.

1975-07-21T20:00:00Z

12x21 The Sickly Sea

12x21 The Sickly Sea

  • 1975-07-21T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon describes the various aspects of the pollution problem of the Mediterranean Sea.

1975-07-28T20:00:00Z

12x22 Happy Catastrophe

12x22 Happy Catastrophe

  • 1975-07-28T20:00:00Z1h

In this Horizon episode, Rene Thom's mathematical discovery of the catastrophe theory is investigated.

This documentary by Horizon commemorates the dropping of the A-bomb on Hiroshima, Japan on August 6, 1945.

1975-08-11T20:00:00Z

12x24 Cannabis

12x24 Cannabis

  • 1975-08-11T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon takes a look at the history of cannabis and the research on the effects of smoking marijuana.

1975-08-18T20:00:00Z

12x25 Meditation and the Mind

12x25 Meditation and the Mind

  • 1975-08-18T20:00:00Z1h

This is a report by Horizon on Transcendental Meditation, or TM, brought to the West by the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.

Season Finale

1975-12-29T21:00:00Z

12x26 The Trobriand Experiment

Season Finale

12x26 The Trobriand Experiment

  • 1975-12-29T21:00:00Z1h

This documentary by Horizon is about the Trobriand islanders, whose culture is based on the Kula, a communication system of giving and receiving.

Season Premiere

1976-01-05T21:00:00Z

13x01 The Transplant Experience

Season Premiere

13x01 The Transplant Experience

  • 1976-01-05T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates heart transplant research and techniques perfected and currently used by Dr. Norman Shumway in Britain.

1976-01-12T21:00:00Z

13x02 Intimate Strangers

13x02 Intimate Strangers

  • 1976-01-12T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about symbiosis - the close association between two or more species for their mutual benefit.

Horizon reports on the country of Tanzania, a country that spends only one dollar per person on health services, and more than half of all children born there die before the age of five.

1976-01-26T21:00:00Z

13x04 The Incredible Machine

13x04 The Incredible Machine

  • 1976-01-26T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon explores what actually happens inside our bodies using new optical techniques.

1976-02-02T21:00:00Z

13x05 King Coal Revived

13x05 King Coal Revived

  • 1976-02-02T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines the projected expansion of the coal mining industry.

1976-02-09T21:00:00Z

13x06 A Question of Trust

13x06 A Question of Trust

  • 1976-02-09T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode of Horizon, we look at the need for confidence in the doctor to patient relationship.

Horizon investigates the mysterious Bermuda Triangle.

Horizon traces back the origins and development of the pre-Incan Chimu civilization of Peru.

1976-03-01T21:00:00Z

13x09 Inside the Shark

13x09 Inside the Shark

  • 1976-03-01T21:00:00Z1h

This documentary by Horizon takes a look at the shark, the supreme predator of the sea.

1976-03-08T21:00:00Z

13x10 The Chemical Dream

13x10 The Chemical Dream

  • 1976-03-08T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on enzymes and the way they are being put on work in the industry and medicine fields.

1976-03-15T21:00:00Z

13x11 The Edelin Affair

13x11 The Edelin Affair

  • 1976-03-15T21:00:00Z1h

This is a Horizon reconstruction of the trial of Dr. Kenneth Edelin who was arrested after performing an abortion in 1973.

This Horizon reports is about Margaret Mead, who at age 74, is one of America's most influential social scientists.

1976-03-29T20:00:00Z

13x13 The Pathway from Madness

Horizon investigates the developments in and the treatment of schizophrenia.

1976-04-05T20:00:00Z

13x14 Geronimo's Children

13x14 Geronimo's Children

  • 1976-04-05T20:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon investigates the aggressive and oppressive history of the Mescalero and Chiricuhua Apache Indians of New Mexico in the USA.

1976-04-12T20:00:00Z

13x15 The Vision of the Blind

13x15 The Vision of the Blind

  • 1976-04-12T20:00:00Z1h

This Horizon documentary investigates the ways that the blind and partially blind are aided.

1976-04-26T20:00:00Z

13x16 A Lesson for Teachers

13x16 A Lesson for Teachers

  • 1976-04-26T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the comparative research study into progressive versus formal primary school teaching in the UK.

1976-05-03T20:00:00Z

13x17 Why Did Stuart Die?

13x17 Why Did Stuart Die?

  • 1976-05-03T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon delves in the research into the causes for, and the methods of eradicating 'cot deaths' in Britain.

1976-05-17T20:00:00Z

13x18 The Children of Peru

13x18 The Children of Peru

  • 1976-05-17T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at food production in Peru today.

1976-05-24T20:00:00Z

13x19 Dying

13x19 Dying

  • 1976-05-24T20:00:00Z1h

This is a Horizon documentary on how a widow faces the last day of her husband's life and the story of three other people who know they only have a short time to live.

Horizon investigates a local authority residential home in Wandsworth, Britain, for emotionally disturbed children.

In the episode, Horizon explores the history of man's understanding of the sun's structure and observations in recent years.

1976-10-25T21:00:00Z

13x22 The Bull's Eye War

13x22 The Bull's Eye War

  • 1976-10-25T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at today's precision guided weapons.

Horizon makes an investigation into claims by a group of scientists who theorize that dinosaurs were not actaully cold-blooded reptiles, but hot-blooded, like mammals.

1976-11-08T21:00:00Z

13x24 Billion Dollar Bubble

13x24 Billion Dollar Bubble

  • 1976-11-08T21:00:00Z1h

This is an investigative report by Horizon that shows how the Equity Funding Corp. of America produced two billion dollars worth of phoney insurance.

1976-11-15T21:00:00Z

13x25 The Selfish Gene

13x25 The Selfish Gene

  • 1976-11-15T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon documentary explores animal behavior. Animals do not act for the good of their own species, rather for the preservation of their own genes.

1976-11-22T21:00:00Z

13x26 A Child of Our Own

13x26 A Child of Our Own

  • 1976-11-22T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about infertility and the state of British scientific research in this area.

Horizon reports on Pacific Ocean fishermen who are famous for their extraordinary fishing skills. They catch fish with a kite and a tassel of spiders webs.

1976-12-06T21:00:00Z

13x28 The Long Valley

13x28 The Long Valley

  • 1976-12-06T21:00:00Z1h

This is a Horizon documentary about six people who have each lost someone very close, as they describe their progress through grief.

1976-12-13T21:00:00Z

13x29 Half-Way to 1984

13x29 Half-Way to 1984

  • 1976-12-13T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at new developments in computer technology that have made mass surveillance possible, and also its political misuse.

This Horizon episode is about the actual King Arthur's Round Table, which hangs in the Hall of Winchester Castle, Hants, Britain.

Season Premiere

1977-01-07T21:00:00Z

14x01 A Smile for a Crocodile

Season Premiere

14x01 A Smile for a Crocodile

  • 1977-01-07T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon documents the life of crocodiles and alligators, and their breeding and exploitation.

1977-01-14T21:00:00Z

14x02 The Pill for the People

14x02 The Pill for the People

  • 1977-01-14T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon traces the history of the oral contraceptive pill through the last 60 years as told by its pioneers.

1977-01-21T21:00:00Z

14x03 The Ape That Stood Up

14x03 The Ape That Stood Up

  • 1977-01-21T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at how recent excavations in Africa have changed the accepted ideas of man's origins and age.

1977-02-04T21:00:00Z

14x04 The Human Animal

14x04 The Human Animal

  • 1977-02-04T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates Sociobiology, which is a study of human social behaviour based on zoological research into animal behaviour.

In this episode, Horizon explores how animal experiments are carried out in Britain.

1977-02-25T21:00:00Z

14x06 Hunters of the Seal

14x06 Hunters of the Seal

  • 1977-02-25T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a story that depicts an astonishingly harsh way of life of the Netsilik Eskimos whose whole life is based on seal hunting.

1977-03-04T21:00:00Z

14x07 The Red Planet

14x07 The Red Planet

  • 1977-03-04T21:00:00Z1h

This story by Horizon traces the efforts of astronomers and scientists through history to prove the existence of life on Mars.

1977-03-11T21:00:00Z

14x08 One of Nature's Hotels

14x08 One of Nature's Hotels

  • 1977-03-11T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at an ecological study of the Ythan estuary in Scotland.

1977-03-18T21:00:00Z

14x09 Dawn of the Solar Age

14x09 Dawn of the Solar Age

  • 1977-03-18T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon investigates research into solar energy in the USA, Japan, and the UK.

1977-04-01T20:00:00Z

14x10 Genetic Roulette

14x10 Genetic Roulette

  • 1977-04-01T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the debate on human genetic engineering.

BBC television documentary which explores, using live-action dramatisation, the life's work of Sir Isaac Newton, emphasising his sources of inspiration.

In this episode, Horizon looks at how, despite the high costs of the National Health System of Britain, more money doesn't mean better health.

1977-07-29T20:00:00Z

14x13 Silent Speech

14x13 Silent Speech

  • 1977-07-29T20:00:00Z1h

This Horizon report is about Prof. Hubert Montagner and his study of non-verbal communication in young children, along with his findings.

1977-08-05T20:00:00Z

14x14 The Green Machine

14x14 The Green Machine

  • 1977-08-05T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon makes an investigation into plant biology.

This is a report by Horizon on the successful clean-up of the River Thames in Britain.

This Horizon episode reports on research by scientists into identifying a system of markers, such as tissue types on blood cells, which indicate the human being's vulnerability to a whole range of diseases like multiple sclerosis and diabetes, and the possibilities this presents for preventive medicine.

1977-09-16T20:00:00Z

14x17 40 Years of Murder

14x17 40 Years of Murder

  • 1977-09-16T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a profile on one of the UK's leading pathologists, Keith Simpson.

1977-09-30T20:00:00Z

14x18 The Cry for Help

14x18 The Cry for Help

  • 1977-09-30T20:00:00Z1h

This Horizon episode examines the growing British problem of attempted suicide by an overdose of drugs.

1977-10-07T20:00:00Z

14x19 The Sunspot Mystery

14x19 The Sunspot Mystery

  • 1977-10-07T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents evidence that links the drought cycle with the number of magnetically-hyperactive sunspots.

1977-10-21T20:00:00Z

14x20 The Rhine's Revenge

14x20 The Rhine's Revenge

  • 1977-10-21T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the story of how the river Rhine has defended itself against progress.

1977-12-02T21:00:00Z

14x21 Icarus' Children

14x21 Icarus' Children

  • 1977-12-02T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a report on the prize offered to the first person who could fly a prescribed figure of eight course.

1977-12-09T21:00:00Z

14x22 The Healing Nightmare

14x22 The Healing Nightmare

  • 1977-12-09T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is a dramatized reconstruction of breakdown of Carl Gustav Jung on the road to insanity.

Season Finale

1977-12-23T21:00:00Z

14x23 The Great Wine Revolution

Season Finale

14x23 The Great Wine Revolution

  • 1977-12-23T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores a new science-based revolution in the production of wine.

Season Premiere

1978-01-06T21:00:00Z

15x01 Living Machines

Season Premiere

15x01 Living Machines

  • 1978-01-06T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how biologists and engineers are pooling their ideas to understand how nature's machines work.

1978-01-20T21:00:00Z

15x02 A Land for All Reasons

15x02 A Land for All Reasons

  • 1978-01-20T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon examines the need for an objective approach to land management in Britain.

Horizon explores community and residential services available to the elderly in South Hampton, England.

1978-02-03T21:00:00Z

15x04 Zero G

15x04 Zero G

  • 1978-02-03T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a report on zero gravity and the effects of weightlessness in spacecraft on humans.

1978-02-17T21:00:00Z

15x05 The Message in the Rocks

15x05 The Message in the Rocks

  • 1978-02-17T21:00:00Z1h

Develops the theory that four and a half thousand million years ago the earth was formed thanks to the explosion of a huge star which provided the rocks, the minerals and the radioactivity from which life developed. These theories are based partly on analysis of a meteorite which dropped near a village in Mexico at the beginning of the seventies.

1978-02-24T21:00:00Z

15x06 The Eddystone Lights

15x06 The Eddystone Lights

  • 1978-02-24T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on last three attempts to build a lighthouse on the Eddystone Rocks, near Plymouth.

Horizon presents a documentary on the development of the Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation device, or more commonly know as the Laser.

1978-03-24T20:00:00Z

15x08 The New Breadline

15x08 The New Breadline

  • 1978-03-24T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the reasons for poverty in Britain today, now with seven million on at the poverty line.

1978-03-31T20:00:00Z

15x09 Now the Chips Are Down

15x09 Now the Chips Are Down

  • 1978-03-31T20:00:00Z1h

About the applications and implications for the future, particularly the effects on the labour market, of microprocessors.

1978-07-14T20:00:00Z

15x10 Explosions in the Mind

15x10 Explosions in the Mind

  • 1978-07-14T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon explores the after effects of a stroke when there is a sudden stoppage of blood to the human brain.

1978-07-21T20:00:00Z

15x11 One Small Step

15x11 One Small Step

  • 1978-07-21T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the race to the moon between the USA and Russia and questions the motives behind the space race.

1978-07-28T20:00:00Z

15x12 The Tsetse Trap

15x12 The Tsetse Trap

  • 1978-07-28T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about the tsetse fly which rules most of Africa and why much of the fertile land can't in Africa can't be used because of the dangerous insect.

1978-08-04T20:00:00Z

15x13 A Whisper From Space

15x13 A Whisper From Space

  • 1978-08-04T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the history of evidence used to support the Big Bang Theory of the creation of the universe.

1978-08-11T20:00:00Z

15x14 Prisoners of Hope

15x14 Prisoners of Hope

  • 1978-08-11T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon explains some of the research in multiple sclerosis and how the lives of MS sufferers are affected.

1978-08-18T20:00:00Z

15x15 On a Different Track

15x15 On a Different Track

  • 1978-08-18T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a brief history of the French railways and the policy behind their future direction.

1978-08-25T20:00:00Z

15x16 Careering into Science

15x16 Careering into Science

  • 1978-08-25T20:00:00Z1h

This documentary by Horizon is about six school children taking 'O' levels exams and inter science in Britain.

1978-09-01T20:00:00Z

15x17 Cashing in on the Ocean

15x17 Cashing in on the Ocean

  • 1978-09-01T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the implications of exploiting Manganese nodules which are scattered over the seabed.

1978-09-08T20:00:00Z

15x18 Bags of Life

15x18 Bags of Life

  • 1978-09-08T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the composition and structure of the membrane that surround individual cells.

1978-09-15T20:00:00Z

15x19 Innocent Slaughter?

15x19 Innocent Slaughter?

  • 1978-09-15T20:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon examines all sides of the Canadian Harpseal hunt issue and asks if it is really necessary.

1978-11-03T21:00:00Z

15x20 The Beersheva Experiment

Horizon explores an experimental medical school in Israel where students are trained primarily to care for people.

1978-11-10T21:00:00Z

15x21 Divers Do It Deeper

15x21 Divers Do It Deeper

  • 1978-11-10T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the years of research that have enabled divers to go to greater and greater ocean depth.

1978-11-17T21:00:00Z

15x22 The Big Sleep

15x22 The Big Sleep

  • 1978-11-17T21:00:00Z1h

In this story, Horizon takes a look at the world's leading hibernation research projects.

1978-11-24T21:00:00Z

15x23 The Vital Spark

15x23 The Vital Spark

  • 1978-11-24T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon examines the current developments in electrotherapy.

Season Finale

1978-12-29T21:00:00Z

15x24 The Red Deer of Rhum

Season Finale

15x24 The Red Deer of Rhum

  • 1978-12-29T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon takes a look at the changing behaviour of individual animals in a herd of red deer on the Isle of Rhum.

Season Premiere

1979-02-26T21:00:00Z

16x01 The Forever Fuel

Season Premiere

16x01 The Forever Fuel

  • 1979-02-26T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents an investigation into the potential and problems of using hydrogen as an alternative to existing fuels.

1979-03-05T21:00:00Z

16x02 In Search of Pegasus

16x02 In Search of Pegasus

  • 1979-03-05T21:00:00Z1h

In this program, Horizon looks at the effort and money spent on the horse to produce the perfect specimen.

1979-03-12T21:00:00Z

16x03 The Keys of Paradise

16x03 The Keys of Paradise

  • 1979-03-12T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows the discovery of a chemical in the brain which has morphine-like properties.

1979-03-19T20:00:00Z

16x04 Sweet Solutions

16x04 Sweet Solutions

  • 1979-03-19T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the history and research into the uses of sugar.

1979-03-26T20:00:00Z

16x05 Bronze Age Blast-Off

16x05 Bronze Age Blast-Off

  • 1979-03-26T20:00:00Z1h

In this documentary by Horizon, you are shown a revolution in archaeological dating has shown that metal technology was invented in Europe.

1979-04-02T20:00:00Z

16x06 The Real Bionic Man

16x06 The Real Bionic Man

  • 1979-04-02T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the current state of research into the development of artificial replacements for various parts of the body.

1979-04-09T20:00:00Z

16x07 A Mediterranean Prospect

Horizon reports about the attempts to bring about cooperation between the Mediterranean countries to combat pollution of their seas.

1979-04-23T20:00:00Z

16x08 Elements of Risk

16x08 Elements of Risk

  • 1979-04-23T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon looks at Britain's methods and plans for nuclear waste management and disposal of the fuel elements.

Horizon presents a documentary that shows how part of the Amazon river area around the Rio Jari was developed with rice and forestry.

This is a Horizon documentary about Liam Hudson, noted psychologist at Brunel University as he challenges modern psychologists.

Horizon examines the work of Dr. Lennart Nilsson who has filmed the complete arterial system of the human body.

1979-05-21T20:00:00Z

16x12 The Fight to Be Male

16x12 The Fight to Be Male

  • 1979-05-21T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon looks at the recent scientific research into how humans become male or female.

1979-05-28T20:00:00Z

16x13 The Robots Are Coming

16x13 The Robots Are Coming

  • 1979-05-28T20:00:00Z1h

This Horizon documentary is about the increasing use of robots in industry, and the robot's abilities and weaknesses.

1979-09-24T20:00:00Z

16x14 Mexican Oil Dance

16x14 Mexican Oil Dance

  • 1979-09-24T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the effect of the Mexican oil boom on the country itself and world energy situation.

Horizon investigates the environmental protection program going on in the state of Oregon in the USA. Oregon is the first state to clean up it's environment.

1979-10-08T20:00:00Z

16x16 The Race to Reshape Cars

In this episode, Horizon reports on the need to consider more aerodynamic designs for cars to improve fuel economy.

1979-10-15T20:00:00Z

16x17 Dragnet for Diabetes

16x17 Dragnet for Diabetes

  • 1979-10-15T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a report on the research into diabetes to determine its causes, controlling measures, and the prevention of complications.

Horizon takes a trip down the Jonglei Canal which is under construction in Sudan and reports on the changes the new canal will bring to the country, and the rest of the world.

1979-10-29T21:00:00Z

16x19 Survival of the Fastest

16x19 Survival of the Fastest

  • 1979-10-29T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon documentary describes the complete history and design of motorcycles which have significantly evolved over the past 80 years.

1979-11-05T21:00:00Z

16x20 A Touch of Sensitivity

16x20 A Touch of Sensitivity

  • 1979-11-05T21:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon is about current research into the physical and psychological effects of touch, and the effects of touch deprivation.

1979-11-12T21:00:00Z

16x21 A Treasury of Trees

16x21 A Treasury of Trees

  • 1979-11-12T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how the British landscape is changing its appearance with native trees being replaced by imported species.

1979-11-19T21:00:00Z

16x22 Darkness Visible

16x22 Darkness Visible

  • 1979-11-19T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines the development of the relatively new science of x-ray astronomy.

1979-12-03T21:00:00Z

16x23 Uranium Goes Critical

16x23 Uranium Goes Critical

  • 1979-12-03T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon episode is all about Uranium; its history, the use of uranium for nuclear energy, the dangers of uranium, and the scarcity of the mineral.

1979-12-10T21:00:00Z

16x24 The Fat in the Fire

16x24 The Fat in the Fire

  • 1979-12-10T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores current research into the causes and cure for obesity.

Season Finale

1979-12-17T21:00:00Z

16x25 Decade

Season Finale

16x25 Decade

  • 1979-12-17T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode by Horizon, G. R. Taylor presents his personal view of science based on previous Horizon episode clips from the 1970's.

Season Premiere

1980-01-14T21:00:00Z

17x01 The Ghost Of The Amoco Cadiz

Season Premiere

17x01 The Ghost Of The Amoco Cadiz

  • 1980-01-14T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary examination of the causes and conditions of the sinking of the Amoco Cadiz oil-tanker, in 1978.

Documentary examination on the process of ageing and some things that can be done about the problems of senility in old people.

1980-02-04T21:00:00Z

17x03 Cleared for Take-Off

17x03 Cleared for Take-Off

  • 1980-02-04T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary which looks at the danger points in flying an airliner on a routine flight from Gatwick to Los Angeles. Danger points are identified and we see research into airtraffic control, aircraft design, the role of the stewardess, avoiding mid-air collisions, electronic flight desks, whirlwind vortices and a new fuel additive that may virtually eliminate the instant conflagrations.

1980-02-11T21:00:00Z

17x04 A Sporting Chance

17x04 A Sporting Chance

  • 1980-02-11T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary on the ways in which athletes from different countries prepare for the Olympic Games and the artificial methods of improving performance, drugs and physiological methods

Documentary film on cancer research in the remote Chinese valley of Lin Xian where the population suffers more than 100 times the incidence of oesophagal cancer than normal.

1980-02-25T21:00:00Z

17x06 The Big If...

17x06 The Big If...

  • 1980-02-25T21:00:00Z1h

About Interferon, a drug made from human blood cells, thought to be capable of controlling viruses and cancer

1980-03-03T21:00:00Z

17x07 Cash from Trash

17x07 Cash from Trash

  • 1980-03-03T21:00:00Z1h

Explores the potential in recycling rubbish in terms of energy and other resources

1980-03-10T21:00:00Z

17x08 Encounter with Jupiter

17x08 Encounter with Jupiter

  • 1980-03-10T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary on the space voyages of Nasa robot space craft Voyager 1 & 2 and their photographic records of the planet Jupiter.

1980-03-17T20:00:00Z

17x09 Portrait of a Poison

17x09 Portrait of a Poison

  • 1980-03-17T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary report on the mounting evidence of the horrifying effects of the use of dioxin as a defoliant in Vietnam and as a herbicide in domestic use on both humans and all other living beings.

1980-03-24T20:00:00Z

17x10 Magnet Earth

17x10 Magnet Earth

  • 1980-03-24T20:00:00Z1h

Looks at what is known about the earth's magnetic field, how it affects the world's organisms and in particular at recent research in this field.

1980-09-01T20:00:00Z

17x11 Goodbye Gutenberg

17x11 Goodbye Gutenberg

  • 1980-09-01T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary on the "information revolution" the advances made in the methods of electronic storage and display of information, and the effects of these advances on democracy, language, national boundaries, bureaucracy and privacy.

1980-09-08T20:00:00Z

17x12 Invasion of the Virions

17x12 Invasion of the Virions

  • 1980-09-08T20:00:00Z1h

Investigates various virus infections ranging from smallpox and rabies down to influenza and the common cold. The way they function and the reasons the body builds up resistance to some and not to others.

1980-09-15T20:00:00Z

17x13 Beyond the Milky Way

17x13 Beyond the Milky Way

  • 1980-09-15T20:00:00Z1h

Astronomers are seen at work in the UK, Arizona, Hawaii, New Mexico and Australia, describing their discoveries about the galaxies beyond the Milky Way.

1980-09-22T20:00:00Z

17x14 Little Boxes

17x14 Little Boxes

  • 1980-09-22T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary about industrial design and the effect it has on the look of everyday life. Dieter Rams, Tom Woolfe, Etore Sottsass and Raymond Loewy are among the designers talking about their work .

1980-09-29T20:00:00Z

17x15 The Other Kenya

17x15 The Other Kenya

  • 1980-09-29T20:00:00Z1h

Looks at the contrasts in Kenya between the tourist image and the hardship caused by development. In particular, considers the lives of three family groups native to the country and the poverty they are forced to live in by the Kenyan economy geared to the West.

1980-10-06T20:00:00Z

17x16 Moving Still

17x16 Moving Still

  • 1980-10-06T20:00:00Z1h

The new perspectives which can be gained on the natural world through time-lapse and high-speed photography. Includes footage of droplets of water merging in mid-air, a bullet spiralling up its barrel toward you, a wet dog shaking its fur, flowers bursting open, starfish scurrying on the sea floor, and spark plugs spreading their fire.

1980-10-13T20:00:00Z

17x17 The Way Out

17x17 The Way Out

  • 1980-10-13T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary about London Transport and the decline in its services over the year s. It receives less subsidy than an comparable transport system in the world, but would more GLC aid improve the service?

1980-10-20T20:00:00Z

17x18 The Dead Sea Lives

17x18 The Dead Sea Lives

  • 1980-10-20T20:00:00Z1h

Explains, within a historical context, how Israel and Jordan are trying to make use of the Dead Sea. Its mineral-rich waters are being harnessed by scientists and engineers to produce such diverse products as protein, potash and cheap energy .

1980-10-27T21:00:00Z

17x19 Once in a Million Years

17x19 Once in a Million Years

  • 1980-10-27T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary on nuclear energy and the efforts of scientists to contain and control the high risk factors involved with plutonium and uranium.

1980-11-03T21:00:00Z

17x20 Smoker's Luck

17x20 Smoker's Luck

  • 1980-11-03T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary about smoking and about the secondary effects of it. Britain leads the world in smoking deaths at 200 per day. The film looks at prognosis of deat h and at the chances of those who give up smoking of dying of the effects.

1980-11-10T21:00:00Z

17x21 Behind the Horoscope

17x21 Behind the Horoscope

  • 1980-11-10T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary looking at the scientific facts about the growing cult of Astrology. In this report, Horizon looks at the way astrology has evolved and examines statistical evidence to evaluate its credibility.

1980-11-17T21:00:00Z

17x22 The Mondragon Experiment

Documentary on the twenty-five year old experimental industrial set-up in the Spanish city of Mondragon where most of the factories and laboratories are co-operativetively owned and run by a workers committee.

1980-11-24T21:00:00Z

17x23 The Spike

17x23 The Spike

  • 1980-11-24T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary about epilepsy, showing epileptic fits as they occur and explaining what the onlooker should and should not do. Sufferers describe their experiences of the disease and consultant neurologist and psychiatrist, Dr. Peter Fenwick, offers a scientific interpretation.

1980-12-01T21:00:00Z

17x24 The Slatemakers

17x24 The Slatemakers

  • 1980-12-01T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary on the slatemaking industry of North Wales, now a dying craft, and the people involved with it.

Season Finale

1980-12-15T21:00:00Z

17x25 Anatomy of a Volcano

Season Finale

17x25 Anatomy of a Volcano

  • 1980-12-15T21:00:00Z1h

Chronicles the efforts of geologists throughout the summer of 1980 to study the recently erupted volcano Mt. Saint Helens in Washington State, USA.

Season Premiere

1981-01-05T21:00:00Z

18x01 Spend and Prosper

Season Premiere

18x01 Spend and Prosper

  • 1981-01-05T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a portrait of the renowned economist John Maynard Keynes, Cambridge Don, and Bloomsbury intellectual.

1981-01-12T21:00:00Z

18x02 A Whole New Medicine

18x02 A Whole New Medicine

  • 1981-01-12T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about holistic medicine, health for the whole person, which uses unorthodox therapies.

1981-01-19T21:00:00Z

18x03 The Qualyub Project

18x03 The Qualyub Project

  • 1981-01-19T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the research of Egyptian doctors in trying to control bilharzia, a disease caused by parasitic worms.

Horizon investigates the reports about a number of scientists who do not conform to contemporary scientific theories.

1981-02-02T21:00:00Z

18x05 Living with Dying

18x05 Living with Dying

  • 1981-02-02T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the care given to the terminally ill by hospices.

In this episode, Horizon presents a portrait of Dr. Edward Teller, whose opinions about nuclear war are highly controversial.

Horizon reports on the changing role of the community midwife in Britain as more births take place in hospital.

1981-03-02T21:00:00Z

18x08 West of Bangalore

18x08 West of Bangalore

  • 1981-03-02T21:00:00Z1h

A group of scientists are trying to solve public utility problems in Mysore, India.

Horizon examines the design of Formula One racing cars with a particular reference to the aerodynamic 'skirt'.

1981-03-16T21:00:00Z

18x10 Hello Universe!

18x10 Hello Universe!

  • 1981-03-16T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores probabilities of whether we have any intelligent neighbors in space.

1981-03-23T21:00:00Z

18x11 Voices from Silent Hands

Horizon presents a documentary on deaf children and their struggle to learn the sign language.

1981-03-30T20:00:00Z

18x12 Did Darwin Get It Wrong?

In this episode, Horizon explores the new evolutionary theory that there are sudden, vs. gradual, evolutionary changes from one species to another.

1981-04-06T20:00:00Z

18x13 East of Bombay

18x13 East of Bombay

  • 1981-04-06T20:00:00Z1h

This show is a Horizon documentary about the training by two doctors from India, Rajnikant and Mabelle Arole, who are trying to combat the curable diseases. These diseases are common killers in Indian communities. Also, a report on Salubai, one of these native health workers and her work at Kamkhed in Western India.

Horizon presents a two part documentary on NASA's unmanned Voyager 1 spacecraft and the data it has sent back from the planets Jupiter and Saturn.

Horizon presents the second episode of a two part documentary on NASA's unmanned Voyager 1 spacecraft and the data it has sent back from the planets Jupiter and Saturn.

In this documentary on nuclear energy, Horizon looks at three experts with regard to the prospect of a nuclear power station sited for construction near where they live.

Horizon investigates Legionnaires disease and the research being carried out in the USA to try find a cause and cure.

1981-10-12T20:00:00Z

18x18 Breaking in Children

18x18 Breaking in Children

  • 1981-10-12T20:00:00Z1h

In this story, Horizon follows the efforts of two mothers who attempt gain control over their very disobedient children.

1981-10-19T20:00:00Z

18x19 The Grid

18x19 The Grid

  • 1981-10-19T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a followup episode of Gentlemen, Lift Up Your Skirts, covering the Formula One racing season while investigating the way the William's racing team fought the fierce competition of the French and Italian racings teams by finding ways around new rulings to make their cars first on the grid.

1981-10-26T21:00:00Z

18x20 Butterflies or Barley?

18x20 Butterflies or Barley?

  • 1981-10-26T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the conflict between the farmers and the conservationists over the English countryside.

1981-11-02T21:00:00Z

18x21 Science for the People

18x21 Science for the People

  • 1981-11-02T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a two part documentary looking at the science and technology inside the Soviet Union. In this episode, we look at why the Russians might need to import a chemical processing plant from the UK and computers from the USA when they have a quarter of the world's scientists and still give science and research the highest priority.

1981-11-09T21:00:00Z

18x22 The Race to Ruin

18x22 The Race to Ruin

  • 1981-11-09T21:00:00Z1h

This is the second part of the Horizon documentary on the Soviet Union. In this report, we examine the basis for the space arms race between USA and USSR. Are the US efforts for the extensive space defense system to match the Russians based on a misconception of the USSR war effort from space?

1981-11-16T21:00:00Z

18x23 Death of the Dinosaurs

18x23 Death of the Dinosaurs

  • 1981-11-16T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates theories about the mystery of why the dinosaurs disappeared 65 million years ago.

Richard Feymann was one of the most brilliant theoretical physicists and original thinkers or the 20th century. He rebuilt the theory of quantum electrodynamics, and it was for this work that he won the Nobel Prize in 1965. In this documentary he talks about his motivations to be a scientist and a teacher of science.

1981-11-30T21:00:00Z

18x25 The Cornucopia

18x25 The Cornucopia

  • 1981-11-30T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the Common Agricultural Policy of the EEC that produces mountains of food. We look at the position which many European farmers occupy in western European economies which leads to the creation of overproduction of agricultural products. Do they need to reform the policy?

1981-12-07T21:00:00Z

18x26 A Race Against Time

18x26 A Race Against Time

  • 1981-12-07T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the efforts of the British Advanced Passenger Train (APT) engineering team trying to prepare the new APT for its first run.

Season Finale

1981-12-21T21:00:00Z

18x27 Painting by Numbers

Season Finale

18x27 Painting by Numbers

  • 1981-12-21T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary on the advances of computer graphics and its multiple uses in simulating reality in industry and science. It looks at the manipulation of 3-D images to paint, animate, design, and test scientific hypothesis.

Season Premiere

1982-01-11T21:00:00Z

19x01 The Secret of the Snake

Season Premiere

19x01 The Secret of the Snake

  • 1982-01-11T21:00:00Z1h

Profile of the snake, which presents a close-up look at how it kills and digests it's prey. Also shows how snake venom could be used in the treatment of many human ailments.

1982-01-18T21:00:00Z

19x02 Finding a Voice

19x02 Finding a Voice

  • 1982-01-18T21:00:00Z1h

An examination of computer-based communication aids for the severely speech impaired. Follows the trip to America of Dick Boydell, a cerebral palsy sufferer without the power of speech. At the Artificial Language Research Laboratory in Michigan, he tries out some of the machines developed the re to help him find his own voice.

1982-01-25T21:00:00Z

19x03 The Sea Beyond the Dunes

Documentary which looks at the wildlife of Pleasant Bay in New England marshland s of the Eastern USA, and their habitat.

Horizon explores what might happen when fossil fuel sources are depleted.

Horizon documents how every one of us is owned and operated by other individuals; by hordes of hidden organisms.

1982-02-15T21:00:00Z

19x06 The Cline Affair

19x06 The Cline Affair

  • 1982-02-15T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary on the first recorded instance of genetic engineering being carried out on a human, when in 1980, Dr. Martin Cline from Los Angeles operated on a 21 year old Israeli girl in Jerusalem to renew her defective blood system by implanting human genes. The programme examines the difficult ethical and moral questions surrounding the field of genetic manipulation and looks at the future of gene therapy.

Documentary which looks at the way in which disease in the world fights back against modern scientific methods of controlling it, looking at the example of the eradication of Malaria from Sri Lanka, and recent measures to eradicate it again

1982-03-01T21:00:00Z

19x08 Shots in the Dark

19x08 Shots in the Dark

  • 1982-03-01T21:00:00Z1h

An examination of the use of Depo-Provera in the Third World. The contraceptive is injected and prevents pregnancy for three months, but it is banned in the U.S. because of the risk of cancer. Looks at its use in Thailand.

1982-03-08T21:00:00Z

19x09 The Victims

19x09 The Victims

  • 1982-03-08T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary which looks at the psychological effects of kidnapping and imprisonment on the victims,based on the psychological characteristics shown by former concentration camp victims 30 years after the end of their ordeal.

Examines the prospects for Japanese economic supremacy in the 1990s and asks whether Japan will be able to compete in the development of new technologies or whether it will continue to look to the West for technological innovation. Also considers whether the Japanese education system stifles creativity.

Documentary which looks at the boom in private medicine in GB and at the effects of this on the National Health Service in the country.

1982-04-05T20:00:00Z

19x12 The Fatal Bargain

19x12 The Fatal Bargain

  • 1982-04-05T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary which looks at the outbreak of a new disease in Spain in 1981 which has affected 17,000 people, killing 300, and the confusion which remains as to its causes. Although adulterated olive oil sold by unscrupulous businessmen is thought to be partly to blame, no-one seems sure to what extent.

1982-10-11T20:00:00Z

19x13 The Miracle of Life

19x13 The Miracle of Life

  • 1982-10-11T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary which shows the human reproductive cycle from conception to birth, through the use of microscopic cameras within the human body.

1982-10-18T20:00:00Z

19x14 The Case of the UFOs

19x14 The Case of the UFOs

  • 1982-10-18T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary which looks at the phenomenon of the Unidentified Flying Object and the possible explanations behind their sighting and observation by mankind.

1982-10-25T21:00:00Z

19x15 A Killing Rain

19x15 A Killing Rain

  • 1982-10-25T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary about acid rain. The effects of various forms of pollution caused by processes of everyday life, including the contamination of rain by the burning of coal and oil. Written by Jeremy Taylor.

1982-11-01T21:00:00Z

19x16 Intimate Relations

19x16 Intimate Relations

  • 1982-11-01T21:00:00Z1h

A look at current research into the causes and effects of divorce in the Western world.

Documentary which looks at the great advances in the performance of ante-natal operations on the human foetus and the implications of these technical facilities for patient and health services and allocation of resources to this sort of medicine.

1982-11-15T21:00:00Z

19x18 Brave New Babies?

19x18 Brave New Babies?

  • 1982-11-15T21:00:00Z1h

Oxford moral philosopher Jonathan Glover introduces some of the new developments in genetic engineering, looks at the future possibilities of human genetic engineering and outlines the ethical questions raised by these new techniques.

1982-11-29T21:00:00Z

19x19 The Professor of Surgery

An informal portrait of Prof. Ian McColl at work in Guy's Hospital, London, and in Kent. He discusses what makes a good surgeon; how he teaches his students to talk to their future patients; and how much a patient should be told about what is going to happen in the operating theatre.

1982-12-06T21:00:00Z

19x20 The Chopper

19x20 The Chopper

  • 1982-12-06T21:00:00Z1h

Traces the evolution of the helicopter, using rare archive footage of early pioneering flights. Also examines the latest research within the industry, and, with the aid of graphics, produces a glimpse of the helicopter of the future

1982-12-13T21:00:00Z

19x21 The State of the Planet

19x21 The State of the Planet

  • 1982-12-13T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary on the discussions at the second UN Environment Conference,in London in 1982,illustrating the points made in the debates on the possible future of the planet.

Season Finale

1982-12-20T21:00:00Z

19x22 The Mysterious Mr. Tesla

Season Finale

19x22 The Mysterious Mr. Tesla

  • 1982-12-20T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary about the little known Yugoslav-American scientist Nikola Tesla, whose experiments with electricity and wireless foreshadowed the discoveries of Edison and Marconi. Some of his most spectacular experiments are recreated by the programme's presenter Robert Syme.

Season Premiere

1983-01-10T21:00:00Z

20x01 Sizewell Under Pressure

Season Premiere

20x01 Sizewell Under Pressure

  • 1983-01-10T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates if Britain should build a United States designed nuclear power station that uses a pressurized water reactor at its core.

Horizon presents a report by Dr. Alison Jolly who discusses the country of Madagascar, just off of the west coast of Africa. Madagascar's ecology and conservation programs are in conflict with most third world economies.

1983-01-24T21:00:00Z

20x03 The Geneva Event

20x03 The Geneva Event

  • 1983-01-24T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you a report about the discovery of two new, and unimaginably short-lived, subatomic particles called "W" and "Z".

1983-02-07T21:00:00Z

20x04 How Much Can You Drink?

20x04 How Much Can You Drink?

  • 1983-02-07T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines some of the effects that moderate amounts of alcohol can have on the body.

1983-02-14T21:00:00Z

20x05 Talking Turtle

20x05 Talking Turtle

  • 1983-02-14T21:00:00Z1h

In the Horizon documentary, we look new ways of using computers in classroom and to what effect computers in our schools will have in future.

Horizon investigates the way girls and boys were taught science and related subjects at schools.

Horizon reports on the state of scientific research in Britain and the past blunders of the National Research Development Council.

In this Horizon documentary, we look back at the event surrounding the near extermination of the North American bison (buffalo) in the 1880's.

1983-03-14T21:00:00Z

20x09 Hard Rock

20x09 Hard Rock

  • 1983-03-14T21:00:00Z1h

The Horizon episode is about the Carsington Aqueduct Scheme in Derbyshire, England, and the massive excavation problems encountered during construction.

1983-03-21T21:00:00Z

20x10 Better Mind the Computer

Horizon presents a look at the current research into artificial computer intelligence.

1983-04-11T20:00:00Z

20x11 Madness on Trial

20x11 Madness on Trial

  • 1983-04-11T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the mental problem of schizophrenia and how madness is medically diagnosed.

In this episode, Horizon investigates the nuclear accident which took place in the United States at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant during March 1979.

1983-04-25T20:00:00Z

20x13 Killer in the Village

20x13 Killer in the Village

  • 1983-04-25T20:00:00Z1h

In this report, Horizon looks at the spread of the AIDS virus in the United States and their search for the cause and cure of the deadly disease.

1983-09-26T20:00:00Z

20x14 The Case of ESP

20x14 The Case of ESP

  • 1983-09-26T20:00:00Z1h

n this documentary, Horizon investigates the power of the mind for psychic phenomena; telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition, and psychokinesis.

1983-10-03T20:00:00Z

20x15 The Artificial Heart

20x15 The Artificial Heart

  • 1983-10-03T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the current research into development and use of an artificial heart.

This report by Horizon examines the experiments of Joseph Priestly on blood and oxygen in photosynthesis.

This episode of Horizon features Prof. Stephen Hawking and how he copes with his severe disability, his scientific career, and his relationship with his students.

1983-10-24T21:00:00Z

20x18 The Cruel Choice

20x18 The Cruel Choice

  • 1983-10-24T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a discussion on the use of animals for experiments.

Looks at different ways of teaching a foreign language and contrasts them with the way babies and young children pick up their native language, without formal teaching.

1983-11-07T21:00:00Z

20x20 China's Child

20x20 China's Child

  • 1983-11-07T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines how the government of China presents the "one child per family" population policy to the people.

Horizon investigates today's research into earthquakes and the usefulness of the findings.

1983-11-28T21:00:00Z

20x22 Prisoner or Patient?

20x22 Prisoner or Patient?

  • 1983-11-28T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents this documentary on how Britain deals with its mentally ill criminal offenders.

In this report, Horizon outlines the latest research into cancer with specific reference to oncogenes.

Season Finale

1983-12-12T21:00:00Z

20x24 The Academy

Season Finale

20x24 The Academy

  • 1983-12-12T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows group of men and women going through basic training in Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) methods at the Academy in the United States.

Season Premiere

1984-01-09T21:00:00Z

21x01 The Intelligence Man

Season Premiere

21x01 The Intelligence Man

  • 1984-01-09T21:00:00Z1h

Sir Cyril Burt died in 1971, the most eminent psychologist of his age. Within two years the most bitter and disturbing scientific controversy since Piltdown Man saw Burt accused of lifelong faking and manipulation of phoney data. How and why was Burt allowed to get away with this?

1984-01-16T21:00:00Z

21x02 Microworld!

21x02 Microworld!

  • 1984-01-16T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the research advances in physics and technology of microelectronics.

1984-01-23T21:00:00Z

21x03 A New Green Revolution?

21x03 A New Green Revolution?

  • 1984-01-23T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon looks at the role of scientists in agriculture throughout the Third World countries.

1984-01-30T21:00:00Z

21x04 Spies in the Wires

21x04 Spies in the Wires

  • 1984-01-30T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines the various ways of committing computer fraud and at the efforts to prevent it and preserve our privacy.

1984-02-13T21:00:00Z

21x05 Valley of the Inca

21x05 Valley of the Inca

  • 1984-02-13T21:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon examines the work at an archaeological project in the Cusichaca Valley, Peru.

Horizon presents this report on parasites, their life styles, and the diseases they cause in Third World countries.

1984-03-05T21:00:00Z

21x07 Reflections on a River

21x07 Reflections on a River

  • 1984-03-05T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the life for various civilizations along the river Waveney in east Angola.

1984-03-12T21:00:00Z

21x08 A Normal Face

21x08 A Normal Face

  • 1984-03-12T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a report on current research and trends in facial reconstructive surgery.

1984-03-19T21:00:00Z

21x09 Prisoners of Incest

21x09 Prisoners of Incest

  • 1984-03-19T21:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon reconstructs a therapy session where a man imprisoned for incest meets his family for first time in two and one half years.

Horizon investigates the linguistic potential of non-human species.

In the documentary, Horizon reports on the life of slime moulds and how they provides clues to cell differentiation.

Horizon presents the first of a two-part documentary about Kenneth Bianchi, the Los Angeles Hillside Strangler, who was convicted of the murder of 12 women even though his defence was that he had no memory of the crimes.

Horizon presents the second part of a two-part documentary about Kenneth Bianchi, the Los Angeles Hillside Strangler, who was convicted of the murder of 12 women even though his defence was that he had no memory of the crimes.

1984-04-30T20:00:00Z

21x14 A Cruel Inheritance

21x14 A Cruel Inheritance

  • 1984-04-30T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on new medical techniques to diagnose the inherited diseases; sickle cell anaemia and cystic fibrosis.

1984-05-07T20:00:00Z

21x15 The Malvern Link

21x15 The Malvern Link

  • 1984-05-07T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the military bias of British scientific industries and the possible consequences if the bias continues.

Horizon explores the behavioural patterns of sheep, cows, chickens, and pigs under both natural and intensive farming conditions.

1984-11-12T21:00:00Z

21x17 Picking Winners

21x17 Picking Winners

  • 1984-11-12T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the decline in the amount of gambling leading to a severe reductions in money to fund the scientific research in Britain.

1984-11-19T21:00:00Z

21x18 The Brain Puzzle

21x18 The Brain Puzzle

  • 1984-11-19T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon documents the current medical research into finding new ways of repairing damage to the brain and the central nervous system.

1984-11-26T21:00:00Z

21x19 Global Village

21x19 Global Village

  • 1984-11-26T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines the concept and implications of a global village in Third World countries.

1984-12-03T21:00:00Z

21x20 Ivan

21x20 Ivan

  • 1984-12-03T21:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon spends a week with a victim of Parkinson's disease and how he has to use considerable muscular effort in order to cope with day-to-day life.

Horizon attempts to explain some of the theories proposed by pure mathematicians over the ages.

Season Finale

1984-12-17T21:00:00Z

21x22 Supercharged

Season Finale

21x22 Supercharged

  • 1984-12-17T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a chronological history of the development of the racing car during the 15 years prior to World War II.

Season Premiere

1985-01-07T21:00:00Z

22x01 Colourful Notions

Season Premiere

22x01 Colourful Notions

  • 1985-01-07T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary about colour perception based on the theories of Dr. Edwin Land, which oppose the long-held three-receptor theory of colour vision

1985-01-14T21:00:00Z

22x02 A World of Their Own

22x02 A World of Their Own

  • 1985-01-14T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon takes a look at consultant psychiatrists.

1985-01-21T21:00:00Z

22x03 Decoding Danebury

22x03 Decoding Danebury

  • 1985-01-21T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the way modern archaeologists extract information from a site dig.

1985-01-28T21:00:00Z

22x04 A Mission to Heal

22x04 A Mission to Heal

  • 1985-01-28T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon episode is about a hospital in the African country of Kenya where the medical staff tells of a new approach to health care among the Pokot tribe.

1985-02-04T21:00:00Z

22x05 Mystery of the Left Hand

In this episode, Horizon explores the characteristics of left-handed people.

1985-02-11T21:00:00Z

22x06 The Theatre of War

22x06 The Theatre of War

  • 1985-02-11T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines new military technology which will come to dominate the battlefields of the future.

1985-02-25T21:00:00Z

22x07 The Careful Predator

22x07 The Careful Predator

  • 1985-02-25T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about the controversial policy in African nation of Zimbabwe of encouraging villagers to allow wild animals back onto their land.

1985-03-04T21:00:00Z

22x08 What Einstein Never Knew

This documentary by Horizon attempts to explain the advances in physics in the search for the ultimate equation that explains the meaning of life, the universe, and everything else in existence.

1985-03-11T21:00:00Z

22x09 Eurekaaargh!

22x09 Eurekaaargh!

  • 1985-03-11T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you a report by Robert Symes who offers ten golden guidelines on how to be a successful inventor.

