Instructional Video4:41
Be Smart

De-Extinction: A Mammoth Undertaking

12th - Higher Ed
De-extinction, or using the power of modern biotechnology to bring back extinct species like mammoths and dinosaurs, would be cool. But is it really as easy as the movies make it look? Or do the cruel hands of time make it impossible?...
Instructional Video10:04
SciShow

Resurrection Biology: How to Bring Animals Back From Extinction

12th - Higher Ed
We've all seen the movies and heard the hype: But is it really possible to bring back animals that have gone extinct? If so, how? And how soon? And can I have a mammoth to ride around in my backyard? Hank explains the latest research...
Instructional Video30:31
TED Talks

TED: Mammoths resurrected, geoengineering and other thoughts from a futurist | Stewart Brand and Chris Anderson

12th - Higher Ed
Stewart Brand is a futurist, counterculturist and visionary with a very wide-ranging mind. In conversation with TED Curator Chris Anderson, Brand discusses ... just about everything: human nature, bringing back the wooly mammoth,...
Instructional Video6:41
PBS

We Can “Bring Back” The Woolly Mammoth. Should We?

12th - Higher Ed
In the quest to understand how evolution basically built the woolly mammoth, we may have found the blueprints for building them ourselves.
Instructional Video6:55
SciShow Kids

Woolly Mammoths, Mastodons, and Amazing Teeth! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Mastodons and woolly mammoths were both ancient relatives of elephants, but they were very different! Join Jessi and Squeaks to see how we can learn all about what an ancient animal ate, just by looking at its teeth.
Instructional Video0:46
Next Animation Studio

New DNA technology might bring back the woolly mammoth

12th - Higher Ed
New advances in DNA technology might lead to the revival of long extinct species such as the passenger pigeon, the Southern gastric brooding frog and the woolly mammoth, scientists believe. Cloning once required intact DNA for successful...
Instructional Video9:55
Curated Video

Why Scientists Want to Resurrect Extinct Species

9th - Higher Ed
From the wooly mammoth to the passenger pigeon, extinct species once maintained the balance of the earth’s delicate ecosystems. But human interference has resulted in dramatic loss of biodiversity. Can science restore what has been lost?...
Instructional Video4:29
Wonderscape

Cloning Extinct Species: Challenges and Possibilities

K - 5th
Science Kids Cloning Endangered Species - Pros and Cons

The video discusses the potential for cloning extinct species, focusing on the challenges and possibilities of bringing back animals like the woolly mammoth, passenger pigeon,...
Instructional Video4:59
Wonderscape

Exploring Gene Splicing: Creating Hybrid Animals and Resurrecting Extinct Species

K - 5th
Science Kids Bringing Back Extinct Animals - Should We Just Because We Can

The video explores the concept of gene splicing and creating hybrid animals through genetic engineering techniques like CRISPR technology. It discusses...
Instructional Video9:37
Curated Video

The Animals We Rescued from Extinction

6th - Higher Ed
It's amazing to think about the animals we've managed to save from the brink of extinction. Thanks to conservation efforts, species like the California condor, black-footed ferret, and the Arabian...
Instructional Video2:10
Howdytoons

Five Woolly Mammoths

Pre-K - 3rd
Five Woolly Mammoths! Enjoy this awesome new kids counting song -- the first video in our brand new Prehistorica series, featuring cool songs about your favourite extinct animals!
Instructional Video2:53
Financial Times

Could technology resurrect the woolly mammoth?

Higher Ed
FT Rethink - A US biotech company thinks it can reverse human-inflicted biodiversity loss and bring animals back from extinction. But scientists and conservationists warn the effects of de-extinction could be unpredictable and divert...
Instructional Video3:19
Curated Video

Extinct

K - 8th
This live-action video program is about the word extinct. The program is designed to reinforce and support a student's comprehension and retention of the word extinct through use of video footage, photographs, diagrams and colorful,...
Instructional Video8:23
Curated Video

Fossils: Evidence for Evolution and Extinction

Higher Ed
This video explains the use of fossils as evidence for the theory of evolution by natural selection. It describes the three main ways in which fossils can be formed, and how they provide evidence of organisms that lived millions of years...
Instructional Video9:37
Journey to the Microcosmos

A Two-Headed Ciliate and Other Adorable, Dead, and Extinct Things

9th - Higher Ed
The theme of today's episode is pretty simple: things we never thought we’d be showing you, but here we are.
Instructional Video1:36
National Geographic

We are Going Mammoth Tusk Hunting | Life Below Zero

Pre-K - 11th
The Hailstones are looking for tusks and bones from extinct mammoths to shape into jewelry. ➡ Subscribehttp://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe' target=hereank' rel='nofollow'>Subscribe ➡ Watch all clips of Life Below Zero
Instructional Video4:50
Wonderscape

The Ethics and Implications of Gene SplicingPros of Gene Splicing

K - 5th
Science Kids Bringing Back Extinct Animals - Should We Just Because We Can

The pros of gene splicing include the potential to bring back extinct species, advance medical treatments through CRISPR and optogenetics, and gain a deeper...
Instructional Video3:58
Curated Video

Mammoths vs. Mastodons: Can we 'de-extinct' them both?

9th - 11th
There's been a lot of talk and research interest around the possibility of resurrecting certain groups of organisms (or, at least their genomes) from extinction, with Woolly Mammoths being prime candidates for such an endeavor. But what...
Instructional Video7:52
Seeker

How Close Are We to Resurrecting Extinct Species?

9th - 11th
Bringing extinct animals back to life sounds like science fiction, but gene-editing techniques are making it possible. U.S./Mexico Border Wall Puts Animals In Danger Of Extinction -ps://youtu.be/l6xTxh96Jbc' target='_blank'...
Instructional Video3:38
Natural History Museum

The last of the mammoths | Natural History Museum

K - 11th
Why did the woolly mammoth go extinct? Museum mammoths expert Prof Adrian Lister discusses what his research reveals about the cause. Find out more about Museum research into the last major extinction of large
Instructional Video22:03
Curated Video

The Mission to Resurrect the Woolly Mammoth

9th - 11th
Subscribe to Motherboard Radio today!f='http://apple.co/1DWdc9d' target='_blank' rel='nofollow'>today! Right now, in the 21st century, South Korean scientists are actually working to resurrect the prehistoric woolly mammoth using...
Instructional Video0:53
The Guardian

Woolly mammoth arrives in Japan from Russia

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Woolly mammoth arrives in Japan from Russia Subscribe to the Guardian HEREref='http://bitly.com/UvkFpD' target='_blank' rel='nofollow'>HERE A 39,000-year-old frozen woolly mammoth is unpacked on Tuesday in Yokohama, Japan, where it...
Instructional Video2:55
Life Noggin

Should We Bring Extinct Animals Back To Life?

3rd - 9th
We all want to bring dinosaurs and wooly mammoths back to life, but could we? And should we? What If All Cats Died Right Now? ►►►►https://www.youtube.com/Patreon=WVAcqRJUs!M' target='_blank' rel='nvideosw'>Now? ►►►► Support Life...
Instructional Video3:30
Curated Video

What Really Killed Off the Woolly Mammoth?

9th - 11th
What caused woolly mammoths to die-off so quickly? New evidence suggests an unfavorable climate may have contributed to a loss of grazing habitats, which eventually drove them to extinction. From: MAMMOTHS: GIANTS OF THE ICE

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