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This press release was originally distributed via the eWire press wire service (2002–2016). It is preserved here as a historical record.

May 1, 2005

Nature's "Deep Jungle" Premieres Sundays, April 17, 24 and May 1 on PBS

ARCHIVED 2002–2016: Originally distributed via the eWire press wire service. Preserved as historical record.

Nature's "Deep Jungle" Premieres Sundays, April 17, 24 and May 1 on PBS

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Nature's "Deep Jungle" Premieres Sundays, April 17, 24 and May 1 on PBS

ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA, Apr. 12 -/E-Wire/-- "Deep Jungle," the new three-hour miniseries premiering on NATURE, brings viewers a world that Tarzan never could have imagined. Airing Sundays April 17-24 and May 1, 2005, 8:00-9:00 p.m. ET on PBS, the miniseries reveals how technology is changing the nature of jungle exploration, and illustrates the ingenious, and often dangerous, methods by which scientists are expanding our understanding of rainforests and the role they play in planetary ecology.

"What we're learning today about jungles and how we're learning it are almost equally fascinating," says NATURE executive producer Fred Kaufman. "These three films reveal as much about the boundless quality of human ingenuity as they do about the living components of the jungle itself."

Filmed in the diverse rainforests of 14 countries, including Borneo, Peru, Cambodia, the Central African Republic and Madagascar, "Deep Jungle" follows researchers as they climb nearly 200-foot-high jungle canopies, confront unknown species, unravel mysteries of animal behavior and explore hidden archeological sites that harbor clues about lost civilizations.

"It's all accomplished with a remarkable element of fearlessness and the inventive use of cutting-edge technology," says Kaufman.

"Deep Jungle" contains an array of unforgettable moments, several of the most striking of which involve jungle primates. In Brazil, for example, capuchin monkeys are seen hoisting small boulders above their heads and crashing them down upon nuts that would not otherwise open. This is the first time such tool usage has been captured on film.

Perhaps equally "chilling" are scenes in which a chimpanzee assails a smaller primate in a breathless pursuit high in the trees, and a group of chimps form an organized mob to ruthlessly persecute one of their own kind who has run afoul of the social structure.

Among the many scientists whose work is depicted in the mini-series are:

• The real "spiderman," renowned arachnologist Martin Nicholas who, from a breathtakingly close range, confronts a previously un-catalogued species more than10 inches in diameter;

• Chloe Cipolletta, whose ability to win the trust of lowland gorillas has expanded human insights into these primates and helped slow rainforest logging; and

• Biologist Roman Dial, an ecologist with superb athletic abilities that have enabled him to prowl the jungle "rooftop" to map its vast expanse and learn its relationship to the animals who live within its shelter.

• Ornithologist Kimberly Bostwick, whose groundbreaking study of the tiny and frenetic manakins of the Costa Rican rainforest revealed the eye-opening secret behind their unique courtship ritual.

These researchers are among more than a dozen scientists whose ingenious, and often dangerous, jungle projects are rapidly expanding humanity's understanding of the natural world and the indispensable role of the rainforests.

NATURE, now in its 23rd season, has won more than 270 honors from the television industry, parents groups, the international wildlife film community, and environmental organizations, including the first award given to a television program by the Sierra Club. The series is produced for PBS by Thirteen/WNET New York.

Underwriters: Park Foundation, Canon U.S.A., Inc., Ford, Public Television Viewers and PBS. Co-producers: Thirteen/WNET New York and Granada Wild. Co-executive producers: Fred Kaufman, Thirteen/WNET; and Brian Leith, Granada Wild. Series producer: David Allen. Executive in charge: William Grant. Format: CC Stereo DVI.

Bob Rumerman, LVM Group Inc., Tel.: 212/499-6567; Fax: 212/751-2862; [REDACTED-EMAIL]

Kathleen Kaan, Thirteen/WNET, Tel.: 212/560-3026; Fax: 212/560-3012; [REDACTED-EMAIL]

http://pbs.org/wnet/nature

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