Instructional Video4:52
SciShow

Earthquakes Probably Won't Destroy Us in 2018

12th - Higher Ed
You may have read that 2018 is looking to be a bad year for earthquakes, but Hank is here to offer you some assurances.
Instructional Video4:06
SciShow

The Most Massive Dinosaur, and Are Earthquakes Contagious?

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News introduces you to the most massive land animal ever to walk the earth (pretty much) and tells you what’s going on with all of these earthquakes lately.
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Doggerland: A Real-Life Atlantis

12th - Higher Ed
Though we probably won’t find a literal Atlantis beneath the sea, that doesn’t mean that a human settlement hasn’t ever been lost to the water. Meet Doggerland.
Instructional Video9:46
SciShow

Are We Overdue for a Megaquake?

12th - Higher Ed
If you live in the U.S. you may have heard that the Pacific Northwest is supposedly overdue for an earthquake of colossal, devastating proportions. If that’s true, how can we better understand the threat and be prepared for the day it...
Instructional Video8:27
TED Talks

Peter Haas: When bad engineering makes a natural disaster even worse

12th - Higher Ed
What did the world learn from the devastating earthquake that struck Haiti in 2010? That shoddy buildings and bad planning can make a terrible situation even worse. "Haiti was not a natural disaster," says TED Fellow Peter Haas. "It was...
Instructional Video3:44
SciShow

The “Devil’s Staircase” Shows Why Earthquakes Are Hard to Predict

12th - Higher Ed
Devastating earthquakes happen every year, and it's difficult to predict when they will happen. But they do follow one mathematical pattern known as the Devil's staircase.
Instructional Video3:12
SciShow

The World's Next Ocean

12th - Higher Ed
A volcanic eruption and series of earthquakes in 2005 were important not because they did a great deal of damage to humans, but because they’re geologic evidence of where Earth’s next ocean will most likely pop up.
Instructional Video5:02
SciShow

The First-Ever Map of Mars’s Interior

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve done a surprising amount of exploration on Mars, from its atmosphere, to its surface, and miles deep into its canyons. But mapping its insides has been a quandary that we hadn’t been able to solve until last week!
Instructional Video2:20
SciShow

Science on Trial in Italy

12th - Higher Ed
Hank has some thoughts on the news that several Italian scientists who were convicted of 29 counts manslaughter for making an "inadequate risk-assessment" before an earthquake.
Instructional Video11:41
Crash Course

Candide: Crash Course Literature 405

12th - Higher Ed
John Green teaches you about Voltaire's hugely important Enlightenment novel, Candide. Candide tells a pretty wild story, but for the most part, it's about the best of all possible worlds. Which, spoiler alert, doesn't seem to be the...
Instructional Video4:30
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Real life sunken cities - Peter Campbell

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Though people are most familiar with Plato's fictional Atlantis, many real underwater cities actually exist. Peter Campbell explains how sunken cities are studied by scientists to help us understand the lives of our ancestors, the...
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

3 Times We Intentionally Crashed into Other Worlds

12th - Higher Ed
Most of the time, it’s not great when an expensive spacecraft slams into an extraterrestrial body. But now and then mission control intentionally crashes a spacecraft for science!
Instructional Video5:29
SciShow

Why Can’t Scientists Predict the Kilauea Eruption?

12th - Higher Ed
Hawaii's Kilauea volcano suddenly erupted last week. It's happened before, so why are eruptions so hard for scientists to predict?
Instructional Video13:26
TED Talks

TED: How to separate fact and fiction online | Markham Nolan

12th - Higher Ed
By the end of this talk, there will be 864 more hours of video on YouTube and 2.5 million more photos on Facebook and Instagram. So how do we sort through the deluge? At the TEDSalon in London, Markham Nolan shares the investigative...
Instructional Video6:06
SciShow

Don't Worry About That Asteroid That Might Hit This Year | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
That asteroid the headlines have been warning people about isn't likely to actually hit us, and scientists might have solved a mystery that could save lives: the relationship between tides and earthquakes.
Instructional Video8:58
Crash Course

How the Leaning Tower of Pisa Was Saved: Crash Course Engineering #40

12th - Higher Ed
This week we’re going underground to explore geotechnical and seismic engineering. We’ll look at how structures connect to the ground and transmit loads through their foundations, and how those foundations need to provide a high bearing...
Instructional Video10:23
SciShow

4 Ways to Uncover Ancient Earthquakes

12th - Higher Ed
Earthquakes shake a lot of things up, but after decades or even centuries, it might be a little tough to figure out when or even where one may have happened. Luckily, nature has a few ways of letting us know.
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 Video3:50
SciShow

Facts About Fracking

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gives us a summary of the important facts about fracking: what it is, why we do it, and how it actually isn't all butterflies and cupcakes.
Instructional Video3:14
SciShow

There Are Mountains Deep Within the Earth

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists think they’ve discovered some peaks taller than Mt Everest deep beneath the earth’s crust, and this range might be the key to one of the biggest mysteries in geology!
Instructional Video3:11
MinuteEarth

Why Earthquakes Are So Hard To Predict

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists are trying to figure out if they can predict big earthquakes by simulating small quakes in labs and studying big quakes under the ocean. Thanks to the University of Rhode Island for sponsoring this video....
Instructional Video10:24
Crash Course

Natural Hazards: Crash Course Geography

12th - Higher Ed
Today we wrap up the first half of our series on physical geography by taking a closer look at natural hazards - which are physical processes like heat waves and cyclones, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, and floods and droughts. And...
Instructional Video5:04
SciShow

Can Animals Predict Earthquakes?

12th - Higher Ed
You might have heard about animals behaving oddly right before an earthquake hits. But are these reports more than just anecdotes?
Instructional Video4:04
SciShow

Detecting Earthquakes: AI vs. Citizen Scientists

12th - Higher Ed
There are over 13,000 active seismic stations out there, producing far more data than seismologists have time to go through. So, researchers set up a showdown of humans versus machines to sift through all this information and, in the...