1985-03-18T21:00:00Z

22x10 Careering On

22x10 Careering On

  • 1985-03-18T21:00:00Z1h

This is a Horizon follow-up report on the careers of seven British teenagers studying Science 'O' levels back in 1978.

This episode of Horizon looks at how the world's best special effects technicians create some of Hollywood's most spectacular film scenes.

1985-04-01T20:00:00Z

22x12 The Food Allergy War

22x12 The Food Allergy War

  • 1985-04-01T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how food allergy has developed from the 1950's to the present.

1985-04-15T20:00:00Z

22x13 The Goddess of the Earth

Horizon examines a hypothesis that life itself manipulates the planet to enhance it's own survival.

This Horizon documentary examines the Infra-Red Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) which has detected evidence of planetary systems around distant stars.

1985-04-29T20:00:00Z

22x15 A Prize Discovery

22x15 A Prize Discovery

  • 1985-04-29T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the current medical treatment of Malaria and Leukemia.

Season Finale

1985-05-13T20:00:00Z

22x16 The Wrong Stuff

Season Finale

22x16 The Wrong Stuff

  • 1985-05-13T20:00:00Z1h

Eighty per cent of all crashes are caused by 'human error'. Finding out what that means in terms of human behaviour has been called the last great frontier in aviation safety.

Season Premiere

1986-01-06T21:00:00Z

23x01 Are You a Racist?

Season Premiere

23x01 Are You a Racist?

  • 1986-01-06T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary about how white racists and black victims of racism volunteered to spend time in an isolated house living and talking about their prejudices.

1986-01-13T21:00:00Z

23x02 Genesis

23x02 Genesis

  • 1986-01-13T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon episode is about the discovery of a molecular key which may literally unlock the mystery of life for all creatures.

1986-01-20T21:00:00Z

23x03 Bitter Cold

23x03 Bitter Cold

  • 1986-01-20T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary on scientists who take themselves to Antarctica in 1980 to act as physical and mental guinea pigs.

Horizon explores the myth about the discovery of the antibiotic penicillin.

In this episode, Horizon explores the question of when antibiotics were first developed it seemed infectious disease might be eliminated, so what has gone wrong?

1986-02-17T21:00:00Z

23x06 Science...Fiction?

23x06 Science...Fiction?

  • 1986-02-17T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the truths of science and it's theories.

1986-02-24T21:00:00Z

23x07 The Children of Eve

23x07 The Children of Eve

  • 1986-02-24T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores at the latest discoveries about just where modern man came from.

1986-03-03T21:00:00Z

23x08 The New Face of Leprosy

23x08 The New Face of Leprosy

  • 1986-03-03T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon documents leprosy in the USA and India with a focus on medical developments for it's cure and control.

1986-03-10T21:00:00Z

23x09 Hi-Tech à la Française

Horizon investigates the remarkable technological transformation of France over the last 25 years.

Will the new strategies and weapons introduced because of the Falklands war be a match for the next generation of weapons? Horizon presents this documentary to answer that question.

Horizon looks at the virus that causes AIDS and the research into vaccines and drugs being developed to counteract the devastating disease of the immune system.

In this documentary, Horizon reports on how doctors in America found that addicts using designer drugs developed Parkinson's Disease-like symptoms.

1986-04-14T20:00:00Z

23x13 Nice Guys Finish First

23x13 Nice Guys Finish First

  • 1986-04-14T20:00:00Z1h

In the interview by Horizon, Richard Dawkins discusses selfishness and cooperation, arguing that evolution often favours co-operative behaviour, and focusing especially on the tit for tat strategy of the prisoner's dilemma game.

This is an interesting Horizon presentation on decoys that look and smell like cows to the tsetse fly who carry a disease fatal to farm animals.

Horizon researches how we acquire mathematical abilities in the first place.

This report by Horizon takes a look at the instinctive side of intelligence in animals that shows us that we owe more to instinct than we may care to think.

Horizon presents a simple, but effective, cure for diarrea in young children; sugar and salt.

1986-05-26T20:00:00Z

23x18 Uranus Encounter

23x18 Uranus Encounter

  • 1986-05-26T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon brings you Voyager's encounter with Uranus and the mysteries that are being relayed back to the scientists.

1986-06-09T20:00:00Z

23x19 Who Built Stonehenge?

23x19 Who Built Stonehenge?

  • 1986-06-09T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents an interview with Prof. C. Renfrew as he questions the accepted wisdom about the origins of Stonehenge in England.

This is the first part of a two-part series on battered children.

This is the second part of a two-part series on battered children.

Season Finale

1986-06-30T20:00:00Z

23x23 Doctors to Be

Season Finale

23x23 Doctors to Be

  • 1986-06-30T20:00:00Z1h

In a unique project, Horizon follows a group of medical students into the next century.

Season Premiere

1987-01-05T21:00:00Z

24x01 The Twenty-Five Hour Clock

Season Premiere

24x01 The Twenty-Five Hour Clock

  • 1987-01-05T21:00:00Z1h

Report on research into biological body clocks, which can effect emotional and physical health and well-being.

Report on how forensic scientists ae identifying individual victims amongst the people murdered by Argentina's military juntas, by examination and genetic testing of their remains.

1987-01-19T21:00:00Z

24x03 The Blind Watchmaker

24x03 The Blind Watchmaker

  • 1987-01-19T21:00:00Z1h

In this interview by Horizon, zoologist Richard Dawkins investigates an attack on evolution by scientific creationists, based on the book of the same name by the famous zoologist.

1987-01-26T21:00:00Z

24x04 Riding the Stack

24x04 Riding the Stack

  • 1987-01-26T21:00:00Z1h

Astronauts and space shuttle designers talk about the risks of space flight, in the light of the space shuttle disaster of January 1986.

Two part documentary on psychologist Bruno Bettelheim and his work with emotionally disturbed children.

Two part documentary on psychologist Bruno Bettelheim and his work with emotionally disturbed children.

1987-02-16T21:00:00Z

24x07 Energy from Outer Space

24x07 Energy from Outer Space

  • 1987-02-16T21:00:00Z1h

Report on exploration into releasing energy sources which came from outer space during the formation of the earth, 4,500 million years ago, and have lain dormant under the earth's crust. In Sweden a five mile deep drill hole was made to unleash this energy.

1987-02-23T21:00:00Z

24x08 The Return of the Osprey

Documentary on the Osprey in north east America, where its natural habitat was being damaged by the use of DDT, but after some conservation work the Osprey is returning to the area.

1987-03-02T21:00:00Z

24x09 Can AIDS Be Stopped?

24x09 Can AIDS Be Stopped?

  • 1987-03-02T21:00:00Z1h

Report on the development of the AIDS virus, and current research into vaccines to combat the disease.

Documentary on the increasing pressure put on the British police resulting in stress and psychological disorders, and also on the work of Dr. Douglas Duckworth, a psychologist at Leeds University who has worked with the police on these problems.

1987-03-16T21:00:00Z

24x11 To Engineer Is Human

24x11 To Engineer Is Human

  • 1987-03-16T21:00:00Z1h

Engineer Henry Petroski explains why engineering can never be an exact science and looks at examples of engineering failures.

1987-03-23T21:00:00Z

24x12 The Magma Chamber

24x12 The Magma Chamber

  • 1987-03-23T21:00:00Z1h

Report on the research into volcanoes by British scientists Professor Geoff Brow n and Dr. Hazel Rymer, who have developed a technique of exploring the magma chambers of volcanoes and predicting when they will erupt.

1987-03-30T20:00:00Z

24x13 Broken Images

24x13 Broken Images

  • 1987-03-30T20:00:00Z1h

Report on two sufferers of visual agnosia. The condition affects their ability to impose order on the visual world, even though they are not blind, but it does reveal a great deal about normal perception.

1987-04-06T20:00:00Z

24x14 Trial Babies

24x14 Trial Babies

  • 1987-04-06T20:00:00Z1h

Report on the different tests done on pregnant women to detect abnormalities in the foetus, with investigation of why these tests are not available in all pregnancies.

Report on the safety of UK nuclear power stations, following the accident at Chernobyl in the USSR in 1986. The programme focuses on the nuclear installation at Hartlepool on Teeside, which has the smallest evacuation zone in the western world.

1987-05-11T20:00:00Z

24x16 Making Sex Pay

24x16 Making Sex Pay

  • 1987-05-11T20:00:00Z1h

James Gould, Professor of Biology at Princeton University, lectures on the mating habits of animals and humans.

1987-05-18T20:00:00Z

24x17 The Anthropic Principle

24x17 The Anthropic Principle

  • 1987-05-18T20:00:00Z1h

Discussion of the Anthropic Principle, a scientific theory for man's place in th e Universe.

Report on the need for improved safety features on airplanes in particular the desirability of smoke hoods, plus an interview with a survivor of the 1985 Manchester aircrash.

1987-06-08T20:00:00Z

24x20 The Riddle of the Joints

Report on research into rheumatoid arthritis.

1987-05-15T20:00:00Z

24x21 To Catch a Falling Star

24x21 To Catch a Falling Star

  • 1987-05-15T20:00:00Z1h

Report on the future and commercial benefit of research into astronomy conducted by the Royal Greenwich Observatory and other scientific institutions in Great Britain.

Report on the evolution of laser light technology for communication in the 21st century, with a dramatised account of the effect of the technology on our daily lives.

Season Finale

1987-06-29T20:00:00Z

24x23 Janice's Choice

Season Finale

24x23 Janice's Choice

  • 1987-06-29T20:00:00Z1h

Janice Blenkharn's mother died of Huntington's Chorea, which any child of a victim has a 50-50 chance of inheriting. Janice is faced with the choice of having a test, developed after research in South America, to see if she has this incurable genetic disease.

Season Premiere

1988-01-04T21:00:00Z

25x01 The Transpanted Brain

Season Premiere

25x01 The Transpanted Brain

  • 1988-01-04T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon looks at a new approach that holds hope for the treatment of Parkinson's Disease.

1988-01-11T21:00:00Z

25x02 Death of a Star

25x02 Death of a Star

  • 1988-01-11T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon documents the first sighting of a star in supernova at its initial stages. The study of the spacial event provides fascinating insight into the life of our own universe.

1988-01-18T21:00:00Z

25x03 Playing With Madness

25x03 Playing With Madness

  • 1988-01-18T21:00:00Z1h

In the report by Horizon, they looks at manic depression and how is now known that it has a strong genetic component.

1988-01-25T21:00:00Z

25x04 The Canal in the Jungle

25x04 The Canal in the Jungle

  • 1988-01-25T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of the Horizon explores the Panama Canal, now a billion dollar commercial sea crossroad between continents. The future of the canal is in danger because of damage to rain forests.

Horizon investigates how those who are born into a working class family are at greater risk of dying early than if born a child of the professional classes.

1988-02-08T21:00:00Z

25x06 The Greenhouse Effect

25x06 The Greenhouse Effect

  • 1988-02-08T21:00:00Z1h

This documentary report by Horizon examines the devastating effects of the Greenhouse Effect (earth's temperature rising) and how man is causing it.

1988-02-15T21:00:00Z

25x07 Struggling for Control

25x07 Struggling for Control

  • 1988-02-15T21:00:00Z1h

This is a Horizon report on Britain's air traffic control capabilities and the use of outdated and unreliable equipment.

1988-02-22T21:00:00Z

25x08 Thinking

25x08 Thinking

  • 1988-02-22T21:00:00Z1h

Explores the limits of digital computers and artificial intelligence. Includes the views of John Searle, a philosopher at the University of California who refutes the claims for 'thinking' machines.

1988-02-29T21:00:00Z

25x09 Patients on Trial

25x09 Patients on Trial

  • 1988-02-29T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the experimental treatment of four cancer patients in the USA who have volunteered to try the LAK/Interleuken 2 treatment.

This is part one of a two-part series by Horizon reporting on a military exercise code named Purple Warrior which is designed to test lessons learned during the Falklands war.

This is part two of a two-part series by Horizon reporting on a military exercise code named Purple Warrior which is designed to test lessons learned during the Falklands war.

1988-03-28T20:00:00Z

25x12 The Heart of Another

25x12 The Heart of Another

  • 1988-03-28T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the progress of two heart disease patients at Montreal's Royal Victoria Hospital in Britain.

This is part one of a two-part Horizon series about the mystery of Easter Island, the stone statues, and the civilization that erected them.

This is part two of a two-part Horizon series about the mystery of Easter Island, the stone statues, and the civilization that erected them.

Horizon presents part one of a three-part series on the education of doctors in Britain. In this episode, we look at the ordeal of an interview faced by two potential students applying to St. Mary's Medical School.

Horizon presents part two of a three-part series on the education of doctors in Britain. In this episode, we examine the first two years of education at St. Mary's Medical School and at the exams that have to be passed.

Horizon presents part three of a three-part series on the education of doctors in Britain. In this episode, a group of medical students are followed from the beginning of their third year of medical education up to the point where they meet patients for the first time.

1988-05-02T20:00:00Z

25x18 Cancer at Bay

25x18 Cancer at Bay

  • 1988-05-02T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates if changes in lifestyle could reduce the risks of cancer.

1988-05-09T20:00:00Z

25x19 Traces of Murder

25x19 Traces of Murder

  • 1988-05-09T20:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon explores how to solve murder cases with the help of new technology.

1988-05-16T20:00:00Z

25x20 The Hope of Progress

25x20 The Hope of Progress

  • 1988-05-16T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon interviews the scientist and Nobel prize winner, Peter Medawar.

1988-05-23T20:00:00Z

25x21 A Newsday Revolution

25x21 A Newsday Revolution

  • 1988-05-23T20:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon covers how the electronic revolution in television news affects the way it is gathered, edited, and presented.

1988-06-06T20:00:00Z

25x22 A Good Test?

25x22 A Good Test?

  • 1988-06-06T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the use of psychological techniques in job recruitment and career development.

This Horizon episode presents the breakthroughs in superconductivity research in several countries.

1988-06-27T20:00:00Z

25x24 Believe Me

25x24 Believe Me

  • 1988-06-27T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you a report on Myalgic Encephalomyelitis which is a neurological disease that has been puzzling doctors for more than 30 years.

Season Finale

1988-07-04T20:00:00Z

25x25 The Quest for Tannu Tuva

Season Finale

25x25 The Quest for Tannu Tuva

  • 1988-07-04T20:00:00Z1h

Richard Feynman was not only an iconoclastic and influential theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate but also an explorer at heart. Feynman through video recordings and comments from his friend and drumming partner Ralph Leighton tell the extraordinary story of their enchantment with Tuva, a strange and distant land in the centre of Asia. While few Westerners knew about Tuva, Feynman discovered its existence from the unique postage stamps issued there in the early 20th century. He was intrigued by the unusual name of its capital, Kyzyl, and resolved to travel to the remote, mountainous land. However, the Soviets, who controlled access, were mistrustful, unconvinced that he was interested only in the scenery. They obstructed his plans throughout 13 years. The majority of the scenes are extended narratives by Feynman. There is included a delightful extended discussion and demonstration of Feyman's bongo playing. Feynman explains how he used a phrase book of the Tuva language to write and express an interest in visiting there. The proposed trip took years to arrange. The programme never does get to show Feyman in Tuva; he died of abdominal cancer a few days after the recorded interview, at age 69 in February 1988. The story is interspersed with earlier recorded conversations by Feynman that add his perspectives on the nature of physics. So, this is not a travel documentary at all; rather it is another fascinating insight into the exciting personality of Richard Feynman. "You have no responsibility to live up to what other people think you ought to accomplish." - Richard Feynman (1918-1988).

Season Premiere

1989-01-09T21:00:00Z

26x01 The Book of Man

Season Premiere

26x01 The Book of Man

  • 1989-01-09T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks again at the Human Genome Project which aims to decipher or sequence all genes.

1989-01-16T21:00:00Z

26x02 The Poison that Waits

26x02 The Poison that Waits

  • 1989-01-16T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the abnormally high incidence of and the early onset of diseases such as senile dementia and Parkinson's disease on the island of Guam in the Pacific. Scientists have now linked the diseases to a poison in the native cycad fruit.

1989-01-23T21:00:00Z

26x03 Perils of the Deep

26x03 Perils of the Deep

  • 1989-01-23T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon presents evidence that even diving in relatively shallow waters can cause serious long term damage to the brain and spinal cord.

1989-01-30T21:00:00Z

26x04 Smart Weapons

26x04 Smart Weapons

  • 1989-01-30T21:00:00Z1h

This documentary by Horizon demonstrates how smart Weapons use computers to destroy targets, that until now, were only able to be threatened by nuclear weapons.

1989-02-06T21:00:00Z

26x05 Wasting the Alps

26x05 Wasting the Alps

  • 1989-02-06T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the damaging effects of pollution and tourism on the Swiss Alps in Europe.

1989-02-13T21:00:00Z

26x06 In the Last Resort

26x06 In the Last Resort

  • 1989-02-13T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon answers the question: What are the alternatives for the elderly in Britain who can't live at home, or in a rest home or nursing home, or part of a sheltered accommodation?

1989-02-20T21:00:00Z

26x07 Gaze in Wonder

26x07 Gaze in Wonder

  • 1989-02-20T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you an interview with Prof. Eric Laithwaite who presents an engineer's personal view of nature and how new inventions already exist in nature.

1989-02-27T21:00:00Z

26x08 In My Lifetime?

26x08 In My Lifetime?

  • 1989-02-27T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon presents an investigation into the state of medical research in neurological disorders and the issues with its funding in Britain.

1989-03-06T21:00:00Z

26x09 Concerto

26x09 Concerto

  • 1989-03-06T21:00:00Z1h

This documentary by Horizon investigates new technology applied to music.

1989-03-13T21:00:00Z

26x10 Black Schizophrenia

26x10 Black Schizophrenia

  • 1989-03-13T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon covers the story of the Nottingham psychiatrists who study the human race to see who is mostly likely to develop schizophrenia.

1989-03-20T21:00:00Z

26x11 Trial in the Jungle

26x11 Trial in the Jungle

  • 1989-03-20T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon report covers the Tasaday, a remote Philippine tribe apparently living in the stone age, who are now seen as a hoax. How did they do it?

1989-04-03T20:00:00Z

26x12 Who Will Make Me Better?

Horizon explores three types of alternative medicine; homoeopathy, acupuncture, and diagnosing food allergies by testing your toes.

1989-04-17T20:00:00Z

26x13 A Wonderful Life

26x13 A Wonderful Life

  • 1989-04-17T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a biography of the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein who lived from 1889 to 1951.

This is a Horizon documentary about an investigation into the so-called "sick building syndrome" where occupants contract illnesses because of the environment within the building.

1989-05-08T20:00:00Z

26x15 Jubilee

26x15 Jubilee

  • 1989-05-08T20:00:00Z1h

How valid have been Horizon's criticisms of scientific orthodoxy and to what effect have the programs had?

1989-05-15T20:00:00Z

26x16 Crash

26x16 Crash

  • 1989-05-15T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how many of the tragedies on our roads in Britain could be avoided by the introduction of technical and legislative changes.

1989-05-22T20:00:00Z

26x17 The New Sixth Sense

26x17 The New Sixth Sense

  • 1989-05-22T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows J. Hooper, a diabetic, as she explores various aspects of biosensor technology.

Horizon presents a profile of noted inventor Clive Sinclair with his family and colleagues reminiscing and analysing his successes and failures.

1989-06-19T20:00:00Z

26x19 Newpin: A Lifetime

26x19 Newpin: A Lifetime

  • 1989-06-19T20:00:00Z1h

In this story, Horizon explores how the destructive patterns of child abuse and depression can be broken by concentrating on the mothers of young children.

Season Finale

1989-06-26T20:00:00Z

26x20 Time of Darkness

Season Finale

26x20 Time of Darkness

  • 1989-06-26T20:00:00Z1h

In this Horizon episode, we look at the effects on the climate from volcanic eruptions.

Season Premiere

1990-01-08T21:00:00Z

27x01 Oil Spill

Season Premiere

27x01 Oil Spill

  • 1990-01-08T21:00:00Z1h

After the Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989, Horizon looks at tanker design and the technology used for dealing with major oil slicks.

1990-01-15T21:00:00Z

27x02 Medicine 2000

27x02 Medicine 2000

  • 1990-01-15T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on medical developments in Britain which could mean by the year 2000, health care will be very different.

Horizon examines the history of research into irradiated food.

1990-01-29T21:00:00Z

27x04 From Earth to Miranda

27x04 From Earth to Miranda

  • 1990-01-29T21:00:00Z1h

In this Horizon documentary, we look at how NASA launched the Voyager space probes to explore the planets of the outer solar system.

1990-02-05T21:00:00Z

27x05 Encounter With Neptune

27x05 Encounter With Neptune

  • 1990-02-05T21:00:00Z1h

This report by Horizon presents the Voyager space probe close up encounter with the planet Neptune.

Horizon looks at the potential implications of genetically engineering plants.

1990-02-19T21:00:00Z

27x07 The First 14 Days

27x07 The First 14 Days

  • 1990-02-19T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you a documentary on embryology - the branch of biology that studies the formation and early development of living organisms from the moment of conception.

1990-03-05T21:00:00Z

27x08 The 10,000 Year Test

27x08 The 10,000 Year Test

  • 1990-03-05T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on how America has chosen to bury all of its most lethal radioactive waste under Yucca mountain in the state of Nevada.

1990-03-12T21:00:00Z

27x09 Hurricane!

27x09 Hurricane!

  • 1990-03-12T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the inside of Hurricane Gilbert as it neared Jamaica on a direct course for the United States.

1990-03-19T21:00:00Z

27x10 The Britannic Greenhouse

Horizon investigates how British scientists have begun to experiment to predict the effects of a changing climate from Greenhouse gases.

1990-03-26T20:00:00Z

27x11 Cold Fusion

27x11 Cold Fusion

  • 1990-03-26T20:00:00Z1h

This story by Horizon investigates cold fusion

Horizon presents the real story of seismic neglect and the failure of the San Francisco city government to protect its citizens.

In this episode, Horizon looks at the Hubble space telescope, hailed as the greatest advance in astronomy since Galileo.

What can we learn from insects? Professor James Gould explains on Horizon that the human society may be able to predict their own future based on the society structure of ants and bees.

1990-04-30T20:00:00Z

27x15 The Intelligent Island

27x15 The Intelligent Island

  • 1990-04-30T20:00:00Z1h

This Horizon documentary looks at the radical transformations in the Singapore society as its technology extends into monitoring, logging, and linking up all businesses, information, and aspects of life on computer systems. The country's ultimate plan is to link the entire population electronically through the world's most advanced videotext system called Teleview. The report raises the question of what type of society this may create and also the political implications of such a system.

1990-05-14T20:00:00Z

27x16 Legacy of a Volcano

27x16 Legacy of a Volcano

  • 1990-05-14T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the area around Mt. St. Helens 10 years after the volcanic eruption that devastated more 500 square kilometres of forest land in just minutes.

1990-05-21T20:00:00Z

27x17 Do Cows Make You Mad?

27x17 Do Cows Make You Mad?

  • 1990-05-21T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about BSE transmitted in cattle feed and causing the fatal Creutzfeldt-Jakob syndrome in humans.

1990-06-04T20:00:00Z

27x18 The Child Mothers

27x18 The Child Mothers

  • 1990-06-04T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how teenage pregnancy is now posing massive health and social problems in many societies.

1990-06-11T20:00:00Z

27x19 Signs of Life

27x19 Signs of Life

  • 1990-06-11T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines the possibility of scientists, either intentionally or unintentionally, creating living forms which could enjoy an independent existence, initially confined to computers and telephone networks, and in the form of computer viruses.

Season Finale

1990-06-25T20:00:00Z

27x20 AIDS: A Quest for a Cure

Season Finale

27x20 AIDS: A Quest for a Cure

  • 1990-06-25T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates new breakthroughs in the scientific study, analysis, and reproduction of cells and their compounds, which may lead to the development of a cure for the AIDS virus.

Season Premiere

1991-01-07T21:00:00Z

28x01 Sudden Death

Season Premiere

28x01 Sudden Death

  • 1991-01-07T21:00:00Z1h

Documentary considering the nature of sudden death, the effects of coronary heart disease and the part they play.

1991-01-14T21:00:00Z

28x02 Keen as Mustard

28x02 Keen as Mustard

  • 1991-01-14T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon episode tells the story of the top secret experiments carried out to test the effects of mustard gas.

Horizon investigates the case against passive smoking and reveals new evidence of its danger.

1991-01-28T21:00:00Z

28x04 Coming In from the Cold

28x04 Coming In from the Cold

  • 1991-01-28T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the new arms verification industry emerging due to the new arms control treaties.

Horizon follows astronomer's efforts to rescue the Hubble space telescope and restore its original planned performance.

Looks at the work of Earthwatch, and some of the many people who spend their holidays contributing to learning about the planet by helping on prehistoric digs, recording fish noises, tracking rodents, measuring grass an leaves and counting insects in places all over the world, often suffering much discomfort and boredom.

1991-02-11T21:00:00Z

28x07 California Dreaming

28x07 California Dreaming

  • 1991-02-11T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon documentary presents the US auto industry's response to clean-up the air in Los Angeles, California by the year 2007.

1991-02-25T21:00:00Z

28x08 The Day the Earth Melted

This episode of Horizon examines 20 years of research which has led to a new theory on how the earth's crust was made.

1991-02-25T21:00:00Z

28x09 The Curse of Karash

28x09 The Curse of Karash

  • 1991-02-25T21:00:00Z1h

Looks at the phenomenon of the outbreaks of a lethal kidney disease amongst groups of people scattered around an area of the Balkans, covering Yugoslavia, Romania and Bulgaria, over the past 30 years.It considers the attempts and theories of scientists from all these countries over the years to find the cause of the disease.

1991-03-04T21:00:00Z

28x10 Playing at Noah

28x10 Playing at Noah

  • 1991-03-04T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon interview presents Dr. Ulysses Seal who believes the "frozen zoo" concept is the best way to save vanishing species for the future generations.

1991-03-11T21:00:00Z

28x11 Cashing in on Paradise

28x11 Cashing in on Paradise

  • 1991-03-11T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon episode considers the pros and cons of "ecotourism" and the effects of tourism on the environment. The coral reefs of areas of Belize are suffering already from the effects tourists coming to the area. Rain forests and ape sanctuary areas employing the local community are also becoming a danger to the delicate environments.

This episode of Horizon explores the Natural History Museum and its philosophy, both past and present. We look at some of the recent innovations that have been introduced in the past few years. The recent director of the museum, Dr. Neil Chalmers, justifies his policies, restructuring, and the academics. The scientists, who are adversely affected by the policies, air their own worries and concerns.

Horizon examines the problems and cartography involved in mapping mountains such as Mount Everest. They follow the history of of mapping from those surveys conducted by mountaineering expeditions and early explorers, to modern mapping techniques using planes and satellites. Horizon also considers the startling news that K2 may actually be the world's tallest mountain according to recent satellite calculations.

1991-04-15T20:00:00Z

28x14 The First Americans

28x14 The First Americans

  • 1991-04-15T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at archaeologist's new theories surrounding the population of the New World over 11,000 years ago

Documentary following the clean-up operation at Chernobyl and the elite team of Soviet scientists working in areas of radiation that would be considered lethal in the West, whilst they hunt for missing fuel, uranium and plutonium, anxious that these could cause a second accident.

1991-04-29T20:00:00Z

28x16 Colonising Cyberspace

28x16 Colonising Cyberspace

  • 1991-04-29T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary on how virtual reality can make humans feel as if they are present in the computer simulated artificial world. What is the future of all this powerful, seductive technology?

1991-05-13T20:00:00Z

28x17 Emerging Viruses

28x17 Emerging Viruses

  • 1991-05-13T20:00:00Z1h

In this report, Horizon follows a group of eminent scientists who believe we have become too complacent about infectious diseases.

Horizon explores the Camelford disaster, in which aluminium sulphate was accidentally added to drinking water in Cornwall in 1988.

Several astronomers and scientists explore the concepts of "hot/cold dark space" and whether or not the "Big Bang" theory is actually correct, as well as considering the structures of galaxies.

1991-06-10T20:00:00Z

28x20 Food For Thought

28x20 Food For Thought

  • 1991-06-10T20:00:00Z1h

This story by Horizon looks at the expanding and controversial area of "smart drugs".

In this Horizon episode, we look at the problems facing the Carl Zeiss optics company of Jena and other companies in the scientific sector of the former Eastern block countries. Following the reunification of Germany and the end of the Cold War, harsh economic conditions and the lack of scientific progress over the preceding decades in particular are explored.

Horizon examines the social and scientific issues around the cholesterol debate.

Season Finale

1991-07-01T20:00:00Z

28x23 T-Rex Exposed

Season Finale

28x23 T-Rex Exposed

  • 1991-07-01T20:00:00Z1h

Considers some of the different theories surrounding the Tyrannosaurus Rex dinosaur, and other members of the same family, and shows how calculations about size, speed, weight, etc. are made from skeletons, some of them recently discovered in Montana. Scientists also use the latest x-ray/scanning techniques to examine skulls and bones for information.

Season Premiere

1992-01-06T21:00:00Z

29x01 The Shadow of Breast Cancer

Season Premiere

29x01 The Shadow of Breast Cancer

  • 1992-01-06T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a new study that has highlighted the case of breast cancer.

1992-01-13T21:00:00Z

29x02 Pest Wars

29x02 Pest Wars

  • 1992-01-13T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines the advantages and disadvantages of biological pest control.

About the original discovery in 1985 of a third form of solid carbon, named Buckminsterfullerene after the architect who invented geodesic domes. The two scientists who discovered the material glimpsed it for brief seconds only in their lasers but neither they nor other scientists subsequently could make the substance last long enough in the laser to prove their theory. Then in 1990, a couple of physicists with an arc-welder in a bell-jar found they could make as much Buckminsterfullerene as they liked, and industrial applications opened up, with talk of new polymers, molecular ball-bearings, lubricants and super- conductors. Meanwhile, the original discoverers were turning back to the fundamental questions surrounding the discovery, such as how and why does it form; does it exist in space or is it the solution to one of the great mysteries of the universe.

Horizon explores the ecological track record of the North American Indians.

In this episode, Horizon look at attempts to persuade major respected organizations to do controlled trials on a synthetic malaria vaccine.

1992-02-17T21:00:00Z

29x06 The Black Sun

29x06 The Black Sun

  • 1992-02-17T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows five teams of scientists on the island of Mauna Kea in Hawaii as they wait for a solar eclipse.

1992-02-24T21:00:00Z

29x07 Hitler's Bomb

29x07 Hitler's Bomb

  • 1992-02-24T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how in 1939, the Nazis led the race for the atomic bomb. Did scientific errors rob Hitler of a victory over the allies?

1992-03-02T21:00:00Z

29x08 An Expensive Theology

29x08 An Expensive Theology

  • 1992-03-02T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon looks at Britain's science spending and how it is falling behind it's competitors.

Horizon presents the life and work of mathematician Dr. Alan Turing.

1992-03-16T21:00:00Z

29x10 Hot Jam in the Doughnut

29x10 Hot Jam in the Doughnut

  • 1992-03-16T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about how nuclear fusion has been heralded as the power of the future with the promise of clean affordable energy.

1992-03-30T20:00:00Z

29x11 A Diet for a Lifetime

29x11 A Diet for a Lifetime

  • 1992-03-30T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a story about what a women eats before and during pregnancy can determine the diseases her children may suffer from later in their life.

1992-04-06T20:00:00Z

29x12 Before Babel

29x12 Before Babel

  • 1992-04-06T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the development of languages all over the world and attempts to reconstruct the first spoken words.

In this report, Horizon presents that scientific observations have shown that the landscape is constantly moving.

1992-04-27T20:00:00Z

29x14 Iceman

29x14 Iceman

  • 1992-04-27T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the investigation into a well-preserved human corpse found frozen in an Alpine glacier.

1992-05-11T20:00:00Z

29x15 Taking the Credit

29x15 Taking the Credit

  • 1992-05-11T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the claims by rival American and French scientists as to who first discovered the HIV virus.

In this story, Horizon presents an investigation into the research to make livestock and poultry grow bigger and stronger.

1992-06-01T20:00:00Z

29x17 Dodging Doomsday

29x17 Dodging Doomsday

  • 1992-06-01T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you this report to explain when animal communities exceed carrying capacities of their environments, they crash spectacularly. Will this also happen to humans?

1992-06-08T20:00:00Z

29x18 A Question of Sport...

29x18 A Question of Sport...

  • 1992-06-08T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the current evidence of a massive sporting fraud in the former Eastern Germany that has now been uncovered. The evidence shows that the East German Olympic success through the 1980's was due in part to the sophisticated use of drugs, a practice which the East German state endorsed.

Season Finale

1992-06-15T20:00:00Z

29x19 Genes R Us

Season Finale

29x19 Genes R Us

  • 1992-06-15T20:00:00Z1h

This Horizon program looks at the stereotyped image of the scientist.

Season Premiere

1993-01-04T21:00:00Z

30x01 Awakening the Frozen Addicts

Season Premiere

30x01 Awakening the Frozen Addicts

  • 1993-01-04T21:00:00Z1h

Horizons presents a report on a daring Swedish operation that transplants foetal tissue into the brains of Parkinson's disease sufferers.

1993-01-11T21:00:00Z

30x02 Cheating Time

30x02 Cheating Time

  • 1993-01-11T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the current benefits and disadvantages of Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT).

This Horizon episode is about the new and terrible threat from tuberculosis which kills more people than any other infection.

1993-01-25T21:00:00Z

30x04 No Ordinary Genius (1)

30x04 No Ordinary Genius (1)

  • 1993-01-25T21:00:00Z1h

This is the first part of a two-part Horizon series presenting a portrait of Richard Feynman, the American Nobel Prize winning physicist.

1993-02-01T21:00:00Z

30x05 No Ordinary Genius (2)

30x05 No Ordinary Genius (2)

  • 1993-02-01T21:00:00Z1h

This is the second part of a two-part Horizon series presenting a portrait of Richard Feynman, the American Nobel Prize winning physicist.

1993-02-08T21:00:00Z

30x06 Mars Alive

30x06 Mars Alive

  • 1993-02-08T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon episode attempts to answer the question if it will be possible to 'terraform' Mars by creating a new atmosphere, and then adding water and plants to make the planet habitable.

Horizon investigates how market research, opinion polls, TV ratings, and consumer surveys have got it disastrously wrong. Commercial decisions depend increasingly on this information, but just how good is that information?

1993-02-22T21:00:00Z

30x08 The Pyramid Builders

30x08 The Pyramid Builders

  • 1993-02-22T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon documentary looks at how the ancient Egyptians built the pyramids without the use of the wheel, ramps, or levers.

1993-03-01T21:00:00Z

30x09 Here Be Monsters

30x09 Here Be Monsters

  • 1993-03-01T21:00:00Z1h

This documentary by Horizon looks at how the Hubble space telescope is uncovering evidence of black holes in our distant galaxies.

1993-03-08T21:00:00Z

30x10 Iceman (Update)

30x10 Iceman (Update)

  • 1993-03-08T21:00:00Z1h

This is a Horizon update to the story of the Stone Age man found frozen in an Alpine glacier in 1991.

Horizon shows how American scientists struggled to fulfil the dreams which challenged fundamental scientific laws.

In this episode, Horizon examines the latest scientific evidence about the Dead Sea Scrolls.

1993-03-29T20:00:00Z

30x13 Dante Goes to Hell

30x13 Dante Goes to Hell

  • 1993-03-29T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the story of a robot named Dante, who goes into an active volcano in Antarctica to find out if volcanoes contribute to the ozone hole in our atmosphere.

Follows a team of archaeologists led by Michael Novacek as they try to retrace the steps of an expedition launched by the American Museum of Natural History in the 1920's. The original expedition sought the origins of humanity but instead came across a virtual graveyard of the dinosaurs.

1993-04-19T20:00:00Z

30x15 The New Alchemists

30x15 The New Alchemists

  • 1993-04-19T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on scientists who are planning smart aircraft wings and smart buildings that can sense earthquakes.

In this episode, Horizon examines Asthma, the illness that is the most common condition of the developed world.

1993-05-24T20:00:00Z

30x17 Wot U Looking At?

30x17 Wot U Looking At?

  • 1993-05-24T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at causes of violence and asks psychologists to interview men and boys with a record of violence.

1993-06-07T20:00:00Z

30x18 The Electronic Frontier

30x18 The Electronic Frontier

  • 1993-06-07T20:00:00Z1h

In this story, Horizon explores the endless stream of digital information available on demand to the public, but do we need, or even want it?

1993-06-14T20:00:00Z

30x19 A Vital Poison

30x19 A Vital Poison

  • 1993-06-14T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon describes how researchers discovered that a lethal gas, called nitric oxide, was behind some of the most basic functions of our bodies.

1993-06-21T20:00:00Z

30x20 Chimp Talk

30x20 Chimp Talk

  • 1993-06-21T20:00:00Z1h

This documentary by Horizon looks back into the 1980's where the work of pioneer researchers trying to determine if chimpanzees could understand language was attacked as charlatanism. Now the public opinion has moved back in favour of the idea that apes can indeed talk to us. The program looks at the latest developments in the chimpanzee language laboratories in America.

Season Finale

1993-06-28T20:00:00Z

30x21 Life is Impossible

Season Finale

30x21 Life is Impossible

  • 1993-06-28T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how life began on Earth. Did it evolve on land surfaces on Earth, in the sea, or in space?

Season Premiere

1994-01-10T21:00:00Z

31x01 Small Arms, Soft Targets

Season Premiere

31x01 Small Arms, Soft Targets

  • 1994-01-10T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you the international campaign to frame the laws of war by limiting the design and use of weapons aimed at "soft targets".

1994-01-17T21:00:00Z

31x02 The Last Mammoth

31x02 The Last Mammoth

  • 1994-01-17T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon documentary explores theories about the reasons for the extinction of mammoths including those which survived on the Island of Wrangel.

This is a Horizon episode that attempts to answer the question, "What is a mind?" and how does your brain create it? Gerald Edelman thinks he has the answer.

1994-01-31T21:00:00Z

31x04 Genie

31x04 Genie

  • 1994-01-31T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you the story about a 13 year old girl who had lived most of her life tied up in the back room of her parent's house since the time she was born.

In this report by Horizon, we look at a type of cancer which cured itself. The cancer cells were killing themselves and finding out why may revolutionize future cancer treatment.

Horizon reports on a team investigating the mysterious disappearance of an airliner in 1992 that was flying over the Panamanian jungle.

In this documentary, Horizon tries to answer the question if "Star Wars" technology could be used to destroy meteors big enough to threaten life on earth.

1994-03-07T21:00:00Z

31x08 Hubble Vision

31x08 Hubble Vision

  • 1994-03-07T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon episode follows the rescue and repair mission carried out by the shuttle astronauts on the Hubble Space Telescope.

1994-03-14T21:00:00Z

31x09 Some Like iit Hot

31x09 Some Like iit Hot

  • 1994-03-14T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores scientific discoveries made in extraordinary ways.

1994-03-21T21:00:00Z

31x10 Too Close to the Sun

31x10 Too Close to the Sun

  • 1994-03-21T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines the continuing, bitter controversy over the claim that nuclear fusion has been produced in a test tube.

1994-03-28T20:00:00Z

31x11 Sir Walter's Journey

31x11 Sir Walter's Journey

  • 1994-03-28T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon presents Professor Sir Walter Bodmer who searches for a new history of Britain, one that is written in their genes.

1994-04-18T20:00:00Z

31x12 After the Flood

31x12 After the Flood

  • 1994-04-18T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon investigates the flooding of the Mississippi river in the USA and a massive flood in Bangladesh.

1994-04-25T20:00:00Z

31x13 Against The Clock

31x13 Against The Clock

  • 1994-04-25T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores how the demands of a 24-hour culture pushes people too far and the many accidents caused by fatigue.

This Horizon documentary investigates newly discovered documents in Moscow from 1945 about German concentration camps.

1994-05-16T20:00:00Z

31x15 Ulcer Wars

31x15 Ulcer Wars

  • 1994-05-16T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on a new discovery where stomach ulcers caused by Bacterium Helicobacter Pylori are treatable with antibiotics.

1994-11-07T21:00:00Z

31x16 Deaf Whale, Dead Whale

31x16 Deaf Whale, Dead Whale

  • 1994-11-07T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how mankind is now polluting the world's oceans with extreme noise caused by many sources such explosions and super tankers.

1994-11-14T21:00:00Z

31x17 Whispers of Creation

31x17 Whispers of Creation

  • 1994-11-14T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the creative process that caused ripples in the universe after the "Big Bang". Three teams of scientists attempt practical experiments to test abstract theories of cosmology.

1994-11-21T21:00:00Z

31x18 The Predator

31x18 The Predator

  • 1994-11-21T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary on the Partula, a Polynesian tree snail.

1994-11-28T21:00:00Z

31x19 Close Encounters

31x19 Close Encounters

  • 1994-11-28T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates some alleged reports of alien abductions.

1994-12-12T21:00:00Z

31x20 Orange Sherbet Kisses

31x20 Orange Sherbet Kisses

  • 1994-12-12T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary on Synaesthesia which is an unusual disorder of perception in which barriers between the senses dissolve.

Season Finale

1994-12-19T21:00:00Z

31x21 Designer Wines

Season Finale

31x21 Designer Wines

  • 1994-12-19T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings you Reports from Europe, America, and Australia on how wine making differs and asks whether the traditional and troubled European wine industry will have to change its methods to compete with those wines from the new world.

Season Premiere

1995-01-09T21:00:00Z

32x01 Tibet - The Ice Mother

Season Premiere

32x01 Tibet - The Ice Mother

  • 1995-01-09T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary on the ideas of Maureen Raymo's thesis on what triggered the last ice age.

1995-01-16T21:00:00Z

32x02 Russia's Deep Secrets

32x02 Russia's Deep Secrets

  • 1995-01-16T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows an expedition from Russia's most advanced oceanographic exploration ship on a mission to clean-up and prevent radioactive contamination of the ocean by one of Russia's sunken nuclear submarines.

1995-01-23T21:00:00Z

32x03 Bones of Contention

32x03 Bones of Contention

  • 1995-01-23T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon explores collections of the bones of thousands of Native American Indians in museums and universities across the United States.

1995-01-30T21:00:00Z

32x04 Siamese Twins

32x04 Siamese Twins

  • 1995-01-30T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the story of a pair of Siamese twins and the surgery they underwent to try and separate them.

1995-02-20T21:00:00Z

32x05 Too Big Too Soon?

32x05 Too Big Too Soon?

  • 1995-02-20T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates whether the human growth hormone is really the new wonder drug of the 21st century.

1995-02-27T21:00:00Z

32x06 Farewell Fantastic Venus

Horizon brings you the recent discovery of the real Venus as space probes, like the Magellan, shattered previous existing concerning its geology.

1995-03-06T21:00:00Z

32x07 Exodus

32x07 Exodus

  • 1995-03-06T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows the a six month study of the world's first Environmental Impact Assessment team as they study the implications for the environment for major environmental events such as in Tanzania, when in April last year, nearly half a million people set up home in the refugee camp of Benaco.

1995-03-13T21:00:00Z

32x08 The Betrayers

32x08 The Betrayers

  • 1995-03-13T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon has uncovered disturbing evidence of the fabrication of scientific research results.

1995-03-20T21:00:00Z

32x09 Icon Earth

32x09 Icon Earth

  • 1995-03-20T21:00:00Z1h

This Horizon episode is about the Earth as an icon.

1995-03-27T20:00:00Z

32x10 The I-Bomb

32x10 The I-Bomb

  • 1995-03-27T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents this documentary on how national power is moving into the hands of those who control information.

1995-04-03T20:00:00Z

32x11 Foetal Attraction

32x11 Foetal Attraction

  • 1995-04-03T20:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon reveals the results of research that could explain the major reasons for so many complications during pregnancy.

1995-04-10T20:00:00Z

32x12 Cracks in the Crust

32x12 Cracks in the Crust

  • 1995-04-10T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon tries to answer the question, "Has the dream of earthquake prediction finally been shattered?"

1995-04-24T20:00:00Z

32x13 Hearing Voices

32x13 Hearing Voices

  • 1995-04-24T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the phenomenon often regarded as the first sign of madness - hearing voices. The report describes how the work of a leading Dutch professor of psychiatry, Marius Romme, has influenced psychologists and psychiatrists in Britain to rethink their current definitions of madness.

1995-10-30T21:00:00Z

32x14 Liar

32x14 Liar

  • 1995-10-30T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary that reveals the role played by deception in society and the effort by science to weed out the truth and the controversy over the accuracy of the polygraph test.

1995-11-06T21:00:00Z

32x15 The Human Laboratory

32x15 The Human Laboratory

  • 1995-11-06T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the controversial research into some birth control contraceptives.

1995-11-13T21:00:00Z

32x16 Nanotopia

32x16 Nanotopia

  • 1995-11-13T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon is about the future of micro-technology. In 1959, noted American physicist Richard Feynman offered a $1000 prize to anyone who could build an electronic motor no larger than half a millimetre on any side. He awarded the prize within eight months. Today, some scientists predict the imminent development of molecular computers the size of specks of dust. This program examines that and other technical possibilities, as it takes viewers on a guided tour of the cutting-edge laboratories of nanotechnology. There, scientists working on similarly astounding projects offer their predictions about future technological developments. Discussions include how nature provides scientific inspiration. Detailed scientific models and sophisticated computer graphics illustrate how these new micro-technologies will work.

Horizon presents an update on the story about asteroids colliding with Earth some day.

1995-11-27T21:00:00Z

32x18 A Code In The Nose

32x18 A Code In The Nose

  • 1995-11-27T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at an attempt to crack the mystery of smell by designing a molecule whose odour can be detected.

This report by Horizon brings you the latest research into the battle agains the AIDS virus.

Season Finale

1995-12-11T21:00:00Z

32x20 The Runaway Mountain

Season Finale

32x20 The Runaway Mountain

  • 1995-12-11T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the story of the search for an explanation of how rock can flow like water.

Season Premiere

1996-01-08T21:00:00Z

33x01 The Butchers of Boxgrove

Season Premiere

33x01 The Butchers of Boxgrove

  • 1996-01-08T21:00:00Z1h

Investigates the case of the "Boxgrove Man". Follows archaeologist Mark Roberts who tries to piece together the history of the first Englishman, from a shin bone nearly 500,000 years old, discovered in Boxgrove in Sussex.

1996-01-15T21:00:00Z

33x02 Fermat's Last Theorem

33x02 Fermat's Last Theorem

  • 1996-01-15T21:00:00Z1h

Tells the story of mathematician Andrew Wiles who has made it his life's work to solve the puzzle of Fermat's last theorem that has baffled minds for three centuries.

1996-01-22T21:00:00Z

33x03 A Miracle for Cancer ?

33x03 A Miracle for Cancer ?

  • 1996-01-22T21:00:00Z1h

Examines the latest research aimed at conquering cancer. Includes research into vaccines for prostate cancer and skin cancer.

1996-01-29T21:00:00Z

33x04 Nature's Numbers

33x04 Nature's Numbers

  • 1996-01-29T21:00:00Z1h

Follows a group of biologists Conservation International who take a pragmatic approach to what species can be saved.They travel to the Bolivian rainforest to assess missing species.

1996-02-05T21:00:00Z

33x05 The Gene Race

33x05 The Gene Race

  • 1996-02-05T21:00:00Z1h

Follows two teams of researchers, in Britain and USA as they use radically different genetic techniques in the race to find an effective treatment against cystic fibrosis.

