Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

Do Animals (That Aren’t Us) Procrastinate?

12th - Higher Ed
Are there any non-human animals that take a task they don't want to do and think to themselves "Eh, I'll do it tomorrow"? Even if they know the task will be harder and/or more unpleasant by putting it off? One of our Patreon subscribers...
Instructional Video5:02
SciShow

North American Inhabitants 30,000 Years Ago

12th - Higher Ed
Two new studies challenge what we thought we knew about the first humans in the Americas. Could people have been on these continents 10 to 15 thousand years earlier than archaeologists previously thought? Join Stefan Chin and learn more...
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

The First Water on Earth Might've Come From… Earth? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have thought for years that Earth was dry in the beginning, but a new paper suggests that Earth might have actually started out wet! And In other meteorite news, a new study of impact sites might give us new clues about...
Instructional Video14:56
TED Talks

TED: The creativity and community behind fanfiction | Cecilia Aragon

12th - Higher Ed
The wildly diverse, thoughtful and hilarious world of fanfiction -- where writers reimagine favorite stories like "Harry Potter," "Pokémon," "My Little Pony" and more -- is ever-growing and becoming a vital social and learning tool....
Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

There Might be a New Kind of Habitable Planet!

12th - Higher Ed
Extreme environments full of life on Earth have led researchers to expand the definition of habitability to something that includes many more planets, potentially leading us to evidence of living things in a dramatically shorter time!...
Instructional Video19:39
TED Talks

TED: The politics of fiction | Elif Shafak

12th - Higher Ed
Listening to stories widens the imagination; telling them lets us leap over cultural walls, embrace different experiences, feel what others feel. Elif Shafak builds on this simple idea to argue that fiction can overcome identity politics.
Instructional Video5:38
SciShow

There's another Milky way out there

12th - Higher Ed
As a species, we like to think everything about us is one of a kind, including the Milky Way Galaxy, but new evidence shows that yet again, we're not so unique.
Instructional Video4:33
SciShow

The Fastest Runaway Star in the Galaxy

12th - Higher Ed
Most stars orbit the center of the galaxy. Some stars don't. Learn what scientists think is going on, with Reid Reimers!
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

Climate Change Moved the North Pole

12th - Higher Ed
The idea that the North Pole can move is nothing new, but the findings of a recent study suggest that Santa might need to pack up and find a new apartment.
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow

3 Mysteries Solved by Extraterrestrial Tsunamis

12th - Higher Ed
Earth isn't the only planet that gets rocked by giant tsunamis. In fact, giant waves on other planets have helped us solve a few mysteries about our solar system.
Instructional Video5:37
SciShow

Is YouTube Giving Us All ADHD

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists are researching the effects that frequent social media use might be having on developing minds, and we're on the verge of colorful X-ray images, which might reveal more than their black and white predecessors
Instructional Video5:33
SciShow

Would Aliens Be Able to See Earth?

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have worked out how likely it is that distant planets can see earth, and we are learning new ways to study the magnetic fields of galaxies.
Instructional Video5:52
SciShow

Hyenas Once Lived in the Frigid Arctic

12th - Higher Ed
Prehistoric teeth prove that hyenas once roamed the Arctic and the relationship between ancient crocodiles and climate is more complicated than we thought.
Instructional Video5:14
SciShow

How We Solved the Mystery of Pulsating Auroras

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have finally observed what causes pulsating auroras, and our estimates of the mass of the Andromeda Galaxy have shrunk.
Instructional Video4:56
SciShow

Great Whites May Have Taken Out Megalodon 3.6 Million Years Ago | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Megalodon is the largest shark that’s ever existed, and according to Hollywood it’s alive and well. But according to scientists, it’s definitely extinct, and it was probably thanks to its smaller cousins, great white sharks.
Instructional Video3:29
SciShow

Science Says You Shouldn't Drink Your Whiskey "Neat"

12th - Higher Ed
If you’ve ever sauntered up to the bar and ordered a whiskey neat, you might have felt cool doing it. But... is that really the best way to drink whiskey? Let's ask science!
Instructional Video6:30
SciShow

Planets Could Form Around Black Holes! SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
This week in space. Scientists have discovered a black hole that could possibly everything we know about black holes, and also, evidence that planets, yes planets, could form around super massive black holes.
Instructional Video12:58
TED Talks

TED: The beauty of being a misfit | Lidia Yuknavitch

12th - Higher Ed
To those who feel like they don't belong: there is beauty in being a misfit. Author Lidia Yuknavitch shares her own wayward journey in an intimate recollection of patchwork stories about loss, shame and the slow process of...
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

How Ancient Buildings Became Accidental Seismographs

12th - Higher Ed
We use seismographs to record the time, location and magnitude of earthquakes as they happen. But in the last three decades, a new field of study has emerged that is learning to track these details about earthquakes of old using the...
Instructional Video4:22
SciShow

The Science Behind 'Genetically Modified Humans'

12th - Higher Ed
The media have been talking about “genetically modified humans” and “designer babies.” But what they’re really talking about is germ-line engineering: a process that could help eliminate heritable diseases. So why do some scientists want...
Instructional Video4:09
SciShow

The Mysterious Origins of Our Galaxy's Fastest Stars

12th - Higher Ed
A new paper that borrows old astrological data from the Voyager 2 probe has used brand-new computer simulations to find some new weird data about Uranus’s magnetic field. Another paper has new information about our galaxy’s fastest...
Instructional Video4:33
SciShow

Dark Matter is Slowing Down the Milky Way

12th - Higher Ed
The effects of dark matter on galaxies is a mystifying and difficult thing to study, but the Milky Way's galactic bar might present an exciting way to quantify how much of it exists!
Instructional Video5:24
SciShow

Carbon on the Moon Hints That It Didn’t Form Like We Thought | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
The idea that the Moon is a blown-off chunk of the Earth is known as the giant impact hypothesis - but the presence of carbon on the Moon throws this hypothesis into question.
Instructional Video16:35
SciShow

Animal Clothes & Exploding Toads | SciShow Quiz Show

12th - Higher Ed
Two authors battle it out on SciShow to see who knows the most about animal clothes and mysterious circumstances.