Instructional Video3:01
MinuteEarth

Why It's Good To Have A Weak Hand

12th - Higher Ed
We might have a strong hand because having a weak hand is actually useful.
Instructional Video11:08
MinuteEarth

MinuteEarth Explains: Water

12th - Higher Ed
In this collection of classic MinuteEarth videos, we take a look at one of Earth’s most critical - and unique - features.
Instructional Video2:29
MinuteEarth

Does It Pay To Cheat?

12th - Higher Ed
For some birds, trying to cheat your neighbors into raising your babies is just as much work - and is no more successful - than doing it yourself.
Instructional Video2:25
MinuteEarth

How two butterflies became one

12th - Higher Ed
Here's why you shouldn't judge a butterfly species by its wing coloration.
Instructional Video2:51
MinuteEarth

Why Does This Shrimp Cost More Than A Car?

12th - Higher Ed
Some aquarium hobbyists will pay $10,000 or more for a single shrimp because of the rarity of their colors or patterns.
Instructional Video10:05
MinuteEarth

MinuteEarth Explains: Stuff That...Isn’t

12th - Higher Ed
In this collection of classic MinuteEarth videos, we find out that lots of what we thought we knew about the world around us isn’t quite right.
Instructional Video2:22
MinuteEarth

*If We Aren't Too Late

12th - Higher Ed
We’ll each have at least $100,000 more in our piggy banks, on average, if we stop climate change than if we don’t.
Instructional Video5:13
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Why do whales sing? - Stephanie Sardelis

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Communicating underwater is challenging. Light and odors don't travel well, but sound moves about four times faster in water than in air - which means marine mammals often use sounds to communicate. The most famous of these underwater...
Instructional Video10:07
MinuteEarth

MinuteEarth Explains: Food

12th - Higher Ed
In this collection of classic MinuteEarth videos, we examine the weird world of what we like to eat.
Instructional Video2:10
MinuteEarth

Why Did T Rex Have Such Tiny Arms?

12th - Higher Ed
It's easy to assume that every trait - including stubby arms on a terrifying predator - must be beneficial, but the forces of evolution don't really work like that.
Instructional Video3:02
MinuteEarth

Why Do We STILL Use Lead Pipes?!

12th - Higher Ed
We've known for millennia that lead pipes could make us sick, so why are we still drinking from them?
Instructional Video3:32
MinuteEarth

Our Lungs Have A Fatal Flaw

12th - Higher Ed
Our respiratory systems do a great job of protecting us, but they are no match for the smallest pollution particles created by the modern world.
Instructional Video2:40
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The loathsome, lethal mosquito - Rose Eveleth

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Everyone hates mosquitos. Besides the annoying buzzing and biting, mosquito-borne diseases like malaria kill over a million people each year (plus horses, dogs and cats). And over the past 100 million years, they've gotten good at their...
Instructional Video2:34
MinuteEarth

Why "Nothing" Matters in Science

12th - Higher Ed
Null results often get a bad rap, sometimes characterized as a study "finding nothing," but there's a lot we can learn from studies whose results fail to support their hypotheses.
Instructional Video3:01
MinuteEarth

Why People Hate Hyenas

12th - Higher Ed
Throughout history and around the world, most people dislike hyenas. But why?
Instructional Video2:10
MinuteEarth

Screens are NOT the reason kids need glasses 👀

12th - Higher Ed
Way more kids have fuzzy vision these days because we spend less time in outdoor light, which makes our eyeballs longer.
Instructional Video2:34
MinuteEarth

The Plant That’s Full Of Metal

12th - Higher Ed
The amount of metal some special plants are able to take up from the soil would be toxic enough to an average plant to kill it several times over.
Instructional Video3:48
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The case of the vanishing honeybees - Emma Bryce

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the past decade, the US honeybee population has been decreasing at an alarming and unprecedented rate. While this is obviously bad news for honeypots everywhere, bees also help feed us in a bigger way -- by pollinating our nation's...
Instructional Video3:10
MinuteEarth

The Best Pokémon (According to Science)

12th - Higher Ed
There’s lots of debate as to which original starter Pokémon is the best fighter among squirtle, bulbasaur, charmander, and pikachu, but only one is the most biologically plausible.
Instructional Video2:25
MinuteEarth

Why Do Humans Vomit So Much? 🤮

12th - Higher Ed
In an effort to protect us from getting killed by something we’ve ingested, our brain’s vomit control center processes a lot of information from several different places … and sometimes is a little overly cautious.
Instructional Video5:22
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Penguins: Popularity, peril and poop - Dyan deNapoli

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Penguins are odd birds. For one, they cannot fly (but they are amazing swimmers), and, contrary to popular belief, the majority of penguin populations live in warmer regions. But these beloved birds are in danger, with populations...
Instructional Video2:27
MinuteEarth

Do Other Diseases Have "Long" Versions?

12th - Higher Ed
COVID isn’t the only virus to cause long-lasting symptoms. Other viruses - including the flu - can have similar enduring effects on our tissues and immune systems.
Instructional Video2:33
MinuteEarth

Will Gas Stations Survive?

12th - Higher Ed
Although it’s not likely to happen soon, someday gas stations may be replaced by (or turn into) another type of fueling station, because no fuel or mode of transportation is forever
Instructional Video2:52
MinuteEarth

How To Hear Halfway Around The World

12th - Higher Ed
Sounds in the ocean can travel more than 10,000 miles - that's halfway around the world! Here's how.