Recounts the history of scientific attempts from Marconi onwards to understand the atmospheric layer, known as the ionosphere. Discusses interest shown by the US Military in the region which has led to the establishment of HAARP (High Altitude Auroral Research Project) which will beam energy directly into the ionosphere.

Are changes in modern living increasing levels of oestrogen and threatening males of different species, from alligators to humans?

1996-03-04T21:00:00Z

33x08 Death by Design

33x08 Death by Design

  • 1996-03-04T21:00:00Z1h

In this Horizon documentary, we look at the notion that each cell in our body is programmed to die. Understanding this concept has major implications for research into disease.

1996-03-11T21:00:00Z

33x09 The Planet Hunters

33x09 The Planet Hunters

  • 1996-03-11T21:00:00Z1h

Follows astronomers from Manchester, Switzerland and California as they search for planets with liquid water on them, the prerequisite for life

In this episode of Horizon, which is a follow-up to the 1991 documentary, we follow a group of soviet scientists on a suicide mission as they search for the missing nuclear fuel inside the remains of the nuclear reactor 4.

1996-04-01T20:00:00Z

33x11 Fallout from Chernobyl

33x11 Fallout from Chernobyl

  • 1996-04-01T20:00:00Z1h

Reports on the work by scientists Dr Keith Baverstock and Sir Dillwyn Williams to confirm that the outbreak of thyroid cancer in children in Belarus and the Ukraine was due to the Chernobyl disaster.

1996-11-04T21:00:00Z

33x12 TV is Dead, Long Live TV

In this documentary, Horizon compares the future of television with the years of experimentation before the first BBC broadcasts in 1936.

1996-11-11T21:00:00Z

33x13 Aliens from Mars

33x13 Aliens from Mars

  • 1996-11-11T21:00:00Z1h

An investigation into claims that life once existed on Mars. NASA scientists and their critics discuss the fossils discovered in a small meteoric rock in Antarctica earlier in 1996.

1996-11-25T21:00:00Z

33x14 Living Death

33x14 Living Death

  • 1996-11-25T21:00:00Z1h

Looks at new treatments for patients in a persistent vegetative state. Focuses on the case of Geoffrey Wildsmith who was misdiagnosed as being PVS. He had awoken from his coma but was totally paralysed and unable to communicate. After two years he was transferred and it was found he could communicate by using a buzzer connected to a highly sensitive pressure-switch.

1996-12-02T21:00:00Z

33x15 The Time Lords

33x15 The Time Lords

  • 1996-12-02T21:00:00Z1h

An investigation into claims by researchers that time travel is not only theoretically possible but is already happening.

Season Finale

1996-12-16T21:00:00Z

33x16 Noah's Flood

Season Finale

33x16 Noah's Flood

  • 1996-12-16T21:00:00Z1h

Follows the work of geologists Bill Ryan and Walter Pitman, who for twenty five years have been investigating evidence for the location of the biblical flood and Noah's Ark.

Season Premiere

1997-02-27T21:00:00Z

34x01 Psychedelic Science

Season Premiere

34x01 Psychedelic Science

  • 1997-02-27T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the resurgence in research on psychedelic drugs in the 1990's.

1997-03-06T21:00:00Z

34x02 Fat Cats, Thin Mice

34x02 Fat Cats, Thin Mice

  • 1997-03-06T21:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon investigates obesity in Britain, following a woman, Heather Osborne, who weighs 322 pounds. We watch her progress through a stomach stapling operation and explore reports on a so-called fat free fat and two new drugs which have been marketed as the ultimate cure for obesity.

1997-03-13T21:00:00Z

34x03 Shipwreck

34x03 Shipwreck

  • 1997-03-13T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows the investigations into the origins of a 16th century shipwreck discovered off of the coast of the Channel Islands.

1997-03-20T21:00:00Z

34x04 Genius of the Jet

34x04 Genius of the Jet

  • 1997-03-20T21:00:00Z1h

This episode of Horizon presents a profile of the inventor Sir Frank Whittle and his idea for the first jet engine which changed the nature of air travel.

1997-03-27T21:00:00Z

34x05 Smallpox on Death Row

34x05 Smallpox on Death Row

  • 1997-03-27T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon reports on the last lab samples of smallpox destined to be destroyed. But do we still have much to learn from this virus?

In this episode, Horizon investigates an amazing new sign language developed solely by deaf children and explores if we copy language from what surrounds us.

1997-04-17T20:00:00Z

34x07 Turned On by Danger

34x07 Turned On by Danger

  • 1997-04-17T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on a radical new theory by Professor Polly Matzinger about the human body's immune system.

1997-04-24T20:00:00Z

34x08 A Perfect Oil Spill

34x08 A Perfect Oil Spill

  • 1997-04-24T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the real impact that oil pollution has on our environment during a 12 month study.

1997-05-01T20:00:00Z

34x09 The Great Balloon Race

34x09 The Great Balloon Race

  • 1997-05-01T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on the technical and logistical struggles of teams trying for the first time to circumnavigate the earth by balloon.

1997-09-11T20:00:00Z

34x10 Crater of Death

34x10 Crater of Death

  • 1997-09-11T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates the theory that a comet impact in the Gulf of Mexico was responsible for the mass extinction of the dinosaurs.

1997-09-18T20:00:00Z

34x11 Mind Over Body

34x11 Mind Over Body

  • 1997-09-18T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on how mainstream science is now looking at whether the brain can affect the immune system.

1997-09-25T20:00:00Z

34x12 Out of Asia

34x12 Out of Asia

  • 1997-09-25T20:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon presents new findings about the dates for the arrival of people in Australia and the invention of art.

1997-10-09T20:00:00Z

34x13 The Virus that Cures

34x13 The Virus that Cures

  • 1997-10-09T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary about scientists who now believe that viruses that can kill bacteria, known as bacteriophage, might win the fight against super-germs.

Looks at Ian Waterman, who at 19 caught a virus that destroyed half of his nervous system and who, in spite of medical assertions that he would never walk, feed or move again, managed by sheer will-power to get back some mobility. Examines the question of how far the brain can over-ride disease or physical problems.

Season Finale

1997-10-23T20:00:00Z

34x15 Dawn of the Clone Age

Season Finale

34x15 Dawn of the Clone Age

  • 1997-10-23T20:00:00Z1h

This Horizon documentary is about how and why, a sheep named Dolly, became the first cloned copy of an adult mammal.

Season Premiere

1998-02-19T21:00:00Z

35x01 Saddam's Secrets

Season Premiere

35x01 Saddam's Secrets

  • 1998-02-19T21:00:00Z1h

After the 1991 Gulf War, a UN Special Commission was set up to go into war-torn Iraq, seek out Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction and destroy or disable them. This remarkable Horizon follows the tension of the inspectors' every move as they track down secret military bases, Scud missile launchers, the infamous super-gun barrels, decaying chemical weapons dumps, and the remains of the nuclear research establishment, cunningly hidden amongst debris and the innocent-looking rubble of post-war reconstruction. At each stage in the cat-and-mouse game with the Iraqi security forces, the UN team had to draw on cunning and courage to force their way into secret locations. Day by day, they recorded their progress on video, and charted the tensions of diplomatic stand-offs as the world was twice drawn close to another violent confrontation in the Gulf. The courage of the UN team, drawn from scientists from all over the world, is graphically revealed as they attempt to gauge the lethal nature of rusting canisters of poison gas, at Saddam's decaying chemical weapons store. After the immediate rush of successes, the inspectors' work became a steady process of attrition - grinding on against the stonewalling of their hosts. "The weapons programme is like layers of an onion. Every now and then, Saddam would allow us to peel one back, but there is always more underneath." But five years on, the inspectors had still not tracked down proof of the darkest of Saddam's secrets: his biological weapons programme. However, painstaking detective work revealed that huge quantities of the media needed for growing biological organisms had been imported, and Iraq finally admitted to having substantial biological weapons, which are cheaper and more simple to produce than nuclear and chemical weapons, yet have the same destructive power. Gradually the inspectors got close to the labs and animal testing stations where the lethal toxins had been produced. In addition to the most common biological warfare organisms, anthrax and botulinus, Iraq developed and tested strains of viruses never before adopted for weapons purposes. This was part of an ongoing international biological arms race to design novel weapons using gene-splicing or fibroviruses such as Ebola, Hanta fever and others.

Horizon presents a documentary with Jonathan Miller who sets out for the Torres Strait, near Australia, to retrace the footsteps of the first British anthropological expedition 100 years ago. The expedition laid the foundations of modern anthropology's aims, ethos, and rules.

1998-03-05T21:00:00Z

35x03 The Rainmaker

35x03 The Rainmaker

  • 1998-03-05T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the scientist, Graeme Mather, whose claims to be able to cause rainfall, are tested in Mexico with his reputation at stake.

1998-03-19T21:00:00Z

35x04 Hopeful Monsters

35x04 Hopeful Monsters

  • 1998-03-19T21:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon reports on the genetic research of biologist Mike Levine, whose discovery of a mutant fruit fly led to cures for illnesses as diverse as Parkinson's disease and skin cancer.

1998-03-26T21:00:00Z

35x05 The Limits to Birth

35x05 The Limits to Birth

  • 1998-03-26T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines how much further we can and should go in our treatment of those born too soon in Britain.

1998-04-02T20:00:00Z

35x06 Overkill

35x06 Overkill

  • 1998-04-02T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the story from Celtic ritual and forensic science with startling conclusions that emerge about the subject and the nature of the evidence itself.

1998-04-16T20:00:00Z

35x07 The Curse of Vesuvius

35x07 The Curse of Vesuvius

  • 1998-04-16T20:00:00Z1h

In this story, Horizon looks at the communities that live directly below the shadow of the volcano called Mount Vesuvius.

1998-04-23T20:00:00Z

35x08 Mir Mortals

35x08 Mir Mortals

  • 1998-04-23T20:00:00Z1h

This documentary by Horizon presents the story of the four Russian men who orbited earth last year on board the ill-fated Mir space station.

Horizon presents this documentary on how special effects have evolved during the last century of films.

1998-05-07T20:00:00Z

35x10 Magic Bullet

35x10 Magic Bullet

  • 1998-05-07T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon brings the story of a 40 year struggle to bring 'Antisense' into being and it's current trials with incurable cancer patients.

1998-05-14T20:00:00Z

35x11 The Gulf War Jigsaw

35x11 The Gulf War Jigsaw

  • 1998-05-14T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon examines claims that measures to protect American and NATO troops against chemical and biological weapons may have backfired.

1998-09-10T20:00:00Z

35x12 Sexual Chemistry

35x12 Sexual Chemistry

  • 1998-09-10T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon series on the emergence of the new sex drug Viagra for men.

1998-10-01T20:00:00Z

35x13 Chimps on Death Row

35x13 Chimps on Death Row

  • 1998-10-01T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the history of experimentation with chimpanzees, our closest living relatives.

1998-10-08T20:00:00Z

35x14 Dinosaurs in Your Garden

Horizon tells the story of maverick scientist John Ostrom and his theory that birds are really just dinosaurs with feathers. Thirty years later, a revolution in palaeontology has proven him correct. Horizon looks at the compelling and recent evidence that shows how modern birds fine-tuned their unique design for flight. It also confirms that Velociraptor dinosaur is more closely related to the sparrow than it is to the crocodile.

1998-10-15T20:00:00Z

35x15 Mosquito!

35x15 Mosquito!

  • 1998-10-15T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates how science is fighting against the mosquito-spread disease Malaria.

Horizon follows the work of various scientists attempting to turn back the biological clock.

Horizon presents an investigation into how Thalidomide is being used to treat leprosy, AIDS, and cancer with encouraging results.

Season Finale

1998-11-05T21:00:00Z

35x18 Beyond a Joke

Season Finale

35x18 Beyond a Joke

  • 1998-11-05T21:00:00Z1h

In this program, Horizon reveals how laughter and play are crucial to the development of the brain, and how some scientists are recommending play as an alternative to drugs in helping to treat hyperactive youngsters.

Season Premiere

1999-01-28T21:00:00Z

36x01 From Here to Infinity

Season Premiere

36x01 From Here to Infinity

  • 1999-01-28T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows the hunt for the most distant star ever seen.

1999-02-04T21:00:00Z

36x02 Pandemic

36x02 Pandemic

  • 1999-02-04T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon looks at the knowledge gained following the Spanish Flu Pandemic of 1918.

1999-02-11T21:00:00Z

36x03 Elephants or Ivory

36x03 Elephants or Ivory

  • 1999-02-11T21:00:00Z1h

In this episode, Horizon reports from Africa on the effect that rising elephant numbers are having on humans and the natural environment.

1999-02-18T21:00:00Z

36x04 Electric Heart

36x04 Electric Heart

  • 1999-02-18T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary looking at the United States heart specialist, Michael DeBakey, and his work and research into making miniature pumps which could help make permanent artificial hearts in the future.

1999-02-25T21:00:00Z

36x05 Sudden Death

36x05 Sudden Death

  • 1999-02-25T21:00:00Z1h

In this Horizon documentary, we present Alfred Steinschneider's theory on cot death where gaps in breathing could be responsible for the death of many infants.

1999-03-11T21:00:00Z

36x06 New Star in Orbit

36x06 New Star in Orbit

  • 1999-03-11T21:00:00Z1h

In this report, Horizon explores the arguments for and against the building of the Space Station Freedom and will it ever justify it's huge cost.

1999-03-18T21:00:00Z

36x07 New Asteroid Danger

36x07 New Asteroid Danger

  • 1999-03-18T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents this documentary by scientists who have calculated that the Earth will be hit by a small asteroid within 50 years. How will this effect our planet?

1999-03-25T21:00:00Z

36x08 Skeleton Key

36x08 Skeleton Key

  • 1999-03-25T21:00:00Z1h

In this report, Horizon investigates the rare disease called Fibrodysplasia Ossificans Progressiva, which causes muscles and ligaments to turn into solid bone. This disease causes severe disfigurement and suffering, and often-time death. We look at the research by scientists trying to find out the causes of the disease and how to find a cure.

1999-08-01T20:00:00Z

36x09 Wings of Angels

36x09 Wings of Angels

  • 1999-08-01T20:00:00Z1h

Dramatisation of biologist David Lack's struggle to reconcile scientific evidence for evolution with his belief in God.

1999-11-11T21:00:00Z

36x10 Mistaken Identity

36x10 Mistaken Identity

  • 1999-11-11T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents a documentary about Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD) where in the 1980's, it suddenly became the talk of the town. Tens of thousands of Americans were diagnosed with an illness that was previously unheard of. A trigger for this sudden was the release of a film, "Sybil". Telling the dramatic story of a woman diagnosed with Multiple Personality Disorder, the film was shown across America making Sybil a household name.

1999-11-18T21:00:00Z

36x11 Volcanoes of the Deep

36x11 Volcanoes of the Deep

  • 1999-11-18T21:00:00Z1h

Could giant volcanic 'chimneys' on the ocean floor unlock the secret of how life began on Earth?

1999-11-25T21:00:00Z

36x12 Anatomy of an Avalanche

36x12 Anatomy of an Avalanche

  • 1999-11-25T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reports on a February 1999 catastrophic avalanche at Galtür in Austria that claimed 31 lives. Over the next six months, Horizon followed a team of scientists as they pieced together the extraordinary chain of events that led to the disaster. The scientists' investigations into the extreme forces of nature responsible for the tragedy are making people re-evaluate their calculations about avalanches.

1999-12-02T21:00:00Z

36x13 The Midas Formula

36x13 The Midas Formula

  • 1999-12-02T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon presents the extraordinary story of a beautiful mathematical formula that changed the world, the financial markets, and indeed capitalism itself. It could do the unthinkable - it took the risk out of playing the money-markets. To its inventors it brought the Nobel Prize for economics. To those who used it, it brought great wealth. But this glittering tale would end in tragedy.

Season Finale

1999-09-09T20:00:00Z

36x14 Blood and Flowers: In Search of the Aztecs

Season Finale

36x14 Blood and Flowers: In Search of the Aztecs

  • 1999-09-09T20:00:00Z49m

The Aztecs are regarded as the most bloodthirsty of the Central American peoples, but they were also one of the most sophisticated. DrTony Spawforth discovers how, on arriving in Mexico, they created a new and brutal mythology from the relics of an earlier civilisation.

Season Premiere

2000-01-12T21:00:00Z

37x01 Breath of Life

Season Premiere

37x01 Breath of Life

  • 2000-01-12T21:00:00Z1h

In this moving film Horizon follows the Loughran family in their fight to save the life of their daughter Sheila who suffers from cystic fibrosis. They lost their youngest daughter Ann to the disease in 1974 at the age of 15, and now as the health of their third daughter Sheila deteriorates, they must face the prospect of losing a second child. The current shortage of donor organs means that Sheila's only hope of survival is a rare and controversial operation that requires her two surviving siblings to undergo an arduous and potentially fatal operation. An X-ray of Shelia's lungs Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common genetic disease in this country and it is incurable. The lungs of people with cystic fibrosis become covered with a sticky mucus making them extremely susceptible to bacterial infection. Over time these infections badly scar the lungs, until eventually they stop functioning. The defective CF gene is harmless when only a single copy of the gene is inherited. However, both the Loughran parents carry the gene, giving any child they may have a 25% chance of being born with cystic fibrosis. In fact two of their four children were born with the condition. Horizon joins the family at a time when Sheila's health has deteriorated to such an extent that she requires oxygen 24 hours a day and has only months to live. Although on the waiting list for a donor lung, with 50% of patients dying while waiting to receive a transplant, Sheila's chances are not good. The family has become aware of a controversial new operation, pioneered in the UK by Professor Sir Magdi Yacoub at Harefield Hospital. The technique, known as Living Donor Lung Transplantation, would involve removing Sheila's diseased lungs and, in an extraordinary three-way operation, replacing them with a lobe from one of the lungs of each her two siblings. There have been six of these groundbreaking operations carried out in this country. However, only three patients have lived longer than a month. There is a clear moral dilemma - with such a low success rate, is it ethical to put the lives of two healthy people at risk? Even if the operation is initially successful it may only give Sheila five more years to live, by which time her new lungs are likely to fail again. Damian Loughran Sheila's brother and sister, Damian and Josephine, feel compelled to do anything they can to save their dying sister. They undergo stringent tests before being certain that they are compatible donors and fit for surgery. They will have to face the risk of haemorrhaging and infection, both of which could potentially be fatal. After the operation both donors will be left with a 20-25% permanent loss of lung function. Despite these dangers, Damian and Josephine remain determined to proceed. As all three of their children are wheeled in for the 12-hour operation, Mary and Harry Loughran's emotion is apparent. A day later, Sheila is breathing with her new lungs, but it is not long before complications arise. She is unable to absorb food and develops an abscess on her lung. Sheila is kept under sedation and so is unaware of these complications. Sadly, three weeks after the operation, Sheila loses her fight for life.

2000-01-20T21:00:00Z

37x02 The Lost City of Nasca

37x02 The Lost City of Nasca

  • 2000-01-20T21:00:00Z1h

On a barren desert in South America lies one of the greatest archaeological puzzles in the world. Etched in the surface of the desert pampa sand are hundreds of straight lines, geometric shapes and pictures of animals and birds - and their patterns are only clearly visible from the air. They were built by a people called the Nasca - but why and how they created these wonders of the world has defied explanation. On the pampa, south of the Nasca Lines, archaeologists have now uncovered the lost city of the line-builders, Cahuachi. It was built nearly two thousand years ago and was mysteriously abandoned 500 years later. New discoveries at Cahuachi are at last beginning to give us insight into the Nasca people and to unravel the mystery of the Nasca Lines. Distorted heads The Lines were first spotted when commercial airlines began flying across the Peruvian desert in the 1920's. Passengers reported seeing 'primitive landing strips' on the ground below. No one knew who had built them or indeed why. Since their discovery, the Nasca Lines have inspired fantastic explanations. SpiderPerhaps most famously, the Austrian writer Erich von Danikken claimed that they were evidence that the earth had been visited by extra-terrestrials. The lines, he said, were runways for their spacecraft. Scientific study began in the 1940s with the arrival of a German mathematician and astronomer called Maria Reiche. She lived at Nazca until her death in 1998 and was known as the Lady of the Lines. Reiche believed that the lines were a sophisticated astronomical calendar. However, in 1965, astronomer Gerald Hawkins came to Nazca and used computers to check Reiche's theory. Hawkins could find no correlation between the lines and the stars. Giuseppe Orefici Italian archaeologist Giuseppe Orefici has been excavating the immense Cahuachi site for the last 17 years. Every year he brings a team of specialists to South America for three, intensive months of excavation. Horizon joined Orefici and his team in the hot, windy months of 1998 and this is a fascinating record of their extraordinary finds. Woven clothCahuachi is emerging as a treasure trove of the Nasca culture. As Orefici and his team excavate, discoveries of paintings on preserved pottery, and the ancient technique of weaving that the Nasca people developed, have given an insight into how the lines may have been made, and what they might have been used for, more than 1500 years ago. MummyMost exciting is the discovery of human remains. Stunningly preserved in the dry soil of the Peruvian desert are the mummified bodies of the Nasca themselves. Orefici's colleagues Brian Harrison and Andrea Drusini carry out modern autopsies on these remarkable finds, and reveal the strange world and rituals of the Nasca people. CahuachiOriginally believed to have been a military stronghold, Cahuachi is now reckoned to be a place of ritual and ceremony, and Orefici's stunning new evidence confirms this idea. Cahuachi is now revealed to have been abandoned after a series of natural disasters destroyed the city. But before they left it, the Nasca people covered the city in the arid pampa sand where, until recently, it has remained a barely visible mound in the desert.

2000-01-27T21:00:00Z

37x03 The Diamond Makers

37x03 The Diamond Makers

  • 2000-01-27T21:00:00Z1h

There is something so special about diamonds, and they are so valuable, that people have always been prepared to go to the most extraordinary lengths to find them. But how would we feel about the uniqueness of diamonds if it was possible to make one in a laboratory, just like the real thing, down to the nearest atom? In the last few years there has been a scientific race to do exactly this: to manufacture the perfect gem diamond. Today the dream is close to becoming reality. Science has finally found a way to replicate in a few days something that nature has taken millions of years to produce - diamonds. These man-made diamonds are so close to the real thing, that they have the same atomic structure as natural diamonds. Even the most sophisticated machines are finding it hard to tell the difference. More importantly, these diamonds can be made and sold at a profit. Synthetic diamond press: This is the story of the race to produce man-made gem diamonds, from the first faltering steps 50 years ago, to today's 'New Alchemists' in Russia who are using the latest science and technology to produce perfect synthetic diamonds in an array of colours and sizes. And it is the story of how this leap in diamond-making technology has forced De Beers to develop ever-more sophisticated detection equipment, trying to spot the synthetics, while the physical distinction between real and man-made diamonds becomes more and more blurred. Today there are alarm bells ringing at De Beers in Johannesburg. De Beers controls the world diamond trade. By buying up most of the world's uncut diamonds, the company can regulate supply to select dealers, increasing it in good years and reducing it in bad, to keep prices high. Every year 3 billion pounds worth of rough diamonds are distributed around the world for cutting and polishing. The diamond market survives on public confidence. Already De Beers spends a fortune trying to detect synthetic gems, and teach wholesalers and graders what the molecular differences are. But imagine if these synthetics had exactly the same properties as real diamonds, each atom in place, every manufacturing flaw removed, leaving something indistinguishable from the real thing. They would be undetectable. What would a real diamond be then? To many, the difference would be purely psychological. And so what would happen to public confidence in the natural diamond market? Man made diamonds: According to the new alchemists, this is all just about to happen.

2000-02-03T21:00:00Z

37x04 Supervolcanoes

37x04 Supervolcanoes

  • 2000-02-03T21:00:00Z1h

Hidden deep beneath the Earth's surface lie one of the most destructive and yet least-understood natural phenomena in the world - supervolcanoes. Only a handful exist in the world but when one erupts it will be unlike any volcano we have ever witnessed. The explosion will be heard around the world. The sky will darken, black rain will fall, and the Earth will be plunged into the equivalent of a nuclear winter. Normal volcanoes are formed by a column of magma - molten rock - rising from deep within the Earth, erupting on the surface, and hardening in layers down the sides. This forms the familiar cone shaped mountain we associate with volcanoes. Supervolcanoes, however, begin life when magma rises from the mantle to create a boiling reservoir in the Earth's crust. This chamber increases to an enormous size, building up colossal pressure until it finally erupts. The last supervolcano to erupt was Toba 74,000 years ago in Sumatra. Ten thousand times bigger than Mt St Helens, it created a global catastrophe dramatically affecting life on Earth. Scientists know that another one is due - they just don't know when... or where. Yellowstone National Park: It is little known that lying underneath one of America's areas of outstanding natural beauty - Yellowstone Park - is one of the largest supervolcanoes in the world. Scientists have revealed that it has been on a regular eruption cycle of 600,000 years. The last eruption was 640,000 years ago... so the next is overdue. And the sleeping giant is breathing: volcanologists have been tracking the movement of magma under the park and have calculated that in parts of Yellowstone the ground has risen over seventy centimetres this century. Is this just the harmless movement of lava, flowing from one part of the reservoir to another? Or does it presage something much more sinister, a pressurised build-up of molten lava? Scientists have very few answers, but they do know that the impact of a Yellowstone eruption is terrifying to comprehend. Huge areas of the USA would be destroyed, the US economy would probably collapse, and thousands might die. And it would devastate the planet. Climatologists now know that Toba blasted so much ash and sulphur dioxide into the stratosphere that it blocked out the sun, causing the Earth's temperature to plummet. Some geneticists now believe that this had a catastrophic effect on human life, possibly reducing the population on Earth to just a few thousand people. Mankind was pushed to the edge of extinction... and it could happen again.

2000-02-03T21:00:00Z

37x05 Miracle In Orbit

37x05 Miracle In Orbit

  • 2000-02-03T21:00:00Z1h

When and how did space and time begin? The birth of the Universe is one of the biggest mysteries in astronomy. It has perplexed the best scientific minds for centuries. Decades before space travel was possible, astronomers dreamed of putting a telescope into orbit to try and answer these fundamental questions. It wasn't until the 1970s, when space flight had become a reality, that NASA resolved to build just such a space telescope. They named it Hubble. This was one of the most ambitious missions ever conceived. The technical challenges were enormous and it took 12 years to design and build. Travelling at seventeen thousand miles an hour, the Hubble Telescope would take pictures of the furthest reaches of space, transmitting them 400 miles back to Earth. In April 1990 the Hubble Space Telescope was launched. But just weeks later, disaster struck - the $2 billion telescope had a fatal flaw in its main mirror. This was not just a disaster for NASA; it was a national scandal. Hubble had to be saved; scientists and engineers began to search desperately for a solution to the problem. Plans for an adventurous repair mission began to take shape but it was two years before work could be carried out. It took astronauts five gruelling space-walks to carefully replace the instruments and patch up the telescope. But nobody knew if Hubble would be able to deliver on any of its original promises. Finally, the miracle happened. An unexpected avalanche of data from Hubble confirmed that the telescope was fixed. At last it began to solve the most fundamental puzzles of the Universe. Hubble has given us breathtaking images of the birth of stars; it has found black holes swallowing matter at the centre of galaxies; and last year the Hubble Telescope resolved the most fundamental question in astronomy - the age of the Universe. At last, half a century of scientific endeavour was rewarded. Horizon marks the 10th anniversary of the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope by tracing the extraordinary tale of triumph, disaster and eventual success of this unique window into the Universe.

What happens when a completely healthy person wants their leg amputated? Gregg is 55 and does not feel physically whole. This is despite the fact that he is physically healthy and able-bodied. Gregg believes he is incomplete with two legs and it has been his life-long struggle to get doctors to agree that removing one of his legs is the right thing for him. He isn't delusional. He knows what he is asking for and knows it is strange. But he cannot help his feelings. Gregg suffers from a rare but genuine psychological disorder - a form of body dysmorphia. And Gregg is not alone. Although Body Dysmorphia is rare, a worldwide network of sufferers is growing and demanding treatment. It affects both men and women and each person has a precise sense of which limb or limbs they want removed. Cases were cited a hundred years ago but still very little is known about the disorder. No one knows what causes it and very few psychiatrists have even encountered patients with the disorder. All that the patients seem to have in common is a strong memory of the first amputee they saw. They also report that the feelings started in childhood. However, the profession is now being forced to respond and devise methods of treatment. If not treated, it has been reported that suffers can go to extreme lengths to remove the unwanted limbs themselves. Some have even committed suicide. The difficulty with the condition is that the conventional methods for treating psychological problems, drugs and therapy, do not seem to be effective. The only treatment that does seem to be effective is surgery - actually removing the limb. The idea of using surgery is highly controversial and has divided the medical community. Some physicians consider it much too drastic a measure, possibly conflicting with their Hippocratic oath, not to cause harm. Others believe that it is the only way to free the patient of their obsession, 'curing' them of their psychological problem. At the present time, there is only one surgeon in Britain who has been prepared to perform such operations and who has publicly defended his decision. He has operated on two patients, both of who claim to be delighted with their new body-image and now free to get on with the rest of their lives. There are many other patients who seek similar treatment. Horizon 'Complete Obsession' follows a year in the lives of people who are body dysmorphic and are determined to have their limbs surgically removed. It follows the process they go through to try and achieve their goal.

2000-03-09T21:00:00Z

37x07 Is GM Safe?

37x07 Is GM Safe?

  • 2000-03-09T21:00:00Z1h

Some people see GM food as a ground-breaking scientific idea that could help to end world hunger and reduce global pollution. Others see it purely as 'Frankenstein foods' on 21st century menus, bringing health and environmental disasters. But what are the real scientific facts behind the newspaper headlines? Scientists can manipulate the genetic code of life to produce plants with new characteristics never seen in nature. They can isolate any one gene from any organism like an animal or bacterium, and insert it into a completely unrelated species like a plant. The possibilities are almost endless - Scientists can insert a gene from a bacterium into a grape to make it resistant to viruses. Or they can engineer maize that resists drought or potatoes that resist pests, so farmers can use less pesticides on their crops. For thousands of years we have been tampering with the genes of plants by traditional breeding. But there's a key difference here - with traditional plant breeding genes cross within the same species. But GM allows plant breeders to break the species barrier. And for critics this is fundamentally unnatural. The fear is that the proteins produced by these foreign genes might be dangerous. Either because the protein itself is poisonous or because it might alter the chemistry of the plant so that the plant becomes toxic. Detailed tests are performed on the plants to discover if they are substantially biologically and chemically the same as before modification and if they have become toxic or allergenic. Critics believe that no amount of testing can ensure that GM crops are completely safe. They believe that there is too much we don't understand about the complex genetic make-up of living organisms. And that even though there is little evidence so far, there may be a risk that genetic modification could cause effects so unexpected that they will be missed by all the tests biotech scientists carry out. In contrast genetic engineers claim their work is safer and more predictable because they are moving just one or two specific genes, and they can more easily test the effects. But those who campaign against GM have another fear: that the genes from the engineered plant will spread throughout the plant world, creating new strains of superweed and superbug we cannot control. Horizon explores the key elements of scientific facts to try to answer the ultimate question: do the dangers of GM foods outweigh their benefits?

2000-03-16T21:00:00Z

37x08 Planet Hunters

37x08 Planet Hunters

  • 2000-03-16T21:00:00Z1h

If extra-terrestrials do exist they must have a home. Horizon tells the story of the race to find out where in the Universe this might be. The answer, for scientists across the world, lies in the hunt for planets around distant stars. Stars which are trillions of miles away from our own solar system. But the history of the planet hunters is littered with failure. Centuries of searching had thrown up nothing. It was time for the new style planet hunters to step in. However, it is only in the last ten years that these scientists have had the technology to succeed. Even now looking for these distant planets is far from straightforward. The planets themselves are so faint that they cannot be seen, even by the most powerful telescopes ever built. Instead the astronomers must devise ingenious ways to search for clues to their presence. They examine stars just like our own Sun, across the galaxy, for any give-away characteristics that might indicate that they too have planets circling around them. A Swiss team finally struck gold in 1995 - convinced they'd detected a star that must have its own planet. Their discovery was the first of its kind but not the last. Other teams started to get lucky and suddenly it seemed like there were stars with planets everywhere. But the scientific community soon became restless. All they had done so far was detect the presence of alien planets - without seeing one, it was impossible to work out what the planet was like. If these planets really did exist it was time the scientists caught a glimpse of one of them. Only then would they be able to learn about the planet - its surface and its atmosphere. And only then would they know whether it could sustain life as we know it. Horizon follows the trials and tribulations of the planet hunters and shares in the triumph of the Scottish team who, just a few months ago, became the first to achieve the ultimate goal - to capture the image of an alien planet. It is orbiting another star, 55 light years away from Earth. The question is - how similar is this planet to our own and could it be home to alien life? Horizon uncovers the answers.

2000-04-04T20:00:00Z

37x09 Moon Children

37x09 Moon Children

  • 2000-04-04T20:00:00Z1h

A handful of children around the world cannot tolerate the sun. Any exposure leads rapidly to skin cancer. They must either play indoors during daylight or be protected from head to toe in UV-proof suits. These children suffer from a strange and rare genetically-inherited disease, xeroderma pigmentosum, or XP, which means that within seconds of the sun's rays touching their skin, they are in danger of developing skin cancer. Sun Children with XP are missing the crucial gene that repairs damage to DNA and so exposure to any carcinogen - UV light, or even cigarette smoke - is lethal. Unless, they are thoroughly protected they will die from cancer at an early age. There is no cure. But these tragic children may may lead the way to new and better cancer treatment. Through studying XP sufferers, scientists have reached a whole new understanding of the genetic basis of cancer. They can now predict why one in three people will succumb to cancer. Scientists have discovered how the body survives damage and repairs itself and as a result of this, developed a radical new approach to treating cancer. Horizon explores the story of one family, where 5 out of 7 siblings suffer from XP, and how they provide the final proof that genes and DNA repair are linked to cancer. It follows an intricate 40-year scientific detective story from the discovery of DNA, through the chance findings of the cells of the XP families that led to the unexpected insight that DNA is capable of repairing itself and that the failure of this repair system underlies most cancers. After years of research, this insight is finally beginning to revolutionise medicine. Now a new concept in cancer drug therapy is just beginning medical trials based on the knowledge gained from children suffering from XP.

Scattered across the world’s oceans are a handful of rare geological time-bombs. Once unleashed they create an extraordinary phenomenon, a gigantic tidal wave, far bigger than any normal tsunami, able to cross oceans and ravage countries on the other side of the world. Only recently have scientists realised the next episode is likely to begin at the Canary Islands, off North Africa, where a wall of water will one day be created which will race across the entire Atlantic ocean at the speed of a jet airliner to devastate the east coast of the United States. America will have been struck by a mega-tsunami. Back in 1953 two geologists travelled to a remote bay in Alaska looking for oil. They gradually realised that in the past the bay had been struck by huge waves, and wondered what could have possibly caused them. Five years later, they got their answer. In 1958 there was a landslide, in which a towering cliff collapsed into the bay, creating a wave half a kilometre high, higher than any skyscraper on Earth. The true destructive potential of landslide-generated tsunami, which scientists named "Mega-tsunami", suddenly began to be appreciated. If a modest-sized landslide in Alaska could create a wave of this size, what havoc could a really huge landslide cause? Scientists now realise that the greatest danger comes from large volcanic islands, which are particularly prone to these massive landslides. Geologists began to look for evidence of past landslides on the sea bed, and what they saw astonished them. The sea floor around Hawaii, for instance, was covered with the remains of millions of years’ worth of ancient landslides, colossal in size. But huge landslides and the mega-tsunami that they cause are extremely rare - the last one happened 4,000 years ago on the island of Réunion. The growing concern is that the ideal conditions for just such a landslide - and consequent mega-tsunami - now exist on the island of La Palma in the Canaries. In 1949 the southern volcano on the island erupted. During the eruption an enormous crack appeared across one side of the volcano, as the western half slipped a few metres towards the Atlantic before stopping in its tracks. Although the volcano presents no danger while it is quiescent, scientists believe the western flank will give way completely during some future eruption on the summit of the volcano. In other words, any time in the next few thousand years a huge section of southern La Palma, weighing 500 thousand million tonnes, will fall into the Atlantic ocean. What will happen when the volcano on La Palma collapses? Scientists predict that it will generate a wave that will be almost inconceivably destructive, far bigger than anything ever witnessed in modern times. It will surge across the entire Atlantic in a matter of hours, engulfing the whole US east coast, sweeping away everything in its path up to 20km inland. Boston would be hit first, followed by New York, then all the way down the coast to Miami and the Caribbean.

2000-10-19T20:00:00Z

37x11 Conjoined Twins

37x11 Conjoined Twins

  • 2000-10-19T20:00:00Z1h

Conjoined twins are among the rarest of human beings. There are probably fewer than a dozen adult pairs living in the world today. Only a few hundred pairs of conjoined twins are born in the whole world each year - they appear about once in every 100,000 births - but more than half of them are stillborn, and one in three live for only a few days. Of those who survive, a very small number will be selected for separation surgery. But as there are few hospitals with the skills and experience to perform this kind of surgery, separation is still a very unusual event. The harrowing decisions which surgeons have to make when faced with conjoined twins have been highlighted by the recent case in Manchester, England. Separating conjoined twins is not only technically challenging; it can involves life and death decisions about whether one twin should be sacrificed in the hope of saving the other. But "sacrifice surgery" has a poor record of success, and the Manchester case is the latest round in an international debate about the value of separation operations. The confidence of the surgeons, who believe that separation is essential, is challenged by medical historian, Dr Alice Dreger of Michigan State University. She argues that twins themselves might take a different view - if they were ever given a chance to express it. Horizon interviews two pairs of adult conjoined twins - Lori and Reba Schappell in Pennsylvania and Masha and Dasha Krivoshlyapova in Moscow. Lori and Reba are joined at the head; Masha and Dasha are joined in their lower body. They say that they prefer their conjoined lives, despite the problems and challenges, rather than face the risks of separation surgery. Lori and Reba live independent lives in their own apartment in Pennsylvania; Lori enjoys working with computers and Reba is developing a career as a country singer. Masha and Dasha had a difficult childhood; they were subjected to medical experimentation when they were very young and hidden away from the public. Since the end of the communist era they have been able to tell their story. Their autobiography is being written by a British journalist, Juliet Butler. Horizon also follows surgeons at the Red Cross Children's Hospital in Cape Town, Africa as they plan to separate eight month old twins, Stella and Esther Alphonce. The baby girls are joined at the hip, and the surgeons have little doubt that they can and should be separated, even though the operation carries risks of disability for the twins. Historically conjoined twins who were not, or could not be separated have lived successful lives, even if this involved putting themselves on public display. The original Siamese twins, Chang and Eng Bunker, were joined by a narrow strip of flesh and could easily be separated today. Like Millie and Christine McCoy, who also lived in the USA in the middle of the last century, they earned fame and fortune touring the world. But life for conjoined twins has never been easy, Millie and Christine were kidnapped and sold several times in their childhood. The British conjoined twin sisters, Violet and Daisy Hilton, provoked a scandal in the USA when one of them tried to get married. They did eventually marry, but they were never separated. The tragedy for conjoined twins who spend their lives together is that they inevitably die together too. When one twin dies, the heart of the other twin keeps pumping until he or she is drained of blood. Is this another reason why twins should be separated when they are young? There are no simple answers, because every pair of twins is unique.

It sometimes seems as if our planet has no secrets left - but deep beneath the great Antarctic ice sheet scientists have made an astonishing discovery. They’ve found one of the largest lakes in the world. It’s very existence defies belief. Scientists are desperate to get into the lake because its extreme environment may be home to unique flora and fauna, never seen before, and NASA are excited by what it could teach us about extraterrestrial life. But 4 kilometres of ice stand between the lake and the surface, and breaking this seal without contaminating the most pristine body of water on the planet is possibly one of the greatest challenges science faces in the 21st century.

On August 2nd 1947, a British civilian version of the wartime Lancaster bomber took off from Buenos Aires airport on a scheduled flight to Santiago. There were 5 crew and 6 passengers on board the plane - named "Stardust". But Stardust never made it to Santiago. Instead it vanished when it was apparently just a few minutes from touchdown. One final strange Morse code radio message - "STENDEC" - was sent, but after that nothing more was heard from the plane. Despite a massive search of the Andes mountains no trace of the plane was ever found. For 53 years the families of those who disappeared have not known what happened to their loved ones. But earlier this year the plane suddenly reappeared on a glacier high up in the Andes, more than 50 km’s from the area where the plane was last reported.

In the summer of 2000, one of the great frontier cities of the Roman Empire, the city of Zeugma, all but disappeared from the face of the Earth under the flood waters of a dam. In a bid to modernise, the Turkish government has embarked on one of the most ambitious engineering projects in the world, building a series of dams on the Euphrates over the past twenty years. Almost every dam threatens ancient remains that lie below in one of the most archaeologically rich regions of the world. The completion of the Birecik dam, featured in this film, has flooded the valley where Zeugma is buried. The city on the flat plain has entirely disappeared and the waters have now risen to cover 30% of the city on the hillside. Horizon tells the story of the archaeologists' fifth and final visit, struggling to save what they could before the dam waters rose. It witnesses the uncovering of some of the most beautiful examples of Roman art ever found. The team’s discoveries at Zeugma caused an international outcry and further excavations were hurriedly put together. Since 1995, French archaeologists Pierre Leriche and Catherine Abadie-Reynal have taken up the challenge to save what they can from the city before the dam is finished. The archaeologists have two main tasks - to uncover the history of this desperately under-excavated region of Turkey and to remove what treasures they could from the site before they were lost forever. On this, their final excavation, they had to work against the clock: they only had a permit to dig for six weeks Zeugma was founded by one of Alexander the Great’s generals, Seleucia Nicator, and prospered under later Roman rule. It became one of the major cities of the Roman eastern frontier with a garrison of over 6,000 soldiers. The city’s bridge across the Euphrates made it one of the most critical trading cities in the region, on the silk routes to the East. The archaeologists know that the city contains vital clues to the history of the region. Previously looted exquisite mosaics have hinted at the treasures of its past that must be buried somewhere in the vast site. The part of the old city on the Euphrates flood plain, Apamea, was the first to go. But the archaeologists didn’t stand a chance of excavating it in such a short amount of time. So using a technology originally developed for finding oil and mineral deposits, they instead generated a picture of the buried city just as it lies below ground. They discovered a preserved ancient Greek city, laid out in a perfect grid. Meanwhile, in the remains of a Roman villa across the river, the archaeologists had an extraordinary stroke of luck. With only five days left on the excavation permit, Catherine Abadie-Reynal unearthed a masterpiece: a beautiful Roman mosaic floor. The discovery caused an international outcry and hit the headlines across the world. The archaeologists were granted more days to excavate, but they could not stem the tide of the dam project. With time running out, they uncovered more stunning mosaics in the villa. They were dug out from the site and sent to a local museum at Gaziantep - just in time. By mid June 2000, the newly uncovered fourteen room villa disappeared underwater. By October, the level of the water finally settled to form a vast, still lake in the valley. All excavations at the site ceased. There's recently been a move by the Turkish government to declare Zeugma a site of special archaeological interest. The remainder of the ancient city on the hillside could, in theory, still be explored. The dam will not only erase much of Zeugma from history. It will also displace 30,000 people, mostly Kurds, from the villages they have lived in for generations. For many, the loss of Zeugma is a tragedy.

2000-11-16T21:00:00Z

37x15 Valley of Life or Death

37x15 Valley of Life or Death

  • 2000-11-16T21:00:00Z1h

At the heart of the AIDS epidemic in Africa, there is a deadly mystery that has puzzled scientists for years. There are groups of people who are four times less likely to get HIV than other people, sometimes living just yards away, across a single valley - people with apparently similar behaviour and lifestyle. Scientists realised that if they could understand why these people are so much less vulnerable to the HIV virus, it might lead to an answer that could save millions of lives. And after 15 years of detective work it turns out there may be a remarkably simple answer: the high risk areas for HIV coincide with tribes who are uncircumcised. In Africa, it seems a man is much more likely to get HIV if he is uncircumcised. In Kaoma, Western Zambia, a young boy is on his way to the sacred Mukondaa - the tribal circumcision ground. Around him the tribal elders are gathered, dressed in their ceremonial garb, and vivid masks. But the young boy himself is an outsider, not from this tribe, and none of his relatives or ancestors have ever been circumcised. In fact, his parents are only prepared to break the taboo of their own tribe because they believe that circumcision could save his life by protecting him from AIDS. At first sight this belief seems like the kind of superstition to which desperate people often turn in times of plague. But now there is scientific evidence that suggests these people could well be right. There have now been twenty seven statistical studies that show a big difference in HIV infection between circumcised and uncircumcised men. For example, among the uncircumcised people of Kisumu in Western Kenya, a man is three times as likely to get AIDS than his circumcised neighbours. Among truck drivers in Mombasa the difference is four-fold. Horizon travels across Africa, tracing the work of scientists who have unearthed the statistical data behind this correlation. At the same time microbiologists have been battling to understand the complex and insidious virus, and their work indicates that the foreskin may be a key entry point for HIV. The logical conclusion for these scientists is that if you remove the foreskin, you begin to protect the man. No-one believes that circumcision can protect completely - the evidence so far only indicates that it reduces the risk of infection by HIV, and then only during heterosexual sex. Unquestionably, condoms are still the best protection. But in the many countries where the use of condoms is minimal, it seems that circumcision might help to reduce the spread of AIDS. In the absence of a vaccine for AIDS, and the lack of condom use in the developing world, should governments think the unthinkable and encourage the circumcision of young boys in non-circumcising tribes as a public policy? Opposing this idea are the voices of tribal elders who are loath to change tribal traditions that have existed for generations, and a fierce Western anti-circumcision lobby which believes that circumcision is a form of mutilation and violates basic human rights.

2000-11-23T21:00:00Z

37x16 Extreme Dinosaurs

37x16 Extreme Dinosaurs

  • 2000-11-23T21:00:00Z1h

Amazing new discoveries in South America are revolutionising what we thought we knew about the dinosaur world. It now seems that South America was home to both the largest meat-eater - so new it's still without a name - and the largest herbivore - the enormous long-necked Argentinasaurus. And what's more, these dinosaurs lived at the same time in the same place. So it's possible that like in a science fiction movie, in this prehistoric world these two giants of their kind fought each other in a spectacular clash of the Titans. Horizon follows the scientists to Argentina as they unearth one of these giants - a brand new species of dinosaur; the biggest carnivore ever discovered. Not yet named, this new creature is even bigger than T. rex, the so-called 'king' of the carnivores. The new giant South American predator had a skull bigger than a man that was full of serrated, knife-like teeth and long powerful jaw muscles. They could dissect their prey with almost surgical precision. But even this formidable killing machine couldn't alone have taken on the massive long-neck, Argentinasaurus, which was the height of a five-storey building. It must have hunted in a pack. The problem is, the mega-meat-eaters have always been assumed to have been solitary creatures. The evidence shows that they lived and hunted alone. If they weren't pack hunters, then they would never have attacked Argentinasaurus. So it looked like the idea of a mighty battle between these two giants was simply science fiction. But extraordinary new clues are proving otherwise. Palaeontologist Phil Currie had long suspected that the giant carnivores might indeed have hunted in packs and he set out to find the proof. Only now after many years' work have Currie and his team unearthed the clues that are beginning to convince other palaeontologists that the huge carnivorous dinosaurs hunted in groups. With the help of his colleague Rodolfo Coria, Currie has discovered not one but two fossil bone-beds showing packs of massive carnivorous dinosaurs that have lain buried for millions of years. Each pack - one found in the badlands of Alberta, Canada and the other in Patagonia, Argentina - contains a whole range of individuals, from young through to fully mature adults indicating that they lived alongside in a herd. He's convinced that these dinosaurs were buried together because they were living together. These new finds are good evidence that these creatures really did hunt as a team. And that means a ferocious pack of enormous carnivorous dinosaurs roaming the lands of South America may indeed have taken on a huge Argentinasaurus in a fight to the death. So it may not just be science fiction - the Clash of the Titans could have happened after all.

