Instructional Video5:28
SciShow Kids

Say Hello to Saber-toothed Smilodon! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Smilodon the saber-toothed cat had really big teeth! Join Jessi and Squeaks and learn all about how fossils can tell us how these Ice Age animals lived.
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 Video8:07
SciShow

How Do We Figure Out The Sex ... Of A Fossil?

12th - Higher Ed
We know a lot about fossils, but there's one thing about all those long-dead organisms that's hard to figure out -- their sex. So let's talk about the ways we can try to determine whether those T. rex bones came from a male or a female,...
Instructional Video10:03
SciShow

The Tiny T. rex Causing a Big Science Feud

12th - Higher Ed
You’ve heard of Tyrannosaurus rex, but did you know they might have a mini-cousin called Nanotyrannus? And that “might” is serious, because researchers have been arguing about it for nearly 40 years and still haven’t gotten to the bottom...
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

This Video Game Software Helps Us Do Paleontology

12th - Higher Ed
The same technology that helps you rack up kills in your favorite FPS games also helps paleontologists solve million-year-old mysteries. Thanks to Dr. Anne Kort for helping us with this video!
Instructional Video6:54
SciShow

Fool’s Gold Might Be Better Than the Real Thing

12th - Higher Ed
This month's Rocks Box is pyrite, also called fool's gold. But this fool's gold might not be so foolish, since we can use it to get all kinds of other minerals we really need, and it may be a key to getting real gold after all.
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 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 Video5:25
SciShow Kids

The Ancient Animal With a Boomerang Head! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Squeaks and Jessi discover an animal with a head that reminds them of a boomerang. Its name is Diplocaulus, and they'll learn all about how that funny head helped it live a very long time ago! First Grade Next Generation Science...
Instructional Video7:02
PBS

When Giant Millipedes Reigned

12th - Higher Ed
This giant millipede was the largest known invertebrate to ever live on land. So how did it get so big??
Instructional Video11:52
PBS

The Humans That Lived Before Us

12th - Higher Ed
As more and more fossil ancestors have been found, our genus has become more and more inclusive, incorporating more members that look less like us, Homo sapiens. By getting to know these other hominins--the ones who came before us--we...
Instructional Video10:09
PBS

When Giant Lemurs Ruled Madagascar

12th - Higher Ed
Just a few thousand years ago, the island of Madagascar was inhabited by giant lemurs. How did such a diverse group of primates evolve in the first place, and how did they help shape the unique environments of Madagascar? And how did...
Instructional Video11:10
PBS

When Bats Took Flight

12th - Higher Ed
Bats pretty much appear in the fossil record as recognizable, full-on, flying bats. And they show up on all of the continents, except Antarctica, around the same time. So where did bats come from? And which of the many weird features...
Instructional Video9:54
PBS

The Missing Link That Wasn’t

12th - Higher Ed
The myth of the Missing Link--the idea that there must be a specimen that partly resembles an ape but also partly resembles a modern human--is persistent. But the reality is that there is no missing link in our lineage, because that’s...
Instructional Video10:44
PBS

How We Identified One of Earth’s Earliest Animals

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists had no idea what type of organisms the life forms of the Ediacaran were—lichen, colonies of bacteria, fungi or something else. It turns out, the key to solving the puzzle of Precambrian life was a tiny bit of fossilized fat.
Instructional Video8:12
PBS

Our Bizarre, Possibly Venomous, Relative

12th - Higher Ed
This video contains images and video of snakes and spiders. It's possible Euchambersia possessed venom about 20 million years before the first lizards and over 150 million years before the first snakes evolved. We’ve teamed up Sarah Suta...
Instructional Video7:21
PBS

Where Are All The Squid Fossils?

12th - Higher Ed
It might surprise you but cephalopods have a pretty good fossil record, with one major exception. If squids were swimming around in the same oceans as their closest cousins, where did all the squids go?
Instructional Video9:26
PBS

These Fossils Were Supposed To Be Impossible

12th - Higher Ed
Hidden in rocks once thought too old to contain complex life we may have found the animal kingdom’s oldest known predator.
Instructional Video10:12
PBS

The Triassic Reptile With "Two Faces"

12th - Higher Ed
Figuring out what this creature’s face actually looked like would take paleontologists years. But understanding this weird animal can help us shine a light on at least one way for ecosystems to bounce back from even the worst mass...
Instructional Video9:43
PBS

Something Has Been Making This Mark For 500 Million Years

12th - Higher Ed
Paleodictyon, a hexagonal-patterned fossil, is a bit of a mystery. We don’t even know if it’s a trace fossil, or the organism itself. So… what could it be?
Instructional Video8:59
PBS

The Evolution of the Heart (A Love Story)

12th - Higher Ed
In order to understand where hearts came from, we have to go back to the earliest common ancestor of everything that has a heart. It took hundreds of millions of years, and countless different iterations of the same basic structure to...
Instructional Video5:04
SciShow

Were Long Necks Also Tall Necks?

12th - Higher Ed
Long-necked sauropod dinosaurs are some of the most striking animals that ever lived. But we don't know what they used their long necks for, and whether they held them high in the air or parallel to the ground. Here's what we do know.
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...