Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

The Oldest Known Animal May Be a Weird, Fleshy Oval | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Dickinsonia might be the oldest known member of the animal kingdom, and the origin of birdsongs from the syrinx might be a little less mysterious.
Instructional Video9:55
SciShow

The Moth That Drinks Bird Tears & 6 Other Absurd Diets

12th - Higher Ed
These organisms don’t just dabble in out-of-the-box delicacies, they make some really bizarre dietary choices! Chapters View all FRUIT-EATING CROCODILES 0:57 SNAIL-SLURPING SNAKES 3:14 SHELL-CRUNCHING CATERPILLAR 5:31 PORTA-POTTY PITCHER...
Instructional Video2:49
SciShow

What Happens to Birds During Hurricanes?

12th - Higher Ed
Birds can't watch the local weather forecast for early hurricane warnings, so what do they do when one hits
Instructional Video2:49
SciShow

What Did Dinosaurs Really Sound Like?

12th - Higher Ed
You probably remember the T.rex's iconic roar from Jurassic Park, but it turns out that dinosaurs actually didn't sound that ferocious.
Instructional Video5:40
SciShow

3 Ways to Prevent Hurricanes (Maybe)

12th - Higher Ed
3 Ways to Prevent Hurricanes (Maybe)
Instructional Video8:36
SciShow

8 Things People Get Wrong About Animals

12th - Higher Ed
If you watched a lot of cartoons as a kid, chances are you picked up some common animal stereotypes like "cats love milk!" or "bears can't get enough of that sweet, sweet honey!" What if we told you that everything cartoons taught you is...
Instructional Video3:22
SciShow

Where Are All the Tiny Dinosaurs

12th - Higher Ed
What was the smallest non-avian dinosaur, and why were there so few tiny dinos running around the Mesozoic?
Instructional Video19:46
TED Talks

Naomi Klein: Addicted to risk

12th - Higher Ed
Days before this talk, journalist Naomi Klein was on a boat in the Gulf of Mexico, looking at the catastrophic results of BP's risky pursuit of oil. Our societies have become addicted to extreme risk in finding new energy, new financial...
Instructional Video4:27
SciShow

THE CICADAS ARE COMING!

12th - Higher Ed
Cicadas have developed an amazing strategy for growth, survival, reproduction, and overcoming predation by...doing nothing. They do nothing for years (except sip at the juice excreted from root structures) before emerging in huge,...
Instructional Video8:01
SciShow

5 Amazing Feats of Animal Engineering

12th - Higher Ed
You might consider humans or beavers to be the best engineers on the planet, but these 5 other animals go to great lengths to put our houses and dams to shame. Chapters SOCIABLE WEAVER 0:38 GREAT BOWERBIRD 2:13 PUFFERFISH 3:39 4 ORIENTAL...
Instructional Video8:53
SciShow

8 Bone Eating Animals

12th - Higher Ed
Bones are hard to digest and can be downright dangerous to eat, but some animals have evolved pretty bizarre adaptations to accommodate their crunchy, splintery diets.
Instructional Video4:53
TED Talks

Sarah Kay: "A Bird Made of Birds"

12th - Higher Ed
"The universe has already written the poem you were planning on writing," says Sarah Kay, quoting her friend, poet Kaveh Akbar. Performing "A Bird Made of Birds," she shares how and where she finds poetry. (Kay is also the host of TED's...
Instructional Video4:03
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How pigeons took over the world | Elizabeth Carlen and Joanna Moles

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Seeing their meat as a protein source and their poop as the perfect fertilizer, humans brought pigeons into captivity as far back as 10,000 years ago. As we carried pigeons around the world, they formed the wild urban flocks we're...
Instructional Video4:52
SciShow

Does Your Cockatiel Have an Accent?

12th - Higher Ed
Dialects are a part of how we communicate, but it also turns out that many animals have dialects depending on what part of the world they live in.
Instructional Video5:03
TED-Ed

Can you be awake and asleep at the same time? | Masako Tamaki

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Many animals need sleep. But all of the threats and demands animals face don't just go away when it's time to doze. That's why a range of birds, mammals, and even humans experience some degree of asymmetrical sleep, where parts of the...
Instructional Video13:33
TED Talks

TED: A lesson in turning adversaries into allies | Leah Garcés

12th - Higher Ed
When you're on opposite sides of an issue, how do you broker peace with your adversaries and work together to solve a problem? Follow along as animal rights activist Leah Garcés recounts three lessons she learned in hatching an ambitious...
Instructional Video3:11
SciShow

The Math and Mystery of Murmurations

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever seen a group of starlings in flight, you've appreciated one of nature's most hypnotic sights -- the lava-lamp-like flow of a murmuration. SciShow explains the biology and mathematics behind this beautiful phenomenon.
Instructional Video10:00
PBS

The Facts About Dinosaurs & Feathers

12th - Higher Ed
Over the past 20 years, dinosaurs of all types and sizes have been found with some sort of fluff or even full-on plumage. These fuzzy discoveries have raised a whole batch of new questions so we're here to tell you everything we know...
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

The First Known Bird Could Fly, But Super Awkwardly

12th - Higher Ed
This week, evidence that Archaeopteryx could actually fly and a giant leap forward in graphene production!
Instructional Video13:11
TED Talks

TED: Zombie roaches and other parasite tales | Ed Yong

12th - Higher Ed
In this fascinating, hilarious and ever-so-slightly creepy talk, science writer Ed Yong tells the story of his favorite parasites -- animals and organisms that live on the bodies (and brains!) of other organisms, causing them to do their...
Instructional Video3:29
SciShow

Why Are Periodical Cicadas So ... Periodical?

12th - Higher Ed
Certain cicada species in North America emerge from the ground by the millions every 13 or 17 years. But why those specific intervals? Are cicadas secretly prime-number-loving mathematicians?!
Instructional Video4:23
SciShow

The Strange Case of the Missing Sunscreen Gene

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever spent too much time in the sun and forgotten to put on sunscreen, you know how painful a sunburn can be. But for some animals, forgetting the sunscreen wouldn't be a problem because they can just produce their own!
Instructional Video12:22
SciShow

5 Dinosaur Dinners and What They Told Us

12th - Higher Ed
"When it comes to extinct creatures like dinosaurs, it can be tough to know for sure what they actually ate. And we’d like to know because what an animal eats tells you a lot about it. But every now and then, the fossil record gives us a...
Instructional Video10:56
Crash Course

Evolutionary Development: Chicken Teeth - Crash Course Biology

12th - Higher Ed
Hank introduces us to the relatively new field of evolutionary developmental biology, which compares the developmental processes of different organisms to determine their ancestral relationship, and to discover how those processes...