2000-11-30T21:00:00Z

37x17 Supermassive Black Holes

In June 2000, astronomers made an extraordinary discovery. One that promises to solve one of the biggest problems in cosmology - how and why galaxies are created. Incredibly, the answer involves the most weird, destructive and terrifying objects in the Universe - supermassive black holes. Scientists are beginning to believe that these forces of pure destruction actually help trigger the birth of galaxies and therefore are at the heart of the creation of stars, planets and all life. Supermassive black holes are so extraordinary that until recently, many people doubted that they existed at all. The idea of giant black holes the size of the Solar System seemed more like science fiction that reality - such monsters would be so powerful that they could destroy the very fabric of the Universe. But in the last five years a series of discoveries has changed our understanding of supermassive black holes and galaxies forever. Using the powerful Hubble Space Telescope, scientists have been scanning nearby galaxies, searching for these giant black holes. It's a difficult job - by their very nature black holes swallow light - so can never be seen. So what scientists have been looking for is the effect of their massive gravity, hurling stars around them at immense speed. What they've found is more extraordinary than anyone could ever have imagined; not just evidence that these vast destructive monsters exist… but so far they're in every single galaxy toward which they have turned their telescopes. These giant agents of destruction appear to be common throughout the Universe. Scientists now think supermassive black holes are a fundamental part of what a galaxy actually is. Lurking at the heart of every single galaxy is a giant black hole of apocalyptic proportions - and that includes our own galaxy, the Milky Way. Astronomer Andrea Ghez has been studying the heart of the Milky Way for the last five years. What she's discovered is irrefutable evidence for a giant black hole, 3 billion times the size of our own sun. A black hole that could destroy the entire Solar System. And as Horizon was filming in July 2000, Ghez got some terrifying images - of the giant monster sucking up gas and stars at the galaxy heart. So what is this giant monster doing at the heart of our galaxy? What effect will this giant black hole 25,000 light years away have on us and the rest of the galaxy around it? These are questions that have been puzzling astronomers for the last few years - and in June, two separate groups of scientists found evidence that points to a startling answer. Rather than being destructive parasites, it seems that supermassive black holes may be essential in the very creation of the galaxies they live in. Exactly how our galaxy was created has mystified astronomers and physicists for years. Although there have been many theories, there's little evidence to explain how the gas in the early Universe condensed to form the galaxy we see today. Now scientists realise they've been missing a vital ingredient - a supermassive black hole. The immense gravity of a giant black hole might trigger the gas to collapse in the first place. By churning up the gas around it, a giant black hole would trigger the birth of stars, planets and life itself. Despite being the most destructive thing in the Universe, scientists now think our supermassive black hole could be crucial in creating the galaxy as we know it. The supermassive black hole in our own galaxy may be the reason we exist, but recent work suggests it may also be our end. At present Earth is so far away from the black hole that it can't affect us, but physicist John Dubinski thinks all that could change. In January 2000 he graphically simulated the final fate of our galaxy. In 3 billion years we will collide with the next door galaxy, Andromeda. The resulting apocalypse will force the Earth and our Solar System out of orbit. Dubinski has calculated a worrying 50:50 chance that we'll be sent hurtling in towards the black hole at the centre of this maelstrom. This would be fatal for the Earth.

In 1965 in the Canadian town of Winnipeg, Janet Reimer gave birth to twin boys - Bruce and Brian. Six months later a bungled circumcision left Bruce without a penis. Based on a radical new theory of gender development the decision was taken to raise Bruce as a girl. In 1967 Bruce became Brenda and for the next three decades this case would be at the heart of one of the most controversial theories in the history of science. The man behind this work was world-renowned psychologist Dr John Money. In the 1950s Dr Money developed a theory that revolutionised our understanding of gender. Money believed that what he called our 'gender identity' - what makes us think, feel and behave as boys or girls - is not fully formed by the time of birth. While we may have some innate sense of being a boy or a girl, for up to two years after birth, our brains are, in effect, malleable and we can be taught to grow up as either a boy or girl by how we are raised - by the toys we are given, the guidance we receive from adults and the clothes we are given to wear. This became known as the 'theory of gender neutrality'. Dr Money had reached this conclusion by working with a rare group of individuals born with ambiguous genitals - people known as intersexuals or hermaphrodites. Dr Money studied groups of intersex children, and concluded that these children could be brought up as either boys or girls regardless of their genetic or physical sex. The legacy of Dr Money's work was a revolution in the treatment of 'intersex'. From the 1950s to the present day many intersex children born with a tiny penis are reassigned as female even if they are actually genetically male. But not everyone agreed with Dr Money's theories. Since the 1950s a small group of scientists including Dr Milton Diamond have questioned John Money's work. Diamond believed that our sex is already defined in our brains before we are born. He was convinced that the power of our genes and hormones was so strong that no amount of nurturing could override them. But John Money's theory had already become firmly accepted around the world and the most dramatic confirmation of the theory came from one particular case - the case of Bruce Reimer. Bruce was a normal boy, not an intersex child, and yet the decision was made to turn this boy who had lost his penis, into a girl. Under the guidance of Dr Money and his team at Johns Hopkins University this baby boy was surgically changed into a girl. After surgeons at Hopkins had castrated baby Bruce, he became baby Brenda. The family were instructed how to bring up Brenda as a normal little girl. According to Dr Money's theory she would grow up believing herself to be female and would go on to live a normal happy life as a woman. It seemed the ultimate test that nurture could override nature. Thirty years after Bruce became Brenda, the impact of this extraordinary story continues. After almost 14 years living as a female, Brenda Reimer reverted to her true biological sex - the case of the boy who was turned into a girl had failed. Brenda took the name David and for the last twenty years he has lived anonymously in his hometown of Winnipeg. For almost all this time no one knew the outcome of John Money's celebrated case. But now that David has gone public, the case is being widely discussed once again and its impact on John Money's theory of gender development and the treatment of intersex children is being hotly debated.

2000-12-14T21:00:00Z

37x19 Atlantis Reborn Again

37x19 Atlantis Reborn Again

  • 2000-12-14T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon puts Graham Hancock's controversial theories about the past to the test, dissecting his evidence for a lost civilisation. Graham Hancock offers various pieces of evidence to support his theory. He claims that the mysterious lost civilisation left its mark in ancient monuments, which he calculates were built to mirror certain constellations of stars. His hugely popular ideas have attracted such a wide audience that they stand to replace the conventional view of the past, which is based on scientific evidence that the civilisations of the ancient world were developed independently, by different peoples, on different continents.

2000-12-14T21:00:00Z

37x20 Atlantis Reborn Again

37x20 Atlantis Reborn Again

  • 2000-12-14T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon puts Graham Hancock's controversial theories about the past to the test, dissecting his evidence for a lost civilisation. Although scientists believe they have categorically disproved the myth of Atlantis, the idea is more popular now than ever before. The latest exponent of the theory of a single lost source for all civilisation, is Graham Hancock. Although he doesn't call it Atlantis, his compelling ideas about a sophisticated society destroyed in a flood 12,000 years ago seem to be based on a reworking of the original Atlantis myth, whose survivors brought culture, religion, monument-building and civilisation to the rest of the world.

Season Premiere

2001-01-25T21:00:00Z

38x01 The Mystery of the Miami Circle

Season Premiere

38x01 The Mystery of the Miami Circle

  • 2001-01-25T21:00:00Z1h

Builders in Miami, Florida unearth a ring of holes. The State then pays $27million to preserve either a Native American village or remnants of a 1950s sewerage system.

2001-02-01T21:00:00Z

38x02 The Missing Link

38x02 The Missing Link

  • 2001-02-01T21:00:00Z1h

A trail from Greenland to Britain via Latvia offers new evidence into how evolution could have seen aquatic life form legs and walk.

2001-02-08T21:00:00Z

38x03 Killer Algae

38x03 Killer Algae

  • 2001-02-08T21:00:00Z1h

A tropical seaweed that escaped from an aquarium is endangering sea life in the Mediterranean and has gone on to infect the California coast.

2001-02-15T21:00:00Z

38x04 Ecstasy and Agony

38x04 Ecstasy and Agony

  • 2001-02-15T21:00:00Z1h

Tim Lawrence was an all-action stuntman until hit by Parkinson's Disease. Horizon follows his hopes of a more normal lifestyle using Ecstasy - a class A illegal drug.

2001-02-22T21:00:00Z

38x05 Snowball Earth

38x05 Snowball Earth

  • 2001-02-22T21:00:00Z1h

The controversial theory that for millions of years the Earth was plunged into catastrophe - entirely smothered in ice up to one kilometre thick.

2001-03-06T21:00:00Z

38x06 Taming the Problem Child

Two disruptive children are followed through a controversial treatment regime.

In November 2000, the international press reported an amazing find: a mummy, which was claimed to be that of an ancient Persian princess, over 2,600 years old. She was encased in a carved stone coffin, inside a wooden sarcophagus and was wearing an exquisite golden crown and mask. Her cloth-bound body was dressed with golden artefacts, with an inscription on her breastplate that read, "I am the daughter of the great King Xerxes, I am Rhodugune." All the internal organs had been taken out of her body, in the same way that the ancient Egyptians mummified their dead. It was the find of a lifetime, one of the most magnificent ancient treasures ever to be unearthed in the area. When the curator from the Karachi National Museum, Dr Asma Ibrahim, began her investigations into the mummy, a different story began to emerge. Horizon follows the story as forensic experts all over the globe analyse the mummy and her magnificent trappings and discover that she is an elaborate fake with a terrible secret. The mummy was found in a house in the desert region of Pakistan during a police raid, after a tip-off that it was to be illegally sold on the antiquities black market for $20m, and smuggled out of Pakistan. The Persian princess was immediately hailed as a major archaeological discovery. In fact, no Persian mummy had ever been found before, let alone a royal mummy. Mummification to preserve bodies had always been thought to be unique to the ancient Egyptians. However, there were some strange puzzles about this beautiful princess. The inscriptions on the mummy's breastplate had some grammatical errors. And there were peculiarities in the way she had been mummified. Several detailed operations common to Egyptian mummifications had been omitted. So it began to look like the mummy was not the princess she was supposed to be; perhaps she was a more ordinary ancient mummy dressed up to be a Persian princess by forgers trying to increase her value. As scientists investigated more closely, it became clear that this mummy had an even darker history. Computerised tomography (CT) scans and X-ray photographs of the body inside the mummy revealed that this was no ancient corpse but a woman who had died in the recent past, and that her neck was broken. An autopsy confirmed that this woman may indeed have been murdered to provide a body for the fakers to mummify - a body they intended to pass off as an ancient mummy for millions of dollars on the international art black market. And, finally there is evidence to suggest that they have done this not once but three times, raising the spectre of a mummy factory and the terrifying thought of yet more victims.

In 2001, scientists announced an amazing discovery: the oldest skull of a human ancestor ever found. The 3 million year old fossil was remarkably complete, and unlike any previous fossil find. Its discovery - by a team led by Meave Leakey of the famous Leakey fossil-hunting family - has revolutionised our understanding of how humans evolved. The great mystery of our evolution is how an ape could have evolved into the extraordinary creature that is a human being. There has never been another animal like us on the planet. And yet ten million years ago there was no sign that humans would take over the world. Instead the Earth was dominated by the apes. More than 50 different species of ape roamed the world - ten million years ago Earth really was the planet of the apes. Three million years later, most had vanished. In their place came something clearly related to the apes, but also completely different: human beings! For years scientists searched for the first key characteristic which had allowed us to make the huge leap from ape to amazing human. At first they thought the development of our big brains was decisive. They even found the fossil that seemed to prove it, until along came the famous three million year old fossilised skeleton Lucy. This quashed the big brain theory, because here was a human ancestor which clearly walked on two legs, just as we do, but had the tiny brain of an ape. It seemed that the development of walking on two legs (bipedalism) was the first key human characteristic, the thing that set us on the road to becoming human. Lucy soon became even more important. She seemed to defy the laws of evolution. Normally a major evolutionary adaptation like walking on two legs is followed by what scientists call an adaptive radiation. Many related species quickly evolve from an initial evolutionary innovation. It gives a very bushy evolutionary family tree, with many different but related species. Scientists knew that the human branch of the family tree had begun about six or seven million years ago, when the planet of the apes ended. And yet there was no sign of an adaptive radiation. The family tree showed just a straight line leading from the planet of the apes through to Lucy. All that has changed with Meave Leakey's spectacular new discovery, named Kenyanthropus platyops or, less formally, Flat-faced Man. Her find is the same age as Lucy's species, but also completely different. It's proof that there were two different bipedal human ancestors living at the same time, more than three million years ago. And it's the first sign of the adaptive radiation that the theory of evolution says should have followed the planet of the apes.

2001-10-11T20:00:00Z

38x09 Life Blood

38x09 Life Blood

  • 2001-10-11T20:00:00Z1h

Matthew Farrow was born with a rare and fatal blood disease, Fanconi's anaemia. His family and doctors thought he was going to die. Instead, aged just five, he became the first person in the world to be given a radical new treatment that few believed would work. It saved his life. The treatment was remarkably simple. A small quantity of blood taken from a newborn baby's umbilical cord and placenta was infused into him. Thanks to this cord blood, Matthew Farrow is now a healthy teenager and the treatment he helped to pioneer is giving hope to hundreds of critically ill children around the world. Cord blood contains a large number of blood stem cells, the mysterious factory cells that make all the red and white blood cells our body needs. Stem cells can rebuild a sick child's blood system in just a few weeks, by producing healthy new blood cells. Until Matthew's case, babies' umbilical cords and placentas were just thrown away at birth. Established medical thought said the only source of blood stem cells was the bone marrow and the only treatment for children with advanced blood cancers was a bone marrow transplant. One in three affected children cannot find a suitable bone marrow donor, and there was a desperate need for an alternative. The first doctors to suggest cord blood as an answer were dismissed as dreamers. But pioneering work over the last twenty years, mainly in America, has shown that the tiny quantity of blood contained in a newborn's umbilical cord and placenta is rich in the crucial stem cells. It is now being used to help to treat a broad range of blood cancers and serious genetic blood diseases. However, even its advocates admit that cord blood is no miracle cure. Cord blood is a significant medical breakthrough, but it cannot save everyone who is treated with it. This powerful and moving film follows patients and their doctors as they go through this arduous new treatment. Not all patients survive the transplant. However, for some patients this treatment is a lifeline when there is no option of a bone marrow transplant. Since 1990, over a thousand lives have been saved by this new treatment.

2001-10-18T20:00:00Z

38x10 The Death Star

38x10 The Death Star

  • 2001-10-18T20:00:00Z1h

Out in deepest space lurks a force of almost unimaginable power. Explosions of extraordinary violence, are blasting through the Universe every day. If one ever struck our Solar System it would destroy our Sun and all the planets. For years no one could work out what was causing these awesome explosions. Now scientists think they have identified the culprit. It's the most extreme object ever found in the Universe; they have christened it a 'hypernova'.

Season Finale

2001-10-25T20:00:00Z

38x11 Cloning the First Human

Season Finale

38x11 Cloning the First Human

  • 2001-10-25T20:00:00Z1h

Doctors Panayiotis Zavos and Severino Antinori claim they are ready to embark on the greatest human experiment of our age. They say they will attempt to clone a human being before the year is out. Most people think the objections to this are ethical - human cloning would create many moral dilemmas. There is another question that few ever ask: is the science actually ready yet for cloning healthy humans? Horizon follows the latest research, which has led many scientists to believe that Zavos and Antinori's plans to clone the first human could end in tragedy. The programme also meets couples like Matthew and Desiree Racquer who think cloning offers them the only way to raise a child who is truly their own. For decades, cloning remained within the realms of science fiction. The idea that instead of combining a sperm and an egg, a new human could be made from a single cell taken from an adult, seemed completely absurd. But that all changed in February 1997, when the Roslin Institute introduced the world to Dolly the sheep - the first animal cloned from an adult. Ever since Dolly, scientists have been continuing to experiment with cloning animals. So far, they have succeeded in cloning sheep, cattle, pigs, goats and mice, fuelling the belief that humans could be next. But even Dolly's creator, Professor Ian Wilmut, is concerned that beneath the veneer of success lies a disturbing reality. Most cloning attempts on animals so far have resulted in failed implantation or abnormal foetuses. Of the animals born alive, some soon die of catastrophic organ failure. Others appear to be healthy for weeks or even months, then die suddenly, sometimes from bizarre new illnesses which do not occur in nature. Years of painstaking work are only now revealing some vital clues to what is going wrong. Horizon talks to the scientists who have uncovered new evidence, suggesting that the process of cloning itself causes subtle errors in the way genes function. These random errors may be like a time bomb inside every clone, causing some of the strange - often fatal - problems. There's no reason to think cloned human babies would fare any better. According to embryologist Dr Susan Avery, death might be the best outcome for many human clones. If they survived, they would suffer from catastrophic illnesses that modern medicine is powerless to prevent or cure. Dr Zavos claims that these problems are the result of the still unsophisticated methods being used by animal researchers. Using advanced in vitro fertilisation ('test tube baby') techniques, he claims that he will strive to make human cloning safer than natural reproduction. Now though, it seems that some IVF procedures themselves are being investigated for possible harmful effects on the long term health of children. Professor Gerald Schatten of the University of Pittsburgh reveals evidence of these risks, which could be magnified in cloning. Most reproductive specialists believe that the danger to any human born by cloning is enormous. But the would-be human cloners are determined to clone a human baby. If they proceed, they may be courting tragedy.

Season Premiere

2002-01-10T21:00:00Z

39x01 Helike - The Real Atlantis

Season Premiere

39x01 Helike - The Real Atlantis

  • 2002-01-10T21:00:00Z1h

On a winter night in 373 BC, the classical Greek city of Helike was destroyed by a massive earthquake and tidal wave. The entire city and all its inhabitants were lost beneath the sea. What has bewitched archaeologists about Helike is that it was engulfed just when ancient Greece was reaching its height; when the philosophy and art that inspired the western world for thousands of years were invented. Its destruction was one of the most appalling tragedies of the classical world and most probably the reality behind the myth of Atlantis. But now, unlike Atlantis, a team of archaeologists may have found Helike - a lost city from the heyday of Greek civilisation. If it is as well preserved as everyone hopes, Helike could be a time capsule from this crucial time in human development. For centuries there had been just no sign of it. All archaeologists had to guide them were obscure and often contradictory ancient texts. So, despite numerous expeditions trawling the waters off the coast of Greece and vast amounts of money and technology thrown at the problem, no one could find anything except two small coins, unearthed over a hundred years ago. Then, in 1988 Dora Katsonopoulou and Steven Soter took up the challenge. Dora had grown up with the legend from childhood and was determined to find the archaeological treasure on her doorstep. Together they went back to basics and re-examined the ancient texts. These said that Helike had sunk into a poros, which everyone had taken to mean Gulf of Corinthe. But Dora thought that a poros could also be an inland lagoon. If she was right, the lost city which had inspired Atlantis might not be under the sea, as everyone thought, but somewhere inland. Studying the geology of the region, earthquake expert Iain Stewart argues that a large earthquake could well cause an inland lagoon. Small recent earthquakes in the region have caused ground liquefaction - a terrifying phenomenon where the ground literally turns to water beneath your feet. If the same had happened on a much larger scale then the whole city could have been plunged downwards, taking much of the city below sea level. But the earthquake in 373 BC could also have had a second more devastating effect. As well as liquifaction recent earthquakes have caused chunks of coastline to fall into the sea. If this happened on a large scale underwater landslides could cause a large wave, or tsunami. This would race across the Gulf of Corinthe, ricochet off the opposite bank and come charging back again, to crash over the sunken plain and fill in the lagoon. Dora's theory makes sense, except for one thing. There is no lagoon in the region today. There is, though, a trail of clues that explains what could have happened. An ancient bridge that is strangely nowhere near water shows how river sediment coming down from the mountains changes the shape of the plain - over hundreds of years the lagoon would have silted up, hiding the lost city beneath solid ground. A host of boreholes drilled into the plain and a remote cave with the legend attached to it have helped pinpoint where the now underground city might lie. Slowly Dora and Steven have pieced it all together, but there have been several false starts along the way. The first lot of ruins they found were Roman - a settlement built hundreds of years after Helike's disappearance to honour the famous lost city. Next they found ruins that turned out to be prehistoric - an early bronze age settlement built 2,500 years before Helike. It wasn't until 2001 that Dora and Steven at last got their breakthrough. Whilst Horizon was filming, the team uncovered ruins from classical Greece. Securely dated by coins and pottery, the team are convinced they have at last found the city they've been looking for. It will take years to uncover Helike's riches, but for the first time in thousands of years, we have glimpses of the lost city that inspired Atlantis.

2002-01-17T21:00:00Z

39x02 Volcano Hell

39x02 Volcano Hell

  • 2002-01-17T21:00:00Z1h

It began with a ghastly tragedy. In 1985 the massive Colombian volcano Nevado del Ruiz erupted, melting a glacier and sending a vast landslide of mud down on the people asleep in the town of Armero below. Twenty thousand died. In the aftermath science was set a challenge: to make sure such a catastrophe never happened again, by finding a way of accurately predicting when a volcano will erupt. Now, at last, it seems that one scientist may have met that challenge. Anyone can tell when a volcano becomes active. You can see it and you can smell it. But a volcano can be active for years without erupting. For those living nearby, there is no way they will abandon their homes and livelihoods just because of a few rumblings. The only way to persuade them to seek safety is to predict an eruption almost to the day, leaving just enough time for an evacuation. Scientists threw themselves at the problem, but there just seemed to be no way to make sense of the violent forces at work inside a volcano. Then along came Bernard Chouet. He is different from other volcanologists. His training lay in the complex equations and theories of physics, and he believed the answer had to lie in analysing the mysterious patterns drawn by seismographs. These measure the tremors caused by active volcanoes. Previous attempts to use these tremors to predict eruptions had proved fruitless. No one could find any correlation between the squiggles on the graph paper and the timing of eruptions. So Chouet locked himself away for five years and then emerged claiming he had found the answer. The key, he said, were seismic signals called long period events. These strange shapes had baffled volcanologists for years. Chouet said they were made by molten magma resonating - that is coming under pressure - inside the volcano. The more long period events there were, then the nearer the volcano was to exploding. Chouet could use the long period events to predict an eruption to within days. But another scientist was working on a completely different method. Stanley Williams could not be more different from Chouet. Where Chouet crunched numbers and looked at graphs, Williams climbed into craters and got up close; because he believed the best clue to when a volcano would erupt was to measure how much gas it was belching out. In 1993 the two methods came head to head. A conference was held at the foot of another Colombian volcano, Galeras. The highlight was to be a trip into the crater. Williams's gas readings indicated the volcano was safe. Chouet's long period events suggested the volcano might blow. After some debate, Williams led a team of volcanologists up the mountain. Suddenly Galeras exploded, killing six scientists and three tourists. Williams himself survived but was maimed for life. Since that day on Galeras, Chouet's methods have commanded wide respect and have been increasingly used around the world. In a dramatic demonstration last year Mexican scientists used Chouet's method to predict an eruption of the mighty volcano Popocatepetl. Tens of thousands of people were safely evacuated just before the biggest eruption of the volcano for a thousand years. No one was hurt.

2002-01-24T21:00:00Z

39x03 Fatbusters

39x03 Fatbusters

  • 2002-01-24T21:00:00Z1h

There is a new epidemic sweeping the world. It's been silently growing over the last few decades - only now is it reaching dramatic proportions. If current trends continue, more than one quarter of British adults will have this disease by the year 2010. This new epidemic is obesity. Scientists have recently made significant discoveries, which could lead to a drug treatment for obesity. In the meantime, until the drugs are developed, what should we do to keep off the pounds? One thing is certain. Willpower alone won't stop the epidemic of obesity; however, new research suggests there may be an easier way to fight the flab than joining the gym. Meet the Padded Lilies, a troupe of obese water ballet dancers who insist it is impossible to change our natural weight. They say they are born with a slow metabolic rate that has made them fat. But scientists now know that fat people actually have a faster metabolic rate. The Padded Lilies' suspicion that there is something wrong with their biology may well be true... but not in the way they thought. In 1994, research into a fat mouse was the starting point for a revolution in the science of obesity. The obese mouse was missing a hormone called leptin, which turns off the feelings of hunger. Wall Street went mad and the patent for leptin was purchased by a biotechnology company for millions of dollars. It seemed that at last a quick fix for obesity had been found. However, researchers quickly discovered that fat people had lots of leptin. There seemed to be no connection between the fat mice and obesity in humans. Then four years ago at Cambridge University, a young researcher, examined the blood of two young children who were so obese they could hardly walk and were confined to wheelchairs. She discovered these children, just like the mouse, didn't have the genetic information to make leptin and so could not suppress their appetites. She had for the first time ever identified human beings who were obese because of a genetic error and not because they didn't have the willpower to control their desire for food. In the last few years, research into obesity has snowballed and scientists around the world have begun to explore the area of genetic human obesity. Dr John Clapham is tackling the problem of obesity from another angle, by speeding up metabolism. Based in a top secret lab he has genetically manipulated a mouse that we all want to be. It can eat huge amounts of food yet, because it has an unnaturally high metabolism, it can't put on weight. This cutting edge science could lead to another target for the battle against obesity. However, we don't yet have this miracle treatment, so what can we do in the meantime? Dr James Levine has come up with an extraordinary idea. His study suggests there may be a way to shed those pounds without taking drugs or even joining a gym. He has found that people who fidget find it very difficult to put on weight. So we don't necessarily need exercise, we simply need to up the pace of our lives; walk rather than drive, climb the stairs rather than take the lift, don't sit still: fidget. All this should help us keep the calories at bay.

The magnificent ancient city of pyramids at Caral in Peru hit the headlines in 2001. The site is a thousand years older than the earliest known civilisation in the Americas and, at 2,627 BC, is as old as the pyramids of Egypt. Many now believe it is the fabled missing link of archaeology - a 'mother city'. If so, then these extraordinary findings could finally answer one of the great questions of archaeology: why did humans become civilised? For over a century, archaeologists have been searching for what they call a mother city. Civilisation began in only six areas of the world: Egypt, Mesopotamia, India, China, Peru and Central America. In each of these regions people moved from small family units to build cities of thousands of people. They crossed the historic divide, one of the great moments in human history. Why? To find the answer archaeologists needed to find a mother city - the first stage of city-building. They couldn't find one anywhere. Everywhere this first stage seemed destroyed or built over. And so, instead, scientists developed a number of theories. Some said it was because of the development of trade, others that it was irrigation. Some even today believe it was all because of aliens. Gradually an uneasy consensus emerged. The key force common to all civilisations was warfare. The theory was that only the fear of war could motivate people to give up the simple life and form complex societies. To prove it, archaeologists still had to find a city from that very first stage of civilisation. If it showed signs of warfare, then the theory had to be true. When archaeologist Ruth Shady discovered her 5,000 year old city of pyramids in the Peruvian desert, all eyes were on the New World. Ruth's extraordinary city, known as Caral, is so much older than anything else in South America that it is a clear candidate to be the mother city. It also is in pristine condition. Nothing has been built on it at all. Instead laid out before the world is an elaborate complex of pyramids, temples, an amphitheatre and ordinary houses. Crucially, there is not the faintest trace of warfare at Caral; no battlements, no weapons, no mutilated bodies. Instead, Ruth's findings suggest it was a gentle society, built on commerce and pleasure. In one of the pyramids they uncovered beautiful flutes made from condor and pelican bones. They have also found evidence of a culture that took drugs and perhaps aphrodisiacs. Most stunning of all, they have found the remains of a baby, lovingly wrapped and buried with a precious necklace made of stone beads.

2002-02-07T21:00:00Z

39x05 Death of the Iceman

39x05 Death of the Iceman

  • 2002-02-07T21:00:00Z1h

In September 1991 two hikers made a sensational discovery - a frozen body high in the mountains, near the border between Austria and Italy. It turned out to be 5,300 years old, the oldest frozen mummy ever found. Named Ötzi the Iceman after the Ötztal area where he was found, he became a worldwide sensation. The body was taken to Austria where scientists soon got to work on him. They analysed his bone density to find out how old he was (in his 40s, an advanced age for the time) and examined his wonderfully preserved belongings. The cause of his death remained a mystery. Now archaeologists are being joined by forensic scientists to investigate this unique case and new research has revealed a shocking answer. The investigation into Ötzi's death started at the scene of discovery. By examining photos which had been taken at the site, Austrian archaeologist Konrad Spindler worked out the layout. He was particularly intrigued by the position of the Iceman's copper axe, which was found propped up against a rock. He believed that this must have been placed in that position by Ötzi himself which meant that everything at the site had been preserved in the position it was when Ötzi died. His body was slumped face down on the ground, his cap lay nearby just as if it had fallen from his head. Scientists also wanted to know when he died so they examined the ice in which he'd been found. This contained pollen that they could identify as coming from autumn-flowering plants, so they concluded that Ötzi had died in the autumn. Together, this evidence implied that the Iceman might have got caught in a storm and died of hypothermia. Then the scientists looked inside the iceman using X-rays and CAT (Computer Assisted Tomography) scans. They saw what looked like unhealed rib fractures. So Spindler came up with what he called his disaster theory. He believed Ötzi was a shepherd who, one autumn, was returning to his home village with his animals. When he got there he became involved in some kind of argument or battle. He suffered a severe injury to his chest, fracturing his ribs, but managed to escape. He fled into the mountains and made it to the top, but by then he was exhausted from his injuries. He lay down to rest in a sheltered gully where he died of hypothermia and was buried in ice. The theory seemed to make sense, but it would not go unchallenged for long. In 1998, Ötzi was transferred to Italy since the body had actually been found just inside the Italian border. There the iceman was placed on display in a specially built museum in the town of Bolzano. To put the finishing touch to their display, the museum contacted forensic pathologist Peter Vanezis to reconstruct Ötzi's face, based on the shape of the skull. Vanezis normally works from the skull itself, but in this case, of course, that was impossible. So using the 3D CAT scan data and a rapid prototyping machine, the Austrian team created a detailed life-size replica of the Iceman's skull and gave this to Vanezis. He then used a laser to scan the skull into his facial reconstruction system. This measures the proportions of the skull and shapes a generic face to match. This allowed him to recreate Ötzi's face at last. Vanezis also wanted to look again at the theory of Ötzi's death, to question assumptions that the archaeologists had made. More and more evidence was questioning the disaster theory. An examination of the contents of Ötzi's intestine found hop hornbeam pollen. This pollen was incredibly well preserved - the cell contents still intact. This could only mean that it had been consumed very soon after the flowering of the plant just before the Iceman died. And since the hop hornbeam only flowers between March and June he must have actually died in spring. Also, evidence from the body and objects showed that the site had melted at least once and so things weren't necessarily in the same position. And finally, new examinations of the ribs showed that they hadn't been fractured before death - but been bent out of shape after death. Scientists seemed to be back to square one. IIt seemed his death might be shrouded in mystery forever. Then in June 2001, his new custodians, the Italians, decided to X-ray the body again. A local hospital radiologist noticed what looked like a foreign object near the shoulder, a shadow in the shape of an arrow. When they looked at its density they found it was denser than bone, it was the same density as flint. They'd discovered a stone arrowhead embedded in Ötzi's shoulder, which had been missed despite 10 years of intensive study. Now scientists can tell a new story of the Iceman's death. Ötzi was attacked and managed to flee. As he ran he was shot in the back with an arrow. He pulled out the arrow shaft but the head remained stuck in his shoulder. He reached the top of the mountains but was now exhausted and weakened from bleeding. He could go no further, lay down and died. Although this story fits the latest results, there are still many unanswered questions. Scientists hope soon to conduct an autopsy to remove the arrowhead and only then will we be able to say for certain what killed Ötzi. The Iceman may still be hiding more secrets.

2002-02-14T21:00:00Z

39x06 Parallel Universes

39x06 Parallel Universes

  • 2002-02-14T21:00:00Z1h

Everything you're about to read here seems impossible and insane, beyond science fiction. Yet it's all true. Scientists now believe there may really be a parallel universe - in fact, there may be an infinite number of parallel universes, and we just happen to live in one of them. These other universes contain space, time and strange forms of exotic matter. Some of them may even contain you, in a slightly different form. Astonishingly, scientists believe that these parallel universes exist less than one millimetre away from us. In fact, our gravity is just a weak signal leaking out of another universe into ours. For years parallel universes were a staple of the Twilight Zone. Science fiction writers loved to speculate on the possible other universes which might exist. In one, they said, Elvis Presley might still be alive or in another the British Empire might still be going strong. Serious scientists dismissed all this speculation as absurd. But now it seems the speculation wasn't absurd enough. Parallel universes really do exist and they are much stranger than even the science fiction writers dared to imagine. It all started when superstring theory, hyperspace and dark matter made physicists realise that the three dimensions we thought described the Universe weren't enough. There are actually 11 dimensions. By the time they had finished they'd come to the conclusion that our Universe is just one bubble among an infinite number of membranous bubbles which ripple as they wobble through the eleventh dimension. Now imagine what might happen if two such bubble universes touched. Neil Turok from Cambridge, Burt Ovrut from the University of Pennsylvania and Paul Steinhardt from Princeton believe that has happened. The result? A very big bang indeed and a new universe was born - our Universe. The idea has shocked the scientific community; it turns the conventional Big Bang theory on its head. It may well be that the Big Bang wasn't really the beginning of everything after all. Time and space all existed before it. In fact Big Bangs may happen all the time. Of course this extraordinary story about the origin of our Universe has one alarming implication. If a collision started our Universe, could it happen again? Anything is possible in this extra-dimensional cosmos. Perhaps out there in space there is another universe heading directly towards us - it may only be a matter of time before we collide.

In the mid 1800s, when Charles Darwin published his theory of evolution, one species of animal remained a mystery; where did birds fit on his evolutionary tree? Several years later his friend and colleague, Thomas Henry Huxley, came up with an answer. Huxley had recently examined a new fossil from southern Germany called Archaeopteryx which was causing considerable excitement in palaeontological circles. There were clear signs of feathers and it was obvious this was the earliest fossil evidence of a bird ever found. Huxley noticed something else as well. To him it looked as though the skeleton bore a striking similarity to that of a family of meat eating dinosaurs known as therapods. In the 1860s, on the basis of this observation, he announced a new theory; birds must have evolved from dinosaurs. The theory ignited what was to become one of the biggest controversies in palaeontology. Could Huxley possibly be right; how could a large, land-bound creature like a dinosaur have ever evolved into something as light and sleek as a bird? Many questioned the accuracy of Huxley's observations and ever since there has been a search for further fossil evidence to confirm the theory; a transitional animal which would incontrovertibly show how, in one creature, birds had evolved from dinosaurs. It has become one of the big missing links in palaeontology. In Spring 1999, at the Tucson Gem and Fossil Fair in Arizona, an American collector came across a new Chinese fossil which seemed to be just this transitional animal. It had the head and upper body of a bird but the tail of a dinosaur. It was called Archaeoraptor or 'ancient hunter'. Throughout the 1990s a number of important fossils emerged from China showing an apparent relationship between dinosaurs and birds. Practically all come from a region in the north of the country called Liaoning, one of the richest fossil areas in the world. Here, 130 million years ago, volcanic eruptions buried a wetland once teeming in wildlife. Many of the fossils have been magnificently preserved in the fine silt; some even have the remains of soft tissue attached to them. It was here, in 1996, that Chinese scientists found a creature they called Sinosauropteryx, an animal which bore many similarities to a dinosaur but appeared to have been covered in a feathery like coat. Two years later a joint Chinese/American team found an even more striking creature; a dinosaur like animal with very clear feathers which they called Caudipteryx. Other similar feathered dinosaurs followed, including in 1999, an important specimen called Sinornithosurus. Yet to those who questioned the relationship between dinosaurs and birds, these fabulous finds raised as many questions as they answered. Were the feather-like markings really signs of feathers, or were they something else? And were the skeletons really those of dinosaurs or were they, in fact, the skeletons of new, as yet unidentified, birds? What was still missing was the piece of evidence which would satisfy everybody. The new Archaeoraptor fossil, also from the Liaoning region of China, seemed to be just that. Here, in one animal, was a unique range of dinosaur and bird features. It had the skull and upper body of a bird, but the teeth and hands of a dinosaur. It also had the legs of a bird but the tail of a dinosaur. It was the most complete set of transitional features ever found in one creature. In November 1999 National Geographic Magazine gave it a special mention in an article about the origins of birds, calling it, "a true missing link.". The debate, started by Thomas Huxley in the 1860s, seemed to have been resolved. Yet within months, new finds in China showed Archaeoraptor to be an extremely clever fake. The head and upper body of a hitherto unidentified bird had been glued onto the tail of a previously unknown dinosaur. It was a journalistic disaster for National Geographic Magazine. The fossil, however, was anything but a disaster for palaeontology. By an extraordinary stroke of good luck, as scientists in China and America examined the head and tail separately, they found that both were, in their own right, unique and extremely valuable specimens. Both, in their different ways, contained powerful evidence that birds had evolved from dinosaurs.

The World Trade Center was built on revolutionary design principles. It turned conventional architectural and structural techniques on their head. Built from a thin web of steel, its design was efficient, cost-effective and would inspire a new wave in modern building techniques. The result was two towers that were both lightweight and strong. When they were completed they were the tallest in the world. They were also milestones of architecture for another reason. The two towers were the first skyscrapers explicitly designed to withstand being hit by a jet plane. Although they had considered an aircraft impact, the designers of the World Trade towers had not anticipated the effect of an aeroplane's fuel load. British-born survivor Paul Neal tells how he smelt jet fuel rushing through the lift shafts close to his desk. "I recognised it because I'm a private pilot. I recall smelling it and instantly dismissed it as being illogical because it didn't have any place in the World Trade Center." Survivor, Bill Forney, recalls the instant that the 767 aircraft hit the North Tower one floor above where he was sitting. "The building started shaking. It lurched back and forth. It was the first time that I had truly thought that I might die. After a terrifying six to ten movements back and forth it was over and it was done." The World Trade Center had ultra-lightweight floors, and used the latest fireproof 'drywall' to protect the stairwells and lift shafts. Much of this internal structure seems to have been vaporized when the planes crashed, exposing the underlying steel to the intense heat of multiple fires. Brian Clark was one of the only four survivors from both towers to escape from above where the planes hit. He describess clambering over the shattered walls to break through a smoke-filled stairwell to get out. "Drywall had been blown off and was lying up against the stair railing." he says, "We had to shovel it aside." Another survivor, window cleaner Jan Demczur, found the drywall so soft that he was able to dig through it with a squeegee to break out of a lift he was trapped in. The two towers responded differently to the initial impacts, because there were crucial differences between the collisions. The South Tower, struck second, was hit lower, and the damaged zone of the tower then had to support a much greater weight of building above it . Rather than being hit head-on, the South Tower was hit at an angle. The plane wreckage scraped along the inside of the east wall and piled up in the northeast corner. Here, the fire burned intensely. At the South Tower's inner core, one escape stair was left intact - the one furthest from the plane's path. Even then, only four people, one of them Brian Clark, managed to get down it. At the northeast corner and along the east wall, the connections between the floors and the outer wall began to break as the floors sagged in the heat. The floors were an essential part of the structure, bracing both the outer walls and the inner core. Already weakened by the impact and now unbraced, the outer wall columns of the South Tower could not support the weight above them. At 9.59am Eastern Time, they snapped. The entire top third of the tower then lurched to the north and east; the floors inside the rest of the tower piled down onto those below. The downward wave of destruction - a progressive collapse - was then unstoppable. Meanwhile, the North Tower, which had been hit first, was still standing. The core of the Tower had been hit head-on, and the core had been left mostly undamaged by the impact. However, the direct hit cut off all the escape routes without exception. Meanwhile, the fire inside the North Tower was spread around the core. Again, connections between floors and columns started to fail in the heat, but here in the North Tower, it was the connections at the core that gave way first. Without the floors to brace it, the core could not stand alone. 29 minutes after the first collapse, the core in the North Tower collapsed vertically, pulling the rest of the tower down with it. The implications of the Twin Towers collapse are disturbing. Whether anything can be done to make modern lightweight skyscrapers more robust in the aftermath of 11 September is a vital question that must now be answered.

2002-03-14T21:00:00Z

39x09 Archimedes' Secret

39x09 Archimedes' Secret

  • 2002-03-14T21:00:00Z1h

This is the story of a book that could have changed the history of the World. To the untrained eye, it is nothing more than a small and unassuming Byzantine prayer book, yet it sold at Christies for over $2m. For faintly visible beneath the prayers on its pages are other, unique, writings - words that have been lost for nearly two thousand years. The text is the only record of work by one of the world's greatest minds - the ancient Greek, Archimedes - a mathematical genius centuries ahead of his time. Hidden for a millennium in a middle eastern library, it has been written over, broken up, painted on, cut up and re-glued. But in the nick of time scientists have saved the precious, fragile document, and for the first time it is revealing just how revolutionary Archimedes' ideas were. If it had been available to scholars during the Renaissance, we might have reached the Moon over a hundred years ago. The trail begins in the tenth century, when a scribe made a unique copy of the most important mathematics that Archimedes ever developed. For 200 years the document survived, but the mathematics in it was so complex that no one paid it any attention. So when one day a monk was looking for some new parchment - an expensive commodity at the time - to write a new prayer book, the answer seemed obvious. He used the Archimedes manuscript. He washed the Greek text off the pages, cut them in half, rebound them, and turned the Archimedes manuscript into an everyday prayer book. As he piously wrote out his prayers, he had no idea of the genius he was obliterating. Several hundred years later, the Renaissance was under way. Scientists were beginning to grapple with new concepts, working out how mathematics could be used to explain the World around them. Little did they know that many of the problems they were just encountering Archimedes had already solved more than a thousand years before. So, tragically, they had to do that research all over again, setting back the development of science and technology immeasurably. Then in 1906, in Constantinople, the document mysteriously turned up in a monastic library. An opportunistic scholar called Johan Ludwig Heiberg identified the text as Archimedes' writings. Although the Greek text was very faint, Heiberg was able to decipher some of it. What he found astonished him, and made the front page of the New York Times. He revealed that Archimedes' manuscript contained something called 'The Method', which showed not only Archimedes' final proofs, but for the first time revealed the process of how he went about making his discoveries. But then disaster struck again. World War One broke out and in its aftermath the Archimedes manuscript disappeared. Scholars had given up any hope of seeing the manuscript again, but in the 1960s odd rumours began to surface that it was to be found in Paris. It took 30 more years, but in 1991 an expert from Christies found it in the hands of a French family. When it reached auction, it was sold to an anonymous millionaire, who has now loaned it to the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore for conservation. Although the text is incredibly difficult to read, with state-of-the-art imaging equipment, they are gradually piecing together all of the writing for the very first time. And as the team in Baltimore peel back the glue, leather and centuries of dirt, dissolve the blue-tack and unfold the lines of Greek that are buried in the spine of the book, they are building up a picture of a man who was thousands of years ahead of his time. Not only was Archimedes coming to terms with the profound subject of infinity, he had taken the first crucial steps towards calculus, a branch of mathematics that had to be reinvented after the Renaissance, and which is today used to describe every physical phenomenon from the movement of the planets to the construction of a skyscraper. Who knows what human minds could have achieved if they had only known what Archimedes already knew?

For years scientists have been trying to find the mysterious evolutionary master key responsible for transforming the dinosaurs into world-beaters. In the early Jurassic, 200 million years ago, they were a relatively small group of primitive creatures. By the late Jurassic, 50 million years later, they had become the magnificent array of carnivores and giant plant eaters that would dominate the planet for millions of years. In between lies the mysterious period of the middle Jurassic in which all these changes must have happened. But what were they? What was it that transformed the dinosaurs? Was there some terrible mass extinction? Had there been an amazing change in the environment? All this was speculation and theory. How and where would evidence come to light? Fossils from the middle Jurassic are incredibly rare. All anyone had to go on were a few small outcrops of rock dotted around the world. Then a treasure trove of fossils emerged from the midst of an Argentinian wilderness in the 1990s; thousands of square miles of mid-Jurassic rocks. On their first season in the field, palaeontologist Oliver Rauhut and his team unearthed two giant meat-eating dinosaurs and six huge long-necked dinosaurs. And there was much more: early mammals, crocodiles, fish and even plant life. They had uncovered a complete mid-Jurassic eco-system, a wonderful snapshot of life from this dark age of dinosaurs. "It's as if someone has unearthed a holy grail of dinosaur palaeontology," says British geologist, Dr Phil Manning. Oliver Rauhut describes the site as, "an extraordinary window on the mid-Jurassic." Above all, the hope is that this site may contain all the information they need to find the mysterious evolutionary forces that have eluded palaeontologists for so long. Already they've been able to test out many of their theories and draw some exciting conclusions. For instance, one theory about what might have happened in the mid-Jurassic clearly does not seem to be supported by the finds in Argentina: the mass extinction theory. The laws of evolution say that a major extinction event could have caused an explosion in dinosaur diversity like the one in the mid-Jurassic. Death on such a vast scale clears away the competition, allowing the survivors to evolve rapidly into new ecological niches. But there's no evidence in Argentina for an extinction event affecting the dinosaurs. A second theory was that a major climate change could have transformed the dinosaurs' environment, leading to the evolution of many new types of dinosaur. In Argentina there is indeed evidence for a dramatic change in the climate. At the time of the early, primitive dinosaurs all the continents were gathered together in one giant super-continent (Pangea). The climate of the super-continent was dominated by extremely hot and dry conditions - with rainfall concentrated in a short bursts. Scientists call this the time of the mega-monsoon. Then in the middle Jurassic Pangea began to split apart. The Argentinian site offers evidence that as the super-continent split up, the climate changed to a more moderate, less extreme climate. Many scientists believe that on its own climate change isn't enough to explain what happened to the dinosaurs in the mid-Jurassic. As Phil Manning points out, the dinosaurs could in theory simply move to find the climates they were most adapted to - unless something stopped them from moving, some major physical barrier that meant they couldn't follow the climate zones. When scientists looked into this, it became clear that as the super-continent split up, such a barrier was being formed. Today it's called the Atlantic Ocean. This major barrier would allow an evolutionary process called vicariance to operate - animals on different sides of the barrier are able to evolve separately. The problem was there was no proof of vicariance in the mid-Jurassic. Until Argentina. Fortunately the site has fossils from just before and just after the super-continent split in two, so it's ideally placed to judge whether vicariance was beginning to take effect. And the early results are lending support that this may have been a key factor in explaining what happened to the dinosaurs in the mid-Jurassic.

