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Instructional Video3:59
Curated Video

Animal Classification | Evolution | Biology | FuseSchool

12th - Higher Ed
Animal Classification | Evolution | Biology | FuseSchool All living things are grouped into five kingdoms. In this video, we are going to look at the animal kingdom in more detail. Make sure to watch our video 'Classifying Organisms'...
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Instructional Video4:55
Curated Video

Why some animals are shrinking

9th - 11th
Birds, mammals, and fish are miniaturizing as temperatures rise. Why? Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO Animals all across the world are undergoing a strange transformation. In Appalachia, salamander body sizes have...
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Instructional Video0:50
New Scientist

Walking shark discovered in Indonesia

9th - 11th
A new species of epaulette shark, discovered in Indonesia, moves across the ocean floor like a salamander. Could this be how the first land animals walked? Read more:...
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Instructional Video2:09
New Scientist

Robots inspired by animals

9th - 11th
Robotics researchers are increasingly turning to nature for inspiration. Watch a robotic salamander, a water strider robot, mechanical cockroaches and some cool self-configuring robots. Footage courtesy of: University of Essex, Ecole...
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Instructional Video2:18
Curated Video

Superhero Science- Limb Regeneration

6th - 11th
For more, visit http://science.discovery.com/videos | Salamanders can grow new limbs, so why can't humans? This clip investigate the possibilities.
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Instructional Video3:44
Curated Video

How to Grow a New Fingertip | World's Strangest

6th - 11th
After a model airplane took his finger, Lee didn't get a replacement digit - science was actually able to regrow his fingertip, with a little help from salamanders and pigs. | For more World's Strangest, visit...
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Instructional Video9:19
Curated Video

Filthy Frank fans made us do this

9th - 11th
Filthy Frank is a star. But is he an artist or an asshole? Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO Whether you call him George Miller, Joji, Pink Guy, Filthy Frank (or Salamander Man, Safari Man, Chin-Chin, Santa's Brother, etc),...
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Instructional Video1:32
Curated Video

These Toads Are Trying to Mate with the Wrong Species

9th - 11th
Female fire salamanders rely on a castle’s fountain to give birth to their larvae. That’s if they can evade the amorous male toads who latch onto anything that moves. From the Series: Wild Castles: Heidelberg http://bit.ly/2SRqKXb
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Instructional Video4:19
Curated Video

Bringing a fossil to life: Reverse engineering locomotion

9th - 11th
You can tell a lot about an animal from the way it moves, which is why scientists have been recreating the movements of an extinct crocodile-like creature called Orobates pabsti. Orobates lived well before the time of the dinosaurs and...
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Instructional Video1:23
Curated Video

Axolotls: A conservation paradox

9th - 11th
Axolotls are found in labs and homes all over the world, but are critically endangered in their natural habitat. If they go extinct in the wild, this could spell bad news for research on these remarkable regenerating salamanders. Listen...
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Instructional Video5:04
American Museum of Natural History

Space Volcanoes - Shelf Life 360

6th - 11th
Here on Earth, volcanic eruptions are dramatic manifestations of our dynamic planet. Elsewhere in our solar system, awe-inspiring extraterrestrial volcanoes—both active and extinct—provide clues to planetary formation and hints of how...
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Instructional Video7:22
American Museum of Natural History

Under the Volcanoes - Shelf Life #18

6th - 11th
Volcanoes have enthralled and terrified humans for centuries. Today, researchers are trying to uncover the secret “ingredients” behind dangerous eruptions. Expeditions to Mt. Vesuvius—one of the world’s best-known volcanoes—and Alaska’s...
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Instructional Video4:40
American Museum of Natural History

Nabokov's Butterflies - Shelf Life 360

6th - 11th
Vladimir Nabokov is best known for his literary masterpiece Lolita, but next to writing, his great passion was the study of moths and butterflies. Curatorial Assistant Suzanne Rab Green tells the story of the author’s first road trip...
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Instructional Video5:59
American Museum of Natural History

Tales From the Cryptic Species - Shelf Life #16

6th - 11th
What do crocodiles and leopards have in common? Century-old specimens of both are helping to decode the biodiversity of ecosystems that are under threat today. Researcher Evon Hekkala and Curator Joel Cracraft help unravel the mystery of...
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Instructional Video4:14
American Museum of Natural History

Shamans of Siberia - Shelf Life 360

6th - 11th
Meet the shamans of snowy Siberia with the Jesup North Pacific Expedition—one of the largest anthropology expeditions of all time. Curator Laurel Kendall tells the story of how the Museum’s pre-Soviet collections remain vital to the...
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Instructional Video6:41
American Museum of Natural History

The Guts and Glory of Object Conservation - Shelf Life #15

6th - 11th
In the Museum’s Objects Conservation Laboratory, walrus intestines, birch bark, and reindeer hide are all in a day’s work for conservators trying to preserve Siberian anthropology collections for the future. Check out our 360 video about...
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Instructional Video6:09
American Museum of Natural History

Into the Island of Bats - Shelf Life #14

6th - 11th
The island of Cuba is a key piece of the puzzle for two bat researchers trying to understand biodiversity in the Caribbean. Find out why on an expedition with mammalogists J. Angelo Soto-Centeno and Gilberto Silva Taboada, joined by Ana...
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Instructional Video5:57
American Museum of Natural History

Nothing But the Tooth - Shelf Life #13

6th - 11th
What does it take to describe a new genus, or two, of ancient mammal ancestors? Paleontologists Mike Novacek and Paúl Velazco explain why dental detective work is a big part of the job. #fossils #teeth #paleontology #ShelfLIfe For more...
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Instructional Video3:45
American Museum of Natural History

Fossil Hunting In the Gobi - Shelf Life 360

6th - 11th
Join a 1920s fossil-hunting expedition to the Gobi Desert with Roy Chapman Andrews, then step into the Museum’s modern-day collections with paleontologist Mike Novacek to discover how these finds are studied today. #fossils #GobiDesert...
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Instructional Video8:19
American Museum of Natural History

Six Extinctions In Six Minutes - Shelf Life Episode #12

6th - 11th
Six tales of extinctions, and what collections can tell us about life on our planet. Six researchers share 60-second stories about organisms that may be gone, but not forgotten. #extinction #AMNH #ShelfLife #massextinction For more about...
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Instructional Video8:32
The Guardian

Tokyo: a walk down Memory Lane - the Guardian

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Omoide Yokochō - Memory Lane - developed as the eating quarter after the second world war. David Levene checks out old school Japanese delicacies such as salamander, loach and viper wine. It's all good for the stamina
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Instructional Video11:35
Brave Wilderness

Massive Wildlife Encounters of 2019!

6th - 8th
On this episode of Breaking Trail, we look at some of the most MASSIVE and EXTRAORDINARY animals we have ever encountered on the Brave Wilderness channel. From GIANT Japanese Salamanders to the art of snake milking, the Brave Crew has...
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Instructional Video8:28
Brave Wilderness

NOT A WORM?!?

6th - 8th
On this episode of Breaking Trail, Coyote discovers the most bizarre creature he’s ever found, a Caecilian! Wait a what?! A Caecilian, while at first glance looks exactly like a giant earthworm, is actually an amphibian more closely...
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Instructional Video12:20
Brave Wilderness

Mysterious SWAMP CREATURE Found!

6th - 8th
On this episode of Breaking Trail, Coyote and the crew are in the swamps of Florida and come across one elusive swamp creature that at first glance appears to be an eel, but.. it walks?! It’s actually a salamander, the Amphiuma! The...

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