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The Native Canoe of the Salish Sea: A Modern Plywood Version
Duration: 7:27
2015
Leif Knutsen is a retired shipwright who lives in the Pacific Northwest and appreciates the fine sea-keeping qualities of the traditional wooden Salish-style canoes of the Skokomish Indians. He has set out to build these canoes lighter (200 pounds verses 700 to 800 pounds), stronger (3 planks per side instead of 25 strips), in less time and at a lower cost, so the Skokomish might carry on this tradition more easily. We caught up with him at the 2014 Wooden Boat Show in Port Townsend.

The Joy of Having a Boat Built: An Outboard Cruiser Takes Shape
Duration: 10:54
2015
Yearning to cruise in style and burn only three gallons per hour? The joy of having a boat built that's exactly what you want may be too tempting to resist.

An Electrifiying Twist To The Gunning Dory: G.E.M.A. – The Gentleman's Electric Mess-About
Duration: 9:19
2015
G.E.M.A, otherwise known as the Gentleman's Electric Mess-About, has an electrifying new twist on the classic Chamberlain/John Gardner Gunning Dory. She was designed and built by Eric Jacobssen, Owner and Master Builder at North Brooklin Boats, in 2014. She is propelled by oar and an Aquamot A20 electric motor.

A Three-Generation Dream Boat – The Herreshoff Fish Class Sloop – PERCH
Duration: 5:19
2015
We fantasize about owning lots of different boats we see in Center Harbor and along the coast of Maine, and each of us have our own dream boats. But a boat we all agree on, is the Herreshoff Fish class.

Installing Floor Timbers in a Wooden Boat, Part 1 – Making the Pattern, Part 2 – Cutting & Fitting Big Oak, and Part 3 – Fastening with Drift Pins & Screws
Duration: 6:17, 12:54, 7:38
2015
It's better to have a whole boat, rather than two halves. Installing floor timbers in a wooden boat ties everything together.

KINTORE – A Bill Garden Inspired Design
Duration: 10:43
2015
KINTORE: A sweet dream-boat with Northwest roots finally goes home.

PopTech

Science Innovation Fellows
Duration: 4:31
2013
This is an introduction to the Science Innovation Fellows that were the lecturers for the 2013 conference.

Maine Public Broadcasting (2001 – 2013)

Quest Investigating Our World - An Emmy award-winning MPBN series that will appeal to anyone interested in the natural world of Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, while telling the most intriguing and entertaining stories about science in this region. (Order by year)

Summer: Getting the Bugs Out
Duration: 56:46
Winner Cine Golden Eagle 2005
Nominated for New England Emmy 2005
It's no secret that northern New England is home to many insects. So why are there 9,000 species of bugs here? What role do they play for us as pollinators and for one another as food? Also, what better time than summer to take inventory of all the biodiversity in our region? We join the region's first BioBlitz as biologists–– in a race against time––count all the flora and fauna they can in 24 hours.

Archaeology
Duration: 56:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2005
Sifting through a 6,000-year-old prehistoric settlement. Discovering the remains of 1812 soldiers under a city seafood shop. We'll follow several teams of professional and amateur archaeologists as they unearth pieces of northern New England's past. We'll see the latest techniques and technologies they're using to detect, excavate and preserve these interesting finds.

Winter
Duration: 56:46
2005
For those plants and animals that don't migrate south for winter, a lot of preparation goes into getting ready for winter. But it takes more than that to make it through our long cold winters. Creating their own anti-freeze and re-directing bloodflow are just a few of the amazing adaptations the natural world has come up with that we'll explore on QUEST. What many plants and animals know that we humans don't when it comes to dealing with winter.

Survival: The Human Body In Extreme Environments
Duration: 56:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2005
How can a man survive two nights at 30 below zero in the White Mountains? How can another live through the night on a buoy in the Atlantic in winter? Our bodies are constantly monitoring, balancing and adapting to the outside environment through a process called "homeostasis." We journey to the limits of human endurance as New England scientists and survivors examine how the body attempts to maintain its steady state at high mountain altitudes, in extreme cold and heat and even in outer space. All things being equal, why does one person survive and another not, would you survive?

