Instructional Video14:56
Be Smart

I Tried Eating Bugs… Here's What I Learned

12th - Higher Ed
People say insects are the food of the future. They’re more environmentally sustainable and more humane than other sources of animal protein. Can they really catch on in western diets? I’m a pretty adventurous eater, but I’ve never...
Instructional Video4:14
Be Smart

You Are An Upside-Down Lobster

12th - Higher Ed
Our bodies are mirror images of lobsters and other arthropods from back to belly. We've know since the early 19th century that our guts and nervous systems are inverted from theirs, but only recently has molecular biology shown us why....
Instructional Video5:20
Be Smart

Why Are There As Many Males As Females?

12th - Higher Ed
In almost every animal species on Earth, equal numbers of males and females are conceived. Why is that? Especially in populations like lions or elephant seals, where most males don’t get to mate? That’s survival of the laziest, not...
Instructional Video9:05
Be Smart

The Impossible Hugeness of Deep Time

12th - Higher Ed
Humans have a hard time with really big numbers, especially when it comes to DEEP TIME. The history of the Earth took a lot longer than you think, trust me. But I’m here to help you put it in perspective. With some string.
Instructional Video8:19
Be Smart

Humans Are Smart. Why Are Babies So Dumb?

12th - Higher Ed
The first thing a baby giraffe experiences after being born is a 2 meter fall straight down to the ground. But within an hour, it’s standing, walking, and nursing on its own. And a blue whale calf, after nearly a year growing inside mom,...
Instructional Video21:29
Be Smart

The Mystery of Earth's Disappearing Giants | IN OUR NATURE

12th - Higher Ed
Seemingly distant ecosystems, even half a world apart, are connected in surprising ways. In this special limited series, Emily Graslie and Trace Dominguez join me as we explore the universal rules of life that tie together Earth’s living...
Instructional Video12:32
Be Smart

Why Is Sex a Thing?

12th - Higher Ed
Why does sex exist? You might think the obvious answer is “reproduction” but there are plenty of organisms on Earth that don’t require sex to reproduce. And the more that scientists examined sex, they more they realized that it’s an...
Instructional Video8:12
Be Smart

Why Is Our Skeleton On the Inside?

12th - Higher Ed
Having bones is pretty cool. They make our blood, let us hear, and keep us from being just a squishy puddle on the floor. But for every species with bones, there are at least 20 species on Earth with exoskeletons instead. And those...
Instructional Video9:11
Be Smart

Why Does Every Animal Look Like This?

12th - Higher Ed
In the race to survive, both predators and prey use visual tricks to get ahead. One nearly universal trick is countershading, a color pattern that helps animals erase their own shadows or blend into different backgrounds. It’s worked...
Instructional Video11:19
Be Smart

Why Are We Warm-Blooded?

12th - Higher Ed
A human with the metabolism of a hummingbird would need to eat about 80,000 calories a day to survive. That’s because staying warm by making your own heat takes a ton of energy. And that brings up a paradox, because creating your own...
Instructional Video19:29
Be Smart

What is Impossible in Evolution?

12th - Higher Ed
Could humans ever evolve to have wings? Why don’t fish have propellers? Why don’t tigers have wheels? Why don’t zebras have laser turrets? These might all seem like stupid questions (and maybe they are!) but they can teach us a lot about...
Instructional Video7:46
Be Smart

What Is A Dinosaur And What Isn’t a Dinosaur?

12th - Higher Ed
There’s a lot of confusion out there about what is and isn’t a dinosaur. And you’d be forgiven for being kinda confused. Maybe paleontologists are just messing with us. Or… maybe the question of what is and isn’t a dinosaur goes deeper...
Instructional Video13:11
Be Smart

This Face TOTALLY Changes the Human Story

12th - Higher Ed
Greetings, fellow Homo sapiens. Our species is the only remaining member of the genus of upright, walking apes known as Homo. Where did we come from? Our history just got a whole lot more complicated (in a good way) thanks to some...
Instructional Video11:50
Be Smart

Evolution FAILS in the Human Body

12th - Higher Ed
If you were taking an engineering class in school and you turned in the human body for your final exam… you would get like, a C+. Or maybe a B- at best. That’s because the human body is full of design flaws. Except they aren’t really...
Instructional Video10:42
Be Smart

Are Humans Still Evolving?

12th - Higher Ed
We’re living longer. Dying less. Human life expectancy has doubled in just a couple centuries. Machines and meals and medicines keeping us alive long past the age where we can make babies. Does this mean our species is no longer under...
Instructional Video12:28
Be Smart

A Brief (Scientific) History of Butts

12th - Higher Ed
Hold on to your butts. This episode is about… butts. The science and evolutionary history of your rear end, the down-low on your derriere, shining a little light where the sun don't shine… you get the picture. But(t) seriously, we don't...
Instructional Video9:06
Be Smart

Ask Joe Stuff #6

12th - Higher Ed
You have questions, I have answers.
Instructional Video12:06
TED Talks

TED: The "adjacent possible" -- and how it explains human innovation | Stuart Kauffman

12th - Higher Ed
From the astonishing evolutionary advances of the Cambrian explosion to our present-day computing revolution, the trend of dramatic growth after periods of stability can be explained through the theory of the "adjacent possible," says...
Instructional Video5:05
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why did Megalodon go extinct? | Jack Cooper and Catalina Pimiento

Pre-K - Higher Ed
20 million years ago, the ocean housed a creature so colossal that its stomach could reach volumes of almost 10,000 liters— big enough to fit an entire orca. It was the megalodon, the biggest shark to ever live. So, what was it like when...
Instructional Video12:07
TED Talks

TED: How life on Earth adapts to you and me | Shane Campbell-Staton

12th - Higher Ed
We tend to think of evolution as a slow, gradual process playing out over millions of years. But evolutionary biologist Shane Campbell-Staton says nature is now changing at breakneck speed to keep up with the world humanity has built....
Instructional Video6:14
SciShow

These Animals Lost Their Stomachs. Why?

12th - Higher Ed
What do a platypus, a pufferfish, and a seahorse have in common? Why, they all managed to evolve themselves out of having a working stomach! The reasons why might vary, as well as how they manage to live their lives without them, but...
Instructional Video5:04
SciShow

Were Long Necks Also Tall Necks?

12th - Higher Ed
Long-necked sauropod dinosaurs are some of the most striking animals that ever lived. But we don't know what they used their long necks for, and whether they held them high in the air or parallel to the ground. Here's what we do know.
Instructional Video5:12
SciShow

Will Climate Change Turn More Reptiles Female?

12th - Higher Ed
We hear all the time about the ways that climate change could disrupt the world. But thanks to a quirk of reptile biology called temperature-based sex determination, it could also mean a surge in the numbers of female reptiles.
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.