Instructional Video7:25
SciShow Kids

Penguins, Birds That Fly in Water! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Squeaks and Jessi are learning all about the animals that live at the bottom of the world, including penguins - emperor penguins, macaroni penguins, and more! We learn why penguins look like they're all dressed up, and what kind of food...
Instructional Video6:35
SciShow

What's Your Cat Dreaming About?

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever watched an animal sleep and wondered what they're dreaming about, science has the answers.
Instructional Video10:17
SciShow

These Birds’ Nests Are Terrible for a Reason

12th - Higher Ed
Some birds' nests are works of art. These are not those. But we'll see why the terrible nesting habits of the cuckoo or jacana or even pigeons are the right thing for their survival.
Instructional Video6:11
SciShow

Why City Birds Love Cigarettes

12th - Higher Ed
Urban birds like house finches and house sparrows are great at finding materials to repel pests and parasites from their nests. Unfortunately, one of those materials is used cigarette butts.
Instructional Video3:55
SciShow

Inside the Nepal Earthquake

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News explains the forces at work behind the earthquake in Nepal, introduces you to a new species of dinosaur, and reveals a discovery in Antarctica.
Instructional Video12:22
TED Talks

TED: Let your garden grow wild | Rebecca McMackin

12th - Higher Ed
Many gardeners work hard to maintain clean, tidy environments ... which is the exact opposite of what wildlife wants, says ecological horticulturist Rebecca McMackin. She shows the beauty of letting your garden run wild, surveying the...
Instructional Video9:36
TED Talks

TED: The Herds, a vast act of theater to spark climate action | Amir Nizar Zuabi

12th - Higher Ed
Theater has the power to transform the most pressing issues of our time from news stories into human stories, says director and playwright Amir Nizar Zuabi. Recounting his work on the journey of Little Amal — a 13-foot puppet symbolizing...
Instructional Video11:45
SciShow

These Are The Coolest Fossils From 2023

12th - Higher Ed
It's that time of year where we round up all our favorite science discoveries of the year, and today, we're talking fossils. From a wild mosasaur with screwdriver teeth, to glittery gold fossils, and even a mammal-versus-reptile fight to...
Instructional Video6:44
SciShow

Did Dinosaurs Have Belly Buttons?

12th - Higher Ed
Belly buttons are, typically, a human's first scar. A sign that you used to feed through an umbilical cord that connected your tummy to a placenta. But it turns out you don't have to feed from a placenta to get a similar scar. It might...
Instructional Video5:51
TED Talks

TED: Photographing nature beyond the limits of human perception | Doris Mitsch

12th - Higher Ed
Artist Doris Mitsch invites us to revel in the wonders of nature through her dazzling photography: stacked images of starlings in flight, hawks surfing thermal updrafts, bats echolocating through the night sky and more. Revealing the...
Instructional Video9:05
SciShow

The Snail We Misidentified More Than 100 Times

12th - Higher Ed
Everyone makes mistakes, but misidentifying a species more than 100 times? It happened. In this List Show, we tell the tale of the periwinkle snail and other creatures scientists confused for someone else.
Instructional Video10:34
PBS

When Penguins Went From The Sky To The Sea

12th - Higher Ed
Today, we think of penguins as small-ish, waddling, tuxedo-birds. But they evolved from a flying ancestor, were actual giants for millions of years, and some of them were even dressed a little more casually.
Instructional Video8:41
PBS

It's Becoming Very Clear That Birds Are Not Normal

12th - Higher Ed
A new discovery raises an important question: from an evolutionary perspective, who really has the stranger wings?
Instructional Video8:44
PBS

How the Egg Came First

12th - Higher Ed
The story of the egg spans millions of years, from the first vertebrates that dared to venture onto land to today’s mammals, including the platypus, and of course birds. Like chickens? We’re here to tell you: The egg came first.
Instructional Video10:37
PBS

Was This Dinosaur a Cannibal?

12th - Higher Ed
Paleontologists have spent the better part of two decades debating whether Coelophysis ate its own kind. It turns out, the evidence that scientists have had to study in order to answer that question includes some of the strangest and...
Instructional Video8:34
PBS

The Giant Bird That Got Lost in Time

12th - Higher Ed
The California condor is the biggest flying bird in North America, a title that it has held since the Late Pleistocene Epoch. It's just one example of an organism that we share the planet with today that seems lost in time, out of place...
Instructional Video9:04
PBS

How Pterosaurs Got Their Wings

12th - Higher Ed
When pterosaurs first took flight, you could say that it marked the beginning of the end for the winged reptiles. Because, strangely enough, the power of flight -- and the changes that it led to -- may have ultimately led to their downfall.
Instructional Video7:49
PBS

How Dinosaurs Coupled Up

12th - Higher Ed
Dinosaur mating behavior has been the subject of a lot of speculation, but what can we actually say about it from the fossil record?
Instructional Video9:33
PBS

How Chilis Got Spicy (and Why We Love the Burn)

12th - Higher Ed
Today, chilis are the most widely cultivated spice crop in the world - grown everywhere from their native home in the Americas to Europe, Africa, and Asia. But how and why did chilis evolve this weird, fiery trick in the first place? And...
Instructional Video7:28
PBS

The (Ovi)Raptor That Paleontologists Got Wrong

12th - Higher Ed
Paleontologists found a small theropod dinosaur skull right on top of a nest of eggs that were believed to belong to a plant-eating dinosaur. Instead of being the nest robbers that they were originally thought to be, raptors like this...
Instructional Video8:52
PBS

How Vertebrates Got Teeth... And Lost Them Again

12th - Higher Ed
As revolutionary as teeth were, they would go on to disappear in some groups of vertebrates. But why?
Instructional Video8:36
PBS

The Raptor That Made Us Rethink Dinosaurs

12th - Higher Ed
In 1964, a paleontologist named John Ostrom unearthed some fascinating fossils from the mudstone of Montana. Its discovery set the stage for what’s known today as the Dinosaur Renaissance, a total re-thinking of what we thought we knew...
Instructional Video14:50
Be Smart

The Science of Iridescence

12th - Higher Ed
Why do we see rainbows in soap bubbles? What makes an oil slick so oddly beautiful? Iridescent colors, which transform depending on the angle you look at them, are all over nature. How does physics make these shifting rainbows? We’re...
Instructional Video4:29
Be Smart

Where Do Birds Go In Winter?

12th - Higher Ed
As winter approaches, V-shaped flocks glide overhead as the world's birds begin their long treks to warmer climates. Humans used to have some pretty crazy theories about where birds went for winter, like the moon, or to the bottom of the...