Getty Images
Newborn foal
Just born foal tries to stand on his feet with a little help of his mother. Foal is still all wet and bloody, so the mare is licking him. Mare still has the umbilical cord hanging out.
Getty Images
Male foetus in the womb. His hand and ear are seen in close-up, and he opens his eyes. This foetus is at full term, and is fully developed and ready for birth
Male foetus in the womb. His hand and ear are seen in close-up, and he opens his eyes. This foetus is at full term, and is fully developed and ready for birth
Getty Images
Male foetus moving in the womb. This foetus is at full term, and is ready to be born
Male foetus moving in the womb. This foetus is at full term, and is ready to be born
Curated Video
KOSOVO: PEC: ABANDONED NEWBORN BABY (2)
English/Nat
An abandoned newborn has beaten the odds in Kosovo.
An American officer of the U-N police force found the baby boy by the side of a road, bleeding from his umbilical cord.
The newborn was taken to an Italian military hospital...
AFP News Agency
CLEAN:Trade between North and South Sudan under threat
CLEAN:Trade between North and South Sudan under threat
AFP News Agency
VOICED: Trade between North and South Sudan under threat
VOICED: Trade between North and South Sudan under threat
Curated OER
The First Few Weeks
As the title implies, the first few weeks of a baby's development are shown in the animated video. From its beginnings as a blastocyst to cell differentiation and intense development, see just how complex reproduction and the beginning...
Curated OER
Human Reproduction: Fertilization and Fetal Development
The journey of a fertilized egg is illustrated as it travels from the fallopian tube to the uterus. Cell division is explained and the miracle of life is shown.
Sophia Learning
Sophia: Placenta: Lesson 2
This lesson will give an overview of the structure and function of the placenta in the development of an embryo as well as discuss other important membranes and structures associated with development. It is 2 of 5 in the series titled...
SciShow
Sci Show Kids: Why Do We Have Belly Buttons?
A video exploring why every person even some animals have belly buttons. Understand that the belly buttons are left over from the umbilical cord that once connected a growing baby inside its mother to its mother for food and oxygen. [2:56]