Workers turn millions of tons of cedar trees into perfect planks of wood siding. Plus, how are world-famous Spanish tiles handcrafted?
Dwarf planets are some of the solar system's most active places, from oceans of liquid water on Pluto to vanishing volcanoes on icy Ceres.
Half of the star systems in our galaxy have two stars, possibly creating habitats for alien life. Here, binary stars fling entire worlds into space.
After five planes vanish in the Bermuda Triangle, science points to a strange geological force. And, satellites reveal lost tribes in the Amazon.
The Roanoke colony vanished without a trace, and centuries later, it remains one of history's greatest unsolved mysteries. Can new evidence reveal its fate?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as squeeze chutes and composite boat propellers made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as retractable saunas and sawmill blade knives made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as plastic model kits and light microscopes made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as gummy vitamins and boat trailers made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as water well cylinders and nonconductive tools made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as stand-up paddleboards and vacuum cleaners made?
Would you ever believe a skyscraper can melt a car? Justin heads to London's Walkie Talkie building to unearth the science behind this building blunder.
Justin braves the turbulent North Sea as he goes inside an offshore wind turbine to see how engineers are fixing a fault that could cause these structures to fall into the sea.
Justin's in for a bumpy ride as he investigates gigantic potholes in Louisiana. Later, he heads to London to get a sneak preview of London's vast Crossrail project.
Confidential CIA files reveal a secret war for space between America and the Soviets. And, experts investigate American espionage during the Apollo programme.
Experts investigate the Lunar Landing Research Vehicle that nearly killed Neil Armstrong during training. Some believe this proves why the moon landing is fake.
New research shows the migration of ice planets may have helped start life on Earth, and stopped it being destroyed. How are they so vital?
Quasars are the brightest objects in space, powered by black holes, and the most mysterious. How do they shape the universe and ultimately aid in its destruction?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production processes. How are objects including dumplings and brass faucets made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their unique production processes. How are objects including saxophones made?
More everyday items go under the microscope. How are objects including prefabricated conservatories and copper cookware made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects including leaf and debris vacuums, canned meat and fillet knives made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects including promotional origami and hedge shears made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects including barbeque utensils made?
Experts examine whether an interdimensional portal in the Alaska Triangle led to the disappearance of an aeroplane carrying 44 military personnel in 1950.
Bigfoot hunters investigate whether a huge, ape-like beast is responsible for a string of disappearances and mutilations in the Alaskan wilderness.
A series of strange animal deaths and UFO sightings brings Chuck to Colorado. Reports of authorities ignoring these incidents suggest a government cover-up.
Chuck receives a map supposedly leading to a hidden cache of recovered materials from the Roswell incident. He and his team go on an epic treasure to find them.
Last season, Miklos located a shipwreck tied to Christopher Columbus using Cooper's intel. Now, Miklos has 8 weeks of cash left to find another shipwreck.
After discovering a 1700s-era cannon Darrell seeks the ship's origin. A letter in Gordon's files details a 16th century wreck connected to Sir Francis Drake.
Justin and Emiliano investigate a historical English ship filled with stolen treasures that has long been rumoured to be buried deep in a California desert.
Discover how wax figures, awnings, sandwich crackers and pewter tankards are made.
Find out how common items like pipe cleaners, blue stilton cheese, smart electric meters and telescopes are made.
Would you ever believe a skyscraper can melt a car? Justin heads to London's Walkie Talkie building to unearth the science behind this building blunder.
Justin braves the turbulent North Sea as he goes inside an offshore wind turbine to see how engineers are fixing a fault that could cause these structures to fall into the sea.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how slate tiles are produced and hot dog carts are made.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how racing leathers are manufactured and wood rocking chairs are made.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how mountain bikes are produced and lever action rifles are manufactured.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how saunas are produced and wheelchair lifts are manufactured.
How do they make the world's finest harp strings? How do they build roof windows that can keep out a hurricane? And, How do they make Belgian waffles?
Experts investigate to see if the fire on Apollo 1 that killed three astronauts was a cover-up. Was it a tragic accident or part of the moon landing conspiracy?
Experts investigate if there was a conspiracy to fake the moon landing. Does a secret report suggest the Nazis were involved in the Apollo space programme?