Climate Change: In Our Backyard
Duration: 56:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2004
Sea levels rising, the end of the sugar maple, tropical diseases heading this way, we've heard a lot about "climate change" and "global warming," but how do we sort through the many terms and myths to see what this planetary issue means here in northern New England? QUEST takes us from fishing on the coast of Maine to farming off-the-grid in New Hampshire to living in-town in Burlington, Vermont. Using close-to-home examples, the views of leading scientists come alive as they show how climate change can affect almost every aspect of our lives - and in turn, how we affect the climate.

Bodies In Motion: The Biomechanics of Sports
Duration: 56:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2004
Using athletics, QUEST takes a fresh look at the way our bodies move. Bridging the gap between research and the playing field, coaches, trainers and athletes themselves discover how to optimize performance and what to do when injury causes that performance to fail. Whether it's defying gravity on a diving board or repairing a broken wrist, these coaches and trainers help us discover the science behind the sports we love.

Bioinvasion
Duration: 56:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2004
Is our environment evolving or under attack? Our modern day ecology is under onslaught from spreading alien organisms. Human activity is silently globalizing our world on an unforeseen level. Our land, forest and waters are all at risk. Why? Because these plants and animals are capable of moving aggressively into a habitat and monopolizing resources to the detriment of other species, can scientists help us win the war against this bio-invasion?

Spring
Duration: 56:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2004
Spring comes so late to northern New England that it hardly seems as though we have it at all. Yet each year, we get to enjoy at least a few weeks of this wondrous season. But because of our late start, things have to happen quickly and profusely. Spring is the time of year that wildlife and our plants come to life again and get right to the business of creating new life. It's the season for sex – not just for animals, but also plants. We'll see how the natural world struts its stuff to advertise its availability. It's no wonder we feel so rejuvenated this time of year.

Remote Sensing
Duration: 56:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2003
It wasn't until manned space missions that we learned how seeing a bigger picture gave us a whole new appreciation of our world. Now we routinely gather and interpret data from a distance. See for yourself how remote sensing helped secure emergency relief funds in the wake of the 1998 ice storm in northern New England forests. And how satellite images of microscopic phytoplankton in the Gulf of Maine may help solve some global warming problems.

Second Chance Wilderness
Duration: 56:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2003
Is there such a thing as true wilderness anymore in northern New England? And would we know it if we saw it? Not everyone defines wilderness the same way. And a relatively new science, conservation biology, is giving us even more options. Experience the region's most wild and stunning places as QUEST seeks out wilderness, old growth forests, and ecological reserves in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. This is the first widescreen program ever produced by Maine Public Broadcasting Network!

Autumn
Duration: 56:46
2003
Long before the first leaf turns red or most wild berries are ripe for eating, the natural world is busy getting ready for winter. So if fall starts that early for plants and animals, how do they know the seasons are changing? Witness the incredible communication that goes on with biochemicals that "tells" the natural world when to start preparing for colder weather.

HOME: The Story of Maine - The only comprehensive television series about Maine state history. Since the award-winning programs first aired in 1999, hundreds of children have used HOME education resources.

Struggle For Identity
Duration: 26:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2005
Have you ever wondered how Maine got its boundaries, or why it looks the way it does on a map? The idea of Maine's independence from Massachusetts had its detractors, not just from the so-called slave states but even from within, and the northern and northeastern borders were still in dispute over two decades after Maine became a state in 1820

MAINE EXPERIENCE - Another Emmy award-winning MPBN original series featuring historical segments on various aspects of Maine life – it might be a person, a place, a historical event or even a cultural phenomenon – that makes the Pine Tree State such a unique place, one that captures the hearts of residents and visitors alike.

Liberty Ships
Duration: 15:44
Winner New England Emmy 2007
The men and women who streamed into Portland in the 1940s to work in South Portland's shipyards helped win World War II. The Liberty Ships built there became the backbone of troop and equipment transport. These contributions from the homeland, in many cases, were just a valuable as those who fought the battles overseas.

Doctors of Osteopaths
Duration: 11:32
Nominated for New England Emmy 2006
Osteopathic practitioners are commonly accepted today in Maine, but that wasn't always the case. Their medical philosophy, which included a holistic approach and use of their hands to diagnose and treat patients, led them to be ridiculed and discriminated against by the prevailing medical community. Witness their struggle out of obscurity and into the medical mainstream.

