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All Seasons

Season 2013

  • S2013E01 The Philip L. Wright Zoological Museum

    • January 14, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein I give you the personal, behind-the-scenes tour of our vast collection and its variable rooms. Welcome to The Brain Scoop. My name is Emily, and I will be your host.

  • S2013E02 Ask Emily #1

    • January 17, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein I address popular queries about things and stuff. Thanks to everyone who asked questions on Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, or YouTube! Keep them coming!

  • S2013E03 The Spirit Collection

    • January 21, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we explore the oft forgotten wet specimen collection.

  • S2013E04 A Bear Skull

    • January 24, 2013
    • YouTube

    Examining a bear skull.

  • S2013E05 Getting the Wolf

    • January 28, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we collect a wolf that had been hit by a car.

  • S2013E06 Recommended Reading

    • January 31, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein I suggest ways to gain superpowers.

  • S2013E07 Skinning the Wolf

    • February 5, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein Mr. Wolf loses his skin.

  • S2013E08 Discussing the Wolf

    • February 8, 2013
    • YouTube

    In which I answer your questions about Mr. Wolf.

  • S2013E09 Gutting the Wolf

    • February 12, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we take the insides and move them outside.

  • S2013E10 Emily Gets a Valentine

    • February 14, 2013
    • YouTube

    From me to you.

  • S2013E11 Hungry Like The Wolf

    • February 18, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we search for buried treasures.

  • S2013E12 Ask Emily #2

    • February 21, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein I address popular queries about things and stuff, again.

  • S2013E13 Tetrapodal Locomotion

    • February 27, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we discuss what moves us -- literally.

  • S2013E14 Wolf Head CSI Fun Time

    • March 7, 2013
    • YouTube

    In which things are not always as they seem, and brains get scooped.

  • S2013E15 Domestication

    • March 12, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we discover what is living in Paris Hilton's purse.

  • S2013E16 Horns vs. Antlers

    • March 18, 2013
    • YouTube

    Do you know the difference between horns and antlers? Talk to your kids. Make a difference.

  • S2013E17 Pangolins

    • March 20, 2013
    • YouTube

    It's basically a Sandshrew.

  • S2013E18 Ask Emily #3

    • March 27, 2013
    • YouTube

    Let's just ignore the part where I thought the Twitter timestamp was part of their usernames...

  • S2013E19 Owls

    • April 4, 2013
    • YouTube

  • S2013E20 Most of a Bear

    • April 12, 2013
    • YouTube

    We're gonna take a walk outside today - gonna see what we can find today.

  • S2013E21 Kids' Q&A

    • April 29, 2013
    • YouTube

    Kids ask the darndest things.

  • S2013E22 De-Extinction, Part One: How It Works, Kinda

    • May 11, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we talk about what it means to 'De-Extinct' - pet dinosaurs? Probably not.

  • S2013E23 De-Extinction, Part Two: Yes, no, maybe so?

    • May 13, 2013
    • YouTube

    This is still a lot to consider. What do you guys think?

  • S2013E24 Chicago Adventure, Part One: Beetles 'n Bats

    • May 24, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein Emily sees things she had only ever read about in books.

  • S2013E25 Chicago Adventure, Part Two: Catalogue Dialogue

    • May 29, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein Emily very nearly cries at least seven times.

  • S2013E26 Mammalian Diversification

    • June 3, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we attempt to figure out our origins.

  • S2013E27 Emily Vlogs: On Dissection

    • June 11, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein Emily dispenses advice on tackling your first dissection.

  • S2013E28 Chicago Adventure, Part Three: Little Skeletons

    • June 16, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we explore tiny skeletons and adaptive evolution.

  • S2013E29 Chicago Adventure, Part Four: Rodents of Unusual Size (And Other Mammals, Too)

    • June 27, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we explore the biggest things ever.

  • S2013E30 Chicago Adventure, Part Five: The Platypus, The Skin, & The Cold

    • July 8, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein *BRAIN ASPLODE*

  • S2013E31 Chicago Adventure, Part Six: The Spice of Life

    • July 17, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we discuss the underrated smell of dead chipmunks.

  • S2013E32 Chicago Adventure, Part Seven: Octopus Sex

    • July 22, 2013
    • YouTube

    Dr. Janet Voight settles the eternal debate about the plural form of "octopus," and becomes my new favorite person.

  • S2013E33 Chicago Adventure, Part Eight: How to be an Insect

    • July 28, 2013
    • YouTube

    Jim Boone shows off his insects. Some of these might actually be plants. I'm still not convinced otherwise.

