Instructional Video9:14
Amoeba Sisters

Evolution

12th - Higher Ed
Explore the concept of biological evolution with the Amoeba Sisters! This video mentions a few misconceptions about biological evolution before providing a general definition. Then this video provides a description of four different...
Instructional Video2:50
MinuteEarth

Why do Some Species Thrive in Cities?

12th - Higher Ed
Urban development can be tough on wildlife. But some plants and animals are adapting to our cities in surprising ways.
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

Why Teeth Make The Best Fossils

12th - Higher Ed
Teeth are so well preserved in the fossil record that they make the best, most informative fossils we can find, from phylogenetic studies to learning about the evolution of the human brain.
Instructional Video3:16
MinuteEarth

We Have No Idea Why

12th - Higher Ed
Most animals on earth are bioluminescent, but almost all of them live in the ocean - and scientists aren’t sure why.
Instructional Video5:23
SciShow

How Earth's Rotation Affects Our Oxygen | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Oxygen is crucial for life as we know it, but before it could build up in our atmosphere, earth had to slow down.
Instructional Video9:06
SciShow

The Bizarre Evolution of Hemipenes (yes...hemipenes.)

12th - Higher Ed
Snakes have two penises (aka hemipenes) that come in a diverse array of shapes and sizes. And they could owe it all to their lack of legs.
Instructional Video2:43
SciShow

These Migrating Birds Fuel Up by Eating…Mud?

12th - Higher Ed
A marathoner needs a lot of energy to make their long distance treks, and this is no different for migratory birds. But how are these marathon flyers getting that energy from the mud they’re slurping off of beaches along the way?
Instructional Video11:36
SciShow

5 Times Evolution Did Its Best

12th - Higher Ed
Usually when you think of evolution or natural selection, you think of survival of the fittest. But sometimes, the resulting traits of evolution aren’t the most efficient solutions to the problems at hand. With the bar set to “good...
Instructional Video10:06
PBS

Why Quantum Information is Never Destroyed

12th - Higher Ed
If you have perfect knowledge of every single particle in the universe, can you use the laws of physics to rewind all the way back to the Big Bang? Is the entire history of the universe perfectly knowable? Or has information somehow lost...
Instructional Video1:47
Be Smart

Can Evolution Make an Eye? - 12 Days of Evolution #4

12th - Higher Ed
Some of the biggest evolution questions finally answered.
Instructional Video11:35
SciShow

5 Times Evolution Should Have Planned Ahead

12th - Higher Ed
Natural selection can lead to some pretty amazing adaptations, but sometimes the resulting traits aren’t the most efficient solutions to the problems at hand. With the bar set to “good enough,” here are some features that arose from...
Instructional Video3:24
SciShow

This is NOT What Evolution Looks Like

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explains where that over-simplified image of evolution comes from and what it is actually supposed to mean.
Instructional Video6:07
SciShow

Maybe Life Doesn't Need Water, After All

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have been searching for alien life by honing in on the existence of liquid water, but we might be overlooking some types of life out there that doesn't need water at all.
Instructional Video13:05
Crash Course

Let's Make an AI that Destroys Video Games

12th - Higher Ed
Today we create a game and then build an AI to destroy it. Our game is called TrashBlaster, and it’s like Asteroids but with trash in the ocean, and instead of a spaceship John Green Bot is wielding a laser. We'll use machine learning...
Instructional Video3:43
SciShow

The Strange Blind Fish of the Lower Congo River

12th - Higher Ed
The lower Congo River is treacherous, turbulent, and very deep. While that might seem like an inhospitable habitat, hundreds of species of fish thrive there, including some that are really bizarre!SciShow is supported by Brilliant.org.
Instructional Video5:27
SciShow

How Earth's Rotation Affects Our Oxygen | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Oxygen is crucial for life as we know it, but before it could build up in our atmosphere, earth had to slow down.
Instructional Video10:11
TED Talks

TED: The radical potential of self-evolving robots | Emma Hart

12th - Higher Ed
What if robots could build and optimize themselves -- with little to no help from humans? Computer scientist Emma Hart is working on a new technology that could make "artificial evolution" possible. She explains how the three ingredients...
Instructional Video10:25
TED Talks

TED: Earth's original inhabitants -- and their role in combating climate change | Steven Allison

12th - Higher Ed
Every environment on the planet -- from forested mountaintops to scorching deserts and even the human gut -- has a microbiome that keeps it healthy and balanced. Ecologist Steven Allison explores how these extraordinarily adaptable,...
Instructional Video7:05
SciShow

There's a Single-Celled Dog

12th - Higher Ed
Is it possible for there to be a dog that is made of one very determined cell?
Instructional Video3:17
SciShow

Why Are There No Sea Snakes in the Atlantic

12th - Higher Ed
The Atlantic Ocean is the second largest on Earth, and yet there are no sea snake populations to be found there. What’s keeping aquatic serpents from making a home in these waters?
Instructional Video15:45
TED Talks

TED: What will humans look like in 100 years? | Juan enriquez

12th - Higher Ed
We can evolve bacteria, plants and animals -- futurist Juan enriquez asks: Is it ethical to evolve the human body? In a visionary talk that ranges from medieval prosthetics to present day neuroengineering and genetics, enriquez sorts out...
Instructional Video17:43
Be Smart

The 12 Days of Evolution - Complete Series!

12th - Higher Ed
All 12 days in ONE video!
Instructional Video2:42
SciShow

These Migrating Birds Fuel Up by Eating…Mud?

12th - Higher Ed
A marathoner needs a lot of energy to make their long distance treks, and this is no different for migratory birds. But how are these marathon flyers getting that energy from the mud they’re slurping off of beaches along the way?
Instructional Video3:53
SciShow

Vestigial Structures

12th - Higher Ed
Hank talks about some of the structures in our bodies that are "leftover" from previous evolutionary phases of humanity.