Instructional Video9:14
PBS

You're Living On An Ant Planet

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewHow did ants take over the world? Well, it looks like they didn’t achieve world domination all by themselves. They may have just been riding the wave of a totally different evolutionary explosion.
Instructional Video10:45
PBS

Why Only Earth Has Fire

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewTo get fire, which exists only on Earth, it took billions of years of photosynthesis – which means fire can’t exist without life. And fire and life have been shaping each other ever since.
Instructional Video9:42
PBS

Our Most Mysterious Extinct Cousins

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThere was a group of hominins, those creatures more closely related to us than to chimpanzees, that did take a different, parallel journey from our ancestors. Our paths ran beside each other - and potentially even crossed at times - but...
Instructional Video10:05
PBS

How the Himalayas Changed the World

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe 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 Video16:37
Be Smart

Will Earth Run Out of Oxygen

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewPlants eat sunlight and air to make life. But the key enzyme behind it all, called RuBisCO, isn’t actually all that great at its job. Let’s talk about how photosynthesis really works, why oxygen isn’t coming from where you think, and...
Instructional Video5:51
SciShow

Something Weird Is Happening With This Bright Red Beach

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewChina's Red Beach is a stunningly beautiful tourist destination. But the plants that make Red Beach red are hiding a secret -- one that could save other wetlands, if we can save this one first. Hosted by: Stefan Chin (he/him)
Instructional Video7:39
SciShow

Why Beaches Need More Sand

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewAdding 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 Video6:11
SciShow

Trees Are All Dead Inside (And That's a Problem)

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewTrees are dead inside. It's true: the xylem tissue that supports their trunks technically isn't alive. Archaeologists hate that because this problem, the old wood problem, can cause carbon dating to be off by hundreds of years. Hosted...
Instructional Video12:20
Crash Course

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

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewEverywhere 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 Video11:49
TED Talks

The surprising power of your nature photos | Scott Loarie

12th - Higher Ed
Scott Loarie has a challenge for you: go outside and take a picture of a living thing. He introduces the global community of people building a living atlas of the natural world by sharing their nature photos with scientists — and shows...
Instructional Video10:38
TED Talks

The food that fertilizes itself | Giles E.D. Oldroyd

12th - Higher Ed
Could the key to a sustainable food system already be growing in the world's farms? Plant scientist Giles E.D. Oldroyd explores how a special quirk of soybean plants allows them to naturally partner with networks of fungi and bacteria to...
Instructional Video3:02
MinuteEarth

Why Did It Take Us So Long?

12th - Higher Ed
We've long known that animal pollination is an important way plants reproduce on land, but we're only just finding out animals also pollinate plants underwater.
Instructional Video2:50
MinuteEarth

All Plants Have Color Vision?

12th - Higher Ed
Plants can tell when competitors are nearby because they can see them.
Instructional Video5:17
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: This mushroom will kill you before you know what’s happening | Michael Beug

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Humans have known about the toxicity of death cap mushrooms for millennia. Yet they continue to pose a significant threat to unsuspecting foragers and mushroom hunters throughout the world. Today, death caps are responsible for more than...
Instructional Video15:23
TED Talks

TED: How regenerative agriculture brings life back to the land | Gabe Brown

12th - Higher Ed
Over his decades of farming and ranching, Gabe Brown has noticed a troubling trend: the conventional farming techniques he used were degrading the soil and harming nature. He shares how his family farm turned things around by adopting...
Instructional Video8:36
TED Talks

TED: The hidden forces behind your food choices | Sarah Lake

12th - Higher Ed
What we eat is less about what we choose and more about what’s offered to us, says food and climate expert Sarah Lake. Unpacking how governments and companies have driven up meat consumption in the US through extensive marketing, she...
Instructional Video2:13
MinuteEarth

How Our Honey is Made

12th - Higher Ed
How Our Honey is Made
Instructional Video4:16
Crash Course Kids

Severe Weather

3rd - 8th
So, what's the difference between 'weather' and 'severe weather'? Is it just how hard the wind is blowing? Is it just thunder and lighting? Well, it can be some or all of those things. In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina talks...
Instructional Video2:09
MinuteEarth

Why Are Leaves Green? Part 2

12th - Higher Ed
Still wondering why leaves are green and not purple or even black? CHLOROPHYLL! It's how leaves work.
Instructional Video2:14
MinuteEarth

Why Are Leaves Green? Part 1

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever wondered why leaves are green and not red, blue, or even black? We did too!
Instructional Video1:54
MinuteEarth

The Secret Social Life of Plants

12th - Higher Ed
The Secret Social Life of Plants
Instructional Video5:47
SciShow Kids

The Driest Places on Earth | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
In this SciShow Kids episode, Jessi and Squeaks learn about amazing places where it almost never rains.
Instructional Video8:17
SciShow Kids

Meet the True Bugs | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
In this episode, Jessi and Squeaks learn what it takes to be a "true bug". Scientists use the word "bug" to refer to a special group of insects, so not all insects (or other critters like spiders) are bugs!
Instructional Video7:00
TED Talks

TED: A climate solution? The wisdom passed down through generations | Louise Mabulo

12th - Higher Ed
Louise Mabulo grew up on seemingly strange farming tips from her parents and grandparents — like planting crops during a full moon or burying a rock beneath them. Now a farmer and climate activist herself, she sees how these practical...