  • S2013E34 Ask Emily #4

    • August 7, 2013
    • YouTube

    QUESTION TIIIME WITH EMILY Don't mind the sparse office decorations.

  • S2013E35 Farewell, Montana

    • August 14, 2013
    • YouTube

    My sincerest thanks to Dave Dyer for giving me the opportunity to volunteer in the UMZM: without your initial support and encouragement, none of this would have been possible. My deepest gratitude goes to Hank Green for seeing the potential and making The Brain Scoop a reality. Thank you, Heather Hsu; without you the next chapter in my adventure would forever remain unwritten. I thank The Field Museum for their continued support in the production of The Brain Scoop, and am so looking forward to becoming a part of their team! And - from the bottom of my heart - thank you to everyone who has watched, liked, shared and commented: this would not have happened without you. Thank you to Šafusová and Deanna Mavis for providing transcriptions for this video, and many others!

  • S2013E36 Welcome to The Field Museum

    • August 21, 2013
    • YouTube

    The possibilities are endless! We're going to film ALL OF THE THINGS!

  • S2013E37 Olinguito

    • August 28, 2013
    • YouTube

    Today we're talking to Bill Stanley about Kris Helgen's Olinguito!

  • S2013E38 What is a Museum?

    • September 4, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we ask researchers, curators, scientists, docents, and visitors alike how they would define a museum. What's your definition?! Let us know in the comments below! Thank you to everyone who provided answers for this video; we couldn't do it without you!

  • S2013E39 Ask Emily #5

    • September 11, 2013
    • YouTube

    DO NOT CLIMB! Wherein questions are answered and arms are waved.

  • S2013E40 Hosenose, Part One

    • September 19, 2013
    • YouTube

    Emily is back at it again with Anna Goldman, mammal preparation lab manager, and special guest Hosenose.

  • S2013E41 Hosenose, Part Two

    • September 25, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein Emily and Anna explore Hosenose from the inside out.

  • S2013E42 The Hero Shrew

    • October 2, 2013
    • YouTube

    Bill Stanley tells us all about the weird and wonderful Hero Shrew, and reveals his latest discovery!

  • S2013E43 Moths vs Butterflies

    • October 9, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we explore the order Lepidoptera! Huge thanks to Jim Boone, collection manager of the insect division for making this episode possible.

  • S2013E44 Ask Emily #6

    • October 16, 2013
    • YouTube

    It's question time! Taxidermy of reptiles, museum donations, theme music, age and gender in STEM, and more!

  • S2013E45 Zebra Bits

    • October 23, 2013
    • YouTube

    What's black and white and red all over? A zebra on The Brain Scoop!

  • S2013E46 Insect Adventure, Part One

    • October 30, 2013
    • YouTube

    Nothing says collection expedition like rotten chicken liver!

  • S2013E47 Insect Adventure, Part Two

    • November 7, 2013
    • YouTube

    Poot Poot!

  • S2013E48 The Gem Room

    • November 13, 2013
    • YouTube

    Wherein we open the vaults and unveil some of the shinier secrets from the Museum's geology collection!

  • S2013E49 Insect Adventure, Part Three

    • November 21, 2013
    • YouTube

    Check out what is living in the Hanover, IL prairie, PLUS Jim Louderman shows us how to prepare insects for the collection. WIN-WIN.

  • S2013E50 Where My Ladies At?

    • November 27, 2013
    • YouTube

    Emily discusses sexism in science, negative and sexist comments, and other STEM channels hosted by women.

  • S2013E51 Carl Akeley's Four Seasons

    • December 4, 2013
    • YouTube

    Emily discusses the father of modern taxidermy, Carl Akeley.

  • S2013E52 Carl Akeley's Fighting African Elephants

    • December 11, 2013
    • YouTube

    ELEFINT. Or, how do you taxidermy an elephant?

  • S2013E53 Squirrel McNastyface

    • December 18, 2013
    • YouTube

    This has been a PSA from the American Dental Association: Brush yo' teeth.

  • S2013E54 The Nondenominational Holiday Botanical Celebration

    • December 25, 2013
    • YouTube

    Happy Holidays from The Brain Scoop team!

Season 2014

  • S2014E01 Siats meekerorum

    • January 1, 2014
    • YouTube

    Peter Makovicky introduces us to Siats meekerorum, a new species of dinosaur discovered and described by him and Lindsay Zanno!

  • S2014E02 Ask Emily #7

    • January 8, 2014
    • YouTube

    Emily answers your questions on ocean exploration, poop, and butterfly memories!

