Overview
In 1714, following a maritime disaster, British Parliament offers £20,000 for the first reliable method of determining longitude on a ship at sea. It's known that longitude can be found by comparing a ship's local time to the time at the port of origin. The challenge is finding a clock—a chronometer—that can keep time at sea, where temperature changes, humidity, gravity and a ship's movement affect accuracy. NOVA chronicles the seventeenth-century journey to determine longitude.
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26 - 1Lost at Sea: The Search for Longitude October 06, 1998
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26 - 2Chasing El Nino October 13, 1998
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26 - 3Terror In Space October 27, 1998
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26 - 4Special Effects: Titanic and Beyond November 03, 1998
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26 - 5Deadly Shadow of Vesuvius November 10, 1998
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26 - 6Ice Mummies: Frozen in Heaven (1) November 24, 1998
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26 - 7Ice Mummies: Siberian Ice Maiden (2) November 24, 1998
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26 - 8Ice Mummies: Return of the Iceman (3) November 24, 1998
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26 - 9Leopards of the Night with David Attenborough December 01, 1998
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26 - 10The Perfect Pearl December 29, 1998
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26 - 11The Beast of Loch Ness January 12, 1999
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26 - 12Submarines, Secrets, and Spies January 19, 1999
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26 - 13Everest: The Mystery of Mallory and Irvin October 06, 1999
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26 - 14Escape! Because Accidents Happen: Fire (1) February 16, 1999
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26 - 15Escape! Because Accidents Happen: Car Crash (2) February 16, 1999
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26 - 16Escape! Because Accidents Happen: Plane Crash (3) February 17, 1999
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26 - 17Escape! Because Accidents Happen: Abandon Ship (4) February 17, 1999
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26 - 18Battle Alert in the Gulf February 23, 1999
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26 - 19Volcanoes of the Deep March 30, 1999
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26 - 20Surviving AIDS April 06, 1999