keyboard_arrow_up

How To Get Venom From The World's Deadliest Spider

AdultsAnimalsLifeNature...
The deadliest is probably the funnel-web spider and its relatives. The Sydney funnel web spider (Atrax robustus) can kill a toddler in about 5 minutes and a 5-year-old in about 2 hours.

How Stretching Changes Your Muscles

YouthMovementScienceHealth
Dig into the science of stretching, and find out what it actually does to your muscles and how you can improve your flexibility.

Meet The Mars Rover

KidsScienceSpaceTechnology
Squeaks and Jessi explore how scientists can learn things about Mars by sending rovers to land on it.

What's So Special About A Woodpecker's Tongue?

YouthAnimalsFactsScience
Dr. Alex Bond explains one of the adaptations that makes woodpecker's tongues so fascinating.

Science All Around Us

YouthExperimentsFactsScience...
Learn all about how science can help solve the problems around us.

A Lesson In Impermanence: Beavers

YouthAnimalsNatureSelf...
An engaging, insightful, and educational video for waking up with a soothing narration guiding us through the role of a beaver in its interconnected, natural habitat.

Why Do We Have Crooked Teeth?

YouthHistoryScienceBiology
Explore the prevailing scientific theory of why crooked teeth and impacted wisdom teeth are recent developments in human evolution.

4 epidemics that almost happened (but didn't) - George Zaidan

AdultsHistoryIndustryLife...
What makes for an effective outbreak response? Explore successful systems from around the world that prevented epidemics.

The Fastest Maze-Solving Competition On Earth

AdultsCreativityIndustryScience...
Welcome to Micromouse, the fastest maze-solving competition on Earth.

NASA's Artemis Highlights

YouthSpaceTechnologyWorld...
Ride along with NASA’s Orion capsule on the Artemis I mission around the Moon and back.

YouTube’s Science Scam Crisis

AdultsIndustryScienceTechnology...
There’s a tsunami of science spam on YouTube. Why does it all look the same? How much harm does it do? Do not watch these low-effort, AI-generated, cash grabs.

The science of super longevity | Dr. Morgan Levine

AdultsBiologyHumanScience...
Science can’t stop aging, but it may be able to slow our epigenetic clocks.

Burn Your Waste With... Water?

AdultsLifeNatureScience...
Supercritical water produces fire without flames, which is great for making clean drinking water from our waste in space or breaking down forever chemicals here on Earth.

How Will We Get To Mars?

KidsScienceSpaceTechnology...
Mars has a ton of amazing features waiting to be explored, but we have to get there first.

Are Life-Saving Medicines Hiding in the World’s Coldest Places?

AdultsEnvironmentLifeNature...
Could the next wonder drug be somewhere in Canada's snowy north? Take a trip to this beautiful, frigid landscape as chemist Normand Voyer explores the mysterious molecular treasures found in plants thriving in the cold.

What Is A Sea Bunny?

YouthAnimalsScience
Scientist Suzanne Williams explains what these cute little creatures are.

What Are Plants Made Of? Crash Course Botany

AdultsEducationFoodLife...
When you eat a salad for lunch, you’re digging into a giant pile of plant organs. That’s right—plants are made up of organs, only theirs follow a totally different set of rules from our own.

Forces And Motion

YouthPhysicsScience
This video will explain what force and motion are, what their relationship is to each other, and what relationship there is between force, mass, and acceleration.

A Lesson In Impermanence: Fungi

YouthNatureSelfWellness...
With calming narration and soothing nature visuals, we’ll learn about how fungi grows and how mushrooms play an important part in the life cycle of all living things.

Can Zoos Save Species From Extinction?

YouthAnimalsHistoryScience...
Dig into the breeding program that saved Takhi horses from extinction, and explore the role of zoos in animal conservation.

Halle Bailey Sits Down with Nat Geo Explorer Aliyah Griffith | National Geographic

AdultsMediaNatureTechnology...
Executive Editor Debra Adams Simmons sits down with Halle Bailey, “Ariel” in Disney’s new movie The Little Mermaid, and Aliyah Griffith, Marine Scientist, National Geographic Explorer, and Founder of Mahogany Mermaids.