Nothing original here. Pretend science. A good example is the episode on Herod. There is a big focus on Caesarea. First the prof they have got an expert takes you under the amphitheater to see a tunnel that has never been mapped. As they crawl through the tunnel you can clearly see piping has been laid and there are electrical cables run. What a discovery they have here. Next they are at a well and she goes down and discovers a gap in the wall rocks at the bottom that could have been caused by an earthquake. Shocking given this area is prone to earthquakes. We are told the wall rocks at the bottom are big so it must be from the period of Herod. Say what? Then, standing on a pier built recently she notes the fall off in the beach is sharp, which would not be consistent with a harbor area where they move boats up on land. Something happened. Let's ignore that it has been 2000 years and the beach may have changed some, like when they built the retaining wall that you are standing on. Finally, a swim in off the beach to find some manmade artifacts and a wall with some shells and now we know that Caesarea was destroyed by a tsunami. What a revelation. Of course the 2006 paper by Harvard professors which confirmed scientifically that a tsunami occurred and linked it to a Talmud source to an event in 115 AD would have been much more convincing. So they pretend to discover that a tsunami occurred even though this has been documented in the literature for 20 years. Don't waste your time.