The Nature of Things
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The Nature of Things
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The Nature of Things
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For over 60 years, The Nature of Things has explored our planet’s fascinating creatures, ecosystems, and scientific breakthroughs. From 1979 to 2023, it was hosted by world-renowned geneticist and environmentalist David Suzuki. In 2024, new hosts Sarika Cullis-Suzuki, a marine biologist, and Anthony Morgan, a social science researcher, continue this legacy. They bring fresh perspectives on how science and conservation can help shape a sustainable future.

ABOUT THE HOSTS

Sarika Cullis-Suzuki
Sarika has a PhD in marine biology and has hosted episodes of The Nature of Things and programs for Audible and Ocean Networks Canada. She continues her father David Suzuki’s legacy, which began almost a decade before humans landed on the moon.

Anthony Morgan
Anthony Morgan is a social science researcher and game designer who has hosted science programs for Discovery Channel, CBC, and Vice. He runs a lab studying how we can have better conversations around tricky science.

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The Nature of Things Conservationist and chimpanzee researcher Jane Goodall has died at 91. Watch her in the documentary She Walks With Apes, the epic story of three women who embarked on lifelong journeys to study and protect humanity’s closest living relatives: the great apes. (4 months ago)
 
 
The Nature of Things "There was a moment in time when their sub was there, and then it was not..." Go inside the investigation to uncover the truth about the Titan sub's final journey. Watch Implosion: The Titanic Sub Disaster - now streaming on the Nature of Things channel: https://youtu.be/DIEPa55uZI0 (8 months ago)
 
 
The Nature of Things Western sandpipers are tiny shorebirds that weigh about as much as a slice of bread. Every spring, they migrate from their wintering grounds as far south as Peru to breeding sites in Alaska and Siberia. They stop to refuel at a few key places on the journey (which can be more than 10,000 kilometres long), including the intertidal mudflats of Roberts Bank near Vancouver. Roberts Bank provides one of the last meals for the birds on their journey north — the next major stopover is the Stikine River estuary, more than 850 kilometres away. The documentary Sandpipers' Last Supper, written and directed by Isabelle Groc, captures tens of thousands of western sandpipers as they blanket Roberts Bank. It explores why this place — a mudflat next to GCT Deltaport, a large shipping-container terminal — is vitally important to their survival. Watch Sandpipers' Last Supper: https://youtu.be/lMo0YiXIxjA?si=ww6dk... (8 months ago)
 
 
The Nature of Things "Our relative, Buffalo, deserves an epic film. Singing Back the Buffalo combines my academic work with my goal to tell compelling Indigenous stories in a visual and connective way. " - Filmmaker Tasha Hubbard on making Singing Back the Buffalo. Watch the full documentary on The Nature of Things YouTube channel or CBC Gem. (10 months ago)
 
 
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