The first in a four-part series entitled The Last Stand. The series looks at a variety of areas in the world set aside as specially protected areas of wilderness and natural wildlife. The first program is about western mountain parks and the work being done by biologists and scientists to save mountain wildlife.
The Everglades, unique in the world, are dependent entirely on water. But the beautiful birds and animals in the park are threatened by land development and a new airport, whose drainage policies are drying up the area.
The third in a four-part series entitled "The Last Stand." Point Pelee is a tiny peninsula in southwestern Ontario, jutting into Lake Erie, which contains a fresh water marsh full of wildlife of all kinds. It is also the last stronghold of the southern deciduous forest in Canada and contains southern species of plants and animals not found anywhere else in the country.
The last in a four-part series entitled The Last Stand. This program looks at Sonoran Desert in US Southwest and in Mexico.
The first in a three-part series entitled "A Sense of Time". This examines past and present ideas on questions of how old is universe.
This program focuses on a new geophysical concept of our planet.
Planet Earth has supported life for some three billion years; but Man, characterized by his powers of thought and other other intelligent faculties, has shown greatest development.
Sociologists tell us that Great Lakes are basis for civilization around them. If lakes fail.
Immediate implementation of pollution control in our Great Lakes is urgently needed if we are to preserve our most vital waterway.
Population: Everybody's Baby" examines projected consequences of overpopulation and-controversy surrounding population control.
Featuring a national opinion poll on public attitudes in Canada towards population growth.
Dealing with McGill University Settlement Mental Health Unit project in Montreal..
Psychiatry: Heavy Night
A visit to Montreal's Allan Memorial Institute, where a disturbed teenager responds to treatment.
A look at Vancouver-area encounter groups.