Building the world's largest (and most controversial) power plant - Alex Gendler
AdultsConstructionDesignIndustry...Explore the creation of China’s Three Gorges Dam, and find out how the hydroelectric plant generates its power.
Why Do You Have Reoccurring Dreams?
AdultsHealthHumanPsychology...Dream. Dream. Dream. It's Dear Blocko 30!
What If Earth got Kicked Out of the Solar System? Rogue Earth
AdultsEducationHumanLife...To get a fresh perspective on science, go to https://brilliant.org/Nutshell/ and sign up free. And there’s an extra perk for kurzgesagt viewers: the first 200 people to use the link get 20% off their annual membership, which lets you view all the daily problems in the archives and unlock every course. Thanks to our friends from Brilliant for supporting this channel.
The Search for History’s Lost Slave Ships | Podcast | Overheard at National Geographic
AdultsEnvironmentHistoryHuman...On the bottom of the world’s oceans lie historic treasures—the lost wrecks of ships that carried enslaved people from Africa to the Americas. Only a handful have been identified so far, but National Geographic explorer and Storytelling Fellow Tara Roberts is documenting the efforts of Black scuba divers and archaeologists to find more, hoping to finally bring their stories to light.
How do investors choose stocks? - Richard Coffin
AdultsData ScienceEconomyPersonal Finance...Explore the strategies investors use to choose stocks and learn whether it’s better to be an active or passive investor.
How Large Can a Bacteria get? Life & Size 3
AdultsBiologyEducationScience...In and out, in and out. Staying alive is about doing things. This very second, your cells are combusting glucose molecules with oxygen to make energy available, which keeps you alive for another precious moment. To get the oxygen to your cells you are breathing.
What If You're Trapped on an Island? ft. MrBeast
AdultsCreativityHealthHumor...MrBeast has a new challenge: Survive Trapped on an Island.
Why no one has measured the speed of light
AdultsData ScienceEducationScience...Physics students learn the speed of light, c, is the same for all inertial observers but no one has ever actually measured it in one direction.