Hi, what do you want to do?
SciShow
A Lost Human Ancestor Is Probably Under This Parking Lot
It's really rare to find fossils, which means that when they're lost again after someone dug them up, it really hurts. These are a few of the most famous fossils that went missing after someone found them, and what researchers can...
PBS
How To Survive the Little Ice Age
Nunalleq, a village in what’s today southwest Alaska, seemed to have thrived during the Little Ice Age. How did this village manage to survive and prosper during this time period? And what caused this period of climate change in the...
SciShow
Plastic Bunny 3D Printed From Its Own DNA
A team is encoding digital data into DNA molecules which are then embedded into larger physical objects, like this plastic bunny! And researchers are working on a new, low maintenance oral contraceptive.
TED Talks
Avi Rubin: All your devices can be hacked
Could someone hack your pacemaker? Avi Rubin shows how hackers are compromising cars, smartphones and medical devices, and warns us about the dangers of an increasingly hack-able world.
TED Talks
Emily Balcetis: Why some people find exercise harder than others
Why do some people struggle more than others to keep off the pounds? Social psychologist Emily Balcetis shows research that addresses one of the many factors: our vision. In an informative talk, she shows how when it comes to fitness,...
TED Talks
TED: The secrets I find on the mysterious ocean floor | Laura Robinson
Hundreds of meters below the surface of the ocean, Laura Robinson probes the steep slopes of massive undersea mountains. She's on the hunt for thousand-year-old corals that she can test in a nuclear reactor to discover how the ocean...
Curated Video
Russian Scientists Discover the Secret of Making Rain
Russian scientists have developed a rain-making machine that creates artificial clouds by charging water droplets, resulting in precipitation. This innovative technology has the potential to bring water to arid regions and alleviate...
Nature League
Exploring Plants | Compilation
Brit looks back on our seventh month on Nature League, when we explored the theme of plants.
Nature League
Can Cannabis Help Mental Illness? - De-Natured
In this De-Natured segment of Nature League, Brit breaks down a recent scientific journal article about the effect of cannabidiol on brain regions associated with psychosis. Article citation: Bhattacharyya S, Wilson R, Appiah-Kusi E, et...
The Wall Street Journal
The Brain Game
Being the only person of your gender or race at work can be lonely. Sian Beilock, Barnard's president and a cognitive-science researcher, explains how those experiences affect both our performance and processing on the job.
Science360
4 Awesome Discoveries You Probably Didn’t Hear About This Week - Episode 26
Bloody good sweat, changing climate/changing sex, sauce that delays frost, and fab fossil find!
Sweat works like blood fmonitoring<
a href='https://www.uc.e
du/news/articles/201
9/03/n2074289.h
tml'...
Sweat works like blood fmonitoring<
a href='https://www.uc.e
du/news/articles/201
9/03/n2074289.h
tml'...
Science360
NSF Science Now 5
In this week's episode of NSF Science Now we explore negative thoughts, robotic fish, sensitive alligators and finally the discovery of a camp used by explorers a century ago during the ""Heroic Age"" of Antarctic exploration.
Next Animation Studio
Explainer: How the CRISPR/Cas9 gene-editing tool works
The 2020 Nobel Prize in chemistry was awarded on Wednesday, Oct. 7 to two women who developed CRISPR/Cas9, a tool that allows scientists to cut parts of the genome like a pair of molecular scissors.
Next Animation Studio
New parrot-like dinosaur’s fossils found in Gobi desert
Paleontologists have found the fossils of four members of a brand new oviraptor species that had only two digits per claw.
<br/>
Science360
Robotic Fish! NSF Science Now 5
In this week's episode of NSF Science Now we explore negative thoughts, robotic fish, sensitive alligators and finally the discovery...
Science360
Science Now Episode 5
This episode explores negative thoughts, robotic fish, Mt. Erebus and finally alligators. Check it out!
Science360
BREAKING SUMMER RECORDS
In episode 60, Charlie and Jordan return from summer break to investigate the future of summers. According to NSF-funded research at NCAR, in 50 years, summers across most of the globe could be hotter than any other experienced by...
Next Animation Studio
Speedy, 500-meter-wide asteroid to pass near Earth on Nov. 29
A half-kilometer-wide asteroid will zoom past Earth on Nov. 29, according to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Curated Video
Rugby World Cup: why size matters
Science360
New technology gives an unprecedented look inside capillaries!
In episode 62 of NSF Science Now, we explore 3D technology to look inside capillaries; we learn about a new species of dinosaur with a heart-shaped tail, and finally, we examine a new kind of thinking cap for online learning. Check it out!
Science360
Dark Matter Detection with XENON100
Dark matter has so far foiled most means of detection, but researchers are continuing to pursue its mysteries. They're using the most sensitive detector yet, called XENON100, to try to glimpse the particles. See how it works in this...
Curated Video
Stamford Health researchers using AI to determine a person's risk of having a heart attack
Their work is part of an overall mission to get information to patients in time for them to prevent a health crisis.
Curated Video
Brainstorm AI London 2024: Striking The Right Balance In AI Regulation
Balbir Bakhshi, Chief Risk Officer, London Stock Exchange Group Ian Hogarth, Chair, Phasecraft, AI Safety Institute; Partner, Plural Connor Leahy, Founder and CEO, Conjecture; Co-founder, EleutherAI Moderator: May Habib, Co-founder and ...