Instructional Video3:20
MinutePhysics

Where is the True North Pole

12th - Higher Ed
Is it in the Arctic Ocean? In Canada? Russia?
Instructional Video2:10
MinutePhysics

TOP 10 REASONS Why We Know the Earth is Round

12th - Higher Ed
TOP 10 REASONS Why We Know the Earth is Round
Instructional Video7:19
SciShow Kids

The Ancient Animal Crossing | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Join Squeaks and Jessi as they learn about a time when lots of animals switched places -- like bears, sloths, armadillos, and more.
Instructional Video19:28
SciShow Kids

Tails and Tusks and Teeth, Oh My! | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
Come with Jessi and Squeaks as they explore some of the animals that roamed the Earth during the ice age. And a lot of these animals had giant features, like teeth the size of bananas or mouths shaped like a shovel!
Instructional Video14:19
SciShow

The 16 Most Asked Questions About Magnets

12th - Higher Ed
Magnets - how DO they work? We've got the answer for you, plus a bunch of weird fun magnet facts - where they got their names, why hitting some stuff with a hammer can turn it into magnets, and even why we feed magnets to cows, on purpose.
Instructional Video7:10
SciShow

Finding True North Is Harder Than You Think

12th - Higher Ed
Sure, you can point to the geographic north pole on a globe. But getting there, even with fancy equipment like GPS, isn't so straightforward. So scientists are looking into a navigation tool some animals use naturally.
Instructional Video18:50
SciShow Kids

The Amazing Power of Magnets | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
In this SciShow Kids compilation, Jessi and her friends at The Fort play with magnets and learn about how both animals and people use them to find their way around
Instructional Video1:49
MinuteEarth

Why Is There So Much Land In The North?

12th - Higher Ed
Most of Earth’s land is currently in the northern hemisphere because we happen to exist in a time where uneven heating in the mantle has pushed many continental plates northward.
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

How to Move the Sky

12th - Higher Ed
The earth is always moving, and our view of the night sky is slowly but surely changing.
Instructional Video12:46
PBS

Is Earth's Magnetic Field Reversing?

12th - Higher Ed
Earth’s magnetic field protects us from deadly space radiation. What if it were drastically weakened, as a precursor to flipping upside down? I mean, it has before … many, many times.. Spaceship Earth has a literal deflector shield. A...
Instructional Video9:20
PBS

When Dinosaurs Chilled in the Arctic

12th - Higher Ed
All told, the Arctic in the Cretaceous Period was a rough place to live, especially in winter. And yet, the fossils of many kinds of dinosaurs have been discovered there. So how were they able to survive in this harsh environment?
Instructional Video11:48
PBS

When We Took Over the World

12th - Higher Ed
From our deepest origins in Africa all the way to the Americas, by looking at the fossils and archaeological materials we have been able to trace the path our ancestors took during the short window of time when we took over the world.
Instructional Video10:41
Curated Video

The Mystery Behind the Biggest Bears of All Time

12th - Higher Ed
The short-faced bears turned out to be remarkably adaptable, undergoing radical changes to meet the demands of two changing continents. And yet, for reasons we don’t quite understand, their adaptability wasn’t enough to keep them from...
Instructional Video7:33
PBS

The Bear-Sized Beaver That Couldn’t Build A Dam

12th - Higher Ed
It’s important to us that you understand how big this beaver was. Just like modern beavers, it was semiaquatic -- it lived both on the land and in the water. The difference is that today’s beavers do a pretty special thing - one that the...
Instructional Video8:54
PBS

What Happened To Primates In North America?

12th - Higher Ed
Early primates not only lived in North America -- our primate family tree actually originated here! So what happened to those early relatives of ours?
Instructional Video4:20
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the time traveling car riddle? | Daniel Finkel

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You and the professor have driven your DeLorean back to the past to fix issues with the spacetime continuum caused by your time traveling. But another DeLorean appears with older versions of you and the professor. The professors panic...
Instructional Video5:43
SciShow

The Southern Hemisphere is Colder, Stormier, and... Cleaner?

12th - Higher Ed
You'd think that the Northern and Southern Hemispheres would be basically symmetrical -- that since our planet is a ball, the climate, temperature, and weather patterns would be the same on top as on the bottom. But there are some...
Instructional Video2:54
SciShow

How Did North America End Up With a Marsupial?

12th - Higher Ed
Both North and South America have their own species of marsupial, the opossum, but how they got so far away from their Australian relatives is a bit of a mystery.
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

The Little Lobster That Reveals Climate

12th - Higher Ed
Pelagic red crabs are actually lobsters - and that’s not even the weirdest thing about them! They sometimes wash up on shore in droves, signaling large scale climate events like El Niños and serving as a warning to marine biologists of...
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Doggerland: A Real-Life Atlantis

12th - Higher Ed
Though we probably won’t find a literal Atlantis beneath the sea, that doesn’t mean that a human settlement hasn’t ever been lost to the water. Meet Doggerland.
Instructional Video2:43
SciShow

These Migrating Birds Fuel Up by Eating…Mud?

12th - Higher Ed
A marathoner needs a lot of energy to make their long distance treks, and this is no different for migratory birds. But how are these marathon flyers getting that energy from the mud they’re slurping off of beaches along the way?
Instructional Video21:02
SciShow

How Climate Change Affects Ocean Life | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
We can see the effects of the climate crisis in many different ways here on land. But the oceans are also part of the interconnected, global system. So, here are a few ways that climate change affects our oceanic buddies.
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

Milk, and the Mutants That Love It

12th - Higher Ed
Got milk? Fact is, most people don't -- and shouldn't -- because for them, ice cream and milkshakes are basically toxic. So why can some people drink milk and survive? Turns out they're mutants! SciShow explains.
Instructional Video4:11
SciShow

How the First Americans Got There

12th - Higher Ed
This week, researches published a genetic analysis of the 11,500-year-old remains of a baby found in Alaska, near where the first Americans crossed the Bering land bridge. That analysis has answered some lingering questions about human...