Instructional Video5:33
TED Talks

TED: Your empty wine bottle could help rebuild coastlines | Franziska Trautmann

12th - Higher Ed
What if you could take something as tiny as a grain of sand — and as common as a glass bottle — and use it to tackle the climate crisis? Waste alchemist Franziska Trautmann shares how the spark of an idea turned into a large-scale...
Instructional Video5:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The rise and fall of the Maya Empire’s most powerful city | Geoffrey E. Braswell

Pre-K - Higher Ed
During the 8th century CE, warfare and failing agriculture forced Maya people to move north, to hotter, drier Yucatán. Because of its freshwater access, Chichen Itza became the most powerful Maya city, with nearly 50,000 citizens at its...
Instructional Video6:06
SciShow

Something's Been Making Weird Pits in the Seafloor

12th - Higher Ed
For years, scientists couldn't solve the mystery of strange pits on the floor of the North Sea. Initially they blamed methane seeps, but it seems like the pits were actually made on porpoise.
Instructional Video11:43
TED Talks

TED: Enough red tape — we need to say yes to clean energy | Rich Powell

12th - Higher Ed
Climate innovation leader Rich Powell dives into the bureaucracy, bottlenecks and not-in-my-backyard attitude preventing the US from achieving its green energy goals, warning that we need about 10,000 new clean energy projects to be...
Instructional Video4:14
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Surviving the coldest place on Earth | Nadia Frontier

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The vast, white surface of Antarctica stretches for over 3 million square kilometers. On the coast of this expanse, just a few meters beneath the ice, lies a remarkably diverse realm that is home to over 8,000 species of sea denizens who...
Instructional Video11:58
Be Smart

The Transcontinental Burrito Hypertunnel (a Very Serious Science Video)

12th - Higher Ed
The finest burritos in the world are made in San Francisco’s Mission District. But how can you get a hot & fresh one in New York City in time for lunch? Physics, that’s how. For this very serious and scientific video, we dug a classic...
Instructional Video2:43
SciShow

The Tiny Reasons This Island Is Shrinking

12th - Higher Ed
Hoboro Island off the coast of Japan may soon be an island of the past, and it’s primarily due to one unsuspecting isopod.
Instructional Video5:10
SciShow

How Washington Became a Ship Graveyard: A SciShow Field Trip #3

12th - Higher Ed
Olympic National Park is temporarily closed as Washington, the US, and the world work to mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 virus. We filmed this series in early January and are currently at home practicing social distancing. We hope...
Instructional Video6:50
SciShow

Man Made Earthquakes and More

12th - Higher Ed
Hank hits you with a ton of news this time - Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has plans to retrieve Saturn V rocket engines from the bottom of the Atlantic; new research on the impacts from the Deep Water Horizon oil spill to life in the Gulf of...
Instructional Video11:43
SciShow

Why is Organized Crime Buying Sand?!

12th - Higher Ed
Some might call sand coarse, rough and irritating, but there’s no denying that it’s used everywhere: from glass to asphalt, sand is a key ingredient for all sorts of materials in construction and technology. But this heavy reliance on...
Instructional Video2:28
SciShow

Why There's a Straight Line Through Scotland

12th - Higher Ed
If you take a look at a map of Scotland, you'll notice an eerily straight line running through the highlands, this is the Great Glen Fault the product of half a billion years of time and geology.
Instructional Video7:59
TED Talks

TED: Mangroves, storm walls and other ways to protect coasts from climate change | Dave Sivaprasad

12th - Higher Ed
Nearly 40 percent of humanity lives near a coast -- and no two coasts are the same. How can these communities build resilience to the increasing risks of climate change? Climate advisor Dave Sivaprasad outlines how to tackle this complex...
Instructional Video11:53
SciShow

The World Is Built on Sand... and We're Running Out

12th - Higher Ed
Some might call sand coarse, rough and irritating, but there’s no denying that it’s used everywhere: from glass to asphalt, sand is a key ingredient for all sorts of materials in construction and technology. But this heavy reliance on...
Instructional Video6:00
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can the ocean run out of oxygen? | Kate Slabosky

Pre-K - Higher Ed
For most of the year, the Gulf of Mexico is teeming with marine life, from tiny crustaceans to massive whales. But every summer, disaster strikes. Around May, animals begin to flee the area. And soon, creatures that can't swim or can't...
Instructional Video4:02
SciShow

The World's Bird Poop Obsession

12th - Higher Ed
Here's something to think about the next time you clean your windshield.
Instructional Video11:57
Crash Course

Frederick Douglass Crash Course Black American History

12th - Higher Ed
Clint Smith teaches you about one of the most famous writers, orators, and advocates of the 19th century, Frederick Douglass. Douglass was born in slavery, escaped to the North, and became one of the most influential people of his time....
Instructional Video18:16
TED Talks

TED: How we wrecked the ocean | Jeremy Jackson

12th - Higher Ed
In this bracing talk, coral reef ecologist Jeremy Jackson lays out the shocking state of the ocean today: overfished, overheated, polluted, with indicators that things will get much worse. Astonishing photos and stats make the case.
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

News Bummers Poison Fog Sad Sperm & SAM

12th - Higher Ed
Hank loves science because it helps us appreciate the world more, but not everything that science does makes him happy - reports of poison fog on the West coast of the United States; dramatic decreases in sperm counts; and a lack of...
Instructional Video3:17
SciShow

Why Are There No Sea Snakes in the Atlantic

12th - Higher Ed
The Atlantic Ocean is the second largest on Earth, and yet there are no sea snake populations to be found there. What’s keeping aquatic serpents from making a home in these waters?
Instructional Video3:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Irish myth of the Giant's Causeway - Iseult Gillespie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
On the coast of Northern Ireland, a vast plateau of basalt slabs and columns called the Giant's Causeway stretches into the ocean. The scientific explanation for this is that it's the result of molten lava contracting and fracturing as...
Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

The Ancient Island That Transformed Washington: A SciShow Field Trip #2

12th - Higher Ed
Even though there are no volcanoes on the Olympic Peninsula, you can find lots of volcanic rocks on the beaches. This bizarre circumstance might have to do with how the ancient island transformed Washington state.
Instructional Video11:32
Crash Course

Phillis Wheatley Crash Course Black American History

12th - Higher Ed
Despite all the hardship of being a Black person in Colonial America, some Black people were able to defy the harsh conditions and create art. Today we're learning about a teenager who attained literacy and wrote poems that reached a...
Instructional Video9:46
SciShow

Are We Overdue for a Megaquake?

12th - Higher Ed
If you live in the U.S. you may have heard that the Pacific Northwest is supposedly overdue for an earthquake of colossal, devastating proportions. If that’s true, how can we better understand the threat and be prepared for the day it...
Instructional Video10:10
SciShow

The Science of Shipwreck Graveyards

12th - Higher Ed
Modern technology can make us forget how cruel the ocean once was to seafarers. Even with these new technologies, some parts of the sea are still just plain dangerous. Here are a few places on Earth where ships have met the briny depths.