In 1962, three convicts try to escape from Alcatraz prison. Officials believe the men drowned, but a scientific experiment suggests they made it to shore.
In 2009, an Air France flight disappears, but could this tragedy happen again? After a huge area of Siberian forest is destroyed, it's a race to find the culprit.
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as detectable warning panels and model Stirling engines made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as micro drill bits and skiffs made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as ocean drone transformers and 3D puzzles made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects including Formula F race cars made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects including vacuum excavators made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects such as electric boats and fencing foils made?
How do they turn used aluminium cans into planes and rockets? Plus, how do they carve the traditional Black Forest cuckoo clock?
How do they build the ultimate car crushing colossus? Plus, how do Lea and Perrins concoct their Worcestershire sauce?
A look at how the amazing, and massive, decorations on Mardi Gras carnival floats are created, how rock candy is twisted together, and a look at how dentures are made.
How do they harvest and treat the world's most expensive tea? Plus, how does the Siekierki power plant of Warsaw, Poland heat half the city's homes?
How do they engineer the latest incarnation of the classic Royal Enfield Continental GT motorbike? Plus, how do 'art detectives' spot a forgery?
How do they blend science and destruction at crash test centres? And how do they piece together the complex mechanism of a pocket sized umbrella?
Adam Savage makes his own Iron Man armour suit made from titanium. He wants it to be bulletproof, suitable for flying and able to survive an explosion.
Adam joins forces with a NASA engineer to rebuild a rocket-propelled super weapon. Originally built to breach barbed wire in WWII, they aim to fix its fatal flaws.
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects including boat radar mounts made?
A look at how everyday items including Asian noodles and rotary engines are made, revealing the unique production processes used in making them.
A look at how everyday items including steel pulleys and acetate eyewear are made, revealing the materials and unique production processes used in making them.
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects including gyroscopic stabilizers made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects including shuffleboard tables made?
More everyday items go under the microscope, revealing their production. How are objects including air hockey tables made?
Jeremy Wade reveals the new deep-sea discoveries that might prove the existence of the infamous giant squid. Is this underwater monster the legendary kraken?
Jeremy Wade investigates if one of the Bermuda Triangle's most infamous disappearances was part of a conspiracy by a secret agent at war with the US.
Clayton and his team prepare to flip a 20,000-lb carnivore fossil from the earth. Mike hunts for a duckbill skull and Jared uncovers an ancient reptile.
Clayton must haul his 20,000-lb dinosaur fossil to a lab for analysis. The Harris-Bolan clan chases poachers off their land and Jared makes a final bid to make money.
Confidential CIA files reveal a secret war for space between America and the Soviets. And, experts investigate American espionage during the Apollo programme.
Experts investigate the Lunar Landing Research Vehicle that nearly killed Neil Armstrong during training. Some believe this proves why the moon landing is fake.
New research shows the migration of ice planets may have helped start life on Earth, and stopped it being destroyed. How are they so vital?
Quasars are the brightest objects in space, powered by black holes, and the most mysterious. How do they shape the universe and ultimately aid in its destruction?
How do they make the king of cheeses, Parmesan? How do they keep the runways running at the world's busiest airports? How do they manufacture relaxing reclining chairs?
How do they weave a Turkish carpet? How do they use helicopter blade technology for cross country skis, and control the water at Niagara Falls?
How do they cast the streetlamps of Venice? How do they prevent another Titanic-like disaster? How do they grow tiny trees for the ancient Chinese art of penjing?
How do they make one of the world's fastest bikes? How do pilots train for death-defying acrobatics? And, how do they bring oil and gas up from the bottom of the sea?
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how upright pianos are manufactured and flags are produced.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how oil lamps are manufactured and chocolate mints are produced.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how skeletal replicas are manufactured and ice buckets are made.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how scuba lights are manufactured and convertible sandals are produced.
How do they take the world's sharpest photos, stitch an airbag to catch a falling car, and produce billions of perfectly-formed jelly beans?
How do they build a caravan, forge tuning forks, resurface an ice rink, and put on the world's biggest light festival?
How do they make the groovy vinyl LP? How do they build the dodgem? How do they make one of the world's oldest pain remedies, tiger balm?