2002-04-04T20:00:00Z

39x11 Killer Lakes

39x11 Killer Lakes

  • 2002-04-04T20:00:00Z1h

When Mount Nyiragongo erupted in the Democratic Republic of Congo in January 2002 it seemed like a disaster. Molten lava plunged down the hillside and poured into nearby Lake Kivu. Many died, and much of the city of Goma was destroyed. In fact, the local people were lucky. Had the eruption spread to one of the many volcanic faults under Lake Kivu, it could have unleashed one of the most terrifying of all natural phenomena - lake overturn. The phenomenon of lake overturn first struck in 1984 at Lake Monoun, in Cameroon. 37 people mysteriously died, suddenly and silently. A bizarre array of theories sprang up - secret testing of chemical weapons, a massacre by unknown terrorists; none really made sense. The scientists who looked into the disaster believed it had to be something to do with the lake itself, but they could not be absolutely sure. In 1986, before research into the Monoun disaster was made public, it all happened again. The tragedy of Lake Nyos, also in Cameroon, made headlines around the world when almost 1,800 people sleeping in houses around the lake suffocated in their sleep. The team of scientists that went to investigate concluded that carbon dioxide, trapped at the bottom of the lake, had suddenly risen to the surface, killing everything within 25km. They called their theory lake overturn. Eventually the scientists came to realise that carbon dioxide springs underground were pumping carbon dioxide into the lake and that the whole tragedy would be repeated if nothing was done. They installed an extraordinary fountain in the middle of the lake to help the gas disperse. Even so, the level of carbon dioxide in the waters remains a concern. The Nyos disaster promoted a survey of deep lakes in Africa and Indonesia to see where else lake overturn could happen. All seem to be safe, except one - Lake Kivu, in Rwanda. Lake Kivu is one of the largest and deepest lakes in Africa and two million people live around its shore. It is also filling up with carbon dioxide, although it's not yet saturated with the deadly gas. The only thing that could trigger a gas release would be a massive geological event. Worryingly, Lake Kivu is sitting in an earthquake zone and surrounded by active volcanoes, including Mount Nyiragongo. If an eruption or an earthquake was to happen under the lake, then the effect could release millions of tons of asphyxiating gas into the surrounding areas. Until a solution is found, millions of lives could be at risk.

2002-05-16T20:00:00Z

39x12 The A6 Murder

39x12 The A6 Murder

  • 2002-05-16T20:00:00Z1h

On 4 April 1962, James Hanratty was led from the condemned cell in Bedford Prison to the gallows. On the way he protested his innocence, as he had done every day since he had been convicted of murder. At 8am, the noose was fitted round Hanratty's neck and he was hanged, launching one of the longest and most bitter appeal campaigns in the history of British justice. Hanratty's supporters believe that he was wrongfully convicted, the victim of dubious police evidence. The police maintain Hanratty was a vicious killer - and say they now have DNA evidence to prove it. After years of doubt, it appears that modern science holds the key to a 40 year old case. It all began when Michael Gregsten drove to the countryside with his lover, Valerie Storie. They had just parked in a quiet lay-by when a gunman got in the back of their car and demanded money. Several hours later Gregsten was dead and Storie had been raped and, with several bullets inside her, left for dead on the side of the A6 road. Amazingly, she survived to tell the tale. The nation was horrified by the savagery of the crime, and a massive manhunt was launched. Police began to close in on a small-time crook, 25 year old James Hanratty. Valerie Storie identified him as the killer, as did two other eye witnesses, who said they saw Hanratty driving Gregsten's car shortly before it was abandoned. Hanratty, a convicted thief, was unable to provide a credible alibi for what he was doing at the time of the murder, and in court, came across as arrogant, devious and unreliable. After a six week trial, and largely on the basis of this crucial eye witness evidence, Hanratty was found guilty and sentenced to death. As time went on, Hanratty campaigners became more and more convinced that the case against him was flawed. They claim that police withheld vital evidence from the defence, that Valerie Storie's identification of Hanratty was dubious, and the other eye witnesses may not even have seen Hanratty at all. The case against Hanratty began to look sufficiently weak that an appeal was begun, nearly 40 years after Hanratty was hanged. As part of the re-examination of the case, painstaking forensic analysis of the original police notebooks suggests that the police may even have altered the records of their interviews with Hanratty. So for Hanratty campaigners, on the evidence as presented in court in 1962, Hanratty should never have been hanged. Horizon has unique access to footage that covers a bizarre twist to this strange story. In 2001 the police exhumed Hanratty's body and took DNA samples, for comparison with crime-scene evidence still stored in police files. Using advanced techniques in DNA analysis which can analyse tiny fragments of DNA - even those from decaying, 40 year old corpses - the scientists made a conclusive match. It seemed that for all the campaign, Hanratty may well have been guilty after all. But with the judgement of the original trial possibly flawed by the suggestion of undisclosed evidence and police interference, the Court of Appeal faced a highly difficult decision. It had to decide whether the original evidence leading to Hanratty's conviction was so flawed that the guilty verdict should be overturned; or whether the case against him, including the new DNA evidence, was so compelling that the guilty verdict should remain. The A6 Murder looks at the evidence that led to two weeks of deliberation for the judges, and discusses where both sides go from here.

2002-05-23T20:00:00Z

39x13 The England Patient

39x13 The England Patient

  • 2002-05-23T20:00:00Z1h

The England football manager, Sven-Goran Eriksson, believes that modern soccer matches are not won on the pitch, but inside people's minds. This film examines not just how Eriksson got inside his players' brains, but how he is now starting nothing short of a revolution in English football thinking. Eriksson's plan, devised with sports psychologist Dr Willi Railo, has two critical elements. These are to banish the crippling effects of the fear of failure from the minds of the England players, and to encourage them to train mentally as well as physically to reach the highest levels of performance - dubbed playing in 'the zone'. Neurologists and psychologists from some of Britain's most prestigious universities believe anxiety and the fear of failure can make top professionals turn in performances like amateurs, and that Eriksson and Railo have a way to help the England team endure the pressure. Their view is that England's football past has been dogged by fear of failure. Piling on pressure and relying on patriotism to get people to perform doesn't work when - at heart - it's just 11 footballers taking on 11. If players accept they could lose (and that it's alright when they do) then they'll be less nervous and less prone to what's called 'choking'. When sportspeople choke, familiar instincts are overwhelmed by pressure. Monitoring shows that people use different parts of the brain to perform actions which they are learning and those which are second nature. If the brain reverts to its learning mode, motor skills are constrained and that 89th minute penalty kick goes right over the bar. Visualisation is fundamental to making sure people play to their best at all times. As far the brain is concerned, there's little difference between practising a movement and just thinking through it. By thinking in advance just how intense the pressure could be, Eriksson's players can avoid choking when critical moments arise. Eriksson has a further psychological ace to play. For all his talk and motivation, he knows he's not there on the pitch. To carry his thinking onto the field, he relies on so-called cultural architects, players whose thinking is so close to his own that they do his bidding without even realising. The captain, David Beckham, is clearly one architect; the team keeps secret just whom the others might be. Sports psychology cannot predict whether England will win the World Cup. However, it does show that - for once - England are going into a major competition with an unprecedented degree of psychological preparedness, a critical advantage that the side has never boasted before. Thirty years of hurt may soon be over.

2002-11-14T21:00:00Z

39x14 Freak Wave

39x14 Freak Wave

  • 2002-11-14T21:00:00Z1h

The world's oceans claim on average one ship a week, often in mysterious circumstances. With little evidence to go on, investigators usually point at human error or poor maintenance but an alarming series of disappearances and near-sinkings, including world-class vessels with unblemished track records, has prompted the search for a more sinister cause and renewed belief in a maritime myth: the wall of water. Waves the height of an office block. Waves twice as large as any that ships are designed to ride over. These are not tsunamis or tidal waves, but huge breaking walls of water that come out of the blue. Suspicions these were fact not fiction were roused in 1978, by the cargo ship München. She was a state-of-the-art cargo ship. The December storms predicted when she set out to cross the Atlantic did not concern her German crew. The voyage was perfectly routine until at 3am on 12 December she sent out a garbled mayday message from the mid-Atlantic. Rescue attempts began immediately with over a hundred ships combing the ocean.

2002-11-21T21:00:00Z

39x15 Stone Age Columbus

39x15 Stone Age Columbus

  • 2002-11-21T21:00:00Z1h

Who were the first people in North America? From where did they come? How did they arrive? The prehistory of the Americas has been widely studied. Over 70 years a consensus became so established that dissenters felt uneasy challenging it. Yet in 2001, genetics, anthropology and a few shards of flint combined to overturn the accepted facts and to push back one of the greatest technological changes that the Americas have ever seen by over five millennia. The accepted version of the first Americans starts with a flint spearhead unearthed at Clovis, New Mexico, in 1933. Dated by the mammoth skeleton it lay beside to 11,500 years ago, it was distinctive because it had two faces, where flakes had been knapped away from a core flint. The find sparked a wave of similar reports, all dating from around the same period. There seemed to be nothing human before Clovis. Whoever those incomers were around 9,500BC, they appeared to have had a clean start. And the Clovis point was their icon - across 48 states.

2002-11-26T21:00:00Z

39x16 Homeopathy: The Test

39x16 Homeopathy: The Test

  • 2002-11-26T21:00:00Z1h

Homoeopathy was pioneered over 200 years ago. Practitioners and patients are convinced it has the power to heal. Today, some of the most famous and influential people in the world, including pop stars, politicians, footballers and even Prince Charles, all use homoeopathic remedies. Yet according to traditional science, they are wasting their money. Sceptic James Randi is so convinced that homoeopathy will not work, that he has offered $1m to anyone who can provide convincing evidence of its effects. For the first time in the programme's history, Horizon conducts its own scientific experiment, to try and win his money. If they succeed, they will not only be $1m richer - they will also force scientists to rethink some of their fundamental beliefs. The basic principle of homoeopathy is that like cures like: that an ailment can be cured by small quantities of substances which produce the same symptoms. For example, it is believed that onions, which produce streaming, itchy eyes, can be used to relieve the symptoms of hay fever.

250 million years ago, long before dinosaurs roamed the Earth, the land and oceans teemed with life. This was the Permian, a golden era of biodiversity that was about to come to a crashing end. Within just a few thousand years, 95% of the lifeforms on the planet would be wiped out, in the biggest mass extinction Earth has ever known. What natural disaster could kill on such a massive scale? It is only in recent years that evidence has begun to emerge from rocks in Antarctica, Siberia and Greenland. The demise of the dinosaurs, 65 million years ago (at the so-called K/T boundary), was as nothing compared to the Permian mass extinction. The K/T event killed off 60% of life on Earth; the Permian event 95%. Geological data to explain the destruction have been hard to find, simply because the rocks are so old and therefore subject to all kinds of erosion processes. It seems plausible that some kind of catastrophic environmental change must have made life untenable across vast swathes of the planet. In the early 1990s, the hunt for evidence headed for a region of Siberia known as the Traps. Today it's a sub-Arctic wilderness but 250 million years ago, over 200,000km² of it was a blazing torrent of lava. The Siberian Traps were experiencing a 'flood basalt eruption', the biggest volcanic effect on Earth. Instead of isolated volcanoes spewing out lava, the crust split and curtains of lava were released. And the Siberian flood eruption lasted for millions of years. Could volcanic activity over such a long time alter the climate enough to kill off 95% of life on Earth?

Season Finale

2002-12-19T21:00:00Z

39x18 The Secret of El Dorado

Season Finale

39x18 The Secret of El Dorado

  • 2002-12-19T21:00:00Z1h

In 1542, the Spanish Conquistador, Francisco de Orellana ventured along the Rio Negro, one of the Amazon Basin's great rivers. Hunting a hidden city of gold, his expedition found a network of farms, villages and even huge walled cities. At least that is what he told an eager audience on his return to Spain. The prospect of gold drew others to explore the region, but none could find the people of whom the first Conquistadors had spoken. The missionaries who followed a century later reported finding just isolated tribes of hunter-gatherers. Orellana's story seemed to be no more than a fanciful myth. When scientists came to weigh up the credibility of Orellana's words, they reached the same conclusion. As productive as the rainforest may appear, the soil it stands in is unsuited to farming. It is established belief that all early civilisations have agriculture at their hearts. Any major population centre will have connections with a system of intensive agriculture. If a soil cannot support crops sufficient to feed a large number of people, then that serves as an effective cap on the population in that area. Even modern chemicals and techniques have failed to generate significant food from Amazonian soil in a sustainable way . The thought that indigenous people could have survived in any number - let alone prospered - was dismissed by most scientists. Scientific consensus was sure that the original Amazonians lived in small semi-nomadic bands and that Orellana must have lied.

Season Premiere

2003-01-09T21:00:00Z

40x01 The Mystery Of Easter Island

Season Premiere

40x01 The Mystery Of Easter Island

  • 2003-01-09T21:00:00Z1h

On Easter Day 1722, Dutch explorers landed on Easter Island. A civilisation isolated by 4,000km of Pacific Ocean was about to meet the outside world for the first time in centuries. The strangers were about to find something very strange themselves - an island dotted with hundreds of huge stone statues and a society that was not as primitive as they expected. The first meeting was an immense clash of cultures. (Bloody too: the sailors killed ten natives within minutes of landing.) Where had the Islanders originally come from? Why and how had they built the figures? Modern science is piecing together the story, but it is far too late for the Easter Islanders themselves. They were virtually wiped out by a series of disasters - natural and man made - that brought a population of 12,000 down to just 111 in a few centuries. The Island's inhabitants today all have Chilean roots, making solving the mysteries even harder. There is no one to ask about the first people of Easter Island. Although fragmentary legends have been passed down, only science can hope to explain the rise and fall of this unusual civilisation.

2003-01-16T21:00:00Z

40x02 Living Nightmare

40x02 Living Nightmare

  • 2003-01-16T21:00:00Z1h

Sleeping is an essential part of everyone's life yet it remains little understood is barely understood. You might think it's a relaxing recharge but in fact your brain is working harder at times overnight than when you're conscious in the day. Fresh insight into why and how we sleep has come from studying people with sleep disorders, especially sufferers of narcolepsy. The condition means that people fall asleep many times a day, completely out of the blue. A less known symptom is paralysing attacks, that can cause narcoleptics to fall to the ground - unable to move - several times a day. If a way can be found to ease their symptoms, it could open the way to helping any of us to control our sleep patterns and perhaps even to go without rest while staying alert. Gaynor Carr has been nodding off routinely since the age of seven. Her narcolepsy has made holding down a job impossible and made her question the idea of ever having children. Gary Beattie used to work in construction, until he fell asleep 7m up a ladder. He not only loses consciousness, his body becomes paralysed in a so-called cataleptic attack. Both of them say that showing emotion sparks the paralysing attacks and that has forced them to avoid laughing and crying. Bill Baird worked in finance but describes his stockbroking days as a race. The emotion of closing a deal would bring on a fit; he had constantly to hope he could get a client's signature before his almost inevitable collapse. His sleep is restless, with vivid nightmares when he is able to hear his surroundings while seeing terrifying hallucinations.

2003-01-23T21:00:00Z

40x03 Averting Armageddon

40x03 Averting Armageddon

  • 2003-01-23T21:00:00Z1h

The Earth is under constant bombardment. Each year, many fragments of debris hit our planet. Fortunately for us, most are so small that they burn up harmlessly in the atmosphere. However, there are hundreds of larger asteroids orbiting near the Earth. Many scientists now believe that one of these hit the Earth 65 million years ago, killing the dinosaurs, along with 90% of all life on the planet. What is more, it is only a matter of time before the Earth is hit again. Experts warn that nuclear weapons might not destroy an approaching asteroid. But Jay Meloch thinks he can use the power of the Sun to nudge an asteroid away from the Earth. Until recently, no one took the asteroid threat very seriously. Yet the evidence that we are in danger is on our own doorstep. We need only look at the cratered surface of the Moon to realise that it has been pounded by impacts throughout its history.

2003-01-30T21:00:00Z

40x04 Dirty Bomb

40x04 Dirty Bomb

  • 2003-01-30T21:00:00Z1h

A dirty bomb is a radiological weapon but unlike a nuclear bomb, its purpose is to contaminate rather than destroy. It uses normal explosives to disperse radioactive materials in the local environment, creating a hazard to health that could last for years unless cleaned up. The relative ease of making such a bomb means it is a potent terrorist weapon but Horizon's investigation shows that the risk to health from most such devices need not be great. It also underlines the need for governments to act to secure radioactive sources from falling into criminal hands. Horizon deliberately avoids outlining the production process in any detail. Horizon publishes the results of specially commissioned research, modelling two possible dirty bomb scenarios: attacks on either London or Washington DC. The main conclusion is that the health risks from a dirty bomb explosion are localised to people who are close to the incident or are in contact with the contamination. Although the modelled attack scenarios could have wide-ranging economic repercussions, the majority of the population of either capital city would have only a negligible increase in their risk of developing cancer.

The drug Viagra revolutionised the treatment of sexual dysfunction in men on its launch five years ago. An accidental discovery, the tablet that gave impotent men the chance once more to have natural erections became the fastest selling pill in history and has earned its manufacturer, Pfizer, over $6bn. The search is now on for a similar drug that could help women. Research is revealing that female sexuality is more complex than expected. For women suffering from a loss of desire many scientists believe that drugs acting on the brain may be the way forward. A pioneering Scottish study may have identified just such a drug and begun testing it scientifically. An erection is achieved by filling the erectile tissue of the penis with blood. Blood vessels widen to allow blood in and then constrict to maintain the pressure. Male impotence was long thought to be a psychiatric effect, a result of stress, anxiety or depression. Medical advice was that there was not much to be done. Some patients refused to take this message on board.

Understanding of humans' earliest past often comes from studying fossils. They tell us much of what we know about the people who lived before us. There is one thing fossils cannot tell us; at what point did we stop living day-to-day and start to think symbolically, to represent ideas about our environment and how we could change it? At a dig in South Africa the discovery of a small piece of ochre pigment, 70,000 years old, has raised some very interesting questions. Anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens) emerged in Africa roughly 100,000 years ago. We know from fossil evidence that Homo sapiens replaced other hominids around them and moved out of Africa into Asia and the Middle East, reaching Europe 40,000 years ago. Prof Richard Klein believes art is a landmark in human evolution. Unquestionable art that's widespread and common suggests you're dealing with people just like us. No other animals, after all, are able to define a painting as anything other than a collection of colours and shapes. This ability is unique to humans.

2003-02-27T21:00:00Z

40x07 Trial and Error

40x07 Trial and Error

  • 2003-02-27T21:00:00Z1h

It was the simplest idea but one with enormous potential. If a gene is defective in the human body, just replace it with one that works properly. Gene therapy would mean that genetic disorders would become a thing of the past. Cancer would be cured, as would cystic fibrosis and hundreds of other genetic illnesses. Scientists were justifiably excited about the idea but, this enthusiasm that would end up costing one young man his life. Jesse Gelsinger was born with a liver disorder, a rare condition called ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency that stops the liver metabolising ammonia. People with the disease can suffer from brain damage or coma. At its most extreme the illness is fatal. Jesse was lucky, able to lead a fairly normal life although he had a daily cocktail of drugs to control his condition. Jesse wanted to help others. When he was offered a chance to take part in a medical trial to test the safety of using gene therapy for OTC deficiency, he was keen to participate. He knew this was not a cure for his condition but that, by volunteering he might be able to help others in the future. Although the concept of gene therapy is simple, the practice of administering the treatment is much more difficult. In order to replace defective genes, doctors must get working ones into the body and to the place where they are needed.

2003-03-06T21:00:00Z

40x08 Earthquake Storms

40x08 Earthquake Storms

  • 2003-03-06T21:00:00Z1h

Earthquakes are among the most devastating natural disasters on the planet. In the last hundred years they have claimed the lives of over one million people. Earthquakes are destructive mainly because of their unpredictable nature. It is impossible to say accurately when a quake will strike but a new theory could help save lives by preparing cities long in advance for an earthquake. The surface of the Earth is made up of large 'tectonic' plates. These plates are in slow but constant motion. When two plates push against each other friction generates a great deal of energy. For this reason earthquakes occur most frequently on tectonic fault lines, where two plates meet. However these fault lines run for thousands of kilometres; predicting exactly where a quake will occur is nearly impossible. In 1992, Dr Ross Stein was monitoring a large earthquake in a town in California called Landers. Three hours later, there was another quake 67km away at Great Bear. Stein believed that this was not simply an aftershock, instead he theorised the event at Landers had set off the earthquake at Big Bear. Stein believes that when an earthquake occurs the stress that has built up along the fault, is in part, transferred along the fault line. It is this energy transfer that causes other quakes to occur hours, days or months after the original.

2003-03-27T21:00:00Z

40x09 Life On Mars (Update)

40x09 Life On Mars (Update)

  • 2003-03-27T21:00:00Z1h

Are we alone in the Universe? Or are there aliens somewhere in space? New evidence suggests not only might other life-forms be out there, they may even be living on the planet right next door to us - Mars. Recent discoveries have shown that Mars has all the ingredients for life, including water. Now the Mars Odyssey probe, launched in April 2001, has detected huge frozen areas of permafrost, just like that found in the Antarctic on Earth. According to astronomers, the position of this frozen slush could hold the key to Mars' mysterious water cycle. And the surface ice may hide something even more exciting below.

2003-04-03T20:00:00Z

40x10 The Secret Life Of Caves

Set against the back drop of awe inspiring geological beauty, a strange scientific adventure sets out to discover how a mineral clad cave network - the height of a 30 storey building and the length of six football fields - came to exist deep below the Guadalupe Mountains in North America. But this journey soon unravels a multitude of inexplicable phenomena and obscure geological formations, leading to the discovery of extreme rock-eating microbes - a testimony from primordial Earth and a glimpse of life elsewhere in the Solar System. Geologists believed that all limestone caves were formed by rain and underground water percolating through cracks in the rocks. Absorbing carbon dioxide from the soil, this water becomes weak carbonic acid, nibbling away at limestone, etching out networks of subterranean caves.

2003-04-17T20:00:00Z

40x11 God On The Brain

40x11 God On The Brain

  • 2003-04-17T20:00:00Z1h

Rudi Affolter and Gwen Tighe have both experienced strong religious visions. He is an atheist; she a Christian. He thought he had died; she thought she had given birth to Jesus. Both have temporal lobe epilepsy. Like other forms of epilepsy, the condition causes fitting but it is also associated with religious hallucinations. Research into why people like Rudi and Gwen saw what they did has opened up a whole field of brain science: neurotheology. The connection between the temporal lobes of the brain and religious feeling has led one Canadian scientist to try stimulating them. (They are near your ears.) 80% of Dr Michael Persinger's experimental subjects report that an artificial magnetic field focused on those brain areas gives them a feeling of 'not being alone'. Some of them describe it as a religious sensation. His work raises the prospect that we are programmed to believe in god, that faith is a mental ability humans have developed or been given. And temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) could help unlock the mystery.

2003-05-08T20:00:00Z

40x12 Flight 587

40x12 Flight 587

  • 2003-05-08T20:00:00Z1h

265 people died when an Airbus operated by American Airlines crashed into the New York suburb of Queens in November 2001. The twin-engined jet took off from John F Kennedy Airport in fine conditions but hit trouble after just 67 seconds. In the following 38 seconds the plane started to disintegrate before nose-diving into the residential Rockaway area of the city. Everyone aboard was killed (along with five people on the ground) so the crash investigators had to rely on eyewitnesses, recovered parts of the plane and information from both air traffic control and the flight data recorders. The discovery of the Airbus' vertical tailfin hundreds of metres from the fuselage immediately focussed attention on whether the pilots lost the ability to control the plane. Why the tailfin detached was at the heart of the investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board. The airline and the manufacturer blame each other for creating a situation in which the stress on the rudder and tailfin exceeded the so-called ultimate load, the worst-case scenario set by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). A number of American Airlines pilots have taken matters into their own hands though: requesting transfers to other aircraft because of their safety concerns.

2003-05-29T20:00:00Z

40x13 SARS: The True Story

40x13 SARS: The True Story

  • 2003-05-29T20:00:00Z1h

Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome didn't even have its name in February 2003, when it struck its first known victim, Johnny Cheng, in Hanoi, Vietnam. Within days, an international effort led by the World Health Organization (WHO) had massed scientific expertise to fight the mystery illness and avert the nightmare scenario of an uncontrollable pandemic sweeping the globe. Amid attempts to quarantine high risk groups of people, it seemed only fear could spread more rapidly than the disease itself. Nothing was known about the condition - where it had come from, how it was passed on, how to spot it, contain it or treat it. The infection was described merely as 'flu-like'. But if this was a type of influenza, it was one that killed up to 15% of its sufferers. The doctor treating Mr Cheng, who first contacted the WHO about the unusual symptoms, was one of six medics to die of SARS at the hospital. But the alarm had been raised and the Organization began to pull together a response. Colossal effort by scientists around the world - and unprecedented co-operation - followed. Meanwhile, the media made much of the risk posed by and to international travel, and watched financial markets respond in gloomy fashion.

2003-11-13T21:00:00Z

40x14 The Big Chill

40x14 The Big Chill

  • 2003-11-13T21:00:00Z1h

Remember that long, hot summer? You might never see its like again. And all that talk of global warming? Forget it. This season's first Horizon reveals that a growing number of experts fear Britain could be heading for a climate like Alaska. Our ports could be frozen over. Ice storms could ravage the country, and London could see snow lying for weeks on end. It would be the biggest change in the British way of life since the last Ice Age. The first signs that such a disaster could happen came from deep within the ice sheet of Greenland. Scientists discovered that the Earth's past was littered with sudden, drastic drops in temperature. The big question was: could it ever happen again? Clues came from tiny shells at the bottom of the Atlantic; a huge glacier on the move in Arctic and some alarming discoveries in the far north of Russia. In the end there came the terrifying revelation: the Gulf Stream, that vast current of water that keeps us warm, could be cut off. According to one scientist, there is a one in two chance it will happen in the next century. Others say a climatic catastrophe could be heading our way in just twenty years time.

2003-11-20T21:00:00Z

40x15 The Bible Code

40x15 The Bible Code

  • 2003-11-20T21:00:00Z1h

This week Horizon investigates the science behind the Bible Code. What he can see is truly horrific; according to Drosnin, the world could end in an atomic holocaust - in 2006. It sounds preposterous yet Drosnin claims to have serious scientific backing. Behind his findings lies the work of one of the world's most brilliant theoretical mathematicians, an Israeli professor called Eliyahu Rips. In 1994, using exactly the same ancient code, Michael Drosnin accurately predicted the assassination of the Israeli Prime Minister Yitzak Rabin - twelve months before it occurred. Drosnin's books on the Bible Code have been translated into most of the world's major languages and are read by millions of people. If he's right, he's stumbled on one of the most important discoveries ever made.

Mixing powerful and deeply moving footage with telling forensic analysis, Horizon reveals what really went wrong on the Space Shuttle Columbia. The film's final revelation is telling. If NASA had acted differently, all seven astronauts could have been brought back to Earth alive. The film begins with the astronauts' final moments and shows the haunting scenes at Mission Control at the moment the disaster struck. What then follows is a disturbing detective story as the investigators gradually realise that the tragedy was caused by the failure of a small panel on the shuttle's left wing that had been built to be indestructible. No one had ever thought such an accident was possible. It has led to the shuttle being grounded for the foreseeable future. But that wasn't all. The film also shows that NASA had a number of options to bring the crew back safely - if only it had commandeered a spy telescope to visually inspect the damage. It could even have launched a rescue mission. But instead, NASA chose to rely on a computer programme for damage assessment. The programme got it wrong; as a result, there was no hope for those seven crew members.

Horizon tells the microbiological detective story in which some of the best brains in science have been pitted against the most extraordinary bug the world has ever seen. In 1984 it was discovered that HIV was the cause of AIDS. Straight away, there were confident predictions that there would be a vaccine ready for testing in just two years. Back then, just 1,292 deaths from AIDS had been reported. Now the figure is 25 million dead. By 2010 it is predicted there will be 85 million infections and 70 million deaths. And after 20 years there is still no sign of a vaccine. Despite work of dazzling complexity, the ambition of so many brilliant scientists has been constantly thwarted. Just as a vaccine seems to be working, the AIDS virus alters itself, and ten to fifteen years of work, and millions of pounds, go down the drain. These bitter disappointments are only compounded by the desperate human urgency of the work. This is a story where the clock doesn't stop ticking.

Could an unknown Englishman have been the first person ever to fly? To mark the hundredth anniversary of the Wright brothers inaugural flight, Horizon tells the remarkable story of Percy Pilcher. He could have been the most famous aviator of them all. Four years before the Wright brothers, he had constructed his own aeroplane. But on the day it was due to take off for the very first time, something so terrible happened that he was denied the chance of ever flying it. So Horizon has rebuilt his long lost flying machine to see if Percy Pilcher, the British amateur, could have claimed the glory and been the first person ever to fly. This film mixes dramatic reconstruction with fabulous contemporary scenes and gripping science. With a specially assembled team of historians, aviation experts and our own test pilot, Horizon painstakingly rebuilds Pilcher's flying machine and puts it to the test. The results will leave you cheering.

Season Finale

2003-12-18T21:00:00Z

40x19 Time Trip

Season Finale

40x19 Time Trip

  • 2003-12-18T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon's Time Trip is a thrilling journey deep into the strangeness of cutting-edge physics - a place where beautiful, baffling ideas are sometimes indistinguishable from the utterly crazy. On this journey, we meet a time-travelling pizza, a brilliant mathematician in a ski mask and even God. The journey ends with a strange and dark conclusion - one which calls into question our very existence. Ever since Einstein showed it was theoretically possible, the quest to travel through time has drawn eccentric amateurs and brilliant scientists in almost equal numbers. The amateurs include Aage Nost, who demonstrates his time machine in front of the cameras. The professionals include the likes of Professor Frank Tipler of Tulane University. His time machine sounds good - but it would weigh half the mass of the galaxy. There is, however, one way that time travel to the past could be possible. And it would be much more convenient. Future civilisations could use computers to create exact replicas of the past. Unfortunately that idea has physics trembling in its socks. Because if you can generate a perfect virtual reality version of the past, who's to say we are not one of the replicas?

Season Premiere

2004-01-08T21:00:00Z

41x01 The Demonic Ape

Season Premiere

41x01 The Demonic Ape

  • 2004-01-08T21:00:00Z1h

In a film that is in turns charming, disturbing and poignant, Horizon explores the relationship between science and the chimpanzee. It began with a magical story. A young girl ventured alone into the jungle and befriended a group of chimpanzees. What she saw became the stuff of scientific legend. But then, last year came a terrible tragedy. Frodo, one of the chimpanzees she had helped make famous, killed a human baby. That shocking act brought into focus a huge debate about the relationship between humans and chimps, and what these primates have taught us about the origins of our own behaviour. The saga of how Jane Goodall went into the jungle to study the chimps of Gombe in Tanzania has inspired novels and movies. Her observations revealed that chimpanzees were in many ways like humans. They used tools, had culture and even language. And what's more they had empathy. They were also capable of savage brutality against their own kind. Just like us. In fact many began to think that the origins of aggressive human male behaviour could be traced back to our shared evolutionary ancestry with chimps. In other words, men are genetically programmed to be violent. But then came some disturbing questions.

2004-01-15T21:00:00Z

41x02 The Moscow Theatre Siege

With the help of doctors and scientists in America, Germany and Britain, Horizon unpicks the mystery of the Moscow theatre siege. In October 2002, Chechen terrorists took a thousand people hostage in a Moscow theatre and threatened to kill them. The problem was how to get them out alive. A bloodbath seemed inevitable. Three days later Russian special forces stormed the theatre using a secret gas to knock everybody out. 129 hostages died - apparently killed by the very gas that was meant to save them. Horizon investigates the mystery substance, and why so many died. The Russian authorities insisted their secret weapon was not lethal. The claim provoked contempt from the victims families, and incredulity among doctors and scientists around the world. But were the Russians actually right? The Russians offered just one clue. And in Germany there was a scientist who had the means to test it: a urine sample taken from one of the survivors shortly after he was freed. Horizon follows as extremely sensitive tests are performed to find out if the Russians were telling the truth, and uncovers a deeper secret.

2004-01-22T21:00:00Z

41x03 The Atkins Diet

41x03 The Atkins Diet

  • 2004-01-22T21:00:00Z1h

This is the truth about the world's most famous, most glamorous and most controversial diet. The Atkins diet says that eating fat can make you thin. It says you don't need to bother watching the calories. Rene Zellweger, Geri Halliwell and a host of other celebrities swear by it. But many scientists think it is scientific nonsense. Some even believe it is dangerous. Horizon cuts through the confusion and provide the answers. When Dr Atkins first launched his diet, he was accused of breaking one of the most fundamental laws of nature. Scientists said that if you eat more, you'll get fatter. They also said it could kill. Fat increases your cholesterol levels. You'd get a heart attack. The only problem was that people who followed the Atkins diet got thinner. Much of the rest of us got fatter. Then came studies showing that cholesterol levels can actually improve on the Atkins diet. So what was going on? Horizon's investigation seems to show that the diet may really work - but for a reason and in a way that no scientists or even Atkins himself had seriously considered.

2004-01-29T21:00:00Z

41x04 Secrets of the Star Disc

This is the extraordinary story of how a small metal disc is rewriting the epic saga of how civilisation first came to Europe, 3600 years ago. When grave robbers ransacked a Bronze Age tomb in Germany, they had no idea that they had unearthed the find of a lifetime. But they knew that it was worth selling. It was a small bronze disc of exquisite design. So they contacted the archaeologist Harald Meller, offering to sell it to him for €300,000. Meller went deep into the criminal underworld and, after a police sting, he got his disc. It depicted the sun, the moon and the stars. This suggested an understanding of the heavens greater than that of the first great civilisations, like Egypt. Could it possibly be real? After exhaustive tests, the disc was declared genuine. Then a team of crack scientists pieced together what it meant. What emerged is a true marvel. This disc, it seems, is a Bronze Age Bible, combining an advanced understanding of the stars with some of the most sophisticated religious imagery of the age. In intellectual achievement and also age, it surpasses anything yet found in Egypt or Greece. It seems that civilisation had already dawned in Europe.

Imagine a world where disease could be eradicated by an injection of tiny robots the size of molecules. That is the hope offered by nanotechnology - the science of microscopically small machines. But others fear nanotechnology could lead to a non-biological cancer - where swarms of tiny nanobots come together and literally devour human flesh. Sounds like science fiction? It certainly did until a brilliant young scientist called Hendrik Schön seemed to bring it a step closer. Schön's great breakthrough was to make a computer transistor out of a single organic molecule. It was an achievement of almost incalculable brilliance. Some speculated this technology could spell the end of the entire silicon chip industry. Crucially, Schön's transistor was organic. Suddenly, this seemed to be the first step towards true nanotechnology, where minute computers could grow as living cells. Scientists speculated about how these tiny machines could be used to target diseases with astonishing precision. Others wondered - could the military use them as a new weapon? Others, including Prince Charles, were terrified. If these machines can grow by themselves, how do we stop them from growing? What happened next would destroy reputations and shatter lives - because there was more to Hendrik Schön's discovery than anyone knew.

Thalidomide was one of the biggest medical tragedies of modern times. The images of children born with shrunken limbs still haunt anyone who sees them. And the tragedy is not over. Those children are adults today, still coping with their disability. For many, thalidomide is a drug that should be consigned to the dustbin of history - an awful cautionary tale of the errors that science can make. But now it is making a comeback - as a radical treatment for incurable blood cancers. But can it possibly be safe to use such a dangerous drug again? In a powerful and deeply moving film, Horizon tells the tale of thalidomide and how this drug that has become so infamous may now be giving hope to people who otherwise face death. It also explores the mystery at the heart of thalidomide. It seems that the reason why it works for cancer may at least partly explain something that has long baffled scientists - why thalidomide caused such terrible damage to babies in the womb all those years ago.

2004-03-04T21:00:00Z

41x07 Diamond Labs

41x07 Diamond Labs

  • 2004-03-04T21:00:00Z1h

Top quality diamonds at knock down prices? The only catch is: these rocks don't come out of the ground, but are made in a lab. This is the promise offered by a series of recent scientific breakthroughs. For most of us, it seems we may soon be able to bejewel ourselves like movie stars. But for De Beers, the world's largest diamond trader, could this, one day, be a serious threat? Following a dodgy meeting in Moscow, retired US Army General Carter Clarke acquired some experimental diamond growing machines, originally destined for the Russian military. He created the world's first gem diamond production line, to mass produce highly prized coloured diamonds. In a secret location south of Boston, a father and son team developed a different technique. Robert Linares and son Bryant have made colourless diamonds, allegedly higher quality than those found in nature. De Beers, at vast cost, set up a new scientific division called the Gem Defensive Programme. Its goal: to find ways to tell apart their natural diamonds from these new synthetic gems. But will the new synthetics slip through De Beers detection net? And could anyone really tell the difference? Horizon tells the story of the Diamond Labs.

2004-03-11T21:00:00Z

41x08 T-Rex - Warrior or Wimp?

Tyrannosaurus rex - it's the scariest, meanest, most bewitching dinosaur of them all. Children are captivated by the sheer savagery of the teeth. Experts marvelled at the force of its bite - ten times more powerful than anything we know today. Movie makers made millions out of the terror it inspired. But could our picture of this monster be completely wrong? Was T. rex in fact a slow lumbering creature, with hideously bad breath, that couldn't get anywhere close to catching a Triceratops. Was it really a scavenger that lived off the scraps left by others? Was T. rex, in fact, a wimp? Featuring fabulous graphics and interviews with T. rex experts from around the world, Horizon looks at the new science that is challenging the legend of the dinosaur we love to hate.

2004-03-18T21:00:00Z

41x09 Project Poltergeist

41x09 Project Poltergeist

  • 2004-03-18T21:00:00Z1h

This is the story of two genuine scientific heroes. For forty years, John Bahcall and Ray Davis were engaged in a single extraordinary experiment - to find out why the Sun shines. In the end they would triumph. Davis would win the Nobel Prize and, thanks to their work, a whole new theory about how the universe is put together may have to be created. At the heart of this story is a tiny, utterly mysterious thing called a neutrino. Trillions of them pass through your body every second, touching nothing, leaving no trace. Yet neutrinos are one of a handful of fundamental particles in the universe, essential to every atom in existence and clues to what makes the Sun work. But their ghost-like quality made trapping and understanding them immensely difficult. What then followed was a bizarre series of experiments. They led from a vat containing 600 tons of cleaning fluid, to a vast cavern in a Japanese mountain, to a hole in the ground in Canada two kilometres deep. What they would reveal would stun the world of science. It seems that neutrinos may be our parents. They may be the reason why everything, including us, exists.

2004-03-25T21:00:00Z

41x10 The Truth of Troy

41x10 The Truth of Troy

  • 2004-03-25T21:00:00Z1h

It's one of the greatest stories ever told. The legend of Helen of Troy has enchanted audiences for the last three thousand years. In May this year a Hollywood film staring Brad Pitt and Orlando Bloom will be launched in Britain. But is there any reality to the myth? Horizon has unprecedented access to the scientist with the answers. Since 1988 Professor Manfred Korfmann has been excavating the site of Troy. He has never before spoken at this length. He has made amazing discoveries - how large the city was, how well it was defended and, crucially, that there was once a great battle there at precisely the time that experts believe the Trojan war occurred. But who had attacked the city and why? Horizon then follows a trail of clues - the ancient tablets written by a lost civilisation, the sunken ship rich in treasure, and the magnificent golden masks and bronze swords of a warrior people. The film reaches its climax in a tunnel deep beneath Troy, where Korfmann has made a discovery that may reveal, once and for all, the truth behind the myth. The story that emerges is one of great passion - but not, it seems, about love.

2004-09-16T20:00:00Z

41x11 The Truth About Vitamins

Every year we spend £300 million on vitamin supplements, but do they actually do us any good? Some believe they offer the promise of preventing or even curing some of the world's biggest killers, such as heart disease and cancer. Others claim that taking large doses of some vitamins may in certain cases be harmful. So what are the facts? Nearly 40 years ago, one of the greatest scientists of the 20th century and double Nobel Prize winner, Linus Pauling, revolutionised the way people thought about vitamins. He claimed that by taking huge doses of vitamin C you could prevent or even cure the common cold. He predicted that if everybody followed his advice, the common cold could even be eradicated. Many scientists dismissed his theory as quackery, but the public loved it and it helped launch a huge industry. But the latest evidence shows the great man was mistaken. Vitamin C can help you once have got a cold, but for most people it does nothing to prevent you from catching one in the first place. Even if large doses of vitamin C do not prevent the common cold, some claim that it can still offer a more profound benefit. It is one of a group of vitamins called anti-oxidants that some believe can prevent illnesses such as cancer, Alzheimer's and heart disease. In 2004, scientists in the United States claimed that people could be missing any of the potential benefits of taking one of the world's most popular anti-oxidant vitamin supplements, vitamin E, because their bodies might not be absorbing it. But our own investigation suggested that the American scientists' conclusion could be mistaken. While most safety experts believe that vitamins C and E can be taken safely even in quite large doses, there is worrying evidence that one form of another common vitamin, vitamin A, could be linked to osteoporosis, a debilitating bone disease. If the theory is right it means that a person's diet, or some supplements that they take every day to improve their health, could actually be slowly and silently weakening their bones.

2004-09-30T20:00:00Z

41x13 Derek Tastes of Earwax

41x13 Derek Tastes of Earwax

  • 2004-09-30T20:00:00Z1h

Is Wednesday red? Take part in our experiment to test whether your senses overlap. Do melodies have a colour? Take part in our experiment to test whether you hear colours. Imagine if every time you saw someone called Derek you got a strong taste of earwax in your mouth. It happens to James Wannerton, who runs a pub. Derek is one of his regulars. Another regular's name gives him the taste of wet nappies. For some puzzling reason, James's sense of sound and taste are intermingled. Dorothy Latham sees words as colours. Whenever she reads a black and white text, she sees each letter tinged in the shade of her own multi-coloured alphabet - even though she knows the reality of the text is black and white. Spoken words have an even stranger effect. She sees them, spelled out letter by letter, on a colourful ticker tape in front of her head. Both James and Dorothy have a mysterious condition called synaesthesia, in which their senses have become linked. For years scientists dismissed it, putting it in the same category as séances and spoon-bending. But now, synaesthesia is sparking a revolution in our understanding of the human mind. Two synaesthetes seldom agree on the colours or tastes they experience. While Covent Garden may taste of crinkly chocolate to James, it's very unlikely to have the same taste for another synaesthete. And Dorothy's brother Peter, also a synaesthete, won't see M or Z in the same colour as she does. But despite these differences, scientists are now beginning to discover more and more overarching synaesthetic patterns. Dorothy doesn't only see letters and numbers in colour. Music produces a riot of colour, too. As Dorothy hears notes going from low to high, her colours change from black and purple to mid-browns and then yellows and whites. Overall, lower notes evoke darker colours and higher notes brighter colours - and this pattern is true for most synaesthetes. But surprisingly, when non-synaesthetes are asked to match colours and music, they show a similar pattern. Most of us seem to associate low notes with darker colours and high notes with brighter colours. The evidence of the synaesthete in all of us doesn't end here. Another clue comes from the way we manipulate numbers. More than half of all synaesthetes who see coloured numbers also experience their numbers arranged in space around them. Heather Birt is such a synaesthete, and she's followed by a stream of numbers wherever she goes. Recently, scientists started to investigate how non-synaesthetes deal with numbers. They found they're better at manipulating small numbers with their left hand, and their bigger numbers with our right hand. This suggests that we all somehow think of numbers as arranged in space, even if we're not aware of it. More evidence, it seems, that we're all synaesthetic to some degree. It's just that some people experience a more exaggerated version. A few scientists believe that synaesthesia might even explain how we evolved two of the traits that define our species and have transformed our world - creativity and language. Many famous artists have been synaesthetes - the jazz legend Miles Davis, for instance, and the painter Kandinsky. In fact, a number of studies suggest that synaesthesia may be more common among artists, poets and musicians. This has led some scientists to argue that synaesthesia and creativity may share a similar basis - that both may be down to brain processes that involve linking two seemingly unrelated areas. Some believe that our common synaesthetic abilities may also have been the springboard to language. Connections between our senses of hearing and vision, for example, could have been an important initial step towards the creation of words. Our earliest ancestors may have first started to talk by using sounds that actually evoked the object they wished to describe. According to this theory, language could have emerged from the multitude of synaesthetic connections within our brains.

Until recently most scientists thought they knew what killed off the dinosaurs. A 10km-wide meteorite had smashed into the Yucatan peninsula in Mexico, causing worldwide forest fires, tsunamis several kilometres high, and an 'impact winter' - in which dust blocked out the sun for months or years. It was thought that the dinosaurs were blasted, roasted and frozen to death, in that order. But now a small but vociferous group of scientists believes there is increasing evidence that this 'impact' theory could be wrong. That suggestion has generated one of the bitterest scientific rows of recent times.

In the mid-1990s, a team of American science students took on the might of the Las Vegas casinos, and came home with millions of dollars. Hard working engineering students during the week, they became high-rolling gamblers by the weekend and proved that, in one game at least, the house doesn't always win. The game was blackjack, and the students were from the world-renowned Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Their audacious winnings marked the climax of an arms race between casino and player that began 40 years earlier with maths professor Edward Thorp. He realised that the one feature of blackjack that made it different from other casino games also made it possible to beat. In most gambling games - roulette, dice, slot machines, the lottery - events in the past do not determine the future. The odds are the same on every roll of the dice or spin of the wheel. Winning streaks or losing streaks may occur, but they are only one possible result from the set of all possible outcomes. A fair coin that has shown heads ten times, still only has a 50% chance of showing heads on the next flip. Casinos and bookmakers make certain that the odds are always stacked slightly in their favour. In other words, over time, the house will always win.

In 1610, Galileo used a new invention -- a simple telescope -- to look at Saturn. When he viewed the planet for the first time, he saw something strange. He thought he saw three stars together, a big one in the middle of two little stars. He knew they weren't really stars, but what were they?

Season Finale

2004-11-04T21:00:00Z

41x18 Dr Money and the Boy with No Penis

Season Finale

41x18 Dr Money and the Boy with No Penis

  • 2004-11-04T21:00:00Z1h

Season Premiere

2005-01-13T21:00:00Z

42x01 Global Dimming

Season Premiere

42x01 Global Dimming

  • 2005-01-13T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon producer David Sington on why predictions about the Earth's climate will need to be re-examined.

The unpredictable results of the Theory of Relativity. Horizon brings you the second part of a two-part series on Albert Einsten. In the summer of 1939 Albert Einstein was on holiday in a small resort town on the tip of Long Island. His peaceful summer, however, was about to be shattered by a visit from an old friend and colleague from his years in Berlin. The visitor was the physicist Leo Szilard. He had come to tell Einstein that he feared the Nazis could soon be in possession of a terrible new weapon and that something had to be done.

The story of Einstein's most famous equation E=mc² – its role in the creation of the atom bomb and our understanding of the beginnings of the Universe. Horizon brings you the second part of a two-part series on Albert Einsten. In the summer of 1939 Albert Einstein was on holiday in a small resort town on the tip of Long Island. His peaceful summer, however, was about to be shattered by a visit from an old friend and colleague from his years in Berlin. The visitor was the physicist Leo Szilard. He had come to tell Einstein that he feared the Nazis could soon be in possession of a terrible new weapon and that something had to be done.

2005-03-03T21:00:00Z

42x04 Living with ADHD

42x04 Living with ADHD

  • 2005-03-03T21:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon investigates Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), which is one of the most feared and misunderstood of all medical conditions. Despite over 200 scientific papers being published on this neurological condition every year, it remains stigmatised and controversial. Some doctors don't even believe it exists. Yet it is estimated that as many as 3-5 percent of the childhood population, and over one million adults in the UK are affected by ADHD. These people are often described as stupid, lazy, disorganised, wild, out of control or woozy on drugs. But the reality is altogether more complex, and deeply moving.

2005-02-10T21:00:00Z

42x05 Neanderthal

42x05 Neanderthal

  • 2005-02-10T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates a strange skull that was discovered in 1848 on the military outpost of Gibraltar. It was undoubtedly human, but also had some of the heavy features of an ape... distinct brow ridges, and a forward projecting face. Just what was this ancient creature? And when had it lived? As more remains were discovered one thing became clear, this creature had once lived right across Europe. The remains were named Homo neanderthalensis (Neanderthal man) an ancient and primitive form of human.

