Instructional Video5:07
SciShow Kids

Where Can We Find Water? | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewWhere does water come from? If you turn on the faucet, there's water. But it goes on an incredible journey to get there. Today, Jessi and Squeaks learn about all the places we can find water.
Instructional Video6:50
SciShow Kids

Yellowstone: The World’s First National Park! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewSqueaks is back from his trip around the world! In this episode, he and Jessi discuss the first stop on his trip: Yellowstone National Park.
Instructional Video7:44
SciShow Kids

How Eyes Let Us See The World | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewSqueaks is heading on a trip around the world! He's going to see so much, and wants Jessi to experience those sights, too. In this episode, he learns about how humans (and a couple of other animal guests) see.
Instructional Video11:16
TED Talks

How to end factory farming | Lewis Bollard

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewFactory farming is the greatest moral crisis we ignore, says farm animal welfare champion Lewis Bollard. He exposes the truth behind the "all natural" labels on your groceries and shows how technology and public pressure can uncover the...
Instructional Video9:45
PBS

The Mystery of South America's False Horses

12th - Higher Ed
How did the "false horse," Thoatherium, and its relatives survive when their hoofed legs seemed to be adapted for an ecosystem that wouldn't exist for another 12 million years?
Instructional Video10:05
PBS

How the Himalayas Changed the World

12th - Higher Ed
The rise of the Himalayas affected more than just the immediate area. Turns out, we may have them to thank for everything from the rise of giant flightless birds in Madagascar; to the disappearance of plants from Antarctica; to the...
Instructional Video12:29
PBS

What Happened To The Other Mesozoic Mammals?

12th - Higher Ed
In 2003, a fossil belonging to a mammaliaform was discovered in an ancient lakebed in what's now China. It was an almost complete skeleton the size of a platypus, a find that complicated the history of mammaliaforms. It painted a picture...
Instructional Video11:50
PBS

When Neandertals Became Apex Predators

12th - Higher Ed
Climbing to the summit of the Eurasian food chain was one of the Neandertals’ most impressive evolutionary feats, but in the end, it may have actually been what doomed them.
Instructional Video10:10
PBS

How Mountains Make Evolution Weird

12th - Higher Ed
Mountains have a unique effect on diversity, messing with our understanding of animals through time, and pretty much just making evolution weird. And they would eventually reveal something even stranger about a group of mammals even...
Instructional Video11:05
Be Smart

Why Don’t Humans Hibernate?

12th - Higher Ed
Nature has had to come up with some crazy ways to survive harsh winters. But none are weirder than hibernation. Turns out there is more than one kind of hibernation, and studying all these ways that life slows down in the cold might help...
Instructional Video12:23
PBS

The Dinosaurs Too Big To Be Dinosaurs

12th - Higher Ed
How did sauropods, uniquely large land animals, actually live, with their anatomy and physiology pushed to such extremes? Well, their unprecedented gigantism came with some equally massive costs…
Instructional Video14:16
Be Smart

Is this Chicken?

12th - Higher Ed
Our appetite for meat is one of the greatest environmental challenges we face. Join me on a mind-blowing visit to UPSIDE Foods, the world's most advanced cultivated meat production facility, as we ask whether cultivated meat can deliver...
Instructional Video7:39
SciShow

Why Beaches Need More Sand

12th - Higher Ed
Adding sand to beaches sounds like it's an oxymoronic thing to do, but it's totally a thing. And there's some major benefits, like protecting our coastlines from storms and conserving ecosystems. But there are also some major drawbacks,...
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

Does the Moon Control Your Period?

12th - Higher Ed
People have been making the connection between the moon's phases and the menstrual cycle for centuries. But when it comes to controlling periods, we may have been looking at the wrong thing in the sky. Hosted by: @NotesByNiba (she/her)
Instructional Video7:28
SciShow

The Biggest Marine Reptile Ever (Was Found By An 11 Year Old)

12th - Higher Ed
When it comes to major discoveries in paleontology, you usually picture a bunch of old professors in khaki digging in the desert. But when Ruby Reynolds discovered a truly groundbreaking ichthyosaur fossil that sheds light on what may be...
Instructional Video6:22
SciShow

How Leeches Are Helping to Save Endangered Species

12th - Higher Ed
Leeches are bloodsucking parasites, and you wouldn't think they're great at protecting other species. Yet for some conservationists, these little vampires are one of the best tools available for conserving endangered and threatened...
Instructional Video10:23
SciShow

We Can't Find the Most Important Fossils Ever

12th - Higher Ed
About 360-ish million years ago, some tetrapods moved onto land and changed the course of history. So we'd love to know more about these guys, and what it took to get there. But the thing is, the fossils we need to understand this...
Instructional Video6:24
SciShow

We've Been Collecting This Fossil for 15,000 Years

12th - Higher Ed
Trilobites are one of the most iconic fossil animals out there. And people have loved them for centuries! Let's talk about the people across time and space who have loved collecting trilobites, from Elrathia to Calymene, going back...
Instructional Video4:03
SciShow

How a Die-Off of Vultures Cost a Country Billions

12th - Higher Ed
Vultures aren't most people's favorite animal. But when they began dying in India, they set in motion a domino effect that spread disease and cost the government billions of dollars. Hosted by: Jaida Elcock (she/her)
Instructional Video7:50
SciShow

6 Futuristic Fishing Nets

12th - Higher Ed
When fishermen cast their nets, they often catch a lot more than the species they're after. Those unlucky creatures are called bycatch, and it's a huge problem in the industry. Fortunately, scientists have been working hard to solve it...
Instructional Video11:02
Crash Course

Animal Defense Systems: How Skin, Snot, and Cells Keep Us Healthy: Crash Course Biology #45

12th - Higher Ed
The world is full of microbes and viruses that can get us sick, but we’ve got an Avengers-style defense system ready to take them on. In this episode of Crash Course Biology, we’ll learn about an animal’s immune system, from their skin...
Instructional Video13:55
Crash Course

Community Ecology: Interspecies Interactions: Crash Course Biology #6

12th - Higher Ed
Community ecology is the study of interactions between different species of living things, and lets ecologists examine the effects of predator-prey relationships, parasites, and mutually beneficial interactions. In this episode of Crash...
Instructional Video12:20
Crash Course

Biological Diversity, Butts, and the Tree of Life: Crash Course Biology #18

12th - Higher Ed
Everywhere you look on Earth, you’ll find wonderful and diverse living things, from tiny tardigrades to soaring sequoias. And incredibly, everything alive today, and everything that’s ever lived, is related. In this episode of Crash...
Instructional Video11:22
TED Talks

Can AI help us speak with wolves? | Jeffrey T. Reed

12th - Higher Ed
Why do wolves howl? With the help of AI, we're getting closer to an answer. Linguist and software engineer Jeffrey T. Reed shares his research on wolf sounds in the wild, revealing the surprisingly complex range of vocalizations — barks,...