Instructional Video6:06
TED-Ed

The world's largest organism | Alex Rosenthal

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The largest animal in the world is the blue whale, which weighs a massive 150 metric tons. Even so, it's not remotely close to being the largest organism by weight. That title goes to an organism so huge that it's estimated to weigh the...
Instructional Video13:10
Crash Course

The 17th Century Crisis: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
The 17th Century in Europe was pretty rough in a lot of ways. The Thirty Years War involved a lot of countries, and a lot of battles, and it was terrible for everyone involved, as wars have aa historical tendency to be. At the same time,...
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Doggerland: A Real-Life Atlantis

12th - Higher Ed
Though we probably won’t find a literal Atlantis beneath the sea, that doesn’t mean that a human settlement hasn’t ever been lost to the water. Meet Doggerland.
Instructional Video5:52
SciShow

Hyenas Once Lived in the Frigid Arctic

12th - Higher Ed
Prehistoric teeth prove that hyenas once roamed the Arctic and the relationship between ancient crocodiles and climate is more complicated than we thought.
Instructional Video10:23
SciShow

The End of Everything

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gives us an inclusive overview of how everything in the universe is thought to have begun, and how cosmologists predict it will all come to an end. Now get happy!
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

The Mysterious *Gigantic* Lions That Used to Roam North America

12th - Higher Ed
North America used to be home to a cat so large, it may have taken down some of the biggest prey of the last Ice Age.
Instructional Video7:24
PBS

What Happened to the World's Greatest Ape?

12th - Higher Ed
Probably twice the size of a modern gorilla, Gigantopithecus is the greatest great-ape that ever was. And for us fellow primates, there are some lessons to be learned in how it lived, and why it disappeared.
Instructional Video10:21
Crash Course

What Are Glaciers? Crash Course Geography

12th - Higher Ed
Today we’re going to talk about glaciers. These behemoth globs of compressed ice and snow moving across the land created fertile soils and physical features while also serving as frozen time capsules. They recorded both Earth’s climatic...
Instructional Video5:39
SciShow

Did This Ancient Asteroid Cause an Ice Age? - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Around 500 Million years ago, Earth’s climate was warm, and the planet had nearly no ice, even at the poles. Then an asteroid broke apart deep in our solar system, and our planet plunged into an ice age at the same time. Are the two...
Instructional Video4:28
SciShow

What’s Up With the Weird Pockmarks Up and Down the East Coast?

12th - Higher Ed
All along the east coast of the United States there are thousands of oval shaped pock marks, and scientists think they have a clue as to how they got there.
Instructional Video5:53
SciShow

Forecasting the Weather...on the Sun

12th - Higher Ed
The sun is beginning a new weather cycle, causing debate among scientists about how intense things are going to get, and elsewhere, scientists are looking into just how fluid our early universe was.
Instructional Video4:33
SciShow Kids

5 Giant Ice Age Animals Natural History for Kids

K - 5th
12,000 years ago, the earth was very different, and so were some of the animals living on it! Here are 5 giants creatures you might have seen back then.
Instructional Video4:20
SciShow

The Ancient Footprints that Changed The Timeline of Human History

12th - Higher Ed
In the history of our species, we still don’t know exactly how and when early humans migrated across the world, but some ancient footprints might be helping us figure it out.
Instructional Video9:41
SciShow

10 Strange-Looking Prehistoric Animals

12th - Higher Ed
Take a close look at some of the strangest-looking animals evolution has created.
Instructional Video12:10
PBS

Is an Ice Age Coming?

12th - Higher Ed
We're living in a brief window of time where our planet isn't frozen underneath a giant layer of glaciers. How much longer will the moderate climate that we've come to know as "normal" continue? This episode looks at how the changes in...
Instructional Video5:23
SciShow

The Oldest DNA Ever Found

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers mapped the mammoth family tree by extracting DNA from fossils. Also, scientists found some sessile animals living under Antarctica's ice shelf, and they're really cool.
Instructional Video12:05
TED Talks

TED: Why are these 32 symbols found in ancient caves all over europe? | Genevieve von Petzinger

12th - Higher Ed
Written language, the hallmark of human civilization, didn't just suddenly appear one day. Thousands of years before the first fully developed writing systems, our ancestors scrawled geometric signs across the walls of the caves they...
Instructional Video4:41
TED-Ed

TED-ED: When will the next ice age happen? - Lorraine Lisiecki

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Throughout Earth's history, climate has varied greatly. For hundreds of millions of years, the planet had no polar ice caps. Without this ice, the sea level was 70 meters higher. At the other extreme, about 700 million years ago, Earth...
Instructional Video14:46
TED Talks

TED: What's your happiness score? | Dominic Price

12th - Higher Ed
How do you rediscover a happier, more purpose-driven (and less productivity-obsessed) self in the wake of the pandemic? Quiz yourself alongside work futurist Dominic Price as he lays out a simple yet insightful four-part guide to...
Instructional Video5:34
SciShow

The Massive Flood That Triggered an Ice Age (w/ PBS Eons!)

12th - Higher Ed
13,000 years ago, North America seemed to be thawing from a 2.6 million-year ice age. Then, a huge swath of Earth was suddenly plunged back into the cold for 1,000 years. To understand why we need to talk about megafloods.
Instructional Video5:22
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: History vs. Sigmund Freud - Todd Dufresne

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Working in Vienna at the turn of the 20th century, he began his career as a neurologist before pioneering the discipline of psychoanalysis, and his influence towers above that of all other psychologists in the public eye. But was Sigmund...
Instructional Video12:54
Crash Course

Absolute Monarchy: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
So far, the rulers of Europe have been working to consolidate their power and expand their kingdoms, and this is it. The moment they've been working toward: Absolute Monarchy. We're going to learn about how kings and queens became...
Instructional Video11:39
Bozeman Science

Speciation

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how reproductive isolation can eventually lead to speciation. Three main barriers to gene flow are included: geographic, pre-zygotic and post-zygotic. Both allopatric and sympatric speciation are discussed. A brief...
Instructional Video3:42
SciShow

The Fern That Cooled the Planet

12th - Higher Ed
Over its lifetime, the Earth has seen plenty of climate change. About 50 million years ago the planet experienced extreme cooling, and all from a little fern.