Instructional Video6:22
SciShow

The Rocky Mountains Are in the Wrong Place

12th - Higher Ed
Mountain ranges usually don't form in the middle of continents. Except for the Rocky Mountains. We'll go into the baffling Laramide Orogeny and a few possible reasons why the Rockies might be in the wrong place.
Instructional Video6:56
SciShow

Female Cockroaches Hate Romance (And It’s Our Fault)

12th - Higher Ed
Most people don't love cockroaches. And thanks to that lack of love, the females of one species of cockroach might not love their males looking for love. But lucky for both of them, evolution might be finding a way around it.
Instructional Video3:51
SciShow

No One Knows Where These Gems Came From

12th - Higher Ed
Montana sapphires come in a beautiful array of colors found in a few other places in the world. But geologists have no idea where they originated.
Instructional Video9:05
SciShow

The Snail We Misidentified More Than 100 Times

12th - Higher Ed
Everyone makes mistakes, but misidentifying a species more than 100 times? It happened. In this List Show, we tell the tale of the periwinkle snail and other creatures scientists confused for someone else.
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

The Sexually Transmitted ... Sandwich?

12th - Higher Ed
When you're enjoying an intimate moment with that special someone, the peanut butter and jelly sandwich you ate for lunch is probably the last thing on your mind. But sexually transmitted allergens are a thing, and nut allergies aren't...
Instructional Video5:46
SciShow

Why Your Dog Has An Anti-Tick Pill And You Don’t?

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever given your pet an anti-flea and tick medicine, you may have wondered why there's not a similar drug out there for you. Here's a little dive into the history of these drugs, and why there may someday be a human-grade...
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

The Rocket that Hopped

12th - Higher Ed
Surveyor 6 may not have been the first craft to make a soft landing on the Moon, but it is the first craft to take off from the surface of another world. And it did so in a very adorable way. Long before any Apollo astronaut, Surveyor 6...
Instructional Video9:25
SciShow

How Many Suns Can One Planet Have?

12th - Higher Ed
Earth and the other seven planets in our solar system have only one star: the Sun. Years ago, astronomers found the first exoplanet that had two stars. They also found one with three stars. And four. Just how many stars can one planet have?
Instructional Video6:43
SciShow

Hacking the Brain to Treat Tinnitus

12th - Higher Ed
Start speaking a new language in 3 weeks with Babbel. Get up to 60% off in your subscription here: https://go.babbel.com/t?bsc=1200m60-y... Tinnitus, or ringing in the ears, often accompanies hearing loss, and usually has no treatment....
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow

The Only Moons That Trade Places

12th - Higher Ed
Saturn's moons Janus and Epimetheus were once thought to be the same moon. It turns out they're dance partners.
Instructional Video8:51
SciShow

Why Your Strawberry Milk May Look Different Soon

12th - Higher Ed
Popular food dyes Red 3 and titanium dioxide are in everything from toothpaste to your strawberry milk. But multiple U.S. states and the EU are trying to ban them. Are they safe?
Instructional Video7:18
SciShow

Does Tylenol Actually Do Anything?

12th - Higher Ed
The pain reliever known as acetaminophen or paracetamol, marketed under brand names like Tylenol, Calpol or Panadol, has an excellent reputation. But the quality of evidence that it actually works is shockingly poor. So, do doctors and...
Instructional Video3:34
SciShow

This Planet is Only Half Covered in Lava

12th - Higher Ed
There are a lot of weird exoplanets out there, like 55 Cancri e (aka Janssen), which is probably half covered in lava. But the half that's covered in lava might not be quite the half you're thinking of.
Instructional Video5:58
SciShow

The Ocean’s Turning Green (That’s Bad)

12th - Higher Ed
Computer models of climate change have long predicted that the ocean would turn green as a result of warming. But the change can't be seen by the human eye, so scientists weren't sure how they'd measure this effect... until it turned out...
Instructional Video6:09
SciShow

The Particle So Extreme Scientists Called it OMG

12th - Higher Ed
In 1991, a subatomic particle smashed into Earth's atmosphere traveling faster than anything humans can replicate. It's the most energetic particle detected to date, and maybe even the fastest (except light itself). Astronomers call it...
Instructional Video3:45
SciShow

Why Hairworms Don’t Have Hair

12th - Higher Ed
Hairworms, sometimes called horsehair or Gordian worms, are mind-controlling parasites with a twist. A genetic study found these nematomorph worms are missing 30% of their genome, and we don't understand how they live without genes for...
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow

The Hostile World Where Animal Life Began

12th - Higher Ed
For decades, researchers thought they had a solid idea about the earliest booms in animal life. But new research might have turned off the gas on all these ideas, flipping our understanding of the Avalon explosion and the Cambrian...
Instructional Video6:02
SciShow

The Spiders That Turn Stars into Planets

12th - Higher Ed
Neutron stars, are some of the most extreme phenomenon in the universe. It's doubly so for a subset known as pulsars. Some are spinning so fast, and are so massive, that astronomers aren't entirely sure how they got to be that way. One...
Instructional Video7:36
SciShow

The Woman Who Saved the World

12th - Higher Ed
On her way to winning the 2023 Nobel Prize for her pioneering work on mRNA vaccines, Katalin Karikó lived a life made for the big screen.
Instructional Video6:48
SciShow

Blue Is the New Green (For Hydrogen)

12th - Higher Ed
We all want green energy to stop climate change, and one option is hydrogen. But achieving green hydrogen is tough, so some want to consider so-called blue hydrogen instead. Support for this video provided by Gates Ventures.
Instructional Video5:34
SciShow

You Went Through Puberty as a Baby

12th - Higher Ed
We all remember the woes and trials of our adolescence. But what you may not have realized is that your middle-school bout with surging hormone's wasn't the first time you went through a sort of puberty. From surging hormones to hair...
Instructional Video2:58
SciShow

The Island Made Of Gemstones

12th - Higher Ed
Zabargad Island in the Red Sea is so crusted with peridot that it's fair to say the place is literally made of it.
Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

Do Animals (That Aren’t Us) Procrastinate?

12th - Higher Ed
Are there any non-human animals that take a task they don't want to do and think to themselves "Eh, I'll do it tomorrow"? Even if they know the task will be harder and/or more unpleasant by putting it off? One of our Patreon subscribers...
Instructional Video5:45
SciShow

We Finally Landed on the Bottom of the Moon!

12th - Higher Ed
Humans have been hurling spacecraft at the Moon for over 60 years. But even with all that practice, it's still quite the challenge to successfully land something on the surface. Case in point: in August 2023, two missions attempted to...