Instructional Video7:33
PBS

The Bear-Sized Beaver That Couldn’t Build A Dam

12th - Higher Ed
It’s important to us that you understand how big this beaver was. Just like modern beavers, it was semiaquatic -- it lived both on the land and in the water. The difference is that today’s beavers do a pretty special thing - one that the...
Instructional Video11:11
PBS

That Time the Mediterranean Sea Disappeared

12th - Higher Ed
How could a body of water as big as the Mediterranean just...disappear? It would take decades and more than 1,000 research studies to even start to figure out the cause -- or causes -- of one of the greatest vanishing acts in Earth’s...
Instructional Video8:27
PBS

How the Andes Mountains Might Have Killed a Bunch of Whales

12th - Higher Ed
At a site known as Cerro Ballena or Whale Hill, there are more than 40 skeletons of marine mammals -- a graveyard of ocean life dating back 6.5 million to 9 million years ago, in the Late Miocene Epoch. But the identity of the killer...
Instructional Video10:12
PBS

How Earth's First, Unkillable Animals Saved the World

12th - Higher Ed
They have survived every catastrophe and every mass extinction event that nature has thrown at them. And by being the little, filter-feeding, water-cleaning creatures that they are, sponges may have saved the world.
Instructional Video9:22
PBS

How Dogs (Eventually) Became Our Best Friends

12th - Higher Ed
We’re still figuring out the details, but most scientists agree that it took thousands of years of interactions to develop our deep bond with dogs. When did they first become domesticated? Where did this happen? And what did the process...
Instructional Video7:49
PBS

How Dinosaurs Coupled Up

12th - Higher Ed
Dinosaur mating behavior has been the subject of a lot of speculation, but what can we actually say about it from the fossil record?
Instructional Video9:43
PBS

How Ancient Art Captured Australian Megafauna

12th - Higher Ed
Beneath layers of rock art are drawings of animals SO strange that, for a long time, some anthropologists thought they could only have been imagined. But what if these animals really had existed, after all?
Instructional Video10:01
PBS

Did These Giant Sloths Poop Themselves to Death?

12th - Higher Ed
At Tanque Loma, at least 22 giant ground sloths in the genus Eremotherium met their end. Of the five hypotheses that researchers proposed for what killed the sloths, the best supported one right now is that they died surrounded by their...
Instructional Video9:19
PBS

A Short Tale About Diplodocus' Long Neck

12th - Higher Ed
Long necks gave sauropods a huge advantage when it came to food, but not in the way you think. And this benefit would allow them to become the biggest terrestrial animals of all time!
Instructional Video11:04
PBS

A Natural History of Mars

12th - Higher Ed
While Earth’s natural history has been playing out over the last few billion years, another epic planetary saga has also been unfolding right next door.
Instructional Video9:18
PBS

Why The Paleo Diet Couldn't Save The Neanderthals

12th - Higher Ed
These relatives of ours lived in Eurasia for more than 300,000 years. They were expert toolmakers, using materials like stone, wood, and animal bone. They were also skilled hunters and foragers, and may even have created cave art. So...
Instructional Video7:28
PBS

When Trees Took Over the World

12th - Higher Ed
420 million years ago, the forest floor of what's now New York was covered with a plant that didn’t look like a tree at all, except its roots were made of wood. Instead of looking up to learn about the evolution of trees, it turns out...
Instructional Video7:50
PBS

When the Sahara Was Green

12th - Higher Ed
The climate of the Sahara was completely different thousands of years ago. And we’re not talking about just a few years of extra rain. We’re talking about a climate that was so wet for so long that animals and humans alike made...
Instructional Video7:06
PBS

When Giant Deer Roamed Eurasia

12th - Higher Ed
Megaloceros was one of the largest members of the deer family ever to walk the Earth. The archaeological record is full of evidence that our ancestors lived alongside and interacted with these giant mammals for millennia. But what...
Instructional Video7:24
PBS

When Dinosaur Look-Alikes Ruled the Earth

12th - Higher Ed
There were a huge number of croc-like animals that flourished during the Triassic Period. Dinosaurs had just arrived on the scene but it was these animals that truly ruled the Earth, becoming both abundant and diverse.
Instructional Video7:16
PBS

The Real Story Of The Dodo Bird's (Current) Extinction

12th - Higher Ed
What’s the real story of the dodo? How did such a unique bird even evolve in the first place? And are we really responsible for its extinction?
Instructional Video8:48
PBS

The Oddest Couple in the Fossil Record

12th - Higher Ed
To figure out how Thrinaxodon and Broomistega became entombed together, scientists looked at the burrow itself, along with their fossilized bones. And it looks like their luck ran out, when a behavior that usually would’ve helped them...
Instructional Video9:10
PBS

The Neanderthals That Taught Us About Humanity

12th - Higher Ed
Throughout the first half of the 20th century, Neandertals were thought to have been…primitive. Unintelligent, hunched-over cavemen, for lack of a better word. But the discoveries made in that Iraqi cave provided some of the earliest...
Instructional Video8:10
PBS

The Neandertal Burial That Taught Us About Humanity

12th - Higher Ed
If we can see ourselves in the way our ancient cousins dealt with death…what else could we have in common?
Instructional Video7:19
PBS

The Hellacious Lives of the "Hell Pigs"

12th - Higher Ed
Despite the name, we don’t know where the so-called “hell pigs” belong in the mammalian family tree. They walked on hooves, like pigs do, but had longer legs, almost like deer. They had hunched backs, a bit like rhinos or bison. But as...
Instructional Video7:32
PBS

The Ghostly Origins of the Big Cats

12th - Higher Ed
All of today’s big cat species evolved less than 11 million years ago and yet their evolutionary history remains an almost total mystery. But scientists have recently discovered a major clue about the origins of the big cats, one that...
Instructional Video7:50
PBS

The Extreme Hyenas That Didn't Last

12th - Higher Ed
Hyenas weren’t always able to eat bones. In fact, only a few million years ago, they lived very different lives.
Instructional Video6:46
PBS

The Creature That Stumped Darwin

12th - Higher Ed
Toxodon was one of the last members of a lineage that vanished 11,000 years ago after thriving in isolation for millions of years. And its fossils would inspire a revolutionary thinker to tackle a bigger mystery than Toxodon itself:...
Instructional Video7:28
PBS

The (Ovi)Raptor That Paleontologists Got Wrong

12th - Higher Ed
Paleontologists found a small theropod dinosaur skull right on top of a nest of eggs that were believed to belong to a plant-eating dinosaur. Instead of being the nest robbers that they were originally thought to be, raptors like this...