The Underground Railroad in Maine
Duration: 14:24
Nominated for New England Emmy 2007
Slavery is not usually associated with Maine. But the state played a role in both perpetuating this terrible institution and fighting it. This complicated tale describes the conflict between commerce and morality as it played out in mid-19th century Maine.

The Way Summer Should Be: Maine Summer Camps
Duration: 7:08
2006
Summer camps on Maine lakes and ponds have provided city kids and rural kids alike a chance to experience the Maine woods up close for over a hundred years. What were the origins of the Maine summer camp experience? And did you know summer camps were strictly for boys until the 1890's? Camp Wyonegonic in Denmark opened in 1901 and remains one of the oldest surviving girls camps in America, and the Campfire Girls got its start in Maine.

Neal Dow: Prophet of Prohibition
Duration: 9:57
Nominated for New England Emmy 2006
Thanks to Portland's Neal Dow, Maine was a "dry state" for over 50 years. His status as the country's leading voice for prohibition was such that when the 18th Amendment prohibiting alcohol sales in the US was passed in 1918 (22 years after Dow's death) he was cited as an indispensable driving force.

A Boat Called Katahdin
Duration: 4:30
2006
Built at Bath Iron Works and shipped in pieces by rail to its home on Moosehead Lake, The Katahdin is a steamship with a long and rich tradition navigating its waters. From hauling food and supplies to remote logging hamlets to ferrying well-to-do tourists to the grand hotels that once dotted the lake, she has a history as colorful as the people who've owned her. Learn of the Moosehead Marine Museum's efforts to restore "Kate" to her former glory.

Mellie Dunham: Fiddling to Fame
Duration: 10:10
Nominated for New England Emmy 2006
Born in the 1800's, fiddler Mellie Dunham of Norway, ME enjoyed such national fame that he's considered the state's first "rock star." A farmer and snowshoe-maker by trade, fame struck when he was invited by Henry Ford to play at Ford's Dearborn, Michigan theatre, which in turn led to a life of constant touring and fawning stories in the nation's gossip tabloids.

Maine Statue Stories
Duration: 6:13
2006
Which is taller, the American Indian statue in Freeport or the one in Skowhegan? Before his trademark axe was put there, what did Rumford's Paul Bunyan statue hold in its hands? And what's the story behind the "Boy with the Leaky Boot" in Houlton? See how town statues reflect the times and the towns in which they stand.

Rockland in the Limelight
Duration: 9:49
2005
Rockland is not named for its rocky coastline but rather for its abundant limestone, which made wealthy men out of local lime merchants like Francis Cobb and William Farnsworth back in the 1800's. The proximity of these huge lime deposits to a deep harbor made it that much easier to ship the processed lime to places like Boston and New York, where building booms created near limitless demand for the lime used in the brick and mortar construction on which these cities were built. The lime industry was central to the midcoast economy, as it spurred demand in other related sectors such as rail transport, shipbuilding and barrell making.

A Day to Remember
Duration: 6:30
Winner New England Emmy 2007
This profile of Charles Norman Shay, a member of the Penobscot Nation, details his story of the D-Day invasion of Normandy, France. Shay was a medic in the Army's 1st Infantry Division, called "the Big Red One" for the patch these soldiers wore on their uniforms. His battalion was sent to land on the beach codenamed "Omaha" by the Supreme Allied Command led by General Dwight D. Eisenhower. Many of Shay's fellow soldiers made the ultimate sacrifice that day, June 6, 1944.

White Gold
Duration: 5:16
2006
If there's one thing Maine doesn't lack in winter, it's ice. In 1870, a warm winter in which ice didn't form on New York and Pennsylvania rivers had entrepreneurs looking to Maine for ice to keep city ice-boxes cool. Soon, 90% of ice harvested in Maine was shipped out of state to places as far away as South America, insulated by sawdust to stay frozen for months.

A Basilica in Maine
Duration: 6:46
2006
The basilica of Saints Peter and Paul in Lewiston is the only basilica in northern New England. Completed in 1938, it's been referred to as "the church built with nickels and dimes" because 98% of its cost was financed by the mostly poor French-Canadian immigrants that worshipped there. Learn more about its fascinating origins and restoration.

The Lindbergh Crate Museum
Duration: 4:01
2006
The crate that carried Charles Lindbergh's famous plane, The Spirit of St. Louis, back to America is now a museum housing Lindbergh memorabilia in Canaan, Maine. Donated by Lindbergh to the Admiral of the ship that brought the plane home, it was converted into a small house in New Hampshire before it fell into disrepair. It was nearly torn apart before being brought to Maine and carefully restored.

