Overview
For 27 years, biologist Charlie Crisafulli has been documenting the dramatic return of plant and animal life to Mt. St. Helens after the 1980 eruption. / When Mount St. Helens erupted in 1980, every living thing in the blast zone was buried beneath 300 feet of avalanche debris, covered with steaming mud and, finally, topped with a superheated layer of frothy rock from deep within the earth. Biologist Charlie Crisafulli has remained at the site for 27 years, documenting the dramatic return of plant and animal life to the barren landscape and pioneering a new understanding of the interaction between geologic forces and the life surrounding the mountain.
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37 - 1Darwin's Darkest Hour October 06, 2009
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37 - 2Hubble's Amazing Rescue October 13, 2009
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37 - 3Lizard Kings October 20, 2009
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37 - 4Becoming Human: First Steps November 03, 2009
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37 - 5Becoming Human: Birth of Humanity November 10, 2009
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37 - 6Becoming Human: Last Human Standing November 17, 2009
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37 - 7What Are Dreams? November 24, 2009
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37 - 8What Darwin Never Knew December 29, 2009
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37 - 9Killer Subs in Pearl Harbor January 05, 2010
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37 - 10Building Pharaoh's Ship January 12, 2010
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37 - 11Riddles of the Sphinx January 19, 2010
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37 - 12Ghosts of Machu Picchu February 02, 2010
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37 - 13Extreme Cave Diving February 09, 2010
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37 - 14The Pluto Files March 02, 2010
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37 - 15Hunting the Edge of Space: The Mystery of the Milky Way April 06, 2010
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37 - 16Hunting the Edge of Space: The Ever Expanding Universe April 13, 2010
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37 - 17Mind Over Money April 27, 2010
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37 - 18Mt. St. Helens Back From the Dead May 04, 2010