Instructional Video11:54
PBS

How The Elephant Got Its Trunk

12th - Higher Ed
Long-jawed proboscideans were doing pretty well for themselves. That is, until they were all rapidly replaced with proboscideans with long, flexible trunks instead: mammoths, mastodons, and our modern elephants.What suddenly made long...
Instructional Video7:17
SciShow

Why Elephants Rarely Get Cancer

12th - Higher Ed
One fun fact about elephants is that they're a lot less likely to get cancer than other animals (including us). Another fun fact is that unlike most warm-blooded animals, their testes are deep inside their bodies. It turns out, these...
Instructional Video6:55
SciShow Kids

Woolly Mammoths, Mastodons, and Amazing Teeth! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Mastodons and woolly mammoths were both ancient relatives of elephants, but they were very different! Join Jessi and Squeaks to see how we can learn all about what an ancient animal ate, just by looking at its teeth.
Instructional Video3:01
MinuteEarth

Is Bigger Better?

12th - Higher Ed
Elephants might be strong, but they are weak compared to ants because ants have certain advantages that allow them to outlift their larger competitors.
Instructional Video7:54
PBS

The Rise and Fall of the Tallest Mammal to Walk the Earth

12th - Higher Ed
It arose from rhino ancestors that were a lot smaller, but Paraceratherium would take a different evolutionary path. Believe it or not, it actually became so big that it probably got close to what scientists think might be the actual...
Instructional Video2:03
SciShow

Do Animals Cry?

12th - Higher Ed
Plenty of animals have tears that moisturize their eyes. But does that mean they’re sad? Quick Questions explains!
Instructional Video9:10
SciShow

10 of the Strangest Prehistoric Creatures

12th - Higher Ed
We know what the dinosaurs looked like thanks to fossils, but have you seen some of these wild creatures? Join Michael Aranda for a new episode of SciShow and take a closer look at some of the strangest-looking animals evolution has...
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow

Why Aren't Mammals as Big as Dinosaurs?

12th - Higher Ed
Dinosaurs were huge—it's common knowledge. So why aren't modern mammals anywhere near that size? In this episode of SciShow, Hank gives a quick run-down of the reasons scientists think the land mammals of today are nowhere near the size...
Instructional Video10:10
SciShow

7 Extreme Animal Moms

12th - Higher Ed
From changing diapers to cleaning up vomit, human parents can have it tough, but at least they don't have to incubate their babies under their skin or liquify their own guts to feed their brood like these animal moms do! In honor of...
News Clip9:33
PBS

Drones keep elephants away from people in Tanzania

12th - Higher Ed
In the Serengeti region in Tanzania, conflict can arise between humans and the elephants that graze on their crops. The U.S.-based nonprofit RESOLVE is testing a new way to reduce these clashes while protecting both elephants and humans:...
News Clip9:02
PBS

Kenya Elephants

12th - Higher Ed
Widespread illegal poaching in the African wild is threatening elephants

and putting them at risk of disappearing in 10 to 15 years. Using som
e of
the same techniques developed to fight terrorism, a new intelli
gence-led...
Instructional Video4:28
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Do larger animals take longer to pee? | David L. Hu

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A cat's bladder can only store a golf ball's worth of urine. For humans, it's a coffee mug and for elephants, a kitchen trash can. An elephant's bladder is 400 times the size of a cat's, but it doesn't take an elephant 400 times longer...
Instructional Video12:37
SciShow

5 Times People Gave Animals Diseases | Reverse Zoonotics

12th - Higher Ed
Usually when we think about animals and disease, we think about illnesses that they transmit to us - like swine flu or Lyme disease. But illness is often a two-way street, and while animals can pass pathogens to us, we can also pass our...
Instructional Video4:25
SciShow

Do Animals Appreciate Music?

12th - Higher Ed
Animals might be music lovers, but how can we know? Is the ability to perceive and appreciate music a shared human and animal experience?
Instructional Video6:50
Be Smart

Why People Don't Believe In Climate Science

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists overwhelmingly agree that our climate is changing, Earth is getting warmer, sea levels are rising, and it's primarily because of humans putting lots of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Yet 4 in 10 Americans aren't convinced....
Instructional Video18:18
TED Talks

TED: A hero of the Congo forest | Corneille Ewango

12th - Higher Ed
Botanist Corneille Ewango talks about his work at the Okapi Faunal Reserve in the Congo Basin -- and his heroic work protecting it from poachers, miners and raging civil wars.
Instructional Video4:17
Be Smart

Do Animals Mourn Their Dead?

12th - Higher Ed
Joe brings in a few friends to look at death in the animal kingdom.
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is the biggest single-celled organism? - Murry Gans

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The elephant is a creature of epic proportions -- and yet, it owes its enormity to more than 1,000 trillion microscopic cells. And on the epically small end of things, there are likely millions of unicellular species, yet there are very...
Instructional Video10:09
SciShow

7 Extreme Animal Moms

12th - Higher Ed
From changing diapers to cleaning up vomit, human parents can have it tough, but at least they don't have to incubate their babies under their skin or liquify their own guts to feed their brood like these animal moms do! In honor of...
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 Video7:13
SciShow

Secrets of the Vampire Squid

12th - Higher Ed
This week in SciShow News, Hank tells us about some weird science, including a squid that's not a squid, animals that can talk, and new insights into how you can mess up your body much faster and for much longer than you ever thought...
Instructional Video9:01
TED Talks

TED: The arts festival revolution | David Binder

12th - Higher Ed
David Binder is a major Broadway producer, but last summer he found himself in a small Australian neighborhood, watching locals dance and perform on their lawns -- and loving it. He shows us the new face of arts festivals, which break...
Instructional Video5:22
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why elephants never forget - Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's a common saying that elephants never forget. But the more we learn about elephants, the more it appears that their impressive memory is only one aspect of an incredible intelligence that makes them some of the most social, creative,...