How do they forge the axe? How do they put together a courier's messenger bag, and how are the fastest lifeboats built?
How do they make Wensleydale cheese, turn pig hair into paintbrushes, and distil aromatic oils from eucalyptus?
The discovery of extra-terrestrial life faces a near impossible challenge. Experts explore the problems with proving or disproving the existence of aliens.
If an asteroid collides with the earth it could end life on our planet as we know it. Experts reveal just how close we are to an apocalypse.
Danny heads to Melbourne, where after years of extreme droughts they are securing the future of the city's water supplies with a huge desalination plant.
Danny Forster explores some amazing feats of engineering designed by some of the most innovative manufacturers in the industry.
How do they forge super steel to make a car lighter, greener and safer? And, how do they shear Australia's eighty million sheep every Spring?
How do they keep you comfortable, entertained and safe with the latest aircraft seats? And, how do they design bras with aerospace technology to give you that extra lift?
How is plasterboard made from power station smoke? How do they cast the world's top awards? How do they build a plane that can take off and land almost anywhere?
How do they make car windows to keep out wind and rain, stones and thieves, and even noise and harmful UV rays? And, how do they put the gloss on lipstick?
Workers turn millions of tons of cedar trees into perfect planks of wood siding. Plus, how are world-famous Spanish tiles handcrafted?
How is the most advanced heavy-lift airplane in the world built? What is the secret behind making sure bananas are ripe when they hit the shelves?
A mysterious ruined city in Greece is home to the mythical Labyrinth and the Minotaur. Its catastrophic downfall may have inspired the legend of Atlantis.
Attila the Hun was one of history's fiercest warriors, and new evidence reveals if his terror was responsible for the fall of Roman Empire.
A probe mysteriously malfunctions as it enters deep space. Astronomers find evidence of an invisible planet in a distant solar system.
A malfunction on the ISS could poison its crew with a deadly gas. A startling image taken by a NASA probe points to evidence that life could exist on Mars.
Jupiter is hotter than it should be, and scientists are baffled. There's a strange discovery on Mars and detectives ask for NASA's help on a murder cold case.
How do they feed France's appetite for snails, turn slabs of steel into shiny cutlery, and craft a kayak you can paddle with your feet?
How do they build emergency bridges that can take the weight of a tank, make a marker pen that never fades, and design a 200-mph superbike?
How do they blow the world's finest crystal, heat the deepest swimming pool, and fill a million bottles a day of the world's favourite ketchup?
How do they turn Sheffield steel into a carpenter's handsaw, make a microphone that can pick up a whisper, and safely steer through a frozen river?
How do they mine one of the rarest gemstones in the world, craft the classic cowboy boot, and build a road sweeper that can pick up seven tonnes of trash?
How do they make the world's softest duvets, drill for oil thousands of metres below ground, and put the stretch in rubber bands?
Experts investigate to see if the fire on Apollo 1 that killed three astronauts was a cover-up. Was it a tragic accident or part of the moon landing conspiracy?
Experts investigate if there was a conspiracy to fake the moon landing. Does a secret report suggest the Nazis were involved in the Apollo space programme?
Black holes aren't simply violent monsters. New discoveries reveal their importance in creating stars, giving light, and building the universe itself.
Nebulas are the strange structures of cosmic gas and dust where stars are born and die. New discoveries reveal the secrets of these mysterious places.
Astronomers detect a potentially habitable planet tantalizingly close to Earth. A chance discovery at NASA reveals a top secret military space program.
Two cosmonauts fight for their lives, trapped inside a capsule in a frozen lake. NASA astronomers are spooked when the full moon affects their experiments.
A starling discovery suggests the hellish clouds of Venus may be the origin of life on Earth. Plus, did the earth once have two moons?
Rob heads to California to investigate a network for major fault lines that could set off a mega-quake. Plus, he explores a mysterious sinkhole.
Rob Nelson investigates a cluster of ancient ruins in New England that suggest Europeans arrived in the Americas almost 1,000 years before Columbus.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how wood windows are manufactured and woven cashmere is produced.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how gas barbecues are manufactured and mattress pads are produced.
More everyday items are put under the microscope as we discover how skateboards are manufactured and braided pastry is produced.