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 Video18:55
TED Talks

Dan Barber: How I fell in love with a fish

12th - Higher Ed
Chef Dan Barber squares off with a dilemma facing many chefs today: how to keep fish on the menu. With impeccable research and deadpan humor, he chronicles his pursuit of a sustainable fish he could love, and the foodie's honeymoon he's...
Instructional Video0:46
SciShow

This river flows backwards. #shorts #science

12th - Higher Ed
This river flows backwards. #shorts #science
Instructional Video2:34
MinuteEarth

Why Do Rivers Have Deltas?

12th - Higher Ed
Where rivers meet the ocean, coastlines tend to bend either inward or outward, creating estuaries and deltas. But how do they get those shapes? Want to learn more about the topic in this week's video? Here are some keywords/phrases to...
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow Kids

Salmon Parents Are Amazing!

K - 5th
What swims in rivers and the ocean and is an awesome parent? Jessi and Squeaks talk about the amazing life cycle of salmon.
Instructional Video13:26
TED Talks

TED: How to separate fact and fiction online | Markham Nolan

12th - Higher Ed
By the end of this talk, there will be 864 more hours of video on YouTube and 2.5 million more photos on Facebook and Instagram. So how do we sort through the deluge? At the TEDSalon in London, Markham Nolan shares the investigative...
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The ferocious predatory dinosaurs of Cretaceous Sahara - Nizar Ibrahim

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In Cretaceous times (around 100 million years ago), North Africa was home to a huge river system and a bizarre menagerie of giant prehistoric predators -- including the Spinosaurus, a dinosaur even more fearsome than the Tyrannosaurus...
Instructional Video2:09
MinuteEarth

How This River Made Chimps Violent

12th - Higher Ed
When a group of apes got split apart, slight differences in their new environments led to big differences in future generations.
Instructional Video8:43
TED Talks

Rob Harmon: How to keep rivers and streams flowing

12th - Higher Ed
With streams and rivers drying up because of over-usage, Rob Harmon talks about a clever market mechanism to bring back the water. Farmers and beer companies find their fates intertwined in the century-old tale of Prickly Pear Creek.
Instructional Video11:08
MinuteEarth

MinuteEarth Explains: Water

12th - Higher Ed
In this collection of classic MinuteEarth videos, we take a look at one of Earth’s most critical - and unique - features.
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Why the Oceans Are Getting Darker

12th - Higher Ed
You’d never tell just by staring out from a sandy beach, but the coasts are gradually getting darker, and the effects of this darkening are only beginning to be understood.
Instructional Video4:09
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The hidden meanings of yin and yang - John Bellaimey

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The ubiquitous yin-yang symbol holds its roots in Taoism/Daoism, a Chinese religion and philosophy. The yin, the dark swirl, is associated with shadows, femininity, and the trough of a wave; the yang, the light swirl, represents...
Instructional Video3:01
SciShow

Why Is the Ocean Blue?

12th - Higher Ed
You may have satisfied your inner five-year-old by learning why the sky is blue, but where does the ocean's color come from?
Instructional Video12:12
TED Talks

TED: My escape from North Korea | Hyeonseo Lee

12th - Higher Ed
As a child growing up in North Korea, Hyeonseo Lee thought her country was "the best on the planet." It wasn't until the famine of the 90s that she began to wonder. She escaped the country at 14, to begin a life in hiding, as a refugee...
Instructional Video12:00
TED Talks

TED: What I learned as a prisoner in North Korea | Euna Lee

12th - Higher Ed
In March 2009, North Korean soldiers captured journalist Euna Lee and her colleague Laura Ling while they were shooting a documentary on the border with China. The courts sentenced them to 12 years of hard labor, but American diplomats...
Instructional Video4:51
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Blood, concrete, and dynamite: Building the Hoover Dam | Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the early 20th century, the US had expanded from coast to coast, but many cities in the southwest still lacked reliable water sources. The Colorado River's erratic flow and frequent floods made it unreliable for agriculture, and the...
Instructional Video9:50
SciShow

7 Super Toxic U.S. Sites

12th - Higher Ed
Let's face it: Humans are pretty messy. Industrial processes like mining and manufacturing are important parts of keeping civilization going, but they all impact the environment. Sometimes that impact is particularly big and messy,...
Instructional Video1:28
MinutePhysics

SMBC Physics - Why are Stones Round feat. Zach Weiner

12th - Higher Ed
Why are some stones round and others flat?
Instructional Video5:40
Bozeman Science

Hydroelectric Power

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how energy can be harnessed was water moves through a turbine. Three types of systems are discussed in the video; run-of-the-water, impoundment, and tidal. Several advantages and disadvantages of dams...
Instructional Video9:25
Crash Course

DC Resistors & Batteries: Crash Course Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Batteries power much of your daily life, so today we're going to talk about how they work. We're also explaining how terminal voltage results from the natural internal resistance of every real battery. We'll get into both series and...
Instructional Video11:06
SciShow

Basically Every Mammal Is Good at Swimming... Except Us

12th - Higher Ed
From the world’s biggest land animal to a creature built more like a tank than a sub, meet seven mammals that you might not think can swim well, but do! CHAPTERS View all MOOSE 1:33 2 ELEPHANTS 3:21 ARMADILLOS 4:54 CAMELS 5:32 6 SLOTHS 9:03
Instructional Video12:23
Crash Course

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Part 1: Crash Course Literature

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green teaches you about Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. This week, we'll talk a little bit about Samuel Langhorne Clemens, who wrote under the name Mark Twain, and how he mined his early life for decades to...
Instructional Video5:39
TED Talks

Aziza Chaouni: How I brought a river, and my city, back to life

12th - Higher Ed
The Fez River winds through the medina of Fez, Morocco—a mazelike medieval city that's a World Heritage site. Once considered the "soul" of this celebrated city, the river succumbed to sewage and pollution, and in the 1950s was covered...
Instructional Video4:17
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Pruney fingers: A gripping story - Mark Changizi

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Why do fingers become pruney when they get wet? Likely, for the same reasons that tires have treads. Mark Changizi examines the evolutionary reasons for pruney fingers, while exploring natural and manmade phenomena, like river networks,...