  • S2014E03 Q&A with Anna Goldman

    • January 15, 2014
    • YouTube

    Wanna know how you can have Anna Goldman's job? Insider's tip: DFTBA.

  • S2014E04 1893 World's Columbian Exposition

    • January 22, 2014
    • YouTube

  • S2014E05 The Economic Botanical Collection

    • January 29, 2014
    • YouTube

    Stay tuned for The Brain Scoop family band - I'm playing the backup gourd.

  • S2014E06 Romantic Ants

    • February 13, 2014
    • YouTube

    This Valentine's Day, woo your boo with sexy entomology words! Spermatheca"..."aedeagus­".... "oral-anal social trophallaxis"...

  • S2014E07 Meteorites From Spaaaaaace!

    • February 19, 2014
    • YouTube

    CSI Meteorites: I guess you could say this show is.... astronomical. YEEAAAAAAAAAH

  • S2014E08 Ask Emily #8

    • February 26, 2014
    • YouTube

    Emily answers your questions from the antler room!

  • S2014E09 Starstuff and Nanodiamonds

    • March 12, 2014
    • YouTube

    Wherein Emily meets our collective origins.

  • S2014E10 The Two-Faced Calf, Part I

    • March 19, 2014
    • YouTube

    Wherein we seriously ask ourselves - are two heads better than one?

  • S2014E11 The Two-Faced Calf, Part II

    • March 26, 2014
    • YouTube

    Come for the 4 eyes, stay for the beetle time lapse.

  • S2014E12 The Interactives Shop

    • April 2, 2014
    • YouTube

    Come visit "The Machine Inside: Biomechanics" at the Field or find a traveling show in your area, and check out Bob's fun interactives for yourself! :D

  • S2014E13 The Replicator

    • April 9, 2014
    • YouTube

    Meet Max: The Replicator. Baby Turtle Maker. Termite Mound Architect. Giant Worm Enthusiast.

  • S2014E14 Crocodiles vs. Alligators

    • April 16, 2014
    • YouTube

    Crocodilia: Keeping it real for the last 83.5 million years.

  • S2014E15 The Audubon Field Guide

    • April 23, 2014
    • YouTube

    On April 26th, Audubon's 229th birthday, we remember the making of The Birds of America and JJ's flowing golden locks of hair.

  • S2014E16 The Heat Theater

    • April 30, 2014
    • YouTube

    Wherein our dynamite Exhibitions Department creates an immersive media experience inspired by a discarded wax candle.

  • S2014E17 The Breast Episode Ever

    • May 7, 2014
    • YouTube

    Wherein we discuss the biological and evolutionary imperatives of human breastfeeding over the last 80 million years.

  • S2014E18 Ask Emily: The Favorites Episode

    • May 14, 2014
    • YouTube

    RAINDROPS ON ROSES AND WHISKERS ON KITTENS: these are a few of Emily's favorite things!

  • S2014E19 Dimetrodon is Not A Dinosaur

    • May 21, 2014
    • YouTube

    They're not.

  • S2014E20 Where'd you get all those dead animals?

    • June 4, 2014
    • YouTube

    The answer to the ever-burning question: why do we need so many dead things?

  • S2014E21 How to Pin an Insect

    • June 18, 2014
    • YouTube

    Your dead insects and their details are valuable to science. Start your own collection today!

  • S2014E22 The Tiger Beetle

    • June 25, 2014
    • YouTube

    Bonus clip from our episode "How To Pin An Insect" - enjoy the lil' tiger beetle!

  • S2014E23 What the Function? with Smarter Every Day!

    • July 2, 2014
    • YouTube

    Where biology and engineering meet: let's puzzle out what the function is for some of our specimens! QUIZ SHOW!

  • S2014E24 In Search of Fossil Fish

    • July 16, 2014
    • YouTube

    Wherein we go on a fishing trip for 52-million year old fossils! The first in a series about the excavation of Fossil Lake, Wyoming.

  • S2014E25 Fossil Fish, Pt. II: A History

    • July 30, 2014
    • YouTube

    Join us for Part II in our quest to uncover the tropical world of ancient Fossil Lake! Palm trees in Wyoming! Sex in the fossil record!

  • S2014E26 Why Sharks?

    • August 11, 2014
    • YouTube

    Welcome to five consecutive calendar days dedicated to programming about everyone's favorite cartilaginous fishes: the sharks!

  • S2014E27 Fossil Sharks

    • August 12, 2014
    • YouTube

    Wherein we take an adventure into the deep oceans of history in pursuit of fossilized sharks.