In this documentary, Horizon follows the scientific world that was rocked by some astonishing news in March 2002 where a distinguished US government scientist claimed he had made nuclear fusion out of sound waves in his laboratory.

This Horizon episode is about genetics in humans. Every parent wants their child to have the best in life. But would this extend to picking the best genes for them? To date, genetic technology has only been used to treat serious disease in children. But as ways are developed to manipulate our DNA, there are those who think that parents will inevitably want to choose their children's genes, and create 'designer babies'.

Horizon brings us back two thousand years ago when a mysterious and little known civilization ruled the northern coast of Peru. Its people were called the Moche.

2005-05-22T20:00:00Z

42x09 The Next Megaquake

42x09 The Next Megaquake

  • 2005-05-22T20:00:00Z1h

In this documentary on earthquakes, Horizon starts with the worst natural disasters of all time in December 2004. The cause of so much devastation was the most powerful kind of earthquake on the planet - a megathrust. Megathrust earthquakes only occur on a particular kind of fault. Scientists have now discovered that just such a fault could cause a huge megathrust earthquake and tsunami right off the coast of North America.

In this documentary, Horizon presents the largest public health issue of recent years that has attracted such heated debate as the question of whether the MMR vaccine can cause autism. The MMR jab combines three childhood vaccines, against measles, mumps and rubella, into one injection, which is first given to children at around 12-18 months. Horizon presents new, exclusive evidence about the MMR jab.

This is the story by Horizon of an epic battle between science and nature. It's a battle to destroy a disease that is one of the biggest killers on the planet: malaria.

2005-09-01T20:00:00Z

42x12 Tsunami: Naming the Dead

How the biggest international forensic operation in history identified the victims of the most devastating natural disaster of recent times.

2005-09-08T20:00:00Z

42x13 The Hawking Paradox

42x13 The Hawking Paradox

  • 2005-09-08T20:00:00Z1h

Has Stephen Hawking been wrong about the universe for the last 30 years? Horizon explores his latest theory.

Is the hobbit a new human species or nothing more than a modern human with a crippling deformity?

At the Xishan Hospital, near Beijing, a remarkable medical pilgrimage is taking place. The sick and the dying are travelling here for a treatment pioneered by Dr Huang Hongyun. He claims he can restore functions that Western doctors said were lost forever. Horizon investigates his methods but are they too much too soon.

Scientists once got sacked for suggesting oily fish was good for you. Now all and sundry are hailing it as a panacea.

Time is running out for the rainforest, but a team of scientists have come up with a unique strategy to help save it: a giant inflatable raft.

42x18 Titan. A Place Like Home?

  • 2005-11-10T21:00:00Z1h

Over a billion kilometres away, Saturn's largest moon, Titan, holds tantalising clues to how life began here on Earth. Horizon tells the story of the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft, the most ambitious and expensive interplanetary space mission of all time.

On 7 July 2005 Britain experienced its first ever suicide attack. Four bombs exploded in central London, killing 52 people and injuring over 700. When Scotland Yard launched one of the biggest investigations in its history, another first was quickly uncovered: the suicide bombers were home-grown, they were young British men, attacking their own country. Horizon explores what makes someone want to blow themselves – and others - up?

Season Finale

2005-12-15T21:00:00Z

42x20 The Ghost in Your Genes

Season Finale

42x20 The Ghost in Your Genes

  • 2005-12-15T21:00:00Z1h

The controversial science of epigenetics suggests you may inherit a lot more than you imagine from your forebears. The scientists who believe your genes are shaped in part by your ancestors' life experiences.

Season Premiere

2006-01-12T21:00:00Z

43x01 Space Tourists

Season Premiere

43x01 Space Tourists

  • 2006-01-12T21:00:00Z1h

Is a space tourism revolution just around the corner?

2006-01-19T21:00:00Z

43x02 Waiting for a Heartbeat

43x02 Waiting for a Heartbeat

  • 2006-01-19T21:00:00Z1h

The story of three women as they attempt to overcome the odds and give birth to a baby.

2006-01-26T21:00:00Z

43x03 A War on Science

43x03 A War on Science

  • 2006-01-26T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores a new theory of evolution.

The coastline that protects the city of New Orleans is sinking into the ocean. Horizon explores what can be done to save the city if it is worth saving at all.

Only 4% of our universe is made from stuff we understand. Horizon explores the 96% that is made up of the elusive substance 'Dark Matter'.

2006-03-18T21:00:00Z

43x06 Winning Gold in 2012

43x06 Winning Gold in 2012

  • 2006-03-18T21:00:00Z1h

An investigation into the scientific approach to sporting success, as demonstrated by the former East Germany and latterly Australia. British children are already in training for the London Olympics and the programme looks at what it takes to produce a successful modern Olympian.

The amazing story of Dr Temple Grandin's ability to read the animal mind, which has made her the most famous autistic woman on the planet.

2006-06-15T20:00:00Z

43x08 The Genius Sperm Bank

43x08 The Genius Sperm Bank

  • 2006-06-15T20:00:00Z1h

The curious tale of an American millionaire optometrist and his dream to save humanity.

2006-06-22T20:00:00Z

43x09 Bye Bye Planet Pluto

43x09 Bye Bye Planet Pluto

  • 2006-06-22T20:00:00Z1h

Is Pluto really a planet? Is it just an asteroid? Horizon investigates.

2006-06-29T20:00:00Z

43x10 We Love Cigarettes

43x10 We Love Cigarettes

  • 2006-06-29T20:00:00Z1h

The science series explores varying attitudes to smoking around the world. Filmed in a single day, the documentary meets the people whose lives are defined by the cigarette. Contributors include Allen Carr, who claims he may get viewers to quit by the end of the programme, the inventor of the nicotine patch Dr Jed Rose and Dr Chris Proctor, the chief scientist at British American Tobacco who has the tricky task of making a safer cigarette.

2006-07-13T20:00:00Z

43x11 Nuclear Nightmares

43x11 Nuclear Nightmares

  • 2006-07-13T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the topical scientific issues investigates, the truth behind our fear of radioactivity and asks whether our nuclear nightmares really are based on reality. From Hiroshima to Chernobyl scientists have been studying the impact of exposure to radiation for over 60 years and have always assumed that any level of radiation is bad. But now some scientists are questioning the power of radiation to cause cancer and finding evidence to suggest that it may have beneficial health effects.

2006-07-20T20:00:00Z

43x12 Tutankhamun's Fireball

43x12 Tutankhamun's Fireball

  • 2006-07-20T20:00:00Z1h

A team of scientists set out to solve the mystery of chunks of ancient glass scattered in a remote part of the Sahara Desert. Their quest takes them on a perilous journey into the Great Sand Sea, the wastes of Siberia and the test site of the world's first atomic bomb in New Mexico. What their search uncovers is a devastating new natural phenomenon.

Over 90% of plane crashes have survivors. Horizon investigate what you can do to increase your chances.

2006-10-10T20:00:00Z

43x14 Chimps are People Too

43x14 Chimps are People Too

  • 2006-10-10T20:00:00Z1h

Danny Wallace is on a mission to convince the world that chimps are people are to. If they are should they have the same rights as people?

In 2005, Isabelle Dinoire become the first person to receive a new face. The decision made by French surgeons to perform the operation went against the findings of almost every other ethical committee in the world and has since sparked a fierce debate over the ethics of the operation. In the UK, a team led by Peter Butler struggles to get approval to perform the first full face transplant. Do the risks outweigh the benefits? Are face transplants really in the best interest of the patient? Horizon investigates.

2006-10-24T20:00:00Z

43x16 Human v2.0

43x16 Human v2.0

  • 2006-10-24T20:00:00Z1h

It has been predicted that by 2029 computers will be powerful enough to rival that of the human brain. Will be able to download ourselves into a computer and live forever? Or will a race of super intelligent destructive machines rise. The only thing we know for sure is the moment is coming and whatever it brings is inevitable.

2006-10-31T21:00:00Z

43x17 The Great Robot Race

43x17 The Great Robot Race

  • 2006-10-31T21:00:00Z1h

20 robotic cars, with no drivers and no remote controls, race across the Nevada desert. Horizon follows 3 teams and their cars as they develop their vehicles.

2006-11-07T21:00:00Z

43x18 Pandemic

43x18 Pandemic

  • 2006-11-07T21:00:00Z1h

A simple virus that started in the belly of a dead bird is set to embark on a global killing spree. H5N1 - a bird flu virus with the potential to become humanised and mutate into the next pandemic flu virus. Horizon explores what could happen if a flu pandemic hits. The last flu pandemic in 1918 killed an estimated 50 million people worldwide. A virus today can spread much easier, much faster and there are estimates that hundreds of millions could be infected and potentially die.

Season Finale

2006-11-14T21:00:00Z

43x19 We are the Aliens

Season Finale

43x19 We are the Aliens

  • 2006-11-14T21:00:00Z1h

Clouds of alien life forms are sweeping through outer space and infecting planets with life – it may not be as far-fetched as it sounds. The idea that life on Earth came from another planet has been around as a modern scientific theory since the 1960s when it was proposed by Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe. At the time they were ridiculed for their idea – known as panspermia. But now, with growing evidence, it's back in vogue and even being studied by NASA. Horizon meets the scientists on a mission to get to the bottom of the beginnings of life on Earth - from the team in Texas who are lovingly building a robotic submarine called DEPTHX to explore a moon of Jupiter, to Southern India where they are investigating a mysterious red rain which fell for two months in 2001. According to local scientist Godfrey Louis, the rain contains biological cells unlike any he had seen before – with no DNA and the ability to replicate at 300°C. Louis has come to the conclusion that the cells are extra-terrestrial in origin.

Season Premiere

2007-03-13T21:00:00Z

44x01 My Pet Dinosaur

Season Premiere

44x01 My Pet Dinosaur

  • 2007-03-13T21:00:00Z1h

What if dinosaurs were still alive today? Would we hunt them, farm them - or even keep them as pets? It's a palaeontologist's dream: the chance to live in a world where dinosaurs are not something to be dug out of the ground but are living among us. It may sound far-fetched but dinosaurs were actually rather unlucky. The meteorite impact that doomed them to extinction was an event with a probability of millions to one. What if the meteorite had missed? Had dinosaurs survived, the world today would be very different. If humans managed to survive alongside them, we wouldn't have the company of most, if not all, of the mammals with which we are familiar today. Giraffes, elephants and other mammals wouldn't have had space to evolve. Would we be hunting Hadrosaurs instead of elk? Or farming Protoceratops instead of pigs? Would dinosaurs be kept as pets? And could the brighter dinosaurs have evolved into something humanoid?

How do you save an endangered species? Get the animals in the mood for love. Thomas Hildebrandt possesses one of the world's most extraordinary jobs - getting the planet's endangered animals in the mood for love. The planet's creatures are facing the biggest mass extinction since the dinosaurs were wiped out. Species are currently disappearing at up to 10,000 times the natural rate. Coming to the rescue are men like Dr Hildebrandt and his team. They are world leaders in the art of animal manipulation. The billions of pounds spent benefiting human reproduction are now being applied to save endangered species. Techniques such as artificial insemination and IVF have been crucial to the successes in breeding giant pandas, big cats and other mammals in zoos across the world. As Thomas Hildebrandt says "Man has created this annihilation of species. It's up to man to use his ingenuity to save them."

Professor Lesley Regan is on a mission to fill her bathroom cabinet with cosmetics that actually work. Professor Lesley Regan, one of the UK's most well-respected (and glamorous) medical experts, turns her scientific eye on the world of cosmetics. She's just turned 50, and is out to create an experimentally proven beauty cabinet. Unafraid to examine the wrinkles, age spots and broken veins on her own face, Professor Regan explores just what makes us look old, and if we can slow down the ageing process. The extraordinary world of cosmetic testing is revealed, from the British hair lab which makes New York tap water, to the volunteers sun-bathing for science. Sun damage, cellulite and balding all face Professor Regan's scrutiny as she discovers which cosmetics do - and don't - have the scientific evidence to back up their claims.

2007-04-03T20:00:00Z

44x04 Mad but Glad

44x04 Mad but Glad

  • 2007-04-03T20:00:00Z1h

Pianist Nick van Bloss has Tourette's syndrome. Is his illness a blessing or a curse? Is there really such a thing as the mad genius? Can an illness be both a blessing and a curse? At seven years old, Nick van Bloss started shaking his head, grinding his teeth and making wild whooping noises. Nick had Tourette's syndrome. No medical intervention helped him. But one activity stopped it all... The moment Nick placed his hands on the piano keys his symptoms vanished. By the age of 20, he was an award winning international pianist. He felt sure that his illness had made him the success he was. But there is a catch. The brain state necessary for his genius can also be dangerously close to mental chaos. Nick's personal journey reveals how close he came to the edge and how determined he is to triumph.

2007-04-10T20:00:00Z

44x05 Moon for Sale

44x05 Moon for Sale

  • 2007-04-10T20:00:00Z1h

After 40 years, man is preparing to return to the Moon. But this time the astronauts won't just land on the Moon - they plan to stay. From his office in Nevada, Dennis Hope has spawned a multi-million dollar business selling lunar real estate. But scientists believe the real prize is trapped in the Moon's rocks. It contains large deposits of an extremely rare gas called Helium-3. Could Helium-3 be mined and used as a new source of almost inexhaustible, clean and pollution-free energy on Earth? Whoever succeeds in transporting Helium-3 back to Earth could solve the world's energy crisis. Who will win what has been dubbed the second Moon race? And should we be exploiting the Moon's valuable resources at all?

2007-04-17T20:00:00Z

44x06 Battle of the Brains

44x06 Battle of the Brains

  • 2007-04-17T20:00:00Z1h

Seven high-flyers are put through a series of tests to measure their intelligence Can you think of 100 different uses for a sock? How would you cope with glasses that turn everything upside down? What's your emotional intelligence? Can you create a work of art in ten minutes? Horizon takes seven people who are some of the highest flyers in their field - a musical prodigy, a quantum physicist, an artist, a dramatist, an RAF fighter pilot, a chess grandmaster and a Wall Street trader. Each is put through a series of tests to discover who is the most intelligent? The principle way that we measure intelligence, the IQ test, remains popular and convenient. Yet most psychologists agree that it only tells half the story... at most. Where they disagree is how to measure intelligence, for the simple reason that the experts still don't know exactly what it is.

2007-04-24T20:00:00Z

44x07 Skyscraper Fire Fighters

Could Professor Jose Torero's fire protection system have saved the Twin Towers? When a fire gets out of control in a skyscraper it tests fire fighters to their limits. Predicting how a fire is behaving high up in a building is almost impossible. The fire fighters who entered the Twin Towers on 11 September 2001 could only guess at what was happening almost 1000 feet above them. That fateful day brought about the death of 343 New York fire fighters. Jose Torero believes fire fighters need not be put in such danger and that new technology could have saved many of the 343 fire fighters who died doing their duty that day. He believes he could even have saved the Twin Towers. He has spent the last ten years developing a system that could change the way fires are fought forever. It's called Firegrid. It's a revolutionary approach to fire fighting that could save thousands of lives, giving man the upper hand on one of his oldest enemies.

Will the Large Hadron Collider finally reveal the elusive God particle? In the coming months the most complex scientific instrument ever built will be switched on. The Large Hadron Collider promises to recreate the conditions right after the Big Bang. By revisiting the beginning of time, scientists hope to unravel some of the deepest secrets of our Universe. Within these first few moments the building blocks of the Universe were created. The search for these fundamental particles has occupied scientists for decades but there remains one particle that has stubbornly refused to appear in any experiment. The Higgs Boson is so crucial to our understanding of the Universe that it has been dubbed the God particle. It explains how fundamental particles acquire mass, or as one scientist plainly states: "It is what makes stuff stuff..."

Season Finale

2007-05-08T20:00:00Z

44x09 How to Commit the Perfect Murder

Season Finale

44x09 How to Commit the Perfect Murder

  • 2007-05-08T20:00:00Z1h

Is it possible to use a knowledge of forensic science, not to catch a killer, but to commit a perfect murder? Modern forensic science should make it impossible to commit murder and get away with it. But how easy would it be to outfox the detectives? With the help of top forensic scientists, and real-life murder investigations, we explore whether it's possible to commit a perfect murder. The body is the most important piece of evidence in any murder. Pathologist Dr Richard Shepherd reveals the crucial clues that give away the secrets of a suspicious death. Dr Lee Goff can work out a time of death from just a few maggots on a corpse. To really understand the way a human decomposes he relies on experiments - and dead pigs make ideal human models. And what is the perfect murder weapon? Probably Agatha Christie's favourite - poison. It leaves no marks on the body, and the victim may not even realise what has happened until it's too late. But there still might not be a perfect murder. The world's most notorious poisoner - Harold Shipman - was eventually caught.

Season Premiere

2008-01-15T21:00:00Z

45x01 How to Kill a Human Being

Season Premiere

45x01 How to Kill a Human Being

  • 2008-01-15T21:00:00Z1h

Michael Portillo looks at the science behind executions. Former Conservative MP, Michael Portillo pushes his body to the brink of death in an investigation into the science of execution. As the American Supreme Court examines whether the lethal injection is causing prisoners to die in unnecessary pain Michael sets out to find a solution which is fundamentally humane. To do so he examines the key methods of execution available today: he discovers why convicts can catch on fire in the electric chair, learns how easy it is to botch a hanging and inhales a noxious gas to experience first hand the terror of the gas chamber. Armed with some startling evidence Michael considers a completely new approach. Will it be the answer? There is only one way of finding out - to experience it himself.

2008-01-22T21:00:00Z

45x02 Total Isolation

45x02 Total Isolation

  • 2008-01-22T21:00:00Z1h

Psychologists subject six volunteers to a world without stimulation. For the first time in 40 years Horizon re-creates a controversial sensory deprivation experiment. Six ordinary people are taken to a nuclear bunker and left alone for 48 hours. Three subjects are left alone in dark, sound-proofed rooms, while the other three are given goggles and foam cuffs, while white noise is piped into their ears. The original experiments carried out in the 1950s and 60s by leading psychologist Prof Donald Hebb, was thought by many in the North American political and scientific establishment to be too cruel and were discontinued. Prof Ian Robbins, head of trauma psychology at St George's Hospital, Tooting, has been treating some of the British Guantanamo detainees and the victims of torture who come to the UK from across the world. Now he evaluates the volunteers as their brains undergo strange alterations.

Dr Brian Cox wants to know why the Universe is built the way it is. Particle physicist and ex D:Ream keyboard player Dr Brian Cox wants to know why the Universe is built the way it is. He believes the answers lie in the force of gravity. But Newton thought gravity was powered by God, and even Einstein failed to completely solve it. Heading out with his film crew on a road trip across the USA, Brian fires lasers at the moon in Texas, goes mad in the desert in Arizona, encounters the bending of space and time at a maximum security military base, tries to detect ripples in our reality in the swamps of Louisiana and searches for hidden dimensions just outside Chicago.

A trip through the highs and lows of the UK’s 20 most dangerous drugs. Recent research has analysed the link between the harmful effects of drugs relative to their current classification by law with some startling conclusions. Perhaps most startling of all is that alcohol, solvents and tobacco (all unclassified drugs) are rated more dangerous than ecstasy, 4-MTA and LSD (all class A drugs). If the current ABC system is retained, alcohol would be rated a class A drug and tobacco class B. The scientists involved, including members of the government's top advisory committee on drug classification, have produced a rigorous assessment of the social and individual harm caused by 20 of the UK's most dangerous drugs and believe this should form the basis of future ranking. They think the current ABC system is arbitrary and not based on any scientific evidence. The drug policies have remained unchanged over the last 40 years so should they be reformed in the light of new research?

Lifting the lid on the business of human choices in an exclusive guide to making better decisions. We are bad at making decisions. According to science, our decisions are based on oversimplification, laziness and prejudice. And that's assuming that we haven't already been hijacked by our surroundings or led astray by our subconscious! Featuring exclusive footage of experiments that show how our choices can be confounded by temperature, warped by post-rationalisation and even manipulated by the future, Horizon presents a guide to better decision making, and introduces you to Mathematician Garth Sundem, who is convinced that conclusions can best be reached using simple maths and a pencil!

2008-02-19T21:00:00Z

45x06 How to Live to be 101

45x06 How to Live to be 101

  • 2008-02-19T21:00:00Z1h

While scientists have been searching for the secrets of long life, a few isolated communities have stumbled across the answer. The quest to live longer has been one of humanities oldest dreams, but while scientists have been searching, a few isolated communities have stumbled across the answer. On the remote Japanese island of Okinawa, In the Californian town of Loma Linda and in the mountains of Sardinia people live longer than anywhere else on earth. In these unique communities a group of scientists have dedicated their lives to trying to uncover their secrets. Horizon takes a trip around the globe to meet the people who can show us all how to live longer, healthier lives.

Friendly bacteria, superfoods, cholesterol busting spreads, 99% germ free, whiter than white...it's almost impossible to find a product in the supermarket today that doesn't come with impressive claims...a scientific claims, but do they actually do what they say? Are they worth the price? Are they worth a place in Prof. Regan's shopping trolly?

Use the Drake equation to calculate the number of civilisations in our galaxy. For fifty years, the Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence has been scanning the galaxy for a message from an alien civilisation. So far to no avail, but a recent breakthrough suggests they may one day succeed. Horizon joins the planet hunters who've discovered a new world called Gliese 581 c. It is the most Earth-like planet yet found around another star and may have habitats capable of supporting life. NASA too hopes to find fifty more Earth-like planets by the end of the decade, all of which dramatically increases the chance that alien life has begun elsewhere in the galaxy.

Horizon investigates the medical revolution that has created an almost insatiable demand for body parts . When veteran broadcaster Alistair Cooke died in 2004 few suspected that he was yet to uncover his greatest story. What happened to his body as it lay in a funeral home would reveal a story of modern day grave robbery and helped smash a body-snatching ring that had made millions of dollars by chopping up and selling-off over 1000 bodies. Dead bodies have become big business. Each year millions of people's lives are improved by the use of tissue from the dead. Bodies are used to supply spare parts, and for surgeons to practice on. Horizon investigates the medical revolution that has created an almost insatiable demand for body parts and uncovers the growing industry and grisly black market that supplies human bodies for a price.

Horizon journeys into the human memory, from how it emerges in childhood, develops through to adulthood, and fades in middle age. You might think that your memory is there to help you remember facts, such as birthdays or shopping lists. If so, you would be very wrong. The ability to travel back in time in your mind is, perhaps, your most remarkable ability, and develops over your lifespan. Horizon takes viewers on an extraordinary journey into the human memory. From the woman who is having her most traumatic memories wiped by a pill, to the man with no memory, this film reveals how these remarkable human stories are transforming our understanding of this unique human ability. The findings reveal the startling truth that everyone is little more than their own memory.

Horizon asks some of the biggest names in science to have a quiet word with the new American president. The United States president is quite simply the most powerful man on earth, but past presidents have often known little about science. That is a problem when the decisions they make will affect every one of us, from nuclear proliferation to climate change. To help the new president get to grips with this intimidating responsibility, some of the world's leading scientists, from Dawkins to Watson, share some crucial words of advice.

First of a two-part special. Ten volunteers have come together for an extraordinary test. Five are 'normal' and the other five have been officially diagnosed as mentally ill. Horizon asks if you can tell who is who, and considers where the line between sanity and madness lies.

Second part of the special documentary considering where the line between sanity and madness lies as ten volunteers come together for an extraordinary test. With five 'normal' volunteers and five who have been officially diagnosed as mentally ill, Horizon asks if you can tell who is who.

2008-11-25T21:00:00Z

45x14 Jimmy's GM Food Fight

45x14 Jimmy's GM Food Fight

  • 2008-11-25T21:00:00Z1h

Jimmy Doherty, pig farmer, one-time scientist and poster-boy for sustainable food production is on a mission to find out if GM crops really can feed the world. We need to double the amount of food we produce in the next fifty years to feed the world's growing population. Are GM crops the answer? Or are they a dangerous Frankenstein technology that could start an environmental catastrophe? To find the answers Jimmy is on a journey that will take him from the vast soya plantations of Argentina to the traditional Amish farms of Pennsylvania; and from the cutting-edge technology of the GM laboratories to the banana plantations of Uganda.

Particle physicist Professor Brian Cox asks, 'What time is it?' It's a simple question and it sounds like it has a simple answer. But do we really know what it is that we're asking? Brian visits the ancient Mayan pyramids in Mexico where the Maya built temples to time. He finds out that a day is never 24 hours and meets Earth's very own Director of Time. He journeys to the beginning of time, and goes beyond within the realms of string theory, and explores the very limit of time. He discovers that we not only travel through time at the speed of light, but the experience we feel as the passing of time could be an illusion.

2008-12-09T21:00:00Z

45x16 Allergy Planet

45x16 Allergy Planet

  • 2008-12-09T21:00:00Z1h

We are in the grip of an allergy epidemic. Fifty years ago one in 30 were affected, but in Britain today it is closer to one in three. Why this should be is one of modern medicine's greatest puzzles. In search of answers, Horizon travels round the globe, from the remotest inhabited island to the polluted centres of California and the UK. We meet sufferers and the scientists who have dedicated their lives trying to answer the mystery of why we are becoming allergic to our world.

Season Finale

2008-12-16T21:00:00Z

45x17 Where's My Robot?

Season Finale

45x17 Where's My Robot?

  • 2008-12-16T21:00:00Z1h

Danny Wallace really wants a robot. He wants it to walk like him and talk like him. It's what scientists have been promising us for generations but it's a promise so far unfulfilled. Danny circumnavigates the globe searching for robot nirvana, trying to uncover how far away his dream is. He discovers that the robotics world is as weird as it is insanely complicated. During his quest he meets a Japanese man who makes copies of himself and his daughter, an Italian who claims he's found the key to human intelligence in a video game and a Singaporean whose unpromising-looking homage to Dusty Bin might just turn out to be the robot of Danny's dreams.

Season Premiere

2009-01-26T21:00:00Z

46x01 Why Are Thin People Not Fat?

Season Premiere

46x01 Why Are Thin People Not Fat?

  • 2009-01-26T21:00:00Z1h

The world is affected by an obesity epidemic, but why is it that not everyone is succumbing? Medical science has been obsessed with this subject and is coming up with some unexpected answers. As it turns out, it is not all about exercise and diet. At the centre of this programme is a controversial overeating experiment that aims to identify exactly what it is about some people that makes it hard for them to bulk up.

2009-02-03T21:00:00Z

46x02 Cannabis: The Evil Weed?

46x02 Cannabis: The Evil Weed?

  • 2009-02-03T21:00:00Z1h

Cannabis is the world's favourite drug, but also one of the least understood. Can cannabis cause schizophrenia? Is it addictive? Can it lead you on to harder drugs? Or is it simply a herb, an undervalued medicine? Addiction specialist Dr John Marsden discovers that modern science is finally beginning to find answers to these questions. John traces the cannabis plants' birthplace in Kazakhstan; finds the origins of our sensitivity to cannabis in the simple sea squirt; and finds out just what it does to our brains. He meets people who have been changed by this drug in drastically different ways - from those whose lives have been shattered to those who lives have been revived.

2009-02-10T21:00:00Z

46x03 Why Do We Dream?

46x03 Why Do We Dream?

  • 2009-02-10T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon uncovers the secret world of our dreams. In a series of cutting-edge experiments and personal stories, we go in search of the science behind this most enduring mystery and ask: where do dreams come from? Do they have meaning? And ultimately, why do we dream? What the film reveals is that much of what we thought we knew no longer stands true. Dreams are not simply wild imaginings but play a significant part in all our lives as they have an impact on our memories, the ability to learn, and our mental health. Most surprisingly, we find nightmares, too, are beneficial and may even explain the survival of our species.

Professor Brian Cox takes a global journey in search of the energy source of the future. Called nuclear fusion, it is the process that fuels the sun and every other star in the universe. Yet despite over five decades of effort, scientists have been unable to get even a single watt of fusion electricity onto the grid. Brian returns to Horizon to find out why. Granted extraordinary access to the biggest and most ambitious fusion experiments on the planet, Brian travels to the USA to see a high security fusion bomb testing facility in action and is given a tour of the world's most powerful laser. In South Korea, he clambers inside the reaction chamber of K-Star, the world's first super-cooled, super-conducting fusion reactor where the fate of future fusion research will be decided.

Why are you more likely to have a heart attack at eight o'clock in the morning or crash your car on the motorway at two o'clock in the afternoon? Can taking your medication at the right time of day really save your life? And have you ever wondered why teenagers will not get out of bed in the morning? The answers to these questions lie in the secret world of the biological clock.

What is wrong with nudity? Why are people embarrassed about their bodies? How and why did they get the way they are? Horizon takes a group of volunteers and subjects them to a series of psychological and physical tests to challenge attitudes to the naked human form. The questions raised strike at the heart of human physical and social evolution. Human beings are the only creatures that can be 'naked' - but why, how and when did people lose their fur? That question takes Horizon around the world to meet scientists from Africa to Florida, and they are finding answers in unexpected places: the chest hair of Finnish students, the genetic history of lice, and the sweat of an unusual monkey. It turns out that something everyone takes for granted may hold the key to the success of the entire human species.

When disaster strikes who lives and who dies is not purely a matter of luck. In every disaster, from those people face once in a lifetime, to those they face every day, there are things that can be done to increase the chances of getting out alive. Horizon has gathered a team of leading experts to produce the ultimate guide to disaster survival. Through controversial experiments, computer simulations and analysis of hundreds of survivor testimonies from plane crashes to ferry disasters and even 9/11, they will reveal what happens in the mind in the moment of crisis and how the human brain can be programmed for survival.

David Baddiel, father of two, sets out to answer one of the greatest questions a parent can ask: how best to educate your child. Taking in the latest scientific research, David uncovers some unconventional approaches: from the parent hot-hosing his child to record-breaking feats of maths, to a school that pays hard cash for good grades. David witnesses a ground-breaking experiment that suggests a child's destiny can be predicted at four, and hears the three little words that can ruin a child's chance of success for good. He also uncovers the neurological basis for why teenagers can be stroppy and explosive and has his own brain tinkered with to experience what it is like to struggle at school. Through it all, David's quest remains true: to maximise his child's potential for success and happiness.

Last century, earthquakes killed over one million, and it is predicted that this century might see ten times as many deaths. Yet when an earthquake strikes, it always takes people by surprise. So why hasn't science worked out how to predict when and where the next big quake is going to happen? This is the story of the men and women who chase earthquakes and try to understand this mysterious force of nature. Journeying to China's Sichuan Province, which still lies devastated by the earthquake that struck in May 2008, as well as the notorious San Andreas Fault in California, Horizon asks why science has so far fallen short of answering this fundamental question.

Ever since he was at school, actor and comedian Alan Davies has hated maths. And like many people, he is not much good at it either. But Alan has always had a sneaking suspicion that he was missing out. So, with the help of top mathematician Professor Marcus du Sautoy, Alan is going to embark on a maths odyssey. Together they visit the fourth dimension, cross the universe and explore the concept of infinity. Along the way, Alan does battle with some of the toughest maths questions of our age. But did his abilities peak 25 years ago when he got his grade C O-Level? Or will Alan be able to master the most complex maths concept there is?

Season Finale

2009-05-12T20:00:00Z

46x11 How Violent Are You?

Season Finale

46x11 How Violent Are You?

  • 2009-05-12T20:00:00Z1h

What makes ordinary people commit extreme acts of violence? Michael Portillo investigates the dark side of human nature, and discovers what it is like to inflict pain.

Season Premiere

2009-10-13T20:00:00Z

47x01 Do I Drink Too Much?

Season Premiere

47x01 Do I Drink Too Much?

  • 2009-10-13T20:00:00Z1h

Alcohol is by far the most widely used drug - and a dangerous one at that. So why are so many of us drinking over the recommended limits? Why does alcohol have such a powerful grip on us? How much of our relationship with this drug is written in our genes? What are the real dangers of our children drinking too young? Addiction expert John Marsden, who likes a drink, makes a professional and personal exploration of our relationship with alcohol. He undergoes physical and neurological examinations to determine its impact, and finds out why some people will find it much harder than others to resist alcohol. Even at the age of 14 there may be a way of determining which healthy children will turn into addicts. John experiments with a designer drug being developed that hopes to replicate all the benefits of alcohol without the dangers. Could this drug replace alcohol in the future?

2009-10-20T20:00:00Z

47x02 The Secret You

47x02 The Secret You

  • 2009-10-20T20:00:00Z1h

With the help of a hammer-wielding scientist, Jennifer Aniston and a general anaesthetic, Professor Marcus du Sautoy goes in search of answers to one of science's greatest mysteries: how do we know who we are? While the thoughts that make us feel as though we know ourselves are easy to experience, they are notoriously difficult to explain. So, in order to find out where they come from, Marcus subjects himself to a series of probing experiments. He learns at what age our self-awareness emerges and whether other species share this trait. Next, he has his mind scrambled by a cutting-edge experiment in anaesthesia. Having survived that ordeal, Marcus is given an out-of-body experience in a bid to locate his true self. And in Hollywood, he learns how celebrities are helping scientists understand the microscopic activities of our brain. Finally, he takes part in a mind-reading experiment that both helps explain and radically alters his understanding of who he is.

2009-10-27T21:00:00Z

47x03 Fix Me

47x03 Fix Me

  • 2009-10-27T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows the emotional journey of three young people with currently untreatable conditions to see if, within their lifetime, they can be cured. Sophie Morgan is determined not to spend the rest of her life in a wheelchair. She is tempted by the online claims of unregulated private clinics promising a cure using stem cells. Anthony Bath was just 20 when his right leg was amputated after a botched pinning procedure. In Finland, Anthony witnesses one of the world's first operations in which stem cells are used to replace bone. Dean Third was diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy, a condition in which his damaged heart could cause his death at any moment. Desperate for a cure, he visits Dr Anthony Mathur from University College London to witness the world's first trial using stem cells taken from bone marrow.

Black holes are one of the most destructive forces in the universe, capable of tearing a planet apart and swallowing an entire star. Yet scientists now believe they could hold the key to answering the ultimate question - what was there before the Big Bang? The trouble is that researching them is next to impossible. Black holes are by definition invisible and there's no scientific theory able to explain them. Despite these obvious obstacles, Horizon meets the astronomers attempting to image a black hole for the very first time and the theoretical physicists getting ever closer to unlocking their mysteries. It's a story that takes us into the heart of a black hole and to the very edge of what we think we know about the universe.

2009-11-10T21:00:00Z

47x05 Why Do We Talk?

47x05 Why Do We Talk?

  • 2009-11-10T21:00:00Z1h

Talking is something that is unique to humans, yet it still remains a mystery. Horizon meets the scientists beginning to unlock the secrets of speech - including a father who is filming every second of his son's first three years in order to discover how we learn to talk, the autistic savant who can speak more than 20 languages, and the first scientist to identify a gene that makes speech possible.

Alan Davies attempts to answer the proverbial question: how long is a piece of string? But what appears to be a simple task soon turns into a mind-bending voyage of discovery where nothing is as it seems.

We have an extraordinary relationship with dogs - closer than with any other animal on the planet. But what makes the bond between us so special? Research into dogs is gaining momentum, and scientists are investigating them like never before. From the latest fossil evidence, to the sequencing of the canine genome, to cognitive experiments, dogs are fast turning into the new chimps as a window into understanding ourselves. Where does this relationship come from? In Siberia, a unique breeding experiment reveals the astonishing secret of how dogs evolved from wolves. Swedish scientists demonstrate how the human/dog bond is controlled by a powerful hormone also responsible for bonding mothers to their babies. Why are dogs so good at reading our emotions? Horizon meets Betsy, the world's most intelligent dog, and compares her incredible abilities to those of children. Man's best friend has recently gone one step further - helping us identify genes responsible for causing human diseases.

2010-01-13T21:00:00Z

47x08 Why Do Viruses Kill?

47x08 Why Do Viruses Kill?

  • 2010-01-13T21:00:00Z1h

Just months ago, the world stood in fear of an emerging new disease that threatened to kill millions. A new flu variant H1N1 had arrived. In the UK alone, 65,000 deaths were predicted. Yet to date, these dire warnings have not materialised. If this latest pandemic has taught anything, it is just how little is understood about the invisible world of viruses. But that has not stopped scientists trying. Horizon follows the leading researchers from across the world, who are attempting to unravel the many secrets of viruses to understand when and why they kill.

2010-01-20T21:00:00Z

47x09 Pill Poppers

47x09 Pill Poppers

  • 2010-01-20T21:00:00Z1h

Over a person's lifetime they are likely to be prescribed more than 14,000 pills. Antibiotics, cholesterol lowering tablets, anti-depressants, painkillers, even tablets to extend youth and improve performance in bed. These drugs perform minor miracles day after day, but how much is really known about them? Drug discovery often owes as much to serendipity as to science, and that means much is learnt about how medicines work, or even what they do, when they're taken. By investigating some of the most popular pills people pop, Horizon asks, how much can they be trusted to do what they are supposed to?

2010-02-03T21:00:00Z

47x10 Don't Grow Old

47x10 Don't Grow Old

  • 2010-02-03T21:00:00Z1h

For centuries scientists have been attempting to come up with an elixir of youth. Now remarkable discoveries are suggesting that ageing is something flexible that can ultimately be manipulated. Horizon meets the scientists who are attempting to piece together why we age and more vitally for all of us, what we can do to prevent it. But which theory will prevail? Does the 95-year-old woman who smokes two packets of cigarettes a day hold the clue? Do blueberries really delay signs of ageing or is it more a question of attitude? Does the real key to controlling how we age lie with a five-year-old boy with an extraordinary ageing disease or with a self-experimenting Harvard professor? Could one of these breakthroughs really see our lives extend past 120 years?

2010-02-10T21:00:00Z

47x11 To Infinity and Beyond

47x11 To Infinity and Beyond

  • 2010-02-10T21:00:00Z1h

By our third year, most of us will have learned to count. Once we know how, it seems as if there would be nothing to stop us counting forever. But, while infinity might seem like an perfectly innocent idea, keep counting and you enter a paradoxical world where nothing is as it seems. Mathematicians have discovered there are infinitely many infinities, each one infinitely bigger than the last. And if the universe goes on forever, the consequences are even more bizarre. In an infinite universe, there are infinitely many copies of the Earth and infinitely many copies of you. Older than time, bigger than the universe and stranger than fiction. This is the story of infinity.

2010-02-17T21:00:00Z

47x12 What Makes a Genius?

47x12 What Makes a Genius?

  • 2010-02-17T21:00:00Z1h

Could you have come up with Einstein's theory of relativity? If not - why not? This is what Marcus du Sautoy, professor of mathematics, wants to explore. Marcus readily admits that he is no genius, but wants to know if geniuses are just an extreme version of himself - or whether their brains are fundamentally different. Marcus meets some remarkable individuals - Tommy, an obsessive artist who uses his whole house as his canvas; Derek: blind, autistic, and a pianist with apparently prodigious gifts; Claire who is also blind, but whose brain has learnt to see using sound. Marcus is shown how babies have remarkable abilities which most of us lose as teenagers. He meets a neuroscientist who claims he has evidence of innate ability, a scientist who's identified a gene for learning, and Dr. Paulus, who has discovered how to sharpen the brain... by electrically turbo-charging it.

Horizon examines the evidence that our ancestors' changing diet and mastery of fire prompted anatomical and neurological changes that took us out of the trees and into the kitchen.

There's something very odd going on in space - something that shouldn't be possible. It is as though vast swathes of the universe are being hoovered up by a vast and unseen celestial vacuum cleaner. Sasha Kaslinsky, the scientist who discovered the phenomenon, is understandably nervous: 'It left us quite unsettled and jittery' he says, 'because this is not something we planned to find'. The accidental discovery of what is ominously being called 'dark flow' not only has implications for the destinies of large numbers of galaxies - it also means that large numbers of scientists might have to find a new way of understanding the universe. Dark flow is the latest in a long line of phenomena that have threatened to rewrite the textbooks. Does it herald a new era of understanding, or does it simply mean that everything we know about the universe is wrong?

Season Premiere

2010-09-27T20:00:00Z

48x01 Back from the Dead

Season Premiere

48x01 Back from the Dead

  • 2010-09-27T20:00:00Z1h

Dr Kevin Fong investigates a technique that is used to bring people back from the dead.

2010-10-04T20:00:00Z

48x02 The Death of the Oceans?

48x02 The Death of the Oceans?

  • 2010-10-04T20:00:00Z1h

Sir David Attenborough reveals the findings of one of the most ambitious scientific studies of our time - an investigation into what is happening to our oceans. He looks at whether it is too late to save their remarkable biodiversity. Horizon travels from the cold waters of the North Atlantic to the tropical waters of the Great Barrier Reef to meet the scientists who are transforming our understanding of this unique habitat. Attenborough explores some of the ways in which we are affecting marine life - from over-fishing to the acidification of sea water. The film also uncovers the disturbing story of how shipping noise is deafening whales and dolphins, affecting their survival in the future.

They are the biggest questions that science can possibly ask: where did everything in our universe come from? How did it all begin? For nearly a hundred years, we thought we had the answer: a big bang some 14 billion years ago. But now some scientists believe that was not really the beginning. Our universe may have had a life before this violent moment of creation. Horizon takes the ultimate trip into the unknown, to explore a dizzying world of cosmic bounces, rips and multiple universes, and finds out what happened before the big bang.

2010-10-18T20:00:00Z

48x04 Is Seeing Believing?

48x04 Is Seeing Believing?

  • 2010-10-18T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon explores the strange and wonderful world of illusions - and reveals the tricks they play on our senses and why they fool us. We show how easy it is to trick your sense of taste by changing the colours of food and drink, explain how what you see can change what you hear, and see just how unreliable our sense of colour can be. But all this trickery has a serious purpose. It's helping scientists to create a new understanding of how our senses work - not as individual senses, but connected together.

A decade ago, scientists announced that they had produced the first draft of the human genome, the 3.6 billion letters of our genetic code. It was seen as one of the greatest scientific achievements of our age, a breakthrough that would usher in a new age of medicine. A decade later, Horizon finds out how close we are to developing the life-changing treatments that were hoped for.

Famed for their ability to inflict Armageddon from outer space, asteroids are now revealing the secrets of how they are responsible for both life and death on our planet.

Horizon reveals the untold story of the 87-day battle to kill the Deepwater Horizon oil blowout a mile beneath the waves - a crisis that became America's worst environmental disaster. Engineers and oil men at the heart of the operation talk for the first time about the colossal engineering challenges they faced and how they had to improvise under extreme pressure. They tell of how they used household junk, discarded steel boxes and giant underwater cutting shears to stop the oil. It's an operation that one insider likens to the rescue of Apollo 13.

2011-01-10T21:00:00Z

48x08 What Is One Degree?

48x08 What Is One Degree?

  • 2011-01-10T21:00:00Z1h

Comedian Ben Miller returns to his roots as a physicist to try to answer a deceptively simple question: what is one degree of temperature? His quest takes him to the frontiers of current science as he meets researchers working on the hottest and coldest temperatures in the universe, and to a lab where he experiences some of the strangest effects of quantum physics - a place where super-cooled liquids simply pass through solid glass. Plus, Ben installs his very own Met office weather station at home. Ben's investigations in this personal and passionate film highlight the importance of measurement and accuracy in the 21st century.

2011-01-17T21:00:00Z

48x09 What Is Reality?

48x09 What Is Reality?

  • 2011-01-17T21:00:00Z1h

There is a strange and mysterious world that surrounds us, a world largely hidden from our senses. The quest to explain the true nature of reality is one of the great scientific detective stories. Clues have been pieced together from deep within the atom, from the event horizon of black holes, and from the far reaches of the cosmos. It may be that that we are part of a cosmic hologram, projected from the edge of the universe. Or that we exist in an infinity of parallel worlds. Your reality may never look quite the same again.

2011-01-24T21:00:00Z

48x10 Science Under Attack

48x10 Science Under Attack

  • 2011-01-24T21:00:00Z1h

Nobel Prize winner Sir Paul Nurse examines why science appears to be under attack, and why public trust in key scientific theories has been eroded - from the theory that man-made climate change is warming our planet, to the safety of GM food, or that HIV causes AIDS.

2011-01-31T21:00:00Z

48x11 The Secret World of Pain

48x11 The Secret World of Pain

  • 2011-01-31T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon reveals the latest research into one of the most mysterious and common human experiences - pain. Breakthroughs have come from studying a remarkable woman in London who has felt no pain at all in her life, a man in the US who cut off his own arm to survive, and three generations of an Italian family who don't feel extremes of temperature. We witness a new treatment that involves a pioneering computer game 'snow world' that contains the power to banish pain. And we find how powerfully our moods and emotions shape what pain we feel.

2011-02-07T21:00:00Z

48x12 Surviving a Car Crash

48x12 Surviving a Car Crash

  • 2011-02-07T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon meets the scientists working to make fatal car crashes a thing of the past. A remarkable fusion of mechanical engineering and biology promises to save countless lives across the world. The programme has exclusive access to the secretive world of the most advanced car crash tests. Horizon reveals how the latest advances in trauma medicine, psychology and even extreme sport are transforming your chances of surviving on the roads. And the programme shows how researchers are creating a new virtual crash test dummy that could change how our cars are designed forever.

Dr Kevin Fong finds out how close scientists are to being able to mend your heart if it stops working. He meets some of the people who have undergone pioneering heart operations and the scientists who are pushing the limits of cardiac treatment. We meet a man who has had his heart replaced with an artificial one powered by a mechanical pump he carries around in a rucksack, and witness a scientist bring a dead animal heart back to life on a workbench. Plus, the work of an American scientist who is using stem cells to turn what she calls a 'ghost heart' - the scaffold of a heart - into a replacement heart for humans.

2011-03-01T21:00:00Z

48x14 Are We Still Evolving?

48x14 Are We Still Evolving?

  • 2011-03-01T21:00:00Z1h

Dr Alice Roberts asks one of the great questions about our species: are we still evolving? There's no doubt that we're a product of millions of years of evolution. But thanks to modern technology and medicine, did we escape Darwin's law of the survival of the fittest? Alice follows a trail of clues from ancient human bones, to studies of remarkable people living in the most inhospitable parts of the planet, to the frontiers of genetic research to discover if we are still evolving - and where we might be heading.

Season Finale

2011-03-08T21:00:00Z

48x15 Predators in Your Backyard

Season Finale

48x15 Predators in Your Backyard

  • 2011-03-08T21:00:00Z1h

Across the world scientists are releasing predators, nature's ultimate killers, close to where people live. In Florida, a new population of panthers, feared as ambush predators, have been released near to the busy town of Naples. In the Italian Alps, bears have been reintroduced after they became virtually extinct, and now try to get into people's homes in the middle of the night. And in Yellowstone National Park, wolves have been brought back 70 years after they were exterminated. Horizon meets the scientist behind this radical scheme, and the people who now have to share their backyards with these predators.

Season Premiere

2011-08-08T20:00:00Z

49x01 Do You See What I See?

Season Premiere

49x01 Do You See What I See?

  • 2011-08-08T20:00:00Z1h

Documentary exploring the impact of colours on people's lives, and how perceptions of them can be influenced by age, gender and mood. The programme examines scientists' claims that different hues have hidden powers, from the winning properties of red to how blue seemingly makes time speed up.

2011-08-15T20:00:00Z

49x02 Seeing Stars

49x02 Seeing Stars

  • 2011-08-15T20:00:00Z1h

Around the world, a new generation of astronomers are hunting for the most mysterious objects in the universe. Young stars, black holes, even other forms of life. They have created a dazzling new set of super-telescopes that promise to rewrite the story of the heavens. This film follows the men and women who are pushing the limits of science and engineering in some of the most extreme environments on earth. But most striking of all, no-one really knows what they will find out there.