Voices of the Grange
Duration: 6:51
2006
An examination of the agrarian beginnings of the Grange in 1867 and how it took root in Maine. Grange halls are still holding on as a center of community life in many Maine towns, serving as the setting for countless weddings, bean suppers and class reunions. Profiled in-depth is the Houlton Grange, once the world's largest.

The Tools That Made Maine
Duration: 6:10
2007
Maine is well known for shipbuilding dating back to the 1600s. However, no ships could have been built here without necessary tools. This is the story of the implements, which gave rise to some of Maine's greatest industry.

Eastport's Last Sardine
Duration: 12:38
Nominated for New England Emmy 2007
The social documentary photographer Lewis Hine visited Eastport in 1911 to record the working conditions of the children employed in the sardine factories. What he found were amazing stories of perseverance under difficult circumstances.

SUSTAINABLE MAINE - MPBN's Emmy nominated science series. Find out how Maine's top researchers partner with stakeholders and communities to address some of Maine's most complex issues.

The Triple Bottom Line
Duration: 26:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2011
Maine's Sustainability Solutions Initiative researchers are working to tackle urgent economic, social and environmental challenges. SSI researchers collaborate with fishermen and others so tidal power in Cobscook Bay is developed sustainably. Then head to Central Maine, where researchers are working with family forest owners struggling to steward their land in the face of growing pressures.
Producer/Director/Writer Frank Ferrel, Videography Brett Plymale, Chad Diamond, Nick Woodward

Desperate Alewives
Duration: 26:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2011
Once migrating by the millions up Maine's rivers to spawn, alewife populations have dramatically decreased. Researchers and scientists with Maine's Sustainability Solutions Initiative team up with local stakeholders to investigate the effects of human activities on the Kennebec and Androscoggin River watershed, with a special focus on native alewife runs.

Pools, Policies and People – Maine's Vernal Pools
Duration: 26:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2012
Many towns in Maine are contending with a common dilemma: how to grow in ways that don't diminish the very things that people cherish about their community, like open space, wildlife, and special landscapes. A research team at Maine's Sustainable Solutions Initiative is using local vernal pool conservation as a model to examine how towns can plan future development in ways that benefit people and wildlife alike.

Basket Trees – Saving a Tradition
Duration: 26:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2012
For centuries, Wabanaki artisans have woven exquisite baskets from brown ash. Now, an invasive beetle threatens this ancient art form and the basketmakers' livelihoods. The emerald ash borer already has killed tens of millions of ash trees in the mid-west and Canada—and it's heading toward Maine.

Saving Our Lakes
Duration: 26:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2012
Maine's 5,700-plus lakes pump an estimated $2.5 billion into the state's economy every year. But human activity is reducing water quality in many of our lakes, which affects everything from property values to tourism dollars to fish. The Belgrade Lakes region is a crucible for these pressures- and an ideal place to learn how to contend with them. Researchers from Maine's Sustainability Solutions Initiative are doing exactly that by studying how development affects lake water quality and local economics.

Return of a River
Duration: 26:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2013
The Saco River Estuary has become a laboratory where scientists, students, and community members are working together to learn how to sustain a very special place. This Maine EPSCoR SSI research project at the University of New England benefits from the ideal location of the school situated right at the mouth of the Saco River. While the river is much cleaner than it was 50 years ago, it courses through the shadow of massive mills that not only fueled the economy but also left a legacy tainted by pollution. To help planners and managers understand that impact, SSI researchers at UNE are combining their research with stakeholder concerns and developing a grading system to help assess the health of the estuary.

SPECIALS
Maine Wind

Duration: 26:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2010

Broken Trust
Duration: 26:46
Nominated for New England Emmy 2009
Broken Trust highlights the compelling stories of Westbrook resident Dot Jarmin, Al Wagner - formerly of Cape Elizabeth and Brunswick - and Portland's Olivia Spallholz, all victims of elder abuse or financial exploitation. The program explores some of the innovative work being done by police officers in Maine to combat elder abuse.

