Instructional Video8:54
PBS

Darwin Missed An Example of Evolution Right Under His Nose

12th - Higher Ed
Charles Darwin encountered a tiny fox-like creature during his famous voyage but instead of discovering its fascinating evolutionary story, he just knocked it on the head with his geology hammer.
Instructional Video8:14
PBS

Cordyceps Turned These Ants Into Zombies

12th - Higher Ed
This fungus was actually manipulating ants’ movements, forcing them to do something they’d never ordinarily do, something strange, yet specific…
Instructional Video8:21
PBS

Are We All Actually Archaea?

12th - Higher Ed
The unexpected discovery of an entirely new domain of life was pretty huge and surprising - even if archaea do just look like bacteria. But, in recent years, it’s been their connection to us that's turned out to be particularly full of...
Instructional Video7:28
PBS

There’s Something Weird About Neandertal DNA And It Might Be Our Fault

12th - Higher Ed
Maybe it’s a little self-centered that we can be pretty focused on the DNA that we got from Neanderthals – but we shouldn’t forget that gene flow goes both ways.
Instructional Video8:07
PBS

The Island of the Last Surviving Mammoths

12th - Higher Ed
The Wrangel Island mammoths would end up being the final survivors of a once-widespread genus. In their final years, after having thrived in many parts of the world for millions of years, the very last mammoths that ever lived...
Instructional Video6:52
PBS

How the Smallest Animal Got So Simple

12th - Higher Ed
We tend to think that evolution only goes in one direction— toward getting bigger and more advanced. But that’s not always the case. This tiny, simple animal, the Myxozoans, (yes, animal!) evolved from something bigger and more complex.
Instructional Video7:20
PBS

How Plate Tectonics Gave Us Seahorses

12th - Higher Ed
How did seahorses — one of the ocean’s worst swimmers — spread around the globe? And where did they come from in the first place?
Instructional Video5:38
Be Smart

Is Your Eye Color Real?

12th - Higher Ed
The eyes are often the first thing we see when we look at someone. And when you look at them up close, everyone’s eye color is a kaleidoscope of shapes and hues. How does eye color work? The answer involves some very cool physics, and...
Instructional Video9:43
Be Smart

Could You Be a Chimera?

12th - Higher Ed
Ever feel like you aren't totally yourself? Well, maybe you aren't. In this video, we explore the idea of human chimeras. In mythology, the "Chimaera" was a beast made from different animals combined into one. But in biology, a chimera...
Instructional Video7:19
Be Smart

Ask Joe Stuff #3

12th - Higher Ed
You have questions, I have answers.
Instructional Video6:17
Be Smart

Ask Joe Stuff #1

12th - Higher Ed
You have questions, I have answers.
Instructional Video6:45
SciShow

Does COVID Mess With Your DNA?

12th - Higher Ed
As more and more are infected with COVID-19, there's a growing group of people who have what's called Long COVID, meaning they still have symptoms for weeks or months after getting sick. While we still don't know for sure the cause of...
Instructional Video5:10
SciShow

Why HPV Is Cancer In One Convenient Package

12th - Higher Ed
HPV isn't the only virus that causes cancer, but it's one of the best at it. Here's what we've learned about this supervillain of a pathogen, and how to stop it.
Instructional Video7:54
SciShow

Chemo Sucks. Science Is Changing That

12th - Higher Ed
We use chemotherapy because it works, but no one has ever come home from chemo treatment and gone "That was fun!" Let's look at the new targeted therapies and personalized treatments for cancer that doctors are developing for clinical use.
Instructional Video7:46
SciShow

Half of All Plants Are Invisible

12th - Higher Ed
If you see an acorn sprout under an oak tree, you're seeing that tree's grandchild. Here's why half of all higher plants are invisible, and why it works for them.
Instructional Video5:43
SciShow

We Can't Find Most Of The World's Fungi

12th - Higher Ed
Most of the world’s fungi aren’t just rarely seen or found solely underground. They’re flat out invisible - and that’s becoming a big problem. Start your own microscopic journey with a Journey to the Microcosmos microscope:...
Instructional Video8:30
Amoeba Sisters

Punnett Squares and Sex-Linked Traits (UPDATED)

12th - Higher Ed
Explore how to solve Punnett squares that involve sex-linked traits, specifically focusing on X-linked traits. Video has a resource available here https://www.amoebasisters.com/handouts This 2023 UPDATED sex-linked traits Amoeba Sisters...
Instructional Video4:40
SciShow

This Sturgeon-Paddlefish Hybrid Shouldn't Exist | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Chromosome shenanigans have resulted in some unexpected hybrid fishes. Also, this record-breaking mouse lives at a ridiculous altitude.
Instructional Video2:39
SciShow

The Secret of Your "Junk," Revealed!

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings us breaking news from a team of geneticists working on figuring out what all that "junk DNA" in the human genome really is - turns out it's not junk after all.
Instructional Video3:58
SciShow

Huge Sperm and Giant Tentacles: Relax, It's Marine Biology

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow shares the latest developments in science, this week including new insights into the evolution of giant sperm, and the discovery of a whole new order of animal. ----------
Instructional Video6:12
SciShow

How One Disease Changed What We Know About Medicine - Twice

12th - Higher Ed
Searching for a cure for rickets led to the discovery of vitamin D. Fortifying foods with vitamin D led to another disease, and a whole new way to view genetic disease in general.
Instructional Video3:46
SciShow

How Health Affects Sperm

12th - Higher Ed
Welcome back to SciShow News! Michael Aranda explains how a male's health affects their sperm.
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

Hospitals are Hotspots for Antibiotic-resistant Germs

12th - Higher Ed
While antibiotics have saved millions of lives, misusing them can speed up how fast bacteria evolve to resist them. And it turns out that one of the biggest hotspots for these antibiotic-resistant bacteria…is hospitals.
Instructional Video2:50
SciShow

Bird Eggs Warn Each Other About Danger

12th - Higher Ed
Although they don’t seem like the talkative type, recent research suggests that bird eggs can use vibrations to relay warnings about the outside world to their nest-mates.