Instructional Video16:02
TED Talks

TED: How Mars might hold the secret to the origin of life | Nathalie Cabrol

12th - Higher Ed
While we like to imagine little green men, it's far more likely that life on other planets will be microbial. Planetary scientist Nathalie Cabrol takes us inside the search for microbes on Mars, a hunt which counterintuitively leads us...
Instructional Video5:44
SciShow

A Very Handy Fish Fossil

12th - Higher Ed
This week, scientists discover something in a fish fossil that might give us a hand in finding our earliest land-dwelling ancestors.
Instructional Video5:40
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How we can detect pretty much anything | Hélène Morlon and Anna Papadopoulou

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Scientists have been staking out a forest in Montana for an animal that's notoriously tricky to find. Camera traps haven't offered definitive evidence, and experts can't identify its tracks with certainty. But within the past decades,...
Instructional Video3:46
SciShow

What Neanderthal DNA Is Doing To Your Genome

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists estimate that about 2% of our DNA is from Neanderthals. In this week, the journal Cell showed what those Neanderthal DNA do to our genome.
Instructional Video3:43
SciShow

Will We Ever Run Out of Dinosaurs?

12th - Higher Ed
Some paleontologists wonder how many species of dinosaurs are left for us to discover, and how many fossils of them are out there. Find out how long the experts think the world's supply of dinosaur fossils will last!
Instructional Video7:05
SciShow

There's a Single-Celled Dog

12th - Higher Ed
Is it possible for there to be a dog that is made of one very determined cell?
Instructional Video2:58
SciShow

Seeing Sick Birds Boosts Canaries’ Immune Responses

12th - Higher Ed
Unlike humans, domestic canaries don’t have the option of social distancing when one of their own is ill. But canaries may have evolved a nifty workaround for protecting their populations when disease strikes!
Instructional Video11:11
SciShow

7 Nests That Will Change How You Think of Birds

12th - Higher Ed
There are estimated to be over 18,000 different bird species with a wide variety of nest shapes and sizes. From teeny, adorable cups to massive compost mounds, the diversity of birds’ nests is definitely impressive. Chapters 1 BALD...
Instructional Video4:23
SciShow

Those White Crusts on Whales Are Alive and Full of Stories

12th - Higher Ed
You might think the white patches that grow on whale’s heads and faces are just weird skin growths, and you’re not wrong. But when you look closer, these patches are crawling with tiny stowaways!
Instructional Video3:06
SciShow

Darwin's Darlings: Meat-Eating Plants

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow describes the fascinating science of Darwin's little darlings: meat-eating plants. Learn about their many different types, how they catch and eat their prey, and how scientists think they evolved.
Instructional Video4:03
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Coneheads, egg stacks and anteater attacks: The reign of a termite queen | Barbara Thorne

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A single determined termite braves countless threats to participate in the only flight of her lifetime. She evades the onslaught of predators as she lands, flips off her wings, secretes pheromones, and attracts a mate. But she's not...
Instructional Video5:07
SciShow

An Unexpected Tool to Track Ancient Civilizations...Bacteria

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have used a bacteria that commonly infects us to track how ancient humans spread to the Americas from Siberia. And other scientists have discovered a new species of hyrax in the forests of Africa by listening to their barks...
Instructional Video14:02
TED Talks

TED: Are we designed to be sexual omnivores? | Christopher Ryan

12th - Higher Ed
An idea permeates our modern view of relationships: that men and women have always paired off in sexually exclusive relationships. But before the dawn of agriculture, humans may actually have been quite promiscuous. Author Christopher...
Instructional Video5:29
SciShow

Why Billions of Passenger Pigeons Died in Under a Century

12th - Higher Ed
How could the most abundant bird in North America go extinct so quickly? Short answer: us.
Instructional Video2:47
SciShow

The Northern Hemisphere’s Very Own Giant Penguins (Sort Of)

12th - Higher Ed
Today, penguins are found mainly in the Southern Hemisphere. But fossils have revealed giant lookalikes to these swimming birds further up north, spurring questions of how they evolved and what happened to them.
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

Why Can't My Cat Roar?

12th - Higher Ed
Only four species in the cat family can roar: lions, tigers, leopards, and jaguars. And zoologists are pretty sure those four species can't purr. But why?
Instructional Video3:51
SciShow

Why Do People Kill? And Other Revelations Of Human Nature

12th - Higher Ed
There are a lot of things that are still not fully understood about the species Homo sapiens - what makes us US? What makes us move the way we do, think the way we do, and kill the way we do? Today on SciShow News, Hank gives us a little...
Instructional Video10:31
SciShow

7 Animals with Really Wild Tongues

12th - Higher Ed
They’re sticky, they’re stretchy, they’re just plain long—here are seven of the most interesting tongues in the animal kingdom! chapters CHAMELEONS 0:51 TUBE-LIPPED NECTAR BATS 2:16 WOODPECKER TONGUE Popular Science Monthly illustration,...
Instructional Video18:52
SciShow

The Many Functions of Fungi | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
There’s no denying that fungus is all around us all the time. And not all of it is helpful, but neither is all of it harmful. Here are some of the many functions of fungi.
Instructional Video16:37
TED Talks

TED: The tiny creature that secretly powers the planet | Penny Chisholm

12th - Higher Ed
Oceanographer Penny Chisholm introduces us to an amazing little being: Prochlorococcus, the most abundant photosynthetic species on the planet. A marine microbe that has existed for millions of years, Prochlorococcus wasn't discovered...
Instructional Video2:24
MinuteEarth

Conservation Triage: Prioritizing Species for Survival

12th - Higher Ed
This video highlights the urgent issue of wildlife extinction and proposes a medical triage approach to prioritize species for conservation efforts. It questions the current emphasis on charismatic species like pandas, suggesting that we...
Instructional Video18:16
TED Talks

TED: How we wrecked the ocean | Jeremy Jackson

12th - Higher Ed
In this bracing talk, coral reef ecologist Jeremy Jackson lays out the shocking state of the ocean today: overfished, overheated, polluted, with indicators that things will get much worse. Astonishing photos and stats make the case.
Instructional Video9:55
SciShow

The Moth That Drinks Bird Tears & 6 Other Absurd Diets

12th - Higher Ed
These organisms don’t just dabble in out-of-the-box delicacies, they make some really bizarre dietary choices! Chapters View all FRUIT-EATING CROCODILES 0:57 SNAIL-SLURPING SNAKES 3:14 SHELL-CRUNCHING CATERPILLAR 5:31 PORTA-POTTY PITCHER...
Instructional Video4:30
SciShow

The Invisible Line in the Indian Ocean

12th - Higher Ed
There’s an invisible line between two groups of islands in the Indian Ocean with two totally different animal populations. It took three branches of science to figure out why it exists.