Instructional Video4:17
Be Smart

Do Animals Mourn Their Dead?

12th - Higher Ed
Joe brings in a few friends to look at death in the animal kingdom.
Instructional Video2:27
SciShow

These Birds Smell Like Tangerines

12th - Higher Ed
On remote, rocky North Pacific islands, you may find a cute little bird that just so happens to smell like tangerines.
Instructional Video20:20
SciShow

SciShow Talk Show: The History of Gender & Kiki the Domestic Cat

12th - Higher Ed
This week on the show Dr. Lindsey Doe, host of Sexplanations, walks us through a history of cases that have altered our understanding of gender identity. Then Jessi from Animal Wonders joins the show with Kiki, a domestic cat.
Instructional Video27:30
SciShow

Your Brain and Stress | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
Stress and anxiety are complex, and the brain chemistry involved in those experiences are no exception. Here we explore the chemicals responsible for your brain’s response to stress.
Instructional Video4:01
SciShow

This Worm's Gut Has No Way In or Out

12th - Higher Ed
There are plenty of creatures out there with only one opening to handle both taking in food and getting rid of waste. But there’s at least one animal out there that doesn’t have a gut opening… at all. How does that even work?!
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

The Cost of Saving a Drowning Town

12th - Higher Ed
This week, a group of scientists estimated the cost of saving just one small village in America’s Chesapeake Bay from rising sea levels, and another found evidence that Smilodon (aka the saber-toothed cat) actually helped take care of...
Instructional Video5:40
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How we can detect pretty much anything | Hélène Morlon and Anna Papadopoulou

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Scientists have been staking out a forest in Montana for an animal that's notoriously tricky to find. Camera traps haven't offered definitive evidence, and experts can't identify its tracks with certainty. But within the past decades,...
Instructional Video11:08
SciShow

What We've Learned from Fossilized Farts

12th - Higher Ed
We tend to think of fossils as dinosaur bones or petrified wood, but what if we told you that there's a lot we can learn from fossilized waste?
Instructional Video2:36
MinuteEarth

Why Do Some Animals Get Gigantic?

12th - Higher Ed
This video explores how various animals throughout evolutionary history have managed to grow to gigantic sizes through unique adaptations and environmental factors. From megabugs benefiting from a spike in atmospheric oxygen levels to...
Instructional Video14:42
TED Talks

Barbara J. King: Grief and love in the animal kingdom

12th - Higher Ed
From mourning orcas to distressed elephants, biological anthropologist Barbara J. King has witnessed grief and love across the animal kingdom. In this eye-opening talk, she explains the evidence behind her belief that many animals...
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

Milk and the Mutants That Love It

12th - Higher Ed
Got milk? Fact is, most people don't -- and shouldn't -- because for them, ice cream and milkshakes are basically toxic. So why can some people drink milk and survive? Turns out they're mutants! SciShow explains.
Instructional Video7:16
Be Smart

The Deadpool Salamander That Can Regrow Limbs

12th - Higher Ed
Axolotls are special salamanders. Not only to they stay in their juvenile form their whole lives, they can regenerate entire limbs! Studying how they do it could change the way we treat human limb injuries.
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

The Bone Wars: A Feud That Rocked U.S. Paleontology

12th - Higher Ed
The Bone Wars resulted in the description of some of the most famous dinosaurs we know of today, but not without some pretty big mistakes.
Instructional Video5:06
SciShow

The Antibacterial Benefits of Wasp Venom

12th - Higher Ed
This week, scientists turned to an unlikely source to try to solve the problem of antibiotic resistance, and got a peek at the lifestyle of some of the very first mammals... by studying their teeth.
Instructional Video12:44
TED Talks

Jay Bradner: Open-source cancer research

12th - Higher Ed
How does cancer know it's cancer? At Jay Bradner's lab, they found a molecule that might hold the answer, JQ1. But instead of patenting it and reaping the profits (as many other labs have done) -- they published their findings and mailed...
Instructional Video9:19
SciShow

The Most Venomous Animals in the World

12th - Higher Ed
There are a lot of ways to kill and be killed in the animal kingdom, but only a lucky few use the powers of venom. Not all are closely related, so how did they acquire the same defenses, where did venom come from, and how does it work?...
Instructional Video10:31
SciShow

7 Animals with Really Wild Tongues

12th - Higher Ed
They’re sticky, they’re stretchy, they’re just plain long—here are seven of the most interesting tongues in the animal kingdom! chapters CHAMELEONS 0:51 TUBE-LIPPED NECTAR BATS 2:16 WOODPECKER TONGUE Popular Science Monthly illustration,...
Instructional Video15:40
SciShow

SciShow Talk Show: Writer Jeremy Smith, Measuring Health & Freya the Pine Snake

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode Hank talks about global medical history and recorded death certificates with journalist Jeremy Smith. Special guest from Animal Wonders and SciShow Kids Jessi Knudsen Castañeda brings Freya the Northern Pine Snake.
Instructional Video3:13
SciShow Kids

3 Cool Facts About Cats!

K - 5th
Even if you have a cat of your own, you might not know these three amazing things about our furry friends!
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

The Oldest Known Animal May Be a Weird, Fleshy Oval | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Dickinsonia might be the oldest known member of the animal kingdom, and the origin of birdsongs from the syrinx might be a little less mysterious.
Instructional Video4:35
SciShow

Optogenetics: Using Light to Control Your Brain

12th - Higher Ed
Optogenetics may allow us to use light like a remote control for our brains, and treat diseases like retinitis pigmentosa.
Instructional Video5:34
SciShow

Bones Began as Mineral Batteries

12th - Higher Ed
Today, bones hold us up. But for ancient jawless fishes, bones may have been a way to store energy for long journeys. Plus, new research indicated that hippos and cetaceans may have evolved their aquatic traits separately.
Instructional Video10:11
PBS

When Camels Roamed North America

12th - Higher Ed
Camels are famous for adaptations that have allowed them to flourish where most other large mammals would perish. But their story begins over 40 million years ago in North America, and in an environment you'd never expect: a rainforest.
Instructional Video21:52
TED Talks

Richard Dawkins: Why the universe seems so strange

12th - Higher Ed
Biologist Richard Dawkins makes a case for "thinking the improbable" by looking at how the human frame of reference limits our understanding of the universe.