Horizon explores the secrets of what makes a long, healthy and happy life. It turns out that a time you can't remember - the nine months you spend in the womb - could have more lasting effects on you today than your lifestyle or genes. It is one of the most powerful and provocative new ideas in human science, and it was pioneered by a British scientist, Professor David Barker. His theory has inspired a field of study that is revealing how our time in the womb could affect your health, personality, and even the lives of your children.

2011-08-31T20:00:00Z

49x04 The Core

49x04 The Core

  • 2011-08-31T20:00:00Z1h

For centuries we have dreamt of reaching the centre of the Earth. Now scientists are uncovering a bizarre and alien world that lies 4,000 miles beneath our feet, unlike anything we know on the surface. It is a planet buried within the planet we know, where storms rage within a sea of white-hot metal and a giant forest of crystals make up a metal core the size of the Moon. Horizon follows scientists who are conducting experiments to recreate this core within their own laboratories, with surprising results.

2011-09-07T20:00:00Z

49x05 Are You Good or Evil?

49x05 Are You Good or Evil?

  • 2011-09-07T20:00:00Z1h

What makes us good or evil? It's a simple but deeply unsettling question. One that scientists are now starting to answer. Horizon meets the researchers who have studied some of the most terrifying people behind bars - psychopathic killers. But there was a shock in store for one of these scientists, Professor Jim Fallon, when he discovered that he had the profile of a psychopath. And the reason he didn't turn out to be a killer holds important lessons for all of us. We meet the scientist who believes he has found the moral molecule and the man who is using this new understanding to rewrite our ideas of crime and punishment.

Six months after the explosions at the Fukushima nuclear plant and the release of radiation there, Professor Jim Al-Khalili sets out to discover whether nuclear power is safe. He begins in Japan, where he meets some of the tens of thousands of people who have been evacuated from the exclusion zone. He travels to an abandoned village just outside the zone to witness a nuclear clean-up operation. Jim draws on the latest scientific findings from Japan and from the previous explosion at Chernobyl to understand how dangerous the release of radiation is likely to be and what that means for our trust in nuclear power.

2012-01-17T21:00:00Z

49x07 Playing God

49x07 Playing God

  • 2012-01-17T21:00:00Z1h

Adam Rutherford meets a new creature created by American scientists, the spider-goat. It is part goat, part spider, and its milk can be used to create artificial spider's web. It is part of a new field of research, synthetic biology, with a radical aim: to break down nature into spare parts so that we can rebuild it however we please. This technology is already being used to make bio-diesel to power cars. Other researchers are looking at how we might, one day, control human emotions by sending 'biological machines' into our brains.

2012-02-28T21:00:00Z

49x08 The Truth About Exercise

Like many, Michael Mosley want to get fitter and healthier but can't face hours on the treadmill or trips to the gym. Help may be at hand. He uncovers the surprising new research which suggests many of us could benefit from just three minutes of high intensity exercise a week. He discovers the hidden power of simple activities like walking and fidgeting, and finds out why some of us don't respond to exercise at all Using himself as a guinea pig, Michael uncovers the surprising new research about exercise, that has the power to make us all live longer and healthier lives.

Scientists are expecting a fit of violent activity on the sun which will propel billions of tonnes of superheated gas and pulses of energy towards our planet. They have the power to close down our modern technological civilization. Horizon meets the space weathermen who are trying to predict what's coming our way, and organistions like the National Grid which are preparing for the impending solar storms.

2012-03-13T21:00:00Z

49x10 Out of Control?

49x10 Out of Control?

  • 2012-03-13T21:00:00Z1h

We all like to think we are in control of our lives - of what we feel and what we think. But scientists are now discovering this is often simply an illusion. Surprising experiments are revealing that what you think you do and what you actually do can be very different. Your unconscious mind is often calling the shots, influencing the decisions you make, from what you eat to who you fall in love with. If you think you are really in control of your life, you may have to think again.

2012-03-27T20:00:00Z

49x11 Global Weirding

49x11 Global Weirding

  • 2012-03-27T20:00:00Z1h

Something weird seems to be happening to our weather - it appears to be getting more extreme. In the past few years we have shivered through two record-breaking cold winters and parts of the country have experienced intense droughts and torrential floods. It is a pattern that appears to be playing out across the globe. Hurricane chasers are recording bigger storms and in Texas, record-breaking rain has been followed by record-breaking drought. Horizon follows the scientists who are trying to understand what's been happening to our weather and investigates if these extremes are a taste of whats to come.

2012-03-20T21:00:00Z

49x12 The Truth about Fat

49x12 The Truth about Fat

  • 2012-03-20T21:00:00Z1h

Surgeon Gabriel Weston discovers the surprising truth about why so many people are piling on the pounds, and how to fight the fat epidemic. She discovers the hidden battles of hormones that control people's appetites, and sees the latest surgery that fundamentally changes what a patient wants to eat by altering how their brains work. Gabriel is shocked to find out that when it comes to being overweight, it is not always your fault you are fat.

Season Finale

2012-04-10T20:00:00Z

49x13 Defeating Cancer

Season Finale

49x13 Defeating Cancer

  • 2012-04-10T20:00:00Z1h

Over the past year, Horizon has been behind the scenes at one of Britain's leading cancer hospitals, the Royal Marsden in London. The film follows Rosemary, Phil and Ray as they undergo remarkable new treatments - from a billion pound genetically targeted drug designed to fight a type of skin cancer, to advanced robotic surgery. We witness the breakthroughs in surgery and in scientific research that are offering new hope and helping to defeat a disease that more than one in three of us will develop at some stage of our lives.

Season Premiere

2012-07-23T20:00:00Z

50x01 The Truth About Looking Young

Season Premiere

50x01 The Truth About Looking Young

  • 2012-07-23T20:00:00Z1h

Plastic surgeon Dr Rozina Ali leaves the operating theatre behind for the frontiers of skin science and asks if it is possible to make your skin look younger without surgery. She discovers the latest research about how the foods we eat can protect our skin from damage, and how a chemical found in a squid's eye is at the forefront of a new sun protection cream. She also finds out how sugar in our blood can make us look older, and explores an exciting new science called glycobiology which promises a breakthrough in making us look younger.

2012-07-30T20:00:00Z

50x02 Mission to Mars

50x02 Mission to Mars

  • 2012-07-30T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon goes behind the scenes at NASA as they countdown to the landing of a 2.5 billion-dollar rover on the surface of Mars. In six days time, the nuclear-powered vehicle - the size of a car - will be winched down onto the surface of the Red Planet from a rocket-powered crane. That's if things go according to plan: Mars has become known as the Bermuda Triangle of space because so many missions there have ended in failure. The Curiosity mission is the most audacious - and expensive - attempt to answer the question: is there life on Mars?

Michael Mosley has set himself a truly ambitious goal: he wants to live longer, stay younger and lose weight in the bargain. And he wants to make as few changes to his life as possible along the way. He discovers the powerful new science behind the ancient idea of fasting, and he thinks he's found a way of doing it that still allows him to enjoy his food. Michael tests out the science of fasting on himself - with life-changing results.

2012-08-27T20:00:00Z

50x04 How Big Is the Universe?

50x04 How Big Is the Universe?

  • 2012-08-27T20:00:00Z1h

Cosmologists talk about their project to create a map of everything in existence, and also reveal that their research has some highly unexpected results, creating a picture stranger than anything they had ever imagined.

Horizon plunges down the biggest rabbit-hole in history in search of the smallest thing in the Universe. It is a journey where things don't just become smaller but also a whole lot weirder. Scientists hope to catch a glimpse of miniature black holes, multiple dimensions and even parallel Universes. As they start to explore this wonderland, where nothing is quite what it seems, they may have to rewrite the fundamental laws of time and space.

2012-09-10T20:00:00Z

50x06 Defeating the Superbugs

50x06 Defeating the Superbugs

  • 2012-09-10T20:00:00Z1h

Across the world we are seeing the emergence of bacteria that have gone rogue. These are the superbugs, dangerous bacteria that are becoming resistant to our only defense; antibiotics. Horizon meets the scientists who are tracking the spread of these potential killers around the globe, and discovers the new techniques researchers are developing to help defeat these superbugs.

It is a feeling we all know - the moment when a light goes on in your head. In a sudden flash of inspiration, a new idea is born. Today, scientists are using some unusual techniques to try to work out how these moments of creativity - whether big, small or life-changing - come about. They have devised a series of puzzles and brainteasers to draw out our creative behaviour, while the very latest neuroimaging technology means researchers can actually peer inside our brains and witness the creative spark as it happens. What they are discovering could have the power to make every one of us more creative.

A&E doctor Kevin Fong finds out how doctors can avoid making mistakes in the high-pressure, high-stakes world of the operating theatre. He sets out to learn how other professionals make life and death decisions under pressure, from airline pilots facing emergencies, to the Fire Service dealing with lethal blazes, to the world of Formula One pit crews. Kevin discovers how all these fields are helping to make surgery safer.

2013-03-28T21:00:00Z

50x09 The Truth about Taste

50x09 The Truth about Taste

  • 2013-03-28T21:00:00Z1h

Taste is our most indulgent sense but it is only in recent years that we have started to understand why we really love the foods we do - and it is a lot more surprising than you might think. There may a way to make food taste sweeter without adding any extra sugar and it is all down to a trick that happens in your brain. Horizon meets the scientist who has grown the perfect tomato, that is sweeter and juicier than anything you are likely to find on a shelf, as well as the men and women hoping to become elite, professional tasters.

2013-04-04T20:00:00Z

50x10 The Age of Big Data

50x10 The Age of Big Data

  • 2013-04-04T20:00:00Z1h

In Los Angeles, a remarkable experiment is underway; the police are trying to predict crime, before it even happens. At the heart of the city of London, one trader believes that he has found the secret of making billions with math. In South Africa, astronomers are attempting to catalogue the entire cosmos. These very different worlds are united by one thing - an extraordinary explosion in data. Horizon meets the people at the forefront of the data revolution, and reveals the possibilities and the promise of the age of big data

Horizon discovers what your cat really gets up to when it leaves the cat flap. In a groundbreaking experiment, 50 cats from a village in Surrey are tagged with GPS collars and their every movement is recorded, day and night, as they hunt in our backyards and patrol the garden fences and hedgerows. Cats are fitted with specially developed cat-cams which reveal their unique view of our world. You may think you understand your pet, but their secret life is more surprising than we thought.

2013-06-14T20:00:00Z

50x12 Little Cat Diaries

50x12 Little Cat Diaries

  • 2013-06-14T20:00:00Z1h

50 cats were fitted with GPS collars to track their every movement, and cat-cams to record their unique view of the world. In this groundbreaking experiment, a few cats stood out. They include the intruder cat, an unneutered tomcat, who comes into the village and seems to have no owner; the hunter, who prefers food that he can catch and kill to anything his owners might buy him; and the deserter cat who has abandoned his home in favour of a new set of owners. This film reveals that the relationship between cats and their owners isn't quite what we imagine.

Iain Stewart investigates a new and controversial energy rush for the natural gas found deep underground. Sometimes, this is right under the places people live in. Getting it out of the ground involves hydraulic fracturing - or fracking. Iain travels to America to find to find out what it is, why it is a potential game changer and what we can learn from the US experience. He meets some of the people who have become rich from fracking as well as the communities worried about the risks.

This summer, the black hole at the centre of the Milky Way is getting ready to feast. A gas cloud three times the size of our planet has strayed within the gravitational reach of our nearest supermassive black hole. And across the globe, telescopes are being trained on the heart of our Milky Way galaxy, some 27,000 light years from Earth, in the expectation of observing this unique cosmic spectacle. For cosmic detectives across the Earth, it is a unique opportunity. For the first time in the history of science, they hope to observe in action the awesome spectacle of a feeding supermassive black hole.

2013-07-03T20:00:00Z

50x15 What Makes us Human?

50x15 What Makes us Human?

  • 2013-07-03T20:00:00Z1h

Professor Alice Roberts is making a new human being - she is pregnant with her second child. But before he is born, she wants to find out what makes a human, human? What is that separates us from our closest living relatives - the chimpanzees? We share 99% of our DNA with chimpanzees and yet from the moment of birth, our lives are completely different. So are we just another animal, or is there something special about being human? Before her new baby emerges into the world, Professor Roberts sets out to explore what it is about our bodies, our genes and ultimately our brains that set us apart from our furry cousins - what is it that truly makes us human?

Season Finale

2013-07-10T20:00:00Z

50x16 The Truth About Personality

Season Finale

50x16 The Truth About Personality

  • 2013-07-10T20:00:00Z1h

Michael Mosley explores the latest science about how our personalities are created - and whether they can be changed. Despite appearances, Mosley is a pessimist who constantly frets about the future. He wants to worry less and become more of an optimist. He tries out two techniques to change this aspect of his personality - with surprising results. And he travels to the frontiers of genetics and neuroscience to find out about the forces that shape all our personalities.

Season Premiere

2013-08-12T20:00:00Z

51x01 Monitor Me

Season Premiere

51x01 Monitor Me

  • 2013-08-12T20:00:00Z1h

Dr Kevin Fong explores a medical revolution that promises to help us live longer, healthier lives. Inspired by the boom in health-related apps and gadgets, it's all about novel ways we can monitor ourselves around the clock. How we exercise, how we sleep, even how we sit.

2013-08-19T20:00:00Z

51x02 Defeating the Hackers

51x02 Defeating the Hackers

  • 2013-08-19T20:00:00Z1h

Exploring the murky and fast-paced world of the hackers out to steal money and identities and wreak havoc with people's online lives, and the scientists who are joining forces to help defeat them. Horizon meets the two men who uncovered the world's first cyber weapon, the pioneers of what is called ultra paranoid computing, and the computer expert who worked out how to hack into cash machines.

The hunt for life within the long-dead bones of dinosaurs may sound like the stuff of Hollywood fantasy - but one woman has found traces of life within the fossilised bones of a T Rex. Dr Mary Schweitzer has seen the remains of red blood cells and touched the soft tissue of an animal that died 68 million years ago. Most excitingly of all, she believes she may just have found signs of DNA. Her work is revolutionising our understanding of these iconic beasts.

2014-01-29T21:00:00Z

51x04 Sugar v Fat

51x04 Sugar v Fat

  • 2014-01-29T21:00:00Z1h

What's worse for us: sugar or fat? To answer the hottest question in nutrition, twin doctors Chris and Xand Van Tulleken go on month long high-fat and high-sugar diets. The effects on their bodies are shocking and surprising. But they also discover that in the debate about fat and sugar, the real enemy might have been hiding in plain sight.

2014-02-03T21:00:00Z

51x05 Swallowed by a Sink Hole

51x05 Swallowed by a Sink Hole

  • 2014-02-03T21:00:00Z1h

In February 2013, a hole opened up beneath a home in Florida, and swallowed a man. Jeff Bush was asleep when a sinkhole opened up beneath his bedroom. Despite the efforts of his brother to rescue him, Jeff was never seen again and his body was never recovered. Professor Iain Stewart travels to Florida to try and understand what killed Jeff, and why the geology of this state makes it the sinkhole capital of the world.

Horizon goes behind the scenes at Nasa to discover how it is preparing for its most ambitious and daring mission: to land men - and possibly women - on the surface of Mars. It's over 40 years since Neil Armstrong made the first human footprint on the moon. But getting to the red planet would involve a journey of at least three years. Horizon meets the scientists and engineers who are designing new rockets, new space suits and finding ways to help astronauts survive the perils of this long voyage. And it turns out that having the 'right stuff' for a mission to mars might not be quite what you expect.

2014-02-17T21:00:00Z

51x07 The Power of the Placebo

51x07 The Power of the Placebo

  • 2014-02-17T21:00:00Z1h

As they contain no active ingredient, placebo medicines and pills should not really work, but they are now being shown to be effective in helping treat pain and depression and even alleviating some of the symptoms of Parkinson's disease. This programme explores why they work and how everyone could benefit from them.

Horizon uncovers the truth about how you really make decisions. Every day you make thousands of decisions, big and small, and behind all them is a powerful battle in your mind, pitting intuition against logic. This conflict affects every aspect of your life - from what you eat to what you believe, and especially to how you spend your money. And it turns out that the intuitive part of your mind is a lot more powerful than you may realise.

2014-04-01T20:00:00Z

51x09 Living with Autism

51x09 Living with Autism

  • 2014-04-01T20:00:00Z1h

When pioneering developmental psychologist Professor Uta Frith started her training back in the 1960s, she met a group of beautiful, bright-eyed young children who seemed completely detached from the rest of the world. It turned out they had just been given the then-new diagnosis of autism. Uta passionately wanted to know more about these children, and they inspired her to dedicate the rest of her career to studying the autistic mind. On the eve of National Autism Day, Horizon reveals how Uta's lifetime study of people with autism has transformed our understanding of this mysterious condition. In this film Uta shows how people with autism perceive and interact with the world and how, for them, another kind of reality exists. She meets people with autism who have extraordinary talents, and explains why they often fail to understand jokes. She also explores whether many of us could be just a little bit autistic.

2014-06-17T20:00:00Z

51x10 Where is Flight MH370?

51x10 Where is Flight MH370?

  • 2014-06-17T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon tells the inside story of the search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. With access to the key players on the frontline in the southern Indian Ocean and the British satellite engineers who tracked the plane's final hours, Horizon breaks open the biggest mystery in aviation history. The film reveals how MH370 disappeared in a radar blind spot; what investigators believe happened to the aircraft in its last minutes; and how the area in which it could be found is still to be searched. Plus Horizon examines the new technologies, like black box streaming and enhanced air traffic surveillance, that mean an airliner should never vanish without trace again.

Season Finale

2014-07-17T20:00:00Z

51x12 What's Wrong with Our Weather?

Season Finale

51x12 What's Wrong with Our Weather?

  • 2014-07-17T20:00:00Z1h

Over the last few years, our weather in Britain has become more extreme. Last winter was the wettest ever recorded, as deadly storms battered the country for weeks on end. But previous winters have seen bitter lows of -22, as Britain was plunged into a deep freeze. What everyone wants to know now is: why is our weather getting more extreme, can we expect to see more of it in the future, and has it got anything to do with climate change? In this episode of Horizon, physicist Dr Helen Czerski and meteorologist John Hammond make sense of Britain's recent extreme weather and discover that there is one thing that connects all our recent extreme winters - the jet stream, an invisible river of air that powers along 10 km above us. What's worrying is that recently it has been behaving rather strangely. Scientists are now trying to understand what is behind these changes in the jet stream. Helen and John find out if extreme winters are something we may all have to get used to in the future.

Season Premiere

2014-08-18T20:00:00Z

52x01 Should I Eat Meat? The Big Health Dilemma

Season Premiere

52x01 Should I Eat Meat? The Big Health Dilemma

  • 2014-08-18T20:00:00Z1h

Michael Mosley investigates the alleged danger in eating red and processed meat, and does a one month test on himself, doubling his meat intake.

Dr Michael Mosley seeks to establish the truth about meat. Every year, humans raise and eat 65 billion animals - nine animals for every person on the globe. In this eye-opening documentary, Michael examines the impact that this is having on the planet and finds out what meat eco-friendly carnivores should be buying. Is it better to buy free-range organic or factory-farmed meat? The answers are far from obvious.

Changes to the bacteria that live inside all of us are responsible for increasing the number of people with allergies, suggests new research. The show investigates this claim by conducting a unique experiment with two allergic families in order to find out just what it is in the modern world that is to blame. With a raft of mini cameras, GPS units and the very latest gene sequencing technology, the show discovers how the western lifestyle is impacting their bacteria. Why are these changes making people allergic? And what can be done to put a stop to the allergy epidemic?

2014-09-03T20:00:00Z

52x04 Inside the Dark Web

52x04 Inside the Dark Web

  • 2014-09-03T20:00:00Z1h

Twenty-five years after the world wide web was created, it is now caught in the greatest controversy of its existence: surveillance. With many concerned that governments and corporations can monitor our every move, Horizon meets the hackers and scientists whose technology is fighting back. It is a controversial technology, and some law enforcement officers believe it is leading to 'risk-free crime' on the 'dark web' - a place where almost anything can be bought, from guns and drugs to credit card details.

The Ebola virus. No-one knows exactly where it comes from but one thing is certain - it's one of the most virulent infections known to science. This special episode of Horizon meets the scientists and doctors from all around the world looking for the cure and hears first-hand accounts of what it's actually like to catch - and survive - this terrible disease.

Dr Michael Mosley and Professor Alice Roberts investigate if male and female brains really are wired differently.

New planets are now being discovered outside our solar system on a regular basis, and these strange new worlds are forcing scientists to rewrite the history of our own solar system. Far from a simple story of stable orbits, the creation of our solar system is a tale of hellfire, chaos and planetary pinball.

Horizon travels to the South Pole to tell the inside story of the greatest scientific quest of our time. In March 2014, a team of astronomers stunned the scientific world when they announced that their BICEP2 telescope at the South Pole had possibly detected a signal of “gravitational waves” from the early universe. This is the inside story of the hunt for gravitational waves from the beginning of time. How the BICEP2 team came close to making one of the greatest discoveries of the century – and what happened when it all began to unravel...

Scientists genuinely don't know what most of our universe is made of. The atoms we're made from only make up four per cent. The rest is dark matter and dark energy (for 'dark', read 'don't know'). The Large Hadron Collider at CERN has been upgraded. When it's switched on in March 2015, its collisions will have twice the energy they did before. The hope is that scientists will discover the identity of dark matter in the debris.

The team investigate the use of modern medical technology to scan Egyptian animal mummies from museums across the world. By creating 3-D images of their content, experts are discovering the truth about the strange role animals played in ancient Egyptian belief. This episode of Horizon meets the scientists working in Egypt who are exploring the ancient underground catacombs where mummies were originally buried to reveal why the ancient Egyptians mummified millions and millions of animals.

How bad can our drinking pattern be for our health? Doctors and genetically identical twins Chris and Xand van Tulleken want to find out. With the current drinking guidelines under review, the twins embark on self-experimentation to see the effects of different drinking patterns on their health. With Chris drinking 21 units spread evenly across the week and Xand having his 21 in single weekly binges, how will their bodies differ after a month? Catching up with the latest research into alcohol drinking patterns, we ask if moderate drinking is genuinely good for us - and whether binge drinking is really that bad.

In 2014, the International Space Station had to move three times to avoid lethal chunks of space debris and there is an increasing problem of satellites mysteriously breaking down. With first-hand accounts from astronauts and experts, Horizon reveals the scale of the problem of space junk. Our planet is surrounded by hundreds of millions of pieces of junk moving at 17,000 miles per hour. Now the US government is investing a billion dollars to track them, and companies around the world are developing ways to clear up their mess - from robot arms to nets and harpoons. Horizon investigates the science behind the hit film Gravity and discovers the reality is far more worrying than the Hollywood fiction.

Michael Mosley puts himself through a battery of health tests available to people who feel perfectly well. From an expensive heart scan to a new national screening procedure to detect the earliest signs of bowel cancer, Mosley sets out to discover which if any of the tests are worth doing.

2015-08-19T20:00:00Z

52x14 First Britons

52x14 First Britons

  • 2015-08-19T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon reveals how new archaeological discoveries are painting a different picture of the very first native Britons. For centuries it's been thought that these hunter-gatherers lived a brutal, hand-to-mouth existence. But extraordinary new evidence has forced scientists to rethink who these people were, where they came from and what impact they had on our early history. Now, our impression is of a hardy, sophisticated people who withstood centuries of extreme climate change and a devastating tsunami that was to give birth to the island nation of Britain. Their way of life may even have survived beyond its greatest ever threat - the farming revolution.

Most of us think that Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is just over fussy tidying. But it's actually much more serious. Sophie has to check that she hasn't killed people, looking for dead bodies wherever she goes, Richard is terrified of touching the bin, and Nanda is about to have pioneering brain surgery to stop her worrying about components on her body - that her eyebrow might not be aligned or that she has bad breath. Professor Uta Frith meets the people living with OCD, looks at the therapy available and asks what neuroscience can offer by way of a cure.

Imagine a world where dinosaurs still walk the earth. A world where the Germans won World War II and you are President of the United States. Imagine a world where the laws of physics no longer apply and where infinite copies of you are playing out every storyline of your life. It sounds like a plot stolen straight from Hollywood, but far from it. This is the multiverse Until very recently the whole idea of the multiverse was dismissed as a fantasy, but now this strangest of ideas is at the cutting edge of science.And for a growing number of scientists, the multiverse is the only way we will ever truly make sense of the world we are in. Horizon asks the question: Do multiple universes exist? And if so, which one are we actually in?

Forget the big bang. The real moment of creation was the Cosmic Dawn - the moment of first light. This is the scientific version of the story of Genesis. The big bang gets all the credit for creating our universe. But in fact, the universe it gave was dark and boring. There were no stars, no galaxies, just a vast, black fog of gas - the cosmic dark ages. But, after a hundred million years of nothing, came a dramatic moment of transformation - the Cosmic Dawn. It's the moment the first stars were born, the moment that lit up the Universe, and made the first structure and the first ingredients of life. This was the real moment of creation. Astronomers are now trying to witness the cosmic dawn. For the first time they have the tools to explore the very first stars of the universe and to tell the scientific story of our creation.

Season Finale

2015-09-16T20:00:00Z

52x18 Are Video Games Really That Bad?

Season Finale

52x18 Are Video Games Really That Bad?

  • 2015-09-16T20:00:00Z1h

The video game industry is a global phenomenon. There are over 1.2 billion gamers across the planet, with sales projected soon to pass $100 billion per year. But their very popularity fuels the controversy that surrounds them. They frequently stand accused of corrupting the young - of causing violence and addiction. But is this true? Horizon reveals a scientific community deeply divided. Some are convinced that video games incite aggression. Others insist they have no effect whatsoever on real-world violence. But away from the controversy, there is a growing body of evidence that suggests video games may help keep the brain sharp, and could soon revolutionize how we combat mental decline as we age.

Season Premiere

2016-03-16T21:00:00Z

53x01 The Immortalist

Season Premiere

53x01 The Immortalist

  • 2016-03-16T21:00:00Z1h

Investigating the story of how a Russian internet millionaire, Dmitry Itskov, is turning to cutting edge science to try to unlock the secret of living forever. The programme investigates the real science inspiring his bold plan to upload the human mind to a computer, and examines whether his goal of bringing about immortality for humans within thirty years is attainable.

Documentary exploring science's long-standing obsession with the idea of gravity control, including recent breakthroughs in the search for loopholes in conventional physics. The programme examines how the groundwork carried out by Project Greenglow in the mid-1990s by UK defence manufacturer BAE Systems (based on the work of Eugene Podkletnov[82]) has changed the understanding of the universe, making the dream of flying cars and journeys to the stars no longer quite so distant.

Examining Dark Energy, the mysterious force that is unexpectedly causing the universe's expansion to speed up. Its effects were discovered in 1998, but physicists still do not know what it is, and its very existence calls into question Albert Einstein's General Theory of Relativity; the cornerstone of modern physics. The hunt for the identity of Dark Energy is on, and although experiments conducted on earth and in space generate data that might provide a clue, physics is hoping another Einstein might emerge and write a new theory that explains the mystery.

The oceans define the earth. They are crucial to life and we used to think that they were unique to our blue planet. But we were wrong. It has recently been discovered that there are oceans all over our solar system and they are very similar to our own. And now scientists are going on an epic journey in search of new life in places that never seemed possible. Nasa is even planning to dive to the depths of a strange, distant ocean in a remarkable submarine. Horizon discovers that the hunt for oceans in space is marking the dawn of a new era in the search for alien life.

This is the story of how our solar system will be transformed by the aging sun before coming to a spectacular end in about eight billion years. Astronomers can peer into the far future to predict how it will happen by analysing distant galaxies, stars and even planets in their final moments. In this film, Horizon brings these predictions to life in a peaceful midwestern town that has a giant scale model of the solar system spread out all over the city. As it ages, the sun will bloat into a red giant star, swallowing planets... as well as half the town. The fate of the Earth itself hangs in the balance. How will the solar system end?

Liz Bonnin presents a controversial and provocative episode of Horizon, investigating how new scientific research is raising hard questions about zoos - the film explores how and why zoos keep animals, and whether they need to change to keep up with modern science or ultimately be consigned to history. Should zoos cull their animals to manage populations? Liz travels to Copenhagen Zoo, who killed a giraffe and fed it to the lions, to witness their culling process first hand. They think it is a natural part of zoo keeping that is often swept under the carpet. Should some animals never be kept in captivity? In a world exclusive, Liz visits SeaWorld in Florida and asks if captivity drove one of their orcas to kill his trainer. But could zoos be the answer to conserving endangered species? Liz examines their record, from helping breed pandas for the wild to efforts to save the rhinos. She meets one of the last surviving northern white rhinos and discovers the future of this species now lies in a multimillion-dollar programme to engineer them from stem cells. Veteran conservation scientist Dr Sarah Bexell tells Liz the science of captive breeding is giving humanity false hope.

2016-04-25T20:00:00Z

53x07 How to Find Love Online

Dr Xand Van Tulleken is single and looking for love. Mathematician Dr Hannah Fry wants to use him as her guinea pig to test whether the algorithms that dating sites use to match people actually work. While Hannah builds a dating site, Xand meets the scientists investigating online dating - and learns what pictures to use and what to write in his profile. He tries out a 'bot' that has automated a swiping app and has an MRI scan to find out whether his brain is equipped for love. 50 members of the public take part in some mini experiments at a date night - and Xand goes on various dates to test whether the algorithm is better than him choosing randomly.

2016-05-04T20:00:00Z

53x08 Ice Station Antarctica

Antarctica is the last great wilderness. It's the coldest, windiest, driest and most isolated place on Earth. And every winter, for over three months of the year, the sun never rises. But it's also home to the British Antarctic Survey's Halley Research Station. A veteran of living and working at Halley in the early eighties, BBC weatherman Peter Gibbs makes an emotional return to the place he once called home. A place that, during his time, was key to the discovery of the ozone hole. The journey starts with an arduous 12-day, 3000-mile voyage onboard the RRS Ernest Shackleton. Once on the ice shelf, Peter is delighted to finally arrive at the futuristic research station and marvels at the cutting edge science being done at Halley today. From vital discoveries about how our lives are vulnerable to the sun's activities, to studying interplanetary travel and the threat of man-made climate change. But Peter's journey is also something of a rescue mission. The research station's home is a floating ice shelf that constantly moves and cracks, and the ice shelf has developed a chasm that could cast Halley adrift on a massive iceberg.

2016-05-11T20:00:00Z

53x09 Curing Alzheimer's

53x09 Curing Alzheimer's

  • 2016-05-11T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates a new era of Alzheimer's research, which is bringing hope to millions of sufferers across the world. New scanning and gene technology is allowing scientists to identify the disease at its earliest stages, often 15 years before symptoms appear and the brain cells are destroyed. A series of new drugs trials in Colombia, the USA and Europe are showing startling success in reducing beta amyloid, the protein which is a hallmark of the disease. It is also becoming clear that changes in lifestyle can prevent the development of the disease. A new system inside the brain has been discovered which clears amyloid when we are in deep sleep, but allows it to accumulate if we don't sleep well. The programme reveals that for sufferers in the early stages of the disease, brain connections, or synapses, can be strengthened and even replaced by absorbing enough of the right nutrients. A UK-wide trail helps sufferers in the early stages to concentrate on improving everyday tasks, and in the process not only make their lives easier, but helps to reactivate the planning and organisational parts of the brain. In an aging world, where the biggest risk of developing Alzheimer's is old age, the scientific breakthroughs in Alzheimer's disease are bringing hope where once there was despair.

Michael Mosley investigates the dramatic rise in e-cigarettes. They're everywhere these days, but what does the latest scientific research on them reveal? Michael reveals what e-cigarettes are really doing to your health. Are they really better for you than cigarettes? What is actually in them? Is passive vapour harmful? And can they really stop you from smoking? Michael meets some of the scientists around the world studying them, asks a group of volunteers to try to give up smoking regular cigarettes using them, and even takes up 'vaping' himself, smoking an e-cigarette every day for a month to see the effects on his own health - no easy task for such a committed non-smoker.

Over 62% of adults in the UK are currently overweight or obese and this figure is set to rise. A common attitude is that obese people should be ashamed - it is their fault, they have no will power and if they could just 'eat less and exercise more', the problem would soon be solved. Yet, despite millions of pounds being spent on this simple message, the UK is getting fatter every year. Cambridge geneticist Dr Giles Yeo believes that for many obese people, simply eating less is a lot harder than you might think - and he is taking a road trip around the UK and America to uncover why. He meets the real people behind some of the more shocking newspaper headlines and, through their stories, reveals surprising truths which dispel commonly held myths about obesity. He gains access to scientists and doctors trialling cutting-edge techniques to tackle the crisis - from a 'miracle' hormone injection to a transfusion of faecal matter, and even learns a thing or two about his own size and relationship with food.

Dr Xand van Tulleken investigates the world of performance-enhancing drugs - from the athletes seeking the rewards of fame, glory and lucrative sponsorship deals to the hundreds of thousands of people in the UK now regularly taking anabolic steroids to look good and buff up. What are these drugs? What do they do to the body? And is it worth it? Xand's investigation reveals the extraordinary gamble dopers take with their health. Long-term effects include kidney failure, cognitive impairment and testicular shrinkage, and Xand witnesses how users are self-experimenting with drugs that have not yet been approved for human use. Horizon uncovers the new frontier of doping, from new molecules to gene therapy - where the genes that control muscle growth are altered. These new methods could be completely undetectable by the doping authorities. Finally, with the help of his twin brother Chris, Xand discovers the legal ways some athletes try to gain the edge.

2016-08-10T20:00:00Z

53x13 Inside CERN

53x13 Inside CERN

  • 2016-08-10T20:00:00Z1h

With exclusive behind-the-scenes access, Horizon follows the highs and lows of an extraordinary story in particle physics. In June 2015, teams at CERN started running the large hadron collider at the highest energy ever. Rumours quickly emerged that they were on the brink of a huge discovery. A mysterious bump in some data suggested a first glimpse of a brand new particle that could change our understanding of how the universe works. A new particle could hint at extra dimensions and help us understand the very beginning of the universe - but first the team has to find it. Horizon follows the scientists as they hunt for the elusive signals that would prove if there is a new particle or if it is just noise from their machine.

2016-08-25T20:00:00Z

53x14 My Amazing Twin

53x14 My Amazing Twin

  • 2016-08-25T20:00:00Z1h

The acerbically witty and severely facially disfigured broadcaster Adam Pearson presents a personal film about genetics. He and his twin brother Neil are genetically identical and both share the same genetic disease, Neurofibromatosis 1 (Nf1) - yet they are completely different. Adam's face is covered with growths, whereas Neil has none. Neil has short term memory loss, whereas Adam is razor sharp. How can the same genetic disease affect identical twins so differently? Adam is on the cusp of a successful film and television career, but the disease has left tumours on his face that are growing out of control and he could lose his sight. For years, everyone thought Adam's brother Neil had escaped symptoms, but today his life is governed by epilepsy and a mysterious memory loss that suddenly came on during his teens. Determined to save their future, Adam tries to find out why the disease affects the twins so differently and see if there is anything he can do to stop it from tearing their lives apart.

Alice Roberts explores the latest discoveries in the study of human origins, revealing the transformation that has been brought about in this field by genetics.

Season Finale

2016-10-23T20:00:00Z

53x16 The Wildest Weather in the Universe

Season Finale

53x16 The Wildest Weather in the Universe

  • 2016-10-23T20:00:00Z1h

We love talking about the weather - is it too hot or too cold, too wet or too windy? It's a national obsession. Now scientists have started looking to the heavens and wondering what the weather might be like on other planets. Today, we are witnessing the birth of extra-terrestrial meteorology, as technology is allowing astronomers to study other planets like never before. They began with our solar system, sending spacecraft to explore its furthest reaches, and now the latest telescopes are enabling astronomers to study planets beyond our solar system. Our exploration of the universe is revealing alien worlds with weather stranger than anyone could ever have imagined - we've discovered gigantic storm systems that can encircle entire planets, supersonic winds, extreme temperatures and bizarre forms of rain. On some planets, the temperatures are so hot that the clouds and rain are believed to be made of liquid lava droplets, and on other planets it is thought to rain precious stones like diamonds and rubies. We thought we had extreme weather on Earth, but it turns out that it is nothing compared to what's out there. The search for the weirdest weather in the universe is only just beginning.

Season Premiere

2017-01-19T21:00:00Z

54x01 Clean Eating: The Dirty Truth

Season Premiere

54x01 Clean Eating: The Dirty Truth

  • 2017-01-19T21:00:00Z1h

Imagine if the food you eat could 'clean' your body and make you feel well. Dr Giles Yeo investigates the latest diet craze and social media sensation - clean eating. In a television first, Giles cooks with Ella Mills, the Instagram entrepreneur behind Deliciously Ella, one of the most popular brands associated with clean eating, and examines how far her plant-based cooking is based on science. She tells him clean has lost its way: "Clean now implies dirty and that's negative. I haven't used it, but as far as I understood it when I first read the term, it meant natural, kind of unprocessed, and now it doesn't mean that at all. It means diet, it means fad". Giles sifts through the claims of the Hemsley sisters, who advocate not just gluten-free but grain-free cooking, and Natasha Corrett, who popularises alkaline eating through her Honestly Healthy brand. In America, Giles reveals the key alternative health figures whose food philosophies are influencing the new gurus of clean. He discovers that when it comes to their promises about food and our health, all is not always what it appears to be. Inside a Californian ranch where cancer patients have been treated with alkaline food, Giles sees for himself what can happen when pseudoscience is taken to a shocking extreme.

2017-01-23T21:00:00Z

54x02 Hair Care Secrets

54x02 Hair Care Secrets

  • 2017-01-23T21:00:00Z1h

The Horizon team have gathered together a team of scientists and doctors to investigate the incredible, natural material that is growing out of our heads - our hair. With access to the research laboratories of some of the world's leading hair care companies, including L'Oreal and ghd, the team explore the latest cutting-edge research and technology designed to push the boundaries of hair and hair care. Each one of us has a unique head of hair - an average of 150,000 individual hair strands growing approximately one centimetre every month. Over your lifetime, that is over 800 miles. The time and effort we put into styling, sculpting and maintaining this precious material has created a global hair care market worth a staggering £60 billion pounds. With such high stakes, it is inevitable that when developing hair-care products, science and business operate hand in hand. The team reveal how this industry science compares to the rigorous academic standards that they are used to. These investigations also reveal why we care so much about our hair, and whether or not it is worth splashing out on expensive shampoos. They uncover the magic ingredients found in conditioners and lay bare the secrets of the shiny, glossy hair seen in the adverts.

Comedian and impressionist Rory Bremner is on a personal mission to uncover the science of ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder), a condition which he has suspected he has. In this film, Rory learns about the science of ADHD, goes for a diagnosis and tries the drug methylphenidate (also known as Ritalin) for the first time - just before walking on stage.

2017-05-02T20:00:00Z

54x04 Why Did I Go Mad?

54x04 Why Did I Go Mad?

  • 2017-05-02T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows three people living with voices, hallucinations and paranoia, to explore what causes this kind of phenomena. Providing a rare first-hand insight into these experiences, they reveal just what it is like to live with them day-to-day. They examine the impact of social, biological and environmental influences on conditions traditionally associated with insanity, such as schizophrenia and psychosis, and within the film they look at how new ways of understanding the brain are leading to a dramatic change in treatments and approaches and examine whether targeting the root causes of psychosis can lead to recovery. Above all, they try to uncover why it happened to them - and whether it could happen to you.

For decades some have suspected that there might be others out there, intelligent beings capable of communicating with us, even visiting our world. It might sound like science fiction, but today scientists from across the globe are scouring the universe for signals from extraterrestrials.

2017-05-23T20:00:00Z

54x06 Space Volcanoes

54x06 Space Volcanoes

  • 2017-05-23T20:00:00Z1h

Horizon follows an international team of volcanologists in Iceland as they draw fascinating parallels with the volcanoes on Earth and those elsewhere in the solar system. Through the team's research, we discover that the largest volcano of the solar system - Olympus Mons on Mars - has been formed in a similar way to those of Iceland, how a small moon of Jupiter - Io - has the most violent eruptions anywhere, and find out that a moon of Saturn called Enceladus erupts icy geysers from a hidden ocean. Computer graphics combined with original NASA material reveal the spectacular sights of these amazing volcanoes. Along the way, we learn how volcanoes are not just a destructive force, but have been essential to the formation of atmospheres and even life. And through these volcanoes of the solar system, scientists have discovered far more about our own planet, Earth- hat it was like when Earth first formed, and even what will happen to our planet in the future.

Filmmaker Natalie Hewit follows the everyday people battling in the most extreme environment on Earth to move Halley VI, a vital polar research station. Britain's state-of-the-art Antarctic research base Halley VI is in trouble. Built on the Brunt Ice Shelf, it sits atop a massive slab of ice that extends far beyond the Antarctic shoreline. But the ice is breaking apart and just 6km from the station is a ginormous crevasse, which threatens to separate Halley from the rest of the continent, setting the £28 million base adrift on a massive iceberg. So Halley needs to move. But this is probably the toughest moving job on Earth, and the team of 90 who have been tasked with the mission aren't just architectural or engineering experts. They are plumbers, mechanics and farmers from across the UK and beyond - ordinary men and women on an extraordinary adventure. Their practical skills will be what makes or breaks this move.

A few weeks ago, the National Health Service was hit by a widespread and devastating cyber attack - Horizon tells the inside story of one of the most challenging days in the history of the NHS. On the morning of 12 May the attack started. Appointment systems, pathology labs, x-rays and even CT scanners were infected - putting not just data but patients lives at risk, and on every screen a simple - some may even say polite - message appeared. 'Ooops, your files have been encrypted!' But what followed was far from civilised. It was very clear that all the data on an infected machine was now scrambled and only the hackers could unscramble it. For a price - and with an extra twist - after a few days the ransom money doubled, and if nothing was paid within a week, the hackers threatened to destroy all the data - forever

This episode of Horizon looks at the issues that will change the way we live our lives in the future. Rather than relying on the minds of science fiction writers, mathematician Hannah Fry delves into the data we have today to provide an evidence-based vision of tomorrow. With the help of the BBC's science experts - and a few surprise guests - Hannah investigates the questions the British public want answered about the future.

The car has shrunk the world, increased personal freedom and in so many ways expanded our horizons, but there is a flipside. Fumes from car exhausts have helped to destroy our environment, poisoned the air we breathe and killed us in far more straightforward ways. But all that is going to change. This episode of Horizon enters a world where cars can drive themselves, a world where we are simply passengers, ferried about by wholesome green compassionate technology which will never ever go wrong. And it is almost here. Horizon explores the artificial intelligence required to replace human drivers for cars themselves, peers into the future driverless world and discovers that, despite the glossy driverless PR (and assuming that they really can be made to work reliably), the reality is that it might not be all good news. From the ethics of driverless car crashes to the impact on jobs, it might be that cars are about to rise up against us in ways that none of us are expecting.

2017-07-13T20:00:00Z

54x11 Dippy and the Whale

54x11 Dippy and the Whale

  • 2017-07-13T20:00:00Z1h

Over the last two years, the BBC's science strand Horizon has been behind the scenes at London's Natural History Museum, following the dramatic replacement of the iconic Dippy the Dinosaur skeleton cast with the real skeleton of a blue whale - the world's biggest animal. Narrated by Sir David Attenborough, this special film follows the teams involved in what has to be one of the world's most unique engineering challenges. Replacing Dippy is brave and bold - it is the first thing visitors see when they enter the grand Hintze Hall, but the Natural History Museum is changing, and the installation of the colossal blue whale skeleton is the start of a new chapter. The largest animal ever to have lived, blue whales were driven to the brink of extinction by hunting and were the first species humans decided to save, telling an inspiring story of hope for the natural world.

2017-08-29T20:00:00Z

54x12 What Makes a Psychopath?

54x12 What Makes a Psychopath?

  • 2017-08-29T20:00:00Z1h

Psychopaths have long captured the public imagination. Painted as charismatic, violent predators lacking in all empathy, they provide intrigue and horror in equal measure. But what precisely is a psychopath? What is it that drives them to cause harm, even kill? And can they ever be cured? Presented by psychologist Professor Uta Frith, this is an in-depth exploration of the psychopathic mind including one of the most notorious of all, Moors murderer Ian Brady. Through an ongoing correspondence between the Horizon team and Brady, the film features some of the very last letters he wrote. The film also features a series of candid interviews with prison inmates who not only describe their crimes but why they think they committed them. Horizon explores not only how each individual's crimes were shaped by their own life experiences, but also gives an insight in to how these people think and behave. Working with the world's experts in the field, the film sheds light on the biological, psychological and environmental influences that shape a psychopath. And it looks to the future, with groundbreaking research that suggests a lifetime of incarceration is not the only option to manage violent and dangerous psychopaths.

The dream of sending humans to Mars is closer than ever before. In fact, many scientists think that the first person to set foot on the Red Planet is alive today. But where should the first explorers visit when they get there? Horizon has gathered the world's leading experts on Mars and asked them where would they go, if they got the chance - and what would they need to survive? Using incredible real images and data, Horizon brings these Martian landmarks to life - from vast plains to towering volcanoes, from deep valleys to hidden underground caverns. This film also shows where to land, where to live and even where to hunt for traces of extra-terrestrial life. This is the ultimate traveller's guide to Mars.

A billion miles from home, running low on fuel, and almost out of time. After 13 years traversing the Saturn system, the spacecraft Cassini is plunging to a fiery death, becoming part of the very planet it has been exploring. As it embarks on its final assignment - a one-way trip into the heart of Saturn - Horizon celebrates the incredible achievements and discoveries of a mission that has changed the way we see the solar system. Strange new worlds with gigantic ice geysers, hidden underground oceans that could harbour life and a brand new moon coalescing in Saturn's magnificent rings. As the world says goodbye to the great explorer Cassini, Horizon will be there for with a ringside seat for its final moments.

Season Finale

2017-09-26T20:00:00Z

54x15 Being Transgender

Season Finale

54x15 Being Transgender

  • 2017-09-26T20:00:00Z1h

How does a person know their gender? Do they see themselves as male or female, or somewhere in between? More and more people around the world do not identify with the gender they were assigned to at birth. Increasingly, people are expressing their gender identity outside of the 'norms', and the lines of gender are becoming more blurred than ever. This film explores what it actually means to be transgender, and what happens when a person transitions psychologically, physically and biologically. We follow a number of transgender people going through their own transition. From a socially transitioning transwoman to two young transmen embarking on hormones, to a transwoman going through gender confirmation surgery - we get a snapshot into what transitioning and being transgender is really like from those living it. We also hear from experts in the field of gender and find out how modern medicine is helping people to transition their gender. And we explore where gender identity actually comes from.

Season Premiere

2018-02-05T21:00:00Z

55x01 My Amazing Brain: Richard's War

Season Premiere

55x01 My Amazing Brain: Richard's War

  • 2018-02-05T21:00:00Z1h

The rarely seen journey back to recovery of Richard Gray after a life-changing catastrophic stroke. Initially bed bound and unable to do anything, including speak, the initial outlook was bleak, yet occasionally small glimmers of hope emerged. Armed always with her camera, his film-maker wife Fiona captures the moment Richard moves his fingers for the first time, and then over months she documents his struggle to relearn how to walk again.

What is it like to be young and find out you have got cancer? What you will find out in this film may surprise you. This film, narrated by actor and comedian Jack Whitehall, tells 11 inspirational stories, revealing how a range of young people have dealt with their cancer diagnosis and the treatment process. We hear, primarily in their own words, about their fears, their hopes and their experiences - affirming the view that 'the best therapist for a teenager with cancer... is another teenager with cancer.'

