Instructional Video7:41
SciShow

Grass Could Save The Arctic

12th - Higher Ed
In a remote corner of Siberia, a Russian scientist is trying to restore the ecosystem to the way it was during the last Ice Age. And while Pleistocene Park is definitely eccentric, it has implications for the future of the entire planet.
Instructional Video10:40
SciShow

What Will Humanity Leave Behind?

12th - Higher Ed
When humans are gone, nature will reclaim our cities and break down much of what we've built. But some of the things we've made will last much longer than others, and they're probably not the things you'd expect.
Instructional Video11:53
SciShow

These Birds Aren’t Real

12th - Higher Ed
If you’ve been around the internet long enough, you’ve probably heard of the “conspiracy” that birds aren’t real (It's not a real conspiracy theory; it was started as a joke). Well for decades, scientists have been using fake birds (even...
Instructional Video11:19
SciShow

You Don’t Need A Uterus to Get A Uterine Disease

12th - Higher Ed
Endometriosis is a disease that affects about one in ten women, and comes from tissue inside the uterus making its way out. But it turns out that's not the only way to get it, because there are people without uteruses who have it too....
Instructional Video9:53
SciShow

4 Fungi We've Finally Figured Out How To Farm

12th - Higher Ed
Mushroom foragers rejoice! Your lives just got a whole lot easier! Now, we can farm four mushrooms that used to only be found in the wild: morels, huitlacoche, chanterelles, and truffles. Here's why it took so long.
Instructional Video10:14
SciShow

5 Ways Space Is Actually Good for You

12th - Higher Ed
Space travel is infamously bad for your health. But it turns out that in some very specific cases, space travel may actually be beneficial. Like by strengthening your bones, or repairing your DNA.
Instructional Video13:20
SciShow

Cold Doesn’t Exist (And 4 Other Things Scientists Used to Think Were Real)

12th - Higher Ed
To explain how the world works, scientists occasionally have an idea that — upon further testing — turns out to be wrong. From rays that carry coldness instead of heat, to a neighboring star that causes regular mass extinctions on Earth,...
Instructional Video13:13
SciShow

Why Did These Ancient People Abandon Copper?

12th - Higher Ed
Most cultures who developed metalworking technology never let the skill go to waste. But in what's now Michigan, Native Americans started making metal tools well before anyone else did, and then stopped. And the reason why this happened...
Instructional Video12:09
SciShow

The Most Important Invention Ever Is... Glue

12th - Higher Ed
There's one human innovation that's so critical to our lives that every modern human group seems to have it. And you probably have some in your craft drawer - it's glue! Turns out there's a long history of glue-making that cements it as...
Instructional Video12:07
SciShow

How Much Information Can A Human Head Hold?

12th - Higher Ed
How much information can a human brain store? If we treat them like computers, one estimate is that they can hold 55 million ebooks worth of information. But why restrict ourselves to biology? If you had the right technology, how much...
Instructional Video8:15
SciShow

Amethyst Used to be Really Valuable

12th - Higher Ed
Diamonds, rubies, emeralds, and sapphires are most of the classic gemstones adorning royal jewels. But they used to be accompanied by a stone that nowadays is most often found in museum gift shops: Amethyst. Here's the story of...
Instructional Video5:36
SciShow

Scientists Have Found the Perfect Urinal Shape

12th - Higher Ed
Science can help solve the world’s most important problems, and what could be more important than keeping pee off your shoes? Yes, even the lowly urinal—and those who use it—can benefit from the occasional peer-reviewed study. So let’s...
Instructional Video11:36
SciShow

Quantum Computers Look Like Chandeliers. This is Why.

12th - Higher Ed
Whether you saw a quantum computer featured in a tech news blog post, or that Black Mirror episode "Joan is Awful", the chandelier-like look may have inspired the thought "Why does it look like that?" Well, it's not for the sci-fi...
Instructional Video7:27
SciShow

How Dogs Can Help Us Prevent Cleft Palates

12th - Higher Ed
Even though cleft lips and palates are really common, there's still a lot of research that needs to be done into why they form. But scientists have found a whole new line of evidence that might crack the case wide open, and it's in dog...
Instructional Video12:07
SciShow

The Ancient Stick Maps That Tackle Unsolvable Physics

12th - Higher Ed
When particle physicist John Huth was briefly lost at sea, he started to wonder how the people around the world who navigate vast oceans figured their way around. What started as an afternoon activity gone awry led him to a years-long...
Instructional Video8:49
SciShow

Joseph Stalin Was Very Wrong About Agriculture

12th - Higher Ed
Soviet agronomist Nikolai Ivanovich Vavilov was obsessed with plants. Especially finding out where domesticated crops first came from. And out of his research came a proposal that certain crops, like rye and oats, were evolutionary...
Instructional Video7:49
SciShow

This Is Where We’re Gonna Bury The ISS

12th - Higher Ed
In the middle of the South Pacific lies Point Nemo: the most remote location on Earth. This super isolated spot is home to a graveyard filled not with human remains, but hundreds of broken up spacecraft and satellites. And after more...
Instructional Video7:28
SciShow

Yes, It Really Does Rain More on Weekends

12th - Higher Ed
Does it seem like your workweeks are full of bright sunny days and then every weekend, every time you make plans, it rains? It's not just you -- at least if you live in the Northeastern US, it really does rain every weekend. The reason...
Instructional Video5:07
SciShow Kids

Where Can We Find Water? | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Where does water come from? If you turn on the faucet, there's water. But it goes on an incredible journey to get there. Today, Jessi and Squeaks learn about all the places we can find water.
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow Kids

Water Made the Grand Canyon! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Bill and Webb want to know: What's stronger, wind or water? Both of them can change the shape of the land. So which one does it better?
Instructional Video5:27
SciShow Kids

The Biggest Volcano Ever is in Space! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Jessi and Sam the Bat talk about the biggest volcano ever that we know of. And it's not on Earth. It's Olympus Mons, on the planet Mars!
Instructional Video5:53
SciShow Kids

The Fiordlands of New Zealand! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Squeaks is back from his trip around the world! In this episode, he and Jessi discuss the second stop on his trip: Fiordlands National Park (aka Te Rua-o-te-moko) in New Zealand (aka Aotearoa)<br/>
Instructional Video6:24
SciShow Kids

Water's Amazing Journey | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Water makes an amazing journey around the world called the water cycle. Squeaks and his friends put on a play to learn all about it!
Instructional Video6:18
SciShow Kids

Iceland: A Land of Ice AND Fire! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Squeaks is back from his trip around the world! In this episode, he and Jessi discuss the final stop on his trip: Vatnajökull National Park in Iceland.