Instructional Video2:47
NASA

NASA | Planetary Scientist Profile: Brent Garry

3rd - 11th
NASA Geologist Brent Garry discusses his work studying volcanoes and lava flows on the Earth, the Moon, and Mars.
Instructional Video2:01
NASA

NASA | LRO Reveals "Incredible Shrinking Moon"

3rd - 11th
Newly discovered cliffs in the lunar crust indicate the moon shrank globally in the geologically recent past and might still be shrinking today, according to a team analyzing new images from NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO)...
Instructional Video1:11
Next Animation Studio

Scientists find the Earth’s largest, hottest volcano

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers have found the Earth’s largest and hottest volcano northwest of Honolulu in the central northern Pacific.
Instructional Video11:06
Cerebellum

Prehistoric Man Human Evolution Lower Paleolithic - Different Types Of The Homo Genus

9th - 12th
Experts now agree that Africa was the birthplace of humankind. Many of the oldest fossils have been discovered in Africa. Climatic changes and the Ice Age, which began close to three million years ago, gave rise to the spread of our...
Instructional Video11:35
Professor Dave Explains

Types of Silicates Part 2: Inosilicates, Phyllosilicates, and Tectosilicates

12th - Higher Ed
Silicates are a particularly complex class of minerals that all contain silica tetrahedra. What are the characteristic structures of the last three sub classes of silicates? How are they different from one another? The 8 Classes of...
Podcast6:53
Tumble Science Podcast for Kids

The Center of the Earth

Pre-K - Higher Ed
There is no natural hole to the center of the planet Earth, so seeing what is in the center is difficult. Scientists haven’t ever drilled deeper than 2,000 feet into the Earth’s crust. Seismographs are used to measure earthquakes, which...
Instructional Video3:40
NASA

Young Cryovolcano on Ceres

3rd - 11th
Analysis of images from NASA's Dawn mission reveals that dwarf planet Ceres hosts an unexpectedly young cryovolcano that formed with the past billion years. Music credits: "Farewell to the King" by Richard Friedman [ASCAP]; Jefandyo...
Instructional Video1:51
NASA

NASA | Goddard Summer Interns: Andy Ryan

3rd - 11th
Andy Ryan is an intern staff assistant with the Lunar and Planetary Science Academy. This summer the LPSA traveled to the Channeled Scablands of eastern Washington to study and map the geology of the area, which serves as a planetary...
Instructional Video1:14
NASA

NASA | Astrogeologist Jim Rice

3rd - 11th
Meet Jim Rice, an astrogeologist whose work has taken him to every continent on the globe. Among the many activities he does as part of his work at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, some of Dr. Rice's favorites include participating in...
Instructional Video2:09
NASA

NASA | Recent Geological Activity on the Moon

3rd - 11th
New images acquired by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft show that the moon's crust is being slightly stretched, forming small valleys - at least in some small areas. High-resolution images obtained by the Lunar...
Instructional Video3:37
NASA

NASA | Planetary Scientist Profile: Noah Petro

3rd - 11th
Noah Petro is a NASA planetary geologist who studies the surface of airless bodies in space, primarily focusing on the moon. In this video profile, Noah talks about how he was inspired to become a NASA researcher and what excites him...
Instructional Video1:49
EarthEcho International

STEMExplore: Life as a Geologist

9th - 12th
This video features a geology professor from the University of Texas who discusses his exciting career as a geologist. He talks about his travels around the world and the interesting problems he solves in his lab. He also shares his...
Instructional Video11:33
Physics Girl

World's Only Moving Mud Puddle

9th - 12th
Want to support more videos like this? Patreon.com/physicsgirl A mud puddle started moving across the California desert, and no one knows why. Dianna visited the mud spring to find out how a puddle became declared a natural disaster....
Instructional Video5:48
NASA

Landsat 9, part 3: More Than Just A Pretty Picture

3rd - 11th
It’s not enough just to record data with a satellite; you also need to analyze it here on Earth. Episode 3 shows the efforts of the USGS to downlink and archive the five decades of Landsat data we’ve collected, as well as make it...
Instructional Video7:28
Professor Dave Explains

The Composition of Rocks: Mineral Crystallinity and Bonding Types

12th - Higher Ed
What is a mineral? How are minerals classified based on their elemental composition, crystalline structure, and bonding type? Learn the basics of mineral composition and classification in this video. Minerals part 1
Instructional Video0:31
NASA

Lee Lincoln Scarp at the Apollo 17 Landing Site

3rd - 11th
This visualization of Lee Lincoln scarp is created from Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter photographs and elevation mapping. The scarp is a low ridge or step about 80 meters high and running north-south through the western end of the...
Instructional Video14:23
The Guardian

Flat Earth: meet the people casting aside 2,500 years of science

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Though not a new phenomenon, flat Earth theory has enjoyed a huge resurgence recently. A YouGov poll indicated that a third of Americans aged 18 to 24 were unsure of the shape of our planet, in spite of scientific proofs from Pythagoras...
Instructional Video0:44
Next Animation Studio

Thinning ice altering ecosystems: National Science Foundation

12th - Higher Ed
Findings from more than 30 years of research by the Long Term Ecological Research program at the US National Science Foundation suggest that ecosystems which depend on a season of snow and ice are the most vulnerable to climate change....
Instructional Video7:42
Professor Dave Explains

Native Elements, Oxides, Halides, and Sulfides

12th - Higher Ed
Different types of rocks contain different classes of minerals, which can tell us a lot about the geological environment in which the rock formed. What are these different mineral classes? What is the common structure of each class? The...
Instructional Video7:10
Professor Dave Explains

Introduction to Geology

12th - Higher Ed
Geology is the study of the Earth itself. But contrary to popular belief, geologists don't just look at rocks all day. Of course rocks are important to study, but geologists also study earthquakes, volcanoes, glaciers, and the structure...
Instructional Video1:04
Next Animation Studio

‘Lost Continent’ of Zealandia revealed in new maps

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers from GNS Science in New Zealand have mapped the submerged land mass of Zealandia in great detail, showing how tectonic and seismic activity have shaped its evolution.
Instructional Video1:10
Next Animation Studio

Geologists claim iron snow is falling on Earth’s core

12th - Higher Ed
It is snowing iron at the Earth’s core because molten iron crystallizes in the outer core before the substance sinks downwards.
Instructional Video1:13
Next Animation Studio

Powerful ‘river of rocks’ found deep under caribbean

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists found that an ancient magma bloom is pushing hot rock from the Pacific into th
Instructional Video9:10
Professor Dave Explains

Topography and Types of Sediments

12th - Higher Ed
Now that we've learned about the layers of the ocean, let's focus on the floor. How did oceanographers learn about the composition of the ocean floor? What is sediment? How do different types of sediment get to the ocean and what happens...