Modern Marvels (Season 5)

HISTORY’s longest-running series moves to H2. Modern Marvels celebrates the ingenuity, invention and imagination found in the world around us. From commonplace items like ink and coffee to architectural masterpieces and engineering disasters, the hit series goes beyond the basics to provide insight and history into things we wonder about and that impact our lives. This series tells fascinating stories of the doers, the dreamers and sometime-schemers that create everyday items, technological breakthroughs and manmade wonders. The hit series goes deep to explore the leading edge of human inspiration and ambition.

  • Poster for Polio Vaccine

    Polio Vaccine (Episode 1)

    Air date: 1997-08-17

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: When “poliomyelitis” swept the nation, thousands died or were disabled before American ingenuity, trial and error, and blatant acts of desperation led to one of the greatest scientific breakthroughs in history. We’ll see how polio shaped the vision of FDR, and catapulted the young unknown doctor Jonas Salk to international celebrity.

  • Poster for The Motion Picture

    The Motion Picture (Episode 2)

    Air date: 1997-08-24

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: The complete story of the feuds, the mistakes, ingenuity, and successes that made movies possible–and kept Edison at the front of the inventor pack. Includes rare early films from the Edison Studios.

  • Poster for Satellites.

    Satellites. (Episode 3)

    Air date: 1997-09-01

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Strong enough to survive their fiery launch into orbit, sophisticated enough to provide life-saving images or relay tens of thousands of phone calls at the same time. By monitoring weapons systems and troop movements, these "eyes in the sky" may be the difference between security and annihilation. From the futuristic visions of a British sci-fi writer to creations of a German rocket designer for the Nazi war machine to the Cold War technological race, we review the satellites that link our world.

  • Poster for Radio: Out Of Thin Air

    Radio: Out Of Thin Air (Episode 4)

    Air date: 1997-09-07

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: To some it was a miracle. Others call it the triumph of illiteracy. Somewhere between adoration and scorn. Somewhere between the carrier pigeon and television. There was and is radio. We take radio for granted. Perhaps think of it as a second rate medium. A poor relation to our pride and joy, television. But fewer than a hundred years ago, the discovery that people could communicate over great distances without wires, galvanized the world to a degree that has been equalled.

  • Poster for The Electric Light

    The Electric Light (Episode 5)

    Air date: 1997-09-21

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Probably Thomas Edison’s best-known invention is the electric light. But the familiar light bulb is only the most obvious element of Edison’s accomplishment. He also created from scratch a delivery system for his light. His invention literally changed the world, putting the power of electricity at our fingertips. In 1878, Edison said: “The electric light is the light of the future. And it will be my light.” This is the story of how he and his team raced against competitors to make good his word.

  • Poster for The Phonograph

    The Phonograph (Episode 6)

    Air date: 1997-09-22

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Thomas Edison registered over 1,000 patents, but his favorite invention was one of his first. Rare photographs and early recordings show how the young inventor and his team outfoxed Alexander Graham Bell.

  • Poster for Great Towers in the Sky

    Great Towers in the Sky (Episode 7)

    Air date: 1997-09-28

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Viewer discretion is advised for those with vertigo! Featuring rare construction footage and interviews with steely-nerved iron workers who risked death to build them, we climb to the top of the world's tallest, most innovative, and most thrilling structures, including Seattle's Space Needle, Toronto's CN Tower, and Las Vegas's Stratosphere. The architects who designed these astounding buildings explain how each broke the boundaries of architecture at the time it was built.

  • Poster for Household Wonders.

    Household Wonders. (Episode 8)

    Air date: 1997-10-05

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Reviews the revolution in home improvement and glimpses the kitchen of tomorrow. Included: the development of the stove, sewing machine, refrigerated air, washing machine, vacuum cleaner, toaster, and mixer.

  • Poster for Radar

    Radar (Episode 9)

    Air date: 1997-10-12

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Examines the history of radar, focusing on its role in the Allies’ victory in WWII–from the Chain Home Network, rudimentary radar towers that ringed England’s eastern coast, to the role of Boston’s MIT in developing a smuggled English secret, the cavity of magnetron.