  • S2014E28 Shark Weapons

    • August 13, 2014
    • YouTube

    Weapons made with shark teeth from 100+ years ago are not only awesome, but they may also help us uncover clues about species distribution.

  • S2014E29 Shark Fin CSI

    • August 14, 2014
    • YouTube

    Every year millions of sharks are slaughtered for their fins. The Field has developed new methods to identify some of these sharks to better enforce laws and help end the illegal trade. Science FTW!

  • S2014E30 Sharks Sharks Sharks & More Sharks

    • August 15, 2014
    • YouTube

    There are 12 living Orders of sharks and rays swimming in our oceans today, and more than 440 known species. Here are some of the wackier ones!

  • S2014E31 Fossil Meteorites

    • August 27, 2014
    • YouTube

    In which we set out and find fossil meteorites in time and space. Wait... meteorites can be fossilized?! Mind blown.

  • S2014E32 Year of the Passenger Pigeon

    • September 10, 2014
    • YouTube

    2014 marks the 100-year anniversary of the extinction of the Passenger Pigeon, the most numerous bird species in the history of our planet.

  • S2014E33 Fossil Fish, PT. III: The Preparation

    • September 24, 2014
    • YouTube

    So.... we've got all of these fish fossils. Now what? To the prep lab!

  • S2014E34 Into Perú

    • October 8, 2014
    • YouTube

    Team Brain Scoop is about to helicopter into a biologically unknown region of the Peruvian jungle with a team of conservationists to study and document the area's biodiversity for the first time in its history.

  • S2014E35 Into the Bat Caves of Kenya: Pt. I

    • October 22, 2014
    • YouTube

    In January 2014, Emily accompanied Curator of Mammals Bruce Patterson on a field expedition into the bat caves of Kenya. They were joined with Field Museum Media Producers Greg Mercer and Emily Ward to document the experience. This is the 1st installment in a 2-part series of highlights from the trip; there's much more to come!

  • S2014E36 Into the Bat Caves of Kenya: Pt. 2

    • November 5, 2014
    • YouTube

    This is the 2nd installment in a 2-part series of highlights from our expedition deep into the bat caves of Kenya!

  • S2014E37 In Search of Night Life

    • November 19, 2014
    • YouTube

    In which we take an expedition deep into an area of unstudied rainforest, and document our discoveries. At night. This is the first part in a series about The Field Museum's Rapid Inventory No. 27, a journey through the forests between the rivers Tapiche and Blanco in Peru. Every year, the Museum's conservation group [the Action Center!] gathers together leading scientific experts across a number of disciplines (botany, zoology, geology, and anthropology) in order to gain an understanding of little-known areas of the rainforest. They work with local communities and their governments to help inform decisions made for conserving these unique, precious, and threatened parts of the world.

  • S2014E38 Investigating the Trees of Amazonia

    • December 3, 2014
    • YouTube

    When in doubt, sniff a tree. No, really! Botanists and rainforest ecologists follow their noses to identify certain species in addition to looking at the plant's flowers, and counting leaves on branches. This is the second part in a series about The Field Museum's Rapid Inventory No. 27, a journey through the forests between the rivers Tapiche and Blanco in Peru. Every year, the Museum's conservation group [the Action Center!] gathers together leading scientific experts across a number of disciplines (botany, zoology, geology, and anthropology) in order to gain an understanding of little-known areas of the rainforest. They work with local communities and their governments to help inform decisions made for conserving these unique, precious, and threatened parts of the world.

  • S2014E39 The Fer-de-Lance

    • December 17, 2014
    • YouTube

    We found so many snakes with Pablo that we decided to have a few episodes devoted to these beautiful and often misunderstood creatures. First: the common Fer-de-lance! This is a segment in a series about The Field Museum's Rapid Inventory No. 27, a journey through the forests between the rivers Tapiche and Blanco in Peru. Every year, the Museum's conservation group [the Action Center!] gathers together leading scientific experts across a number of disciplines (botany, zoology, geology, and anthropology) in order to gain an understanding of little-known areas of the rainforest. They work with local communities and their governments to help inform decisions made for conserving these unique, precious, and threatened parts of the world.

Season 2015

  • S2015E01 Two Bats and a Spider

    • January 7, 2015
    • YouTube

    Pregnant bats and the world's largest spider; your average evening in the Amazon. Studying bats allows biologists to make valuable connections between the animals and their environments, as insect eaters thrive in jungles and fruit-eaters act as seed dispersers and plant pollinators. We may not have netted an incredible number that evening, but the two bats documented provide important insights on the