Crash Course Kids
Who Needs Dirt?
So... do plants need dirt? The truth might shock you. In this episode of Crash Course kids, Sabrina talks about how plants get energy and how that energy is transported around them. Also, she talks about dirt.
MinuteEarth
MinuteEarth Explains: Size
In this collection of classic MinuteEarth videos, we tackle the science of size.
Food Farmer Earth
Salad Bowls in Small Spaces: Container Gardening for Beginners
The guide focuses on creating "salad bowls" through container gardening, ideal for city dwellers with limited outdoor space like balconies or small decks. It introduces a sustainable method for a continuous harvest of salad ingredients,...
Curated Video
This Farm Turns Garbage into Food
Permaculture instructor Andrew Millison visits Black Dirt Farm in Vermont, and speaks with owner Tom Gilbert where they collect local waste from nearby towns and process it into beautiful compost.
FuseSchool
MATHS - Geometry - Perpendicular from a point to a line
In this video, we're going to look at how to construct a perpendicular from a point on a line and that point can be anywhere on the line
Food Farmer Earth
Raising Backyard Chickens - Greens for your Chickens
Naomi Montacre shares the in and outs of feeding fresh greens to your backyard chickens. As Montacre explains, feeding chickens a variety of greens is a good supplement in addition to their regular feed diet. Watch out for grass and...
Food Farmer Earth
How To make Sorrel Soup
Sorrel is a perennial plant that grows easily in a kitchen garden and has many applications. It can be used as a herb, a leafy green to spice up a salad, or the main focus of a tasty cold soup, just perfect for a hot, summer day.
Food Farmer Earth
Symphony of the Soil: Interview with Deborah Koons Garcia
Deborah Koons Garcia's exceptional, new film, Symphony of the Soil, pays loving homage to the beauty and the wondrous mystery of soil, celebrating not just the incredible soil diversity found on four of the world's continents, it also...
History Hit
How were ancient China, India and Europe all connected?
When one thinks of the Ancient World you would be forgiven for instantly thinking of either the cultural glories of ancient Greece or the military might of the Roman Empire. Yet the Mediterranean and the Near East was just one part of a...
Curated Video
Stop peeing in the pool. Chlorine doesn't work like you think.
Pee-ple taking bathroom breaks in pools is not good. Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO Not everyone will readily admit to peeing in swimming pools, but it does happen. An anonymous survey from 2012 found that 19 percent of...
SciShow
Why Astronauts Need Farm-to-Table
Growing food in space will be necessary to support the future of space exploration. And it won't be monoculture, either. Here's why astronauts will be growing whole ecosystems in space.
The March of Time
Algeria sheiks (Ref. 5.3)
MOT 1937: FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION: LA MS French guard, sentry, sign 'Legion.' MS Legion soldiers drumming. VS Legion soldiers marching, walking on dirt field. LA XWS Airplanes (possibly bombers) flying in V-formation. France
Science360
Arctic soils key to future climate
Since the last ice age, plants in the Alaskan Arctic have been taking carbon out of the atmosphere and locking it away in the soil. So, for thousands of years, the soil microbes in this region of the world have subsisted on a limited...
Weatherthings
Water Smart: Water as a Natural Resource - Conserve Water
In Water as a Natural Resource we are introduced to words such as habitat, ecosystem, watershed and estuary. Not only do kids learn that water exists everywhere on Earth, but that it is vital for life in plants, animals, and all other...
Brian McLogan
Most Asked Question #1 When am I going to use math in real life
Most Asked Question #1 When am I going to use math in real life
Curated Video
Diego Stocco Builds a Mad Max-Style Instrument Out of Pipes: Sound Builders
Subscribe to MOTHERBOARD here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-To-MOTHERBOARD Listen up: We're running a special rebroadcast of the first season of Sound Builders, our show about noise (and the people rethinking how to make it), all week on...
SciShow Kids
What's the Dirt on ... Dirt?
Dirt or soil? What's the difference? Actually, dirt is soil as explained by the video's high-energy speaker who goes on to emphasize its importance. She describes the composition of soil as minerals, water, air,...
MinuteEarth
How These Sea Shells Know the Weather in Greenland
Does a single-celled organism know more about the history of our planet than we do? A video explains how single-celled organisms manage to build a house and hold the secrets to the weather. They contain the information about the changes...
Crash Course Kids
The Dirt on Decomposers
What happens to all the waste created in nature? This is the focus of a video that explains how decomposers break down waste to be used as nutrients and turned into energy for other living organisms.
Be Smart
Where Does the Smell of Rain Come From?
I smell a great video. Viewers learn how the smell of rain originates from various sources, and how ozone and organic material work to produce the recognizable smell.
Veritasium
Where Do Trees Get Their Mass From?
From stately oaks to towering pines, trees are the largest members of the plant kingdom that most people see. But how do trees get so big? Find out where the mass of a tree comes from with a short video. The narrator presents the topic...