Remembering Pearl Harbor
Duration: 56:46
Won Maine Broadcaster of the year 2001
Nominated for New England Emmy 2001
Remembering Pearl Harbor commemorates the 60th anniversary of the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor though compelling stories of Maine people who were in Hawaii, and those who were here in Maine. These events changed their lives forever.

National Geographic Television

National Geographic Ultimate Explorer –

Mississippi River Trip
Aired 07/02/2001
Get ready to take a trip down America's most famous river on a homemade raft unlike anything you have ever seen before. The "Floating Neutrinos", have already concurred an ocean so the Mississippi is bound to be a breeze right? Don't be to sure because up against a battalion of barges…

Everest Extreme
Duration: 34:23
2001
Mt Everest it towers over everything else on earth making it the ultimate challenge for mountain climbers. It can't be conquered, but with extraordinary effort it can be climbed. But why, why climb this mountain when so much is out of your control from storms and avalanches to pulmonary and cerebral…

Reptile World –
Trouble in Cancun
Duration:
2001
The bustling tourist resort of Cancun once was the site of a pristine mangrove forest, and some of its toothy former residents remain. Brady Barr joins a local scientist in trying to capture and relocate some problem crocodiles.

Post Office Editorial

Anyplace Wild – These aired on PBS. The dates are the airdates.
Buffalo Badlands: Hiking in Teddy Roosevelt National Park, North Dakota
Duration: 26:46
11/23/2000
Co-host Arlene Burns hikes in the North Dakota Badlands with naturalist-author Robert Steelquist. They're searching for North American bisons.
Host Arlene Burns, Producers/Directors P. David Berez & Darryl Czuchra, Director of Photography Scott Simper

World's Wildest Highway: Mountain Biking the Yukon's Dempster Highway, Canada
Duration: 26:46
11/16/2000
Mountain biking above the Arctic circle along the Dempster Highway (it's a gravel road) in Canda's Yukon and Northwest Territories, with host John Viehman and cyclist Jonathan Dorn.
Host John Viehman, Producers/Directors P. David Berez & Darryl Czuchra, Director of Photography Scott Simper

Prisoner's Paddle: Sea Kayaking Tasmania's Freycinet Peninsula and Maria Island
Duration: 26:46
10/19/2000
Host John Viehman kayaks along the Freycinet Peninsula of the Australian island Tasmania, and ventures into open sea to visit a former penal colony on nearby Maria Island, joined by Australian adventurer Simon Stubbs.
Host John Viehman, Producers/Directors P. David Berez & Darryl Czuchra, Director of Photography Scott Simper

Highways of Prehistory: Maine's Ancient Native Trails
Duration: 26:46
10/5/2000
Penobscot Indian Barry Dana and co-host Anne Gretchel go canoeing in Maine. They paddle down the Penobscot River and along the Atlantic coast to the Penobscots' traditional summer camps near Acadia National Park on Mount Desert Island.
Host Annie Getchell, Producer Dave Getchell, Director of Photography Steve Phillips

Alps of the East
Duration: 26:46
2000
Co-Host Annie Getchell goes backcountry skiing in French Canada with a crazy Quebecker snow hound. They are in the Chic-Choc Mountains on the Gaspe Peninsula considered an isolated outpost of French cultural.
Host Annie Getchell, Producers Dave Getchell & Darryl Czuchra, Director/Camera D'Arcy Marsh

Snowshoeing in New Hampshire: Saved by the Wood Butcher
Duration: 26:46
12/9/1999
"Snowshoeing in New Hampshire" finds cohost Annie Getchell in the White Mountains, exploring the Pernigewassett Wilderness with snowshoeing veteran Bill Osgood. Host Annie Getchell, Producer Dave Getchell, Director/Camera Scott Simper

Hiking Washington's Coast: Walking the Waves
Duration: 26:46
12/2/1999
In "Hiking Washington's Coast: Walking the Waves," co-host Arlene Burns goes beachcombing in Olympic National Park with two naturalists. The program also visits the geographically diverse park's rain forests and glaciers.
Host Arlene Burns, Producer Darryl Czuchra, Director/Camera Scott Simper

Dogsledding in North Woods: Mush, You Huskies!
Duration: 26:46
11/18/1999
"Dogsledding in Minnesota: Mush, You Huskies." The site: Superior National Forest near Grand Marais, Minn., where musher Arleigh Jorgensen shows co-host Arlene Burns the ropes.
Host Arlene Burns, Producer Darryl Czuchra, Director/Camera D'Arcy Marsh
*Editor credit in wrong order

