Instructional Video6:06
SciShow

Something's Been Making Weird Pits in the Seafloor

12th - Higher Ed
For years, scientists couldn't solve the mystery of strange pits on the floor of the North Sea. Initially they blamed methane seeps, but it seems like the pits were actually made on porpoise.
Instructional Video3:03
SciShow

Where Did the Moon Come From?

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space takes you to the moon! Learn about the competing theories about how Earth's closest neighbor formed.
Instructional Video5:09
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Something weird is happening in our galaxy | Ashkbiz Danehkar

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 2010, NASA announced the discovery of a never-before-seen galactic object: two gigantic gaseous bubbles, each emanating an impressive 25,000 light years from the center of the Milky Way. Astronomers were perplexed: what created these...
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

This Year in Space News (That Isn't JWST)

12th - Higher Ed
If you’ve been distracted looking at the amazing photos The James Webb Space Telescope has taken, not to worry. Here are three other stellar stories from the last year of space science!
Instructional Video14:48
PBS

What If the Galactic Habitable Zone LIMITS Intelligent Life?

12th - Higher Ed
Our solar system is a tiny bubble of habitability suspended in a vast universe that mostly wants to kill us. In fact, a good fraction of our own galaxy turns out to be utterly uninhabitable, even for sun—like stellar systems. Is this why...
Instructional Video15:33
PBS

The NEW SCIENCE of Moon Formation

12th - Higher Ed
Einstein once asked whether “the moon exists only when I look at it?". It was rhetorical objection to the idea that measurement in quantum mechanics causes reality to become real. But there was a time when the moon didn’t exist, and then...
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

We’re Wrong About How Mountains Form

12th - Higher Ed
We think we know how mountains form. Plate tectonics causes rock to be pushed up at fault boundaries. Except that model is hard to prove, and a new study suggests it might actually be a lot more complicated.
Instructional Video2:02
SciShow

How Do Oysters Make Pearls?

12th - Higher Ed
Quick Questions gives you the low-down on how oysters turn a tiny bit of gunk into a lovely, valuable pearl. ----------
Instructional Video4:44
SciShow

Anatomy of a Super Storm

12th - Higher Ed
On the weekend of April 29th and 30th this year, a series of thunderstorms slammed the southern and midwestern US. SciShow News takes a look at those deadly storms using the latest, high-resolution data from the NOAA's GOES-16 weather...
Instructional Video9:38
PBS

How a Supervolcano Made the Cenozoic's Coolest Fossils

12th - Higher Ed
One of the most dynamic, transformative, and potentially dangerous features in North America is also responsible for some of the continent's most amazing fossil deposits. It's a supervolcano we now call Yellowstone.
Instructional Video2:22
SciShow

Weird Places Mauritania's Eye of the Sahara

12th - Higher Ed
Explore the origins of one of the coolest geologic formations in the world, West Africa's Richat Structure.
Instructional Video2:21
SciShow

Weird Places: Mauritania's Eye of the Sahara

12th - Higher Ed
Explore the origins of one of the coolest geologic formations in the world, West Africa's Richat Structure.
Instructional Video4:03
SciShow

Moon dust tricky squid and the worlds biggest telescope

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explains the enormity of the Giant Magellan Telescope, possibly the biggest telescope ever built, as well as updates about NASA's new mission to the moon, and an unusual discovery about the habits of deep-sea squid.
Instructional Video5:44
SciShow

Why Only Some Vaccines Need Booster Shots

12th - Higher Ed
Vaccines teach your immune system to recognize pathogens, but sometimes your body needs a bit of a reminder.
Instructional Video5:11
SciShow

Immune NETs: What COVID and Snake Venoms Have in Common

12th - Higher Ed
When faced with threats ranging from snake bites to COVID infections, some white blood cells retaliate with a peculiar tactic: spewing out their own DNA to form pathogen-trapping nets. But research suggests that sometimes this...
Instructional Video7:42
PBS

Kronos: Devourer Of Worlds

12th - Higher Ed
What happens when a star eats its planets? Find out on today's Space Time Journal Club.
Instructional Video16:40
TED Talks

TED: Robots that fly ... and cooperate | Vijay Kumar

12th - Higher Ed
In his lab at Penn, Vijay Kumar and his team build flying quadrotors, small, agile robots that swarm, sense each other, and form ad hoc teams -- for construction, surveying disasters and far more.
Instructional Video8:29
MinutePhysics

A Brief History of Everything, feat. Neil deGrasse Tyson

12th - Higher Ed
In this captivating video narrated by astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, viewers are taken on a journey through the history of the universe, from its explosive beginnings to the evolution of life on Earth. Through a mix of science and...
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Red Nugget Galaxies The Universe's Ultimate Survivors

12th - Higher Ed
Finding a red nugget galaxy is like discovering a time capsule from the early universe.
Instructional Video2:33
SciShow

The Rainbow Gem Made from Ancient Sea Creatures

12th - Higher Ed
Ammonite fossils can be found all over world, but in one place, something happened that turned their remains into rainbow-colored gems that are more rare than diamonds!
Instructional Video4:43
SciShow

Can We Redirect Asteroids like in Armageddon? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
If you think punching an asteroid to knock it off the course to Earth’s destruction is purely for science fiction, you might only be right a for a little longer! Plus, scientists are being thrown for a loop with the orbits of planets...
Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

The InSight Lander Is Going to Mars! Here's Why

12th - Higher Ed
The InSight lander is finally launching and headed to Mars, and Hubble has revealed some hot supernova info.
Instructional Video5:31
SciShow

A Baby Planet May Have Once Smashed Into Jupiter - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Shortly after Jupiter formed, it might have been struck by an object that may have otherwise become its own planet! And researchers have a new estimate of how many Earth-like planets might exist.
Instructional Video2:06
SciShow

How Do Oysters Make Pearls?

12th - Higher Ed
Quick Questions gives you the low-down on how oysters turn a tiny bit of gunk into a lovely, valuable pearl.