  • Poster for Forensic Science: The Crime Fighter's Weapon.

    Forensic Science: The Crime Fighter's Weapon. (Episode 10)

    Air date: 1997-10-19

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: From Sherlock Holmes' examination of the physical evidence at a crime scene to today's DNA technology, we review the history of crime detection through the use of forensic science.

  • Poster for The Stock Exchange

    The Stock Exchange (Episode 11)

    Air date: 1997-10-26

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Welcome to the center of the American economy, where nearly $90-million changes hands each minute. Journey back to the wooden wall, built to hold back Indians, where early traders signed a pact creating the New York Stock Exchange; watch worldwide markets quake with the crash of 1929; and visit today’s computer-driven wonder.

  • Poster for NORAD: The War Game Fortress

    NORAD: The War Game Fortress (Episode 12)

    Air date: 1997-10-27

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Journey inside the top-secret headquarters of NORAD–the North American Aerospace Defense Command–a binational military command composed of the United States and Canada. Established in 1958 during the height of the Cold War, NORAD’S initial mission was air defense against a bomber attack by the Soviet Union. We see how its primary mission has changed through the years, and go inside the Cheyenne Mountain Operations Center, one of history’s most ambitious underground building projects.

  • Poster for Earthmovers: The Power to Move Mountains

    Earthmovers: The Power to Move Mountains (Episode 13)

    Air date: 1997-10-28

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Feel the earth move under your feet and dig into the fascinating history of earthmoving equipment–from invention of the simple spade to today’s powerful steam shovels. Meet the legendary giants like John Deere, Jerome Case, and the founders of Caterpillar, who helped forge America’s monolithic construction industry.

  • Poster for International Airports

    International Airports (Episode 14)

    Air date: 1997-11-03

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Everyday 3-million passengers board the 10,000 aircraft flying at any given moment. Go behind the scenes at international airports to see the inner workings that make commercial air travel possible–from ground control in air traffic towers, the plane's cargo holds and high-tech security, and back to earth at customs.

  • Poster for Deep Sea Exploration: Challenging The Abyss

    Deep Sea Exploration: Challenging The Abyss (Episode 15)

    Air date: 1997-11-04

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: From hollow-reed snorkels to mini-submarines equipped with video cameras, curiosity compelled inventors to conceive of innovative devices to dive ever deeper into earth’s last frontier. Explore the ocean floor using the latest in technology, and examine biological and geological discoveries culled from the sea’s depths.

  • Poster for The Alaskan Oil Pipeline

    The Alaskan Oil Pipeline (Episode 16)

    Air date: 1998-01-01

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: In 1973, a desperate America, starved by an OPEC embargo, began construction on an 800-mile lifeline for its insatiable oil hunger. We’ll examine this technological triumph, built over impenetrable mountains and tundra, where temperatures drop to 75 below zero. We also study its impact on a fragile ecological system.

  • Poster for American Steel: Built to Last.

    American Steel: Built to Last. (Episode 17)

    Air date: 1998-01-18

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: For over a century, the US steel industry was a powerful symbol of the nation's industrial might. Steel helped explode the stock market into an overnight powerhouse, and transformed a country of farmers and merchants into a nation of visionary builders. But America's domination of the market would meet new challenges in the 1970s.

  • Poster for Battlefield Engineering.

    Battlefield Engineering. (Episode 18)

    Air date: 1998-02-08

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: Meet some of the most important, yet least-recognized, warriors–the battlefield engineers who lay the groundwork for oncoming conflicts. We'll cover combat engineering from ancient Rome to modern-day Iraq, and take a look at the "Next Big Thing".

  • Poster for Statue of Liberty.

    Statue of Liberty. (Episode 19)

    Air date: 1998-02-15

    Runtime: 44 min

    Overview: It started as an idea at a French dinner party and became the symbol of the free world. The story of France's gift to the US reveals a 20-year struggle to design and build the world's largest monument–using paper-thin copper sheets.

Modern Marvels

Seasons

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