Sea Kayaking in Alaska: Search for the Ancient Chugach
Duration: 26:46
10/28/1999
"Sea Kayaking in Alaska: Search for the Ancient Chugach." Host John Viehman kayaks in Alaska's Prince William Sound with Alaskan John Johnson, and the two search for evidence of Johnson's native ancestors ashore. Viehman also inspects the sound's shore for evidence of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill.
Host John Vieman, Producers Dave Getchell & Darryl Czuchra, Director/Camera D'Arcy Marsh

Climbing in Utah: Life on a Big Wall
Duration: 26:46
10/21/1999
In "Climbing in Utah: Life on a Big Wall," co-host Annie Getchell climbs rocks in the Grand Staircase-Escalante in Utah's Zion National Park, joined by climber Stephanie Davis. Also: hiking and canyoneering in the park.
Host Annie Getchell, Producer Dave Getchell, Director/Camera Scott Simper

Outrigger Canoeing in Hawaii: Pacific Ocean Sleigh Ride
Duration: 26:46
10/7/1999
Co-host Arlene Burns goes "Outrigger Canoeing in Hawaii" (the Big Island, to be precise) and learns about traditional sailing methods and Pacific-islander folklore.
Host Arlene Burns, Producer Darryl Czuchra, Director/Camera D'Arcy Marsh

Adventuring in Canada: Lewis & Clark's Inspiration
Duration: 26:46
9/29/1999
Following the footsteps of Scottish explorer Alexander Mackenzie, who trekked through British Columbia in the 1790s, prompting Thomas Jefferson to engage Lewis and Clark. Included: a review of Mackenzie's journeys and Lewis and Clark's. Joining host John Viehman are his brother Tommy and Canadian outdoorsmen and historians Geoffrey and Sean Peake.

Heavenly Sights in Hell Below: Caving in New Mexico's Guadalupe Range
Duration: 26:46
1998
Exploring caves in New Mexico's Guadalupe Mountain Range. Hosted by Annie Getchell.

Two Kids, Two Dads and 10,000 Islands: Family Canoeing in the Florida Everglades
Duration: 26:46
1998
Host John Viehman and his daughter Haley take a family canoe trip in the Florida Everglades with father and son friends Bardy & Houston Jones. They skip the crowed theme parks and head out to where the wildlife is real.
Host John Viehman, Producers Dave Getchell &' Darryl Czuchra, Director/Camera D'Arcy Marsh

New Dominion Pictures

The New Detectives- these aired on Discovery Channel.
Episode 08 – Face of Tragedy

Duration: 53:46
1997
Forensic Sculpting: Forensic sculptors retrieve people from oblivion. Using clay and an intricate knowledge of anatomy, forensic arts place a face on an unidentified skull, recreating the victim's likeness, which often leads to his name.

Episode 09 – Without a Trace
Duration: 53:46
1997
Missing Person: Approximately 1.8 million Americans are reported missing each year. Worldwide, the number of missing persons nearly triples. In addition to pictures on milk cartons, store windows, and in mass mailings, authorities use nationwide computer databases to help locate missing persons or match them with unidentified bodies. Even so, many of the missing are never seen again.

Episode 14 – Witness to Terror
Duration: 53:46
1997
Black Boxes: Little evidence is left after an airplane takes a deadly plunge from the sky. Investigators' best hope for an answer comes from the flight data recorder known as a "black box." Virtually indestructible, the black box could be the only witness to the final horrifying moments of a doomed flight.

The Quest- these aired on The Learning Channel.
Upright Man
Duration: 25:46
1997
Looks at why we stood up as a species

Faces of Fear
Duration: 25:46
1997
It can be your best friend or worst enemy. It can give you superhuman strength or stalk you every night of your life. It can scare you to death, but living without it could kill you. The Quest takes a chilling look at the face of fear.

Violent Sleep
Duration: 25:46
1997
It visits each of us every night, but sleep remains a baffling mystery. Sometimes causing us to perform monstrous acts. Even in sleep our bodies and minds are never completely at rest. What strange side of us awakens when our head hits the pillow? The Quest explores why a night of slumber turns into violent sleep.

Bigfoot
Duration: 25:46
1997
Investigating the reality of Bigfoot.

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