Instructional Video2:04
MinuteEarth

You Can’t Actually Die Of Old Age

12th - Higher Ed
Despite centuries of death records to the contrary, “dying of old age” is not medically possible; instead, it’s just a convenient catch-all.
Instructional Video3:15
MinuteEarth

Why We Haven’t Learned More In 101 Years Of Trying

12th - Higher Ed
Almost everything we know about the reproductive practices of European eels comes from a genius study conducted more than 100 years ago.
Instructional Video2:42
MinuteEarth

Why These Bears “Waste” Food

12th - Higher Ed
Optimal foraging theory means that turning down food is sometimes more efficient than eating it - but even then, what’s “wasted” doesn’t necessarily go to waste.
Instructional Video2:39
MinuteEarth

Why The Ocean Needs Salt

12th - Higher Ed
Our oceans don’t technically contain salt, but the ions salt is made of play a critical role in planet-wide processes that make the Earth habitable.
Instructional Video2:51
MinuteEarth

Why Do Weeping Willows Weep?

12th - Higher Ed
Most trees reach for the sun – but not the weeping willow. Why?
Instructional Video4:26
MinuteEarth

Why Do People Hate Koalas?

12th - Higher Ed
On the Internet, koalas get an unnecessary amount of hate, so let's debunk some of the most pervasive koala myths!
Instructional Video3:15
MinuteEarth

The WEIRD Way Monkeys Got to America

12th - Higher Ed
Many of the greatest biological dispersal events in history likely happened because animals inadvertently traveled across the oceans on floating debris.
Instructional Video12:01
MinuteEarth

MinuteEarth Explains: Animal Winners and Losers

12th - Higher Ed
In this collection of classic MinuteEarth videos, we keep score on the winners and losers of the animal kingdom. 0:00 - Intro 0:10 - Why Only Some Monkeys Have Awesome Tails • Why Only Some Monkeys Have Awesome Tails 1:57 - Rise Of The...
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 Video2:47
MinuteEarth

In The Future, Death Will Be Different

12th - Higher Ed
In the future, humans will likely die of a very different suite of causes than we do now, thanks to advances in healthcare, an aging population, and changes in the environment.
Instructional Video1:49
MinuteEarth

How To Survive Poison

12th - Higher Ed
It’s not just how much you take in; it’s how fast your body can purge it.
Instructional Video3:16
MinuteEarth

Apparently tree FINGERPRINTS are a thing

12th - Higher Ed
Every species on Earth has a fingerprint - whether or not they have fingers at all.
Instructional Video2:26
MinuteEarth

How A Whale And A Bear Beat The System

12th - Higher Ed
While the rest of the world’s megafauna are still foundering in the anthropocene era, these two big animals have used little animal strategies to bounce back. Way back.
Instructional Video3:50
MinuteEarth

Eclipses Used To Be Terrifying

12th - Higher Ed
Because eclipses are powerful and frightening events, ancient cultures went to great lengths to understand eclipses, leading to remarkably accurate predictions and helping invent the science of astronomy.
Instructional Video3:20
MinuteEarth

Ancient Humans Made Millions Of These - We Don’t Know Why

12th - Higher Ed
The Acheulean handaxe was the most common tool of early humans, but we still don’t know what the heck they used it for.
Instructional Video2:54
MinuteEarth

Which Will Kill You First?

12th - Higher Ed
The body can get a whole lot colder - but not a whole lot hotter - before we die. Why is that?
Instructional Video1:49
MinuteEarth

Why Is There So Much Land In The North?

12th - Higher Ed
Most of Earth’s land is currently in the northern hemisphere because we happen to exist in a time where uneven heating in the mantle has pushed many continental plates northward.
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...
Instructional Video3:12
MinuteEarth

The Plant You Don’t Have To Water

12th - Higher Ed
Some plants can drink water from the air - and that has some weird effects on the forests where they live.
Instructional Video2:40
MinuteEarth

There’s No Such Thing As “Warm-” Or “Cold-” Blooded

12th - Higher Ed
The concept of warm-blooded and cold-blooded animals is outdated because there are actually tons of different animal thermoregulation strategies.
Instructional Video2:30
MinuteEarth

Which Is Worse: Underpopulation Or Overpopulation?

12th - Higher Ed
The human population of the world will soon peak – and then decrease – thanks to a combination of two quickly changing economic and educational trends.
Instructional Video3:32
MinuteEarth

Why Most Fossils Are Incomplete

12th - Higher Ed
In 1990, fossil collectors in South Dakota stumbled across a dinosaur that turned out to be a really big deal. Not just because it was a T. rex – basically the most popular dino out there – or because it ended up in Chicago’s famous...
Instructional Video2:36
MinuteEarth

Why Continents Are High

12th - Higher Ed
Lots of geological forces need to come together for continents to form, but they all require one ingredient: water.
Instructional Video2:49
MinuteEarth

Why Weather Forecasts Suck

12th - Higher Ed
There are two types of rain, and one of them is almost impossible to forecast.