SciShow
Megatsunamis: World's Biggest Wave
Megatsunamis are not only much larger than your average tsunami, they also form under different conditions. Good news: they're extremely rare. Bad news: they might not be for long. Hosted by: Hank Green SciShow has a spinoff podcast!...
Wendover Productions
The New Economy of the Warming Arctic
Learn what you want to learn for free for two months by being one of the first 500 to sign up at http://skl.sh/wendover4 Subscribe to Half as Interesting (The other channel from Wendover Productions):...
The Atlantic
When Will the North Pole Melt?
In the near future, the North Pole could truly be relegated to the realm of history. In fact, since scientists started measuring winter sea ice, we’ve lost half a million square miles of it—and for every additional ton of carbon dioxide...
OverSimplified
WW1 - Oversimplified (Part 1)
PART 2 HERE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mun1dKkc_As MERCH: https://oversimplified.tv/merch World War 1 Explained! If you would like to see more OverSimplified on a more regular basis, please consider supporting me on Patreon:...
Steve Spangler Science
Denver's Brown Cloud - Cool Science Experiment
Why does a brown cloud occur in Denver at a certain time of the year? When warm air is higher in the atmosphere, it traps cooler, denser air below and smog just sits in between them. Using bottles of colored hot and cold water, this...
TED-Ed
How Did Clouds Get Their Names?
Have you ever wondered how clouds float in the sky, or why they seem to change so much in just a few minutes. Watch a short video about the way clouds are identified and named, and how they are affected by the Earth's conditions.
TED-Ed
What on Earth is Spin?
If your head is spinning when you consider teaching the action of spinning, this video is sure to settle things. First, the motion is defined and described. The conservation of angular momentum, the Coriolis effect, and the air pressure...