Time travel is not forbidden by the laws of nature, but to build a time machine, we would need to understand more about those laws and how to subvert them than we do now. And every day, science does learn more. In this film Horizon meets the scientists working on the cutting edge of discovery - men and women who may discover how to build wormholes, manipulate entangled photons or build fully functioning time crystals. In short, these scientists may enable an engineer of the future to do what we have so far been only able to imagine - to build a machine that allows us travel back and forward in time at the touch of a button. It could be you! Science fiction? Watch this space.

2018-07-26T20:00:00Z

55x04 Spina Bifida & Me

55x04 Spina Bifida & Me

  • 2018-07-26T20:00:00Z1h

One in every 1,000 pregnancies in Britain has a spine or brain defect like spina bifida. 30 years ago, actress Ruth Madeley was one of them. Despite having spina bifida herself, it is a condition she doesn't fully understand. In this programme, Ruth sets out to discover why she has it, whether it could have been prevented and what it means for her future. Ruth meets the lord campaigning for a change in the law that he says could prevent thousands of birth defects. And she discovers that a pioneering surgery could offer a different future for babies diagnosed with spina bifida, by operating on them before they are even born. She discovers how this surgery was invented, meets the families whose lives it has changed and follows the team of British surgeons preparing to perform this extraordinary foetal surgery in the UK for the very first time. But Ruth also examines attitudes in Britain today and asks whether we should change the way we see disability.

2018-08-07T20:00:00Z

55x05 Jupiter Revealed

55x05 Jupiter Revealed

  • 2018-08-07T20:00:00Z1h

'To send a spacecraft there is a little bit insane,' says Scott Bolton when talking about Jupiter, the largest planet in the solar system. But that is exactly what he has done, because Scott is head of Juno, the Nasa mission designed to peer through Jupiter's swirling clouds and reveal the wonders within. But this is no ordinary world. This documentary, narrated by Toby Jones, journeys with the scientists into the heart of a giant. Professor Kaitlin Kratter shows us how extreme Jupiter is. She has come to a quarry to measure out each planet's mass with rocks, starting with the smallest. Mercury is a single kilogram, and the Earth is 17. But Jupiter is on another scale entirely. It is seven tonnes - that is two and a half times the mass of all the other planets combined. On Kaitlin's scale it is not a pile of rocks, it is the truck delivering them. With extreme size comes extreme radiation. Juno is in the most extreme environment Nasa has visited. By projecting a 70-foot-wide, life-size Juno on a Houston rooftop, Scott shows us how its fragile electronics are encased in 200kg of titanium. As Scott puts it, 'we had to build an armoured tank to go there.' The team's efforts have been worthwhile. Professor Andrew Ingersoll, Juno's space weatherman, reveals they have seen lightning inside Jupiter, perhaps a thousand times more powerful than Earth's lightning. This might be evidence for huge quantities of water inside Jupiter. Prof Ingersoll also tells us that the Great Red Spot, a vast hurricane-like storm that could swallow the Earth whole, goes down as far as they can see - 'it could go down 1,000s of kilometres'. Deeper into the planet and things get stranger still. At the National Ignition facility in northern California, Dr Marius Millot is using powerful lasers normally used for nuclear fusion for an astonishing experiment. He uses '500 times the power that is used for the entire United States at a given moment' to crush hydrogen to the pressures inside Jupiter. Under these extreme conditions, hydrogen becomes a liquid metal. Juno is finding out how much liquid metallic hydrogen is inside Jupiter, and scientists hope to better understand how this flowing metal produces the most powerful aurora in the Solar System. But what is at Jupiter's heart? In Nice, Prof Tristan Guillot explains how Juno uses gravity to map the planet's centre. This can take scientists back to the earliest days of the solar system, because Jupiter is the oldest planet and it should contain clues to its own creation. By chalking out an outline of the Jupiter, Tristan reveals there is a huge rocky core - perhaps ten times the mass of Earth. It is now thought Jupiter started as a small rocky world. But there is a surprise, because Juno's findings suggest this core might be 'fuzzy'. Tristan thinks the planet was bombarded with something akin to shooting stars. As he puts it, 'Jupiter is quite unlike we thought'.

2018-08-22T20:00:00Z

55x06 Stopping Male Suicide

55x06 Stopping Male Suicide

  • 2018-08-22T20:00:00Z1h

Suicide is the biggest killer of men under 50 in the UK - causing more deaths in this group than car accidents, and even more than cancer. This means that the most likely thing to kill Dr Xand Van Tulleken is himself. And he wants to know why. In this sensitive film, Xand finds out what we know about why people develop suicidal thoughts, and whether there is anything that we can do about it.

Deception is an integral part of human nature and it is estimated we all lie up to nine times a day. But what if we created a world in which we couldn't lie? In a radical experiment, pioneering scientists from across Europe have come together to make this happen. Brand new technology is allowing them to rig three British people to make it impossible for them to lie undetected. Then they will be challenged to live for a whole week without telling a single lie. It is a bold social experiment to discover the role of deception in our lives - to investigate the impact lying has on our mental state and the consequences of it for our relationships, and to ask whether the world would be a better or worse place if we couldn't lie.

Dr. Michael Mosley cures real pain with fake pills in Britain's largest ever placebo trial.

We all have a biological clock ticking away inside us that governs our daily rhythms. This affects our health as much as our diet and whether we exercise. So what can we do to manage this internal clock better? To find out, evolutionary biologist Ella Al-Shamahi locks former commando Aldo Kane in an abandoned nuclear bunker with no way of telling the time - for ten days. Monitored around the clock by a team of scientists, he carries out a barrage of tests to uncover exactly what makes our body clock tick. Above ground, Ella meets two time-starved couples to test the latest thinking on how we can manage our body clocks better. In trying to improve their sleep, and their lives, she uncovers practical advice that we can all take on board. Studies on shift workers show that regularly disrupting our sleep makes us more at risk of diabetes, heart disease and even cancer. So getting to grips with our biological clock couldn't be more important.

Can we predict avalanches? How can we save more lives? A team of scientists led by Prof Danielle George create a massive avalanche to find out.

Nearly half of us take a vitamin or mineral supplement every day, but what are these pills sold on every high street actually doing? Digging deeper than the eye-catching words on the packaging, Dr Giles Yeo investigates who really needs a supplement by putting our diets to the test.

Could a machine replace your doctor? Dr Hannah Fry explores the incredible ways AI is revolutionising healthcare - and what this means for all of us. This film chronicles the inside story of the AI health revolution, as one company, Babylon Health, prepare for a man vs machine showdown. Can Babylon succeed in their quest to prove their AI can outperform human doctors at safe triage and accurate diagnosis? Artificial intelligence is starting to transform healthcare beyond recognition - and tech companies large and small see almost limitless commercial opportunity. The ultimate vision is for accessible, affordable, better healthcare for almost everyone with a phone. In Britain this is already radically changing how some of us see our GPs. And in a world with a chronic shortage of doctors, but where even the very poor own mobile phones, it could be truly revolutionary. To witness this revolution from the inside, this film has privileged, behind-the-scenes access to ambitious British tech start-up Babylon Health, whose CEO Dr Ali Parsa declares with complete conviction 'we're going to do with healthcare what Google did with information.' Babylon launched its GP at Hand app in London in late 2017 and has already persuaded 30,000 Londoners to quit their old GPs to register instead for this NHS 'digital first' service, where patients discuss symptoms with an AI chatbot and see a doctor in minutes 24/7 via their phone. But GP at Hand's arrival has proved controversial - with many traditional GPs worried about the disruptive consequences for them and their patients, and others seeking to thwart its expansion nationwide. As this film reveals, there is a fundamental culture clash at play - between the 'move fast and break things' world of tech, and the cautious, diligent, often slow-moving world of medical science. So how will both camps respond when Babylon's AI attempts to pass the diagnostic sections of the Royal College of GPs exam? Amazingly, the NHS is today the largest purchaser of fax machines in the world - and the British government are eagerly embracing AI as the remedy for our public health system's antiquated inefficiencies. British health secretary Matt Hancock is an unabashed evangelist for tech - boasting Babylon's GP at Hand as his GP. Yet some scientists are increasingly alarmed, questioning the current hype and asking where is the proof that AI health apps, now in widespread use, are effective and safe. How should they be evaluated and regulated? And what needs to happen before we all trust our health to AI? As well as following a tumultuous year inside Babylon, both in the UK and Rwanda, the film also explores how another British AI Health start-up, Kheiron Medical, has successfully used deep learning to train its AI to detect breast cancer and now outperforms human radiologists at spotting the tell-tale signs of cancer in mammograms.

Season Finale

2018-11-21T21:00:00Z

55x13 The Contraceptive Pill: How Safe Is It?

Season Finale

55x13 The Contraceptive Pill: How Safe Is It?

  • 2018-11-21T21:00:00Z1h

In recent years a groundbreaking new study has been released into the effects of the contraceptive pill. Research from Denmark claimed women on the pill and other forms of hormonal contraception were 70% more likely to be diagnosed with depression than those who were not. And another study has found hormonal contraception was linked to a seemingly dramatic risk of breast cancer. Negative headlines are nothing new for the contraceptive pill - first introduced in 1961, it has had a chequered history with early versions linked to cancer risk and life-threatening blood clots. Yet hormonal contraception remains Britain's most popular form of birth control, and today over three million women take regular doses of synthetic hormones. So should they be worried about its safety? GP Dr Zoe Williams gets behind the headlines in this Horizon investigation. A specially commissioned, nationwide survey reveals the areas of most concern to British women - from mental health to the risk of cancer and drop in libido. With the help of world leading scientists, Zoe finds out if these concerns are justified and by delving deep into the science around the pills side effects Horizon uncovers some striking revelations - from protecting women against cancer to increasing their risk of suicide.

Season Premiere

2019-01-23T21:00:00Z

56x01 We Need to Talk about Death

Season Premiere

56x01 We Need to Talk about Death

  • 2019-01-23T21:00:00Z1h

Dr Kevin Fong makes a personal journey through the moral questions about death that face not just the medical profession, but each and every one of us.

In the wake of the Gatwick drone crisis, high-risk specialist Aldo Kane investigates the threat drones pose to UK skies and tests the new technology we can use to keep ourselves safe.

We spend 190 billion pounds a year on groceries, but can we trust our supermarkets to tell us the truth about what we’re buying? Dr Hannah Fry and Priya Tew investigate the food we eat.

Following the teams inside Facebook, revealing a hidden technological playground. The film tackles difficult questions, like how our data is used, and also shows how Facebook works.

Following the NHS as they start to implement proton beam therapy, an advanced but expensive cancer treatment, as well as following as the first children awaiting the lifesaving treatment.

At a pivotal moment in the history of one of the world’s oldest drugs, Dr Javid Abdelmoneim investigates the latest medical and scientific research into the effects of cannabis on the brain and body.

Dr Michael Mosley immerses himself on the frontline of our prescription painkiller habit. In America, it is an epidemic. Now, new evidence raises concern about the UK's use of prescription opioids.

Naturalist Chris Packham investigates the impact a growing human population is having on the planet, asking whether the earth can sustain predictions of ten billion people by 2050.

The unknown story of the worst child-poisoning case since thalidomide, featuring a landmark legal battle by a group of mothers determined to uncover the truth.

Fred Sirieix and Zoe Williams open a restaurant with a difference, where every calorie eaten must be burned off by a secret gym team.

To celebrate the 30th anniversary of its launch, this film tells the remarkable story of how Hubble revealed the awe and wonder of our universe and how a team of daring astronauts risked their lives to keep it working.

Dr Hannah Fry and Michael Mosley put the public to the test, pitting young and old, males and females and tech lovers and readers against each other in a battle of wits.

Comedian Tony Slattery meets experts to explore his psychological problems, finding out if he is definitely bipolar, confronting addiction and opening up about a childhood trauma.

Season Finale

2020-07-06T20:00:00Z

57x08 Pluto: Back From the Dead

Season Finale

57x08 Pluto: Back From the Dead

  • 2020-07-06T20:00:00Z1h

The incredible story of how Pluto has been propelled from an unremarkable ball of ice on the edge of the solar system to a world of unimaginable complexity - where some form of alien life might exist.

Season Premiere

2021-01-04T21:00:00Z

58x01 Feast to Save the Planet

Season Premiere

58x01 Feast to Save the Planet

  • 2021-01-04T21:00:00Z1h

Gregg Wallace and mathematician Hannah Fry invite five special guests to a unique dinner party where they are scored on the environmental impact of every dish they choose.

Dr George McGavin and Dr Zoe Laughlin set up base camp at one of the UK's biggest sewage works to investigate the revolutionary science finding vital renewable resources and undiscovered life in human waste. Teaming up with world-class scientists, they search for biological entities in sewage with potentially lifesaving medical properties, find out how pee can generate electricity, how gas from poo can fuel a car and how nutrients in waste can help solve the soil crisis. They follow each stage of the sewage treatment process, revealing what the stuff we flush can tell us about how we live today, and the mindboggling biotechnology being harnessed to clean it, making the wastewater safe enough to return to the environment.

The story of the scientists who created Dolly, the sheep that changed the world in this documentary, part of the Horizon series. This Horizon branded documentary tells the full story for the first time with never-before-seen archive, revealing how on a small Scottish farm, a handful of the world’s best genetic scientists worked in secret to crack the holy grail of life: cloning.

Season Finale

2021-07-08T20:00:00Z

58x04 The Vaccine

Season Finale

58x04 The Vaccine

  • 2021-07-08T20:00:00Z1h 29m

With unique access to five vaccine teams around the globe, this is the extraordinary inside story of the unprecedented quest to develop and make vaccines to fight Covid-19.

Season Premiere

2022-03-31T20:00:00Z

59x01 How to Sleep Well with Michael Mosley

Season Premiere

59x01 How to Sleep Well with Michael Mosley

  • 2022-03-31T20:00:00Z1h

As more people than ever report struggling with their sleep, Michael Mosley uses the latest science to explore how this impacts our health and what can be done to improve our sleep.

BBC News special correspondent Fergal Keane has covered conflict and brutality for more than 30 years and is known for reporting with humanity and extraordinary empathy, but in 2020 revealed he had been diagnosed with an acute form of post-traumatic stress disorder. In this Horizon documentary, he reveals the impact of PTSD on his life, exploring how it led him to consider withdrawing from reporting on conflicts, as well as investigating the latest scientific thinking behind its treatment.

When she's diagnosed with cervical cancer at the age of 36, Hannah Fry explores the problematic issues surrounding how we screen for and treat cancer, asking if we could be overmedicalising it.

The inside story of the James Webb Space Telescope, following the Nasa team building the £8 billion device and the scientists taking its first image of distant stars and galaxies.

Season Premiere

2002-01-10T21:00:00Z

2002x01 Helike - The Real Atlantis

Season Premiere

2002x01 Helike - The Real Atlantis

  • 2002-01-10T21:00:00Z1h

On a winter night in 373 BC, the classical Greek city of Helike was destroyed by a massive earthquake and tidal wave. The entire city and all its inhabitants were lost beneath the sea. What has bewitched archaeologists about Helike is that it was engulfed just when ancient Greece was reaching its height; when the philosophy and art that inspired the western world for thousands of years were invented. Its destruction was one of the most appalling tragedies of the classical world and most probably the reality behind the myth of Atlantis. But now, unlike Atlantis, a team of archaeologists may have found Helike - a lost city from the heyday of Greek civilisation. If it is as well preserved as everyone hopes, Helike could be a time capsule from this crucial time in human development. For centuries there had been just no sign of it. All archaeologists had to guide them were obscure and often contradictory ancient texts. So, despite numerous expeditions trawling the waters off the coast of Greece and vast amounts of money and technology thrown at the problem, no one could find anything except two small coins, unearthed over a hundred years ago. Then, in 1988 Dora Katsonopoulou and Steven Soter took up the challenge. Dora had grown up with the legend from childhood and was determined to find the archaeological treasure on her doorstep. Together they went back to basics and re-examined the ancient texts. These said that Helike had sunk into a poros, which everyone had taken to mean Gulf of Corinthe. But Dora thought that a poros could also be an inland lagoon. If she was right, the lost city which had inspired Atlantis might not be under the sea, as everyone thought, but somewhere inland. Studying the geology of the region, earthquake expert Iain Stewart argues that a large earthquake could well cause an inland lagoon. Small recent earthquakes in the region have caused ground liquefaction - a terrifying phenomenon where the ground literally turns to water beneath your feet. If the same had happened on a much larger scale then the whole city could have been plunged downwards, taking much of the city below sea level. But the earthquake in 373 BC could also have had a second more devastating effect. As well as liquifaction recent earthquakes have caused chunks of coastline to fall into the sea. If this happened on a large scale underwater landslides could cause a large wave, or tsunami. This would race across the Gulf of Corinthe, ricochet off the opposite bank and come charging back again, to crash over the sunken plain and fill in the lagoon. Dora's theory makes sense, except for one thing. There is no lagoon in the region today. There is, though, a trail of clues that explains what could have happened. An ancient bridge that is strangely nowhere near water shows how river sediment coming down from the mountains changes the shape of the plain - over hundreds of years the lagoon would have silted up, hiding the lost city beneath solid ground. A host of boreholes drilled into the plain and a remote cave with the legend attached to it have helped pinpoint where the now underground city might lie. Slowly Dora and Steven have pieced it all together, but there have been several false starts along the way. The first lot of ruins they found were Roman - a settlement built hundreds of years after Helike's disappearance to honour the famous lost city. Next they found ruins that turned out to be prehistoric - an early bronze age settlement built 2,500 years before Helike. It wasn't until 2001 that Dora and Steven at last got their breakthrough. Whilst Horizon was filming, the team uncovered ruins from classical Greece. Securely dated by coins and pottery, the team are convinced they have at last found the city they've been looking for. It will take years to uncover Helike's riches, but for the first time in thousands of years, we have glimpses of the lost city that inspired Atlantis.

2002-01-17T21:00:00Z

2002x02 Volcano Hell

2002x02 Volcano Hell

  • 2002-01-17T21:00:00Z1h

It began with a ghastly tragedy. In 1985 the massive Colombian volcano Nevado del Ruiz erupted, melting a glacier and sending a vast landslide of mud down on the people asleep in the town of Armero below. Twenty thousand died. In the aftermath science was set a challenge: to make sure such a catastrophe never happened again, by finding a way of accurately predicting when a volcano will erupt. Now, at last, it seems that one scientist may have met that challenge. Anyone can tell when a volcano becomes active. You can see it and you can smell it. But a volcano can be active for years without erupting. For those living nearby, there is no way they will abandon their homes and livelihoods just because of a few rumblings. The only way to persuade them to seek safety is to predict an eruption almost to the day, leaving just enough time for an evacuation. Scientists threw themselves at the problem, but there just seemed to be no way to make sense of the violent forces at work inside a volcano. Then along came Bernard Chouet. He is different from other volcanologists. His training lay in the complex equations and theories of physics, and he believed the answer had to lie in analysing the mysterious patterns drawn by seismographs. These measure the tremors caused by active volcanoes. Previous attempts to use these tremors to predict eruptions had proved fruitless. No one could find any correlation between the squiggles on the graph paper and the timing of eruptions. So Chouet locked himself away for five years and then emerged claiming he had found the answer. The key, he said, were seismic signals called long period events. These strange shapes had baffled volcanologists for years. Chouet said they were made by molten magma resonating - that is coming under pressure - inside the volcano. The more long period events there were, then the nearer the volcano was to exploding. Chouet could use the long period events to predict an eruption to within days. But another scientist was working on a completely different method. Stanley Williams could not be more different from Chouet. Where Chouet crunched numbers and looked at graphs, Williams climbed into craters and got up close; because he believed the best clue to when a volcano would erupt was to measure how much gas it was belching out. In 1993 the two methods came head to head. A conference was held at the foot of another Colombian volcano, Galeras. The highlight was to be a trip into the crater. Williams's gas readings indicated the volcano was safe. Chouet's long period events suggested the volcano might blow. After some debate, Williams led a team of volcanologists up the mountain. Suddenly Galeras exploded, killing six scientists and three tourists. Williams himself survived but was maimed for life. Since that day on Galeras, Chouet's methods have commanded wide respect and have been increasingly used around the world. In a dramatic demonstration last year Mexican scientists used Chouet's method to predict an eruption of the mighty volcano Popocatepetl. Tens of thousands of people were safely evacuated just before the biggest eruption of the volcano for a thousand years. No one was hurt.

The magnificent ancient city of pyramids at Caral in Peru hit the headlines in 2001. The site is a thousand years older than the earliest known civilisation in the Americas and, at 2,627 BC, is as old as the pyramids of Egypt. Many now believe it is the fabled missing link of archaeology - a 'mother city'. If so, then these extraordinary findings could finally answer one of the great questions of archaeology: why did humans become civilised? For over a century, archaeologists have been searching for what they call a mother city. Civilisation began in only six areas of the world: Egypt, Mesopotamia, India, China, Peru and Central America. In each of these regions people moved from small family units to build cities of thousands of people. They crossed the historic divide, one of the great moments in human history. Why? To find the answer archaeologists needed to find a mother city - the first stage of city-building. They couldn't find one anywhere. Everywhere this first stage seemed destroyed or built over. And so, instead, scientists developed a number of theories. Some said it was because of the development of trade, others that it was irrigation. Some even today believe it was all because of aliens. Gradually an uneasy consensus emerged. The key force common to all civilisations was warfare. The theory was that only the fear of war could motivate people to give up the simple life and form complex societies. To prove it, archaeologists still had to find a city from that very first stage of civilisation. If it showed signs of warfare, then the theory had to be true. When archaeologist Ruth Shady discovered her 5,000 year old city of pyramids in the Peruvian desert, all eyes were on the New World. Ruth's extraordinary city, known as Caral, is so much older than anything else in South America that it is a clear candidate to be the mother city. It also is in pristine condition. Nothing has been built on it at all. Instead laid out before the world is an elaborate complex of pyramids, temples, an amphitheatre and ordinary houses. Crucially, there is not the faintest trace of warfare at Caral; no battlements, no weapons, no mutilated bodies. Instead, Ruth's findings suggest it was a gentle society, built on commerce and pleasure. In one of the pyramids they uncovered beautiful flutes made from condor and pelican bones. They have also found evidence of a culture that took drugs and perhaps aphrodisiacs. Most stunning of all, they have found the remains of a baby, lovingly wrapped and buried with a precious necklace made of stone beads.

2002-02-07T21:00:00Z

2002x05 Death of the Iceman

2002x05 Death of the Iceman

  • 2002-02-07T21:00:00Z1h

In September 1991 two hikers made a sensational discovery - a frozen body high in the mountains, near the border between Austria and Italy. It turned out to be 5,300 years old, the oldest frozen mummy ever found. Named Ötzi the Iceman after the Ötztal area where he was found, he became a worldwide sensation. The body was taken to Austria where scientists soon got to work on him. They analysed his bone density to find out how old he was (in his 40s, an advanced age for the time) and examined his wonderfully preserved belongings. The cause of his death remained a mystery. Now archaeologists are being joined by forensic scientists to investigate this unique case and new research has revealed a shocking answer. The investigation into Ötzi's death started at the scene of discovery. By examining photos which had been taken at the site, Austrian archaeologist Konrad Spindler worked out the layout. He was particularly intrigued by the position of the Iceman's copper axe, which was found propped up against a rock. He believed that this must have been placed in that position by Ötzi himself which meant that everything at the site had been preserved in the position it was when Ötzi died. His body was slumped face down on the ground, his cap lay nearby just as if it had fallen from his head. Scientists also wanted to know when he died so they examined the ice in which he'd been found. This contained pollen that they could identify as coming from autumn-flowering plants, so they concluded that Ötzi had died in the autumn. Together, this evidence implied that the Iceman might have got caught in a storm and died of hypothermia. Then the scientists looked inside the iceman using X-rays and CAT (Computer Assisted Tomography) scans. They saw what looked like unhealed rib fractures. So Spindler came up with what he called his disaster theory. He believed Ötzi was a shepherd who, one autumn, was returning to his home village with his animals. When he got there he became involved in some kind of argument or battle. He suffered a severe injury to his chest, fracturing his ribs, but managed to escape. He fled into the mountains and made it to the top, but by then he was exhausted from his injuries. He lay down to rest in a sheltered gully where he died of hypothermia and was buried in ice. The theory seemed to make sense, but it would not go unchallenged for long. In 1998, Ötzi was transferred to Italy since the body had actually been found just inside the Italian border. There the iceman was placed on display in a specially built museum in the town of Bolzano. To put the finishing touch to their display, the museum contacted forensic pathologist Peter Vanezis to reconstruct Ötzi's face, based on the shape of the skull. Vanezis normally works from the skull itself, but in this case, of course, that was impossible. So using the 3D CAT scan data and a rapid prototyping machine, the Austrian team created a detailed life-size replica of the Iceman's skull and gave this to Vanezis. He then used a laser to scan the skull into his facial reconstruction system. This measures the proportions of the skull and shapes a generic face to match. This allowed him to recreate Ötzi's face at last. Vanezis also wanted to look again at the theory of Ötzi's death, to question assumptions that the archaeologists had made. More and more evidence was questioning the disaster theory. An examination of the contents of Ötzi's intestine found hop hornbeam pollen. This pollen was incredibly well preserved - the cell contents still intact. This could only mean that it had been consumed very soon after the flowering of the plant just before the Iceman died. And since the hop hornbeam only flowers between March and June he must have actually died in spring. Also, evidence from the body and objects showed that the site had melted at least once and so things weren't necessarily in the same position. And finally, new examinations of the ribs showed that they hadn't been fractured before death - but been bent out of shape after death. Scientists seemed to be back to square one. IIt seemed his death might be shrouded in mystery forever. Then in June 2001, his new custodians, the Italians, decided to X-ray the body again. A local hospital radiologist noticed what looked like a foreign object near the shoulder, a shadow in the shape of an arrow. When they looked at its density they found it was denser than bone, it was the same density as flint. They'd discovered a stone arrowhead embedded in Ötzi's shoulder, which had been missed despite 10 years of intensive study. Now scientists can tell a new story of the Iceman's death. Ötzi was attacked and managed to flee. As he ran he was shot in the back with an arrow. He pulled out the arrow shaft but the head remained stuck in his shoulder. He reached the top of the mountains but was now exhausted and weakened from bleeding. He could go no further, lay down and died. Although this story fits the latest results, there are still many unanswered questions. Scientists hope soon to conduct an autopsy to remove the arrowhead and only then will we be able to say for certain what killed Ötzi. The Iceman may still be hiding more secrets.

2002-02-14T21:00:00Z

2002x06 Parallel Universes

2002x06 Parallel Universes

  • 2002-02-14T21:00:00Z1h

Everything you're about to read here seems impossible and insane, beyond science fiction. Yet it's all true. Scientists now believe there may really be a parallel universe - in fact, there may be an infinite number of parallel universes, and we just happen to live in one of them. These other universes contain space, time and strange forms of exotic matter. Some of them may even contain you, in a slightly different form. Astonishingly, scientists believe that these parallel universes exist less than one millimetre away from us. In fact, our gravity is just a weak signal leaking out of another universe into ours. For years parallel universes were a staple of the Twilight Zone. Science fiction writers loved to speculate on the possible other universes which might exist. In one, they said, Elvis Presley might still be alive or in another the British Empire might still be going strong. Serious scientists dismissed all this speculation as absurd. But now it seems the speculation wasn't absurd enough. Parallel universes really do exist and they are much stranger than even the science fiction writers dared to imagine. It all started when superstring theory, hyperspace and dark matter made physicists realise that the three dimensions we thought described the Universe weren't enough. There are actually 11 dimensions. By the time they had finished they'd come to the conclusion that our Universe is just one bubble among an infinite number of membranous bubbles which ripple as they wobble through the eleventh dimension. Now imagine what might happen if two such bubble universes touched. Neil Turok from Cambridge, Burt Ovrut from the University of Pennsylvania and Paul Steinhardt from Princeton believe that has happened. The result? A very big bang indeed and a new universe was born - our Universe. The idea has shocked the scientific community; it turns the conventional Big Bang theory on its head. It may well be that the Big Bang wasn't really the beginning of everything after all. Time and space all existed before it. In fact Big Bangs may happen all the time. Of course this extraordinary story about the origin of our Universe has one alarming implication. If a collision started our Universe, could it happen again? Anything is possible in this extra-dimensional cosmos. Perhaps out there in space there is another universe heading directly towards us - it may only be a matter of time before we collide.

The World Trade Center was built on revolutionary design principles. It turned conventional architectural and structural techniques on their head. Built from a thin web of steel, its design was efficient, cost-effective and would inspire a new wave in modern building techniques. The result was two towers that were both lightweight and strong. When they were completed they were the tallest in the world. They were also milestones of architecture for another reason. The two towers were the first skyscrapers explicitly designed to withstand being hit by a jet plane. Although they had considered an aircraft impact, the designers of the World Trade towers had not anticipated the effect of an aeroplane's fuel load. British-born survivor Paul Neal tells how he smelt jet fuel rushing through the lift shafts close to his desk. "I recognised it because I'm a private pilot. I recall smelling it and instantly dismissed it as being illogical because it didn't have any place in the World Trade Center." Survivor, Bill Forney, recalls the instant that the 767 aircraft hit the North Tower one floor above where he was sitting. "The building started shaking. It lurched back and forth. It was the first time that I had truly thought that I might die. After a terrifying six to ten movements back and forth it was over and it was done." The World Trade Center had ultra-lightweight floors, and used the latest fireproof 'drywall' to protect the stairwells and lift shafts. Much of this internal structure seems to have been vaporized when the planes crashed, exposing the underlying steel to the intense heat of multiple fires. Brian Clark was one of the only four survivors from both towers to escape from above where the planes hit. He describess clambering over the shattered walls to break through a smoke-filled stairwell to get out. "Drywall had been blown off and was lying up against the stair railing." he says, "We had to shovel it aside." Another survivor, window cleaner Jan Demczur, found the drywall so soft that he was able to dig through it with a squeegee to break out of a lift he was trapped in. The two towers responded differently to the initial impacts, because there were crucial differences between the collisions. The South Tower, struck second, was hit lower, and the damaged zone of the tower then had to support a much greater weight of building above it . Rather than being hit head-on, the South Tower was hit at an angle. The plane wreckage scraped along the inside of the east wall and piled up in the northeast corner. Here, the fire burned intensely. At the South Tower's inner core, one escape stair was left intact - the one furthest from the plane's path. Even then, only four people, one of them Brian Clark, managed to get down it. At the northeast corner and along the east wall, the connections between the floors and the outer wall began to break as the floors sagged in the heat. The floors were an essential part of the structure, bracing both the outer walls and the inner core. Already weakened by the impact and now unbraced, the outer wall columns of the South Tower could not support the weight above them. At 9.59am Eastern Time, they snapped. The entire top third of the tower then lurched to the north and east; the floors inside the rest of the tower piled down onto those below. The downward wave of destruction - a progressive collapse - was then unstoppable. Meanwhile, the North Tower, which had been hit first, was still standing. The core of the Tower had been hit head-on, and the core had been left mostly undamaged by the impact. However, the direct hit cut off all the escape routes without exception. Meanwhile, the fire inside the North Tower was spread around the core. Again, connections between floors and columns started to fail in the heat, but here in the North Tower, it was the connections at the core that gave way first. Without the floors to brace it, the core could not stand alone. 29 minutes after the first collapse, the core in the North Tower collapsed vertically, pulling the rest of the tower down with it. The implications of the Twin Towers collapse are disturbing. Whether anything can be done to make modern lightweight skyscrapers more robust in the aftermath of 11 September is a vital question that must now be answered.

2002-03-14T21:00:00Z

2002x09 Archimedes' Secret

2002x09 Archimedes' Secret

  • 2002-03-14T21:00:00Z1h

This is the story of a book that could have changed the history of the World. To the untrained eye, it is nothing more than a small and unassuming Byzantine prayer book, yet it sold at Christies for over $2m. For faintly visible beneath the prayers on its pages are other, unique, writings - words that have been lost for nearly two thousand years. The text is the only record of work by one of the world's greatest minds - the ancient Greek, Archimedes - a mathematical genius centuries ahead of his time. Hidden for a millennium in a middle eastern library, it has been written over, broken up, painted on, cut up and re-glued. But in the nick of time scientists have saved the precious, fragile document, and for the first time it is revealing just how revolutionary Archimedes' ideas were. If it had been available to scholars during the Renaissance, we might have reached the Moon over a hundred years ago. The trail begins in the tenth century, when a scribe made a unique copy of the most important mathematics that Archimedes ever developed. For 200 years the document survived, but the mathematics in it was so complex that no one paid it any attention. So when one day a monk was looking for some new parchment - an expensive commodity at the time - to write a new prayer book, the answer seemed obvious. He used the Archimedes manuscript. He washed the Greek text off the pages, cut them in half, rebound them, and turned the Archimedes manuscript into an everyday prayer book. As he piously wrote out his prayers, he had no idea of the genius he was obliterating. Several hundred years later, the Renaissance was under way. Scientists were beginning to grapple with new concepts, working out how mathematics could be used to explain the World around them. Little did they know that many of the problems they were just encountering Archimedes had already solved more than a thousand years before. So, tragically, they had to do that research all over again, setting back the development of science and technology immeasurably. Then in 1906, in Constantinople, the document mysteriously turned up in a monastic library. An opportunistic scholar called Johan Ludwig Heiberg identified the text as Archimedes' writings. Although the Greek text was very faint, Heiberg was able to decipher some of it. What he found astonished him, and made the front page of the New York Times. He revealed that Archimedes' manuscript contained something called 'The Method', which showed not only Archimedes' final proofs, but for the first time revealed the process of how he went about making his discoveries. But then disaster struck again. World War One broke out and in its aftermath the Archimedes manuscript disappeared. Scholars had given up any hope of seeing the manuscript again, but in the 1960s odd rumours began to surface that it was to be found in Paris. It took 30 more years, but in 1991 an expert from Christies found it in the hands of a French family. When it reached auction, it was sold to an anonymous millionaire, who has now loaned it to the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore for conservation. Although the text is incredibly difficult to read, with state-of-the-art imaging equipment, they are gradually piecing together all of the writing for the very first time. And as the team in Baltimore peel back the glue, leather and centuries of dirt, dissolve the blue-tack and unfold the lines of Greek that are buried in the spine of the book, they are building up a picture of a man who was thousands of years ahead of his time. Not only was Archimedes coming to terms with the profound subject of infinity, he had taken the first crucial steps towards calculus, a branch of mathematics that had to be reinvented after the Renaissance, and which is today used to describe every physical phenomenon from the movement of the planets to the construction of a skyscraper. Who knows what human minds could have achieved if they had only known what Archimedes already knew?

For years scientists have been trying to find the mysterious evolutionary master key responsible for transforming the dinosaurs into world-beaters. In the early Jurassic, 200 million years ago, they were a relatively small group of primitive creatures. By the late Jurassic, 50 million years later, they had become the magnificent array of carnivores and giant plant eaters that would dominate the planet for millions of years. In between lies the mysterious period of the middle Jurassic in which all these changes must have happened. But what were they? What was it that transformed the dinosaurs? Was there some terrible mass extinction? Had there been an amazing change in the environment? All this was speculation and theory. How and where would evidence come to light? Fossils from the middle Jurassic are incredibly rare. All anyone had to go on were a few small outcrops of rock dotted around the world. Then a treasure trove of fossils emerged from the midst of an Argentinian wilderness in the 1990s; thousands of square miles of mid-Jurassic rocks. On their first season in the field, palaeontologist Oliver Rauhut and his team unearthed two giant meat-eating dinosaurs and six huge long-necked dinosaurs. And there was much more: early mammals, crocodiles, fish and even plant life. They had uncovered a complete mid-Jurassic eco-system, a wonderful snapshot of life from this dark age of dinosaurs. "It's as if someone has unearthed a holy grail of dinosaur palaeontology," says British geologist, Dr Phil Manning. Oliver Rauhut describes the site as, "an extraordinary window on the mid-Jurassic." Above all, the hope is that this site may contain all the information they need to find the mysterious evolutionary forces that have eluded palaeontologists for so long. Already they've been able to test out many of their theories and draw some exciting conclusions. For instance, one theory about what might have happened in the mid-Jurassic clearly does not seem to be supported by the finds in Argentina: the mass extinction theory. The laws of evolution say that a major extinction event could have caused an explosion in dinosaur diversity like the one in the mid-Jurassic. Death on such a vast scale clears away the competition, allowing the survivors to evolve rapidly into new ecological niches. But there's no evidence in Argentina for an extinction event affecting the dinosaurs. A second theory was that a major climate change could have transformed the dinosaurs' environment, leading to the evolution of many new types of dinosaur. In Argentina there is indeed evidence for a dramatic change in the climate. At the time of the early, primitive dinosaurs all the continents were gathered together in one giant super-continent (Pangea). The climate of the super-continent was dominated by extremely hot and dry conditions - with rainfall concentrated in a short bursts. Scientists call this the time of the mega-monsoon. Then in the middle Jurassic Pangea began to split apart. The Argentinian site offers evidence that as the super-continent split up, the climate changed to a more moderate, less extreme climate. Many scientists believe that on its own climate change isn't enough to explain what happened to the dinosaurs in the mid-Jurassic. As Phil Manning points out, the dinosaurs could in theory simply move to find the climates they were most adapted to - unless something stopped them from moving, some major physical barrier that meant they couldn't follow the climate zones. When scientists looked into this, it became clear that as the super-continent split up, such a barrier was being formed. Today it's called the Atlantic Ocean. This major barrier would allow an evolutionary process called vicariance to operate - animals on different sides of the barrier are able to evolve separately. The problem was there was no proof of vicariance in the mid-Jurassic. Until Argentina. Fortunately the site has fossils from just before and just after the super-continent split in two, so it's ideally placed to judge whether vicariance was beginning to take effect. And the early results are lending support that this may have been a key factor in explaining what happened to the dinosaurs in the mid-Jurassic.

2002-04-04T20:00:00Z

2002x11 Killer Lakes

2002x11 Killer Lakes

  • 2002-04-04T20:00:00Z1h

When Mount Nyiragongo erupted in the Democratic Republic of Congo in January 2002 it seemed like a disaster. Molten lava plunged down the hillside and poured into nearby Lake Kivu. Many died, and much of the city of Goma was destroyed. In fact, the local people were lucky. Had the eruption spread to one of the many volcanic faults under Lake Kivu, it could have unleashed one of the most terrifying of all natural phenomena - lake overturn. The phenomenon of lake overturn first struck in 1984 at Lake Monoun, in Cameroon. 37 people mysteriously died, suddenly and silently. A bizarre array of theories sprang up - secret testing of chemical weapons, a massacre by unknown terrorists; none really made sense. The scientists who looked into the disaster believed it had to be something to do with the lake itself, but they could not be absolutely sure. In 1986, before research into the Monoun disaster was made public, it all happened again. The tragedy of Lake Nyos, also in Cameroon, made headlines around the world when almost 1,800 people sleeping in houses around the lake suffocated in their sleep. The team of scientists that went to investigate concluded that carbon dioxide, trapped at the bottom of the lake, had suddenly risen to the surface, killing everything within 25km. They called their theory lake overturn. Eventually the scientists came to realise that carbon dioxide springs underground were pumping carbon dioxide into the lake and that the whole tragedy would be repeated if nothing was done. They installed an extraordinary fountain in the middle of the lake to help the gas disperse. Even so, the level of carbon dioxide in the waters remains a concern. The Nyos disaster promoted a survey of deep lakes in Africa and Indonesia to see where else lake overturn could happen. All seem to be safe, except one - Lake Kivu, in Rwanda. Lake Kivu is one of the largest and deepest lakes in Africa and two million people live around its shore. It is also filling up with carbon dioxide, although it's not yet saturated with the deadly gas. The only thing that could trigger a gas release would be a massive geological event. Worryingly, Lake Kivu is sitting in an earthquake zone and surrounded by active volcanoes, including Mount Nyiragongo. If an eruption or an earthquake was to happen under the lake, then the effect could release millions of tons of asphyxiating gas into the surrounding areas. Until a solution is found, millions of lives could be at risk.

2002-11-14T21:00:00Z

2002x14 Freak Wave

2002x14 Freak Wave

  • 2002-11-14T21:00:00Z1h

The world's oceans claim on average one ship a week, often in mysterious circumstances. With little evidence to go on, investigators usually point at human error or poor maintenance but an alarming series of disappearances and near-sinkings, including world-class vessels with unblemished track records, has prompted the search for a more sinister cause and renewed belief in a maritime myth: the wall of water. Waves the height of an office block. Waves twice as large as any that ships are designed to ride over. These are not tsunamis or tidal waves, but huge breaking walls of water that come out of the blue. Suspicions these were fact not fiction were roused in 1978, by the cargo ship München. She was a state-of-the-art cargo ship. The December storms predicted when she set out to cross the Atlantic did not concern her German crew. The voyage was perfectly routine until at 3am on 12 December she sent out a garbled mayday message from the mid-Atlantic. Rescue attempts began immediately with over a hundred ships combing the ocean.

2002-11-26T21:00:00Z

2002x16 Homeopathy: The Test

Homoeopathy was pioneered over 200 years ago. Practitioners and patients are convinced it has the power to heal. Today, some of the most famous and influential people in the world, including pop stars, politicians, footballers and even Prince Charles, all use homoeopathic remedies. Yet according to traditional science, they are wasting their money. Sceptic James Randi is so convinced that homoeopathy will not work, that he has offered $1m to anyone who can provide convincing evidence of its effects. For the first time in the programme's history, Horizon conducts its own scientific experiment, to try and win his money. If they succeed, they will not only be $1m richer - they will also force scientists to rethink some of their fundamental beliefs. The basic principle of homoeopathy is that like cures like: that an ailment can be cured by small quantities of substances which produce the same symptoms. For example, it is believed that onions, which produce streaming, itchy eyes, can be used to relieve the symptoms of hay fever.

250 million years ago, long before dinosaurs roamed the Earth, the land and oceans teemed with life. This was the Permian, a golden era of biodiversity that was about to come to a crashing end. Within just a few thousand years, 95% of the lifeforms on the planet would be wiped out, in the biggest mass extinction Earth has ever known. What natural disaster could kill on such a massive scale? It is only in recent years that evidence has begun to emerge from rocks in Antarctica, Siberia and Greenland. The demise of the dinosaurs, 65 million years ago (at the so-called K/T boundary), was as nothing compared to the Permian mass extinction. The K/T event killed off 60% of life on Earth; the Permian event 95%. Geological data to explain the destruction have been hard to find, simply because the rocks are so old and therefore subject to all kinds of erosion processes. It seems plausible that some kind of catastrophic environmental change must have made life untenable across vast swathes of the planet. In the early 1990s, the hunt for evidence headed for a region of Siberia known as the Traps. Today it's a sub-Arctic wilderness but 250 million years ago, over 200,000km² of it was a blazing torrent of lava. The Siberian Traps were experiencing a 'flood basalt eruption', the biggest volcanic effect on Earth. Instead of isolated volcanoes spewing out lava, the crust split and curtains of lava were released. And the Siberian flood eruption lasted for millions of years. Could volcanic activity over such a long time alter the climate enough to kill off 95% of life on Earth?

Season Premiere

2005-01-13T21:00:00Z

2005x01 Global Dimming

Season Premiere

2005x01 Global Dimming

  • 2005-01-13T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon producer David Sington on why predictions about the Earth's climate will need to be re-examined.

The unpredictable results of the Theory of Relativity. Horizon brings you the second part of a two-part series on Albert Einsten. In the summer of 1939 Albert Einstein was on holiday in a small resort town on the tip of Long Island. His peaceful summer, however, was about to be shattered by a visit from an old friend and colleague from his years in Berlin. The visitor was the physicist Leo Szilard. He had come to tell Einstein that he feared the Nazis could soon be in possession of a terrible new weapon and that something had to be done.

2005-03-03T21:00:00Z

2005x04 Living with ADHD

2005x04 Living with ADHD

  • 2005-03-03T21:00:00Z1h

In this documentary, Horizon investigates Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), which is one of the most feared and misunderstood of all medical conditions. Despite over 200 scientific papers being published on this neurological condition every year, it remains stigmatised and controversial. Some doctors don't even believe it exists. Yet it is estimated that as many as 3-5 percent of the childhood population, and over one million adults in the UK are affected by ADHD. These people are often described as stupid, lazy, disorganised, wild, out of control or woozy on drugs. But the reality is altogether more complex, and deeply moving.

2005-02-10T21:00:00Z

2005x05 Neanderthal

2005x05 Neanderthal

  • 2005-02-10T21:00:00Z1h

Horizon investigates a strange skull that was discovered in 1848 on the military outpost of Gibraltar. It was undoubtedly human, but also had some of the heavy features of an ape... distinct brow ridges, and a forward projecting face. Just what was this ancient creature? And when had it lived? As more remains were discovered one thing became clear, this creature had once lived right across Europe. The remains were named Homo neanderthalensis (Neanderthal man) an ancient and primitive form of human.

In this documentary, Horizon follows the scientific world that was rocked by some astonishing news in March 2002 where a distinguished US government scientist claimed he had made nuclear fusion out of sound waves in his laboratory.

This Horizon episode is about genetics in humans. Every parent wants their child to have the best in life. But would this extend to picking the best genes for them? To date, genetic technology has only been used to treat serious disease in children. But as ways are developed to manipulate our DNA, there are those who think that parents will inevitably want to choose their children's genes, and create 'designer babies'.

Horizon brings us back two thousand years ago when a mysterious and little known civilization ruled the northern coast of Peru. Its people were called the Moche.

2005-05-22T20:00:00Z

2005x09 The Next Megaquake

2005x09 The Next Megaquake

  • 2005-05-22T20:00:00Z1h

In this documentary on earthquakes, Horizon starts with the worst natural disasters of all time in December 2004. The cause of so much devastation was the most powerful kind of earthquake on the planet - a megathrust. Megathrust earthquakes only occur on a particular kind of fault. Scientists have now discovered that just such a fault could cause a huge megathrust earthquake and tsunami right off the coast of North America.

In this documentary, Horizon presents the largest public health issue of recent years that has attracted such heated debate as the question of whether the MMR vaccine can cause autism. The MMR jab combines three childhood vaccines, against measles, mumps and rubella, into one injection, which is first given to children at around 12-18 months. Horizon presents new, exclusive evidence about the MMR jab.

2005-09-08T20:00:00Z

2005x13 The Hawking Paradox

Has Stephen Hawking been wrong about the universe for the last 30 years? Horizon explores his latest theory.

Is the hobbit a new human species or nothing more than a modern human with a crippling deformity?

At the Xishan Hospital, near Beijing, a remarkable medical pilgrimage is taking place. The sick and the dying are travelling here for a treatment pioneered by Dr Huang Hongyun. He claims he can restore functions that Western doctors said were lost forever. Horizon investigates his methods but are they too much too soon.

Scientists once got sacked for suggesting oily fish was good for you. Now all and sundry are hailing it as a panacea.

Time is running out for the rainforest, but a team of scientists have come up with a unique strategy to help save it: a giant inflatable raft.

Over a billion kilometres away, Saturn's largest moon, Titan, holds tantalising clues to how life began here on Earth. Horizon tells the story of the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft, the most ambitious and expensive interplanetary space mission of all time.

On 7 July 2005 Britain experienced its first ever suicide attack. Four bombs exploded in central London, killing 52 people and injuring over 700. When Scotland Yard launched one of the biggest investigations in its history, another first was quickly uncovered: the suicide bombers were home-grown, they were young British men, attacking their own country. Horizon explores what makes someone want to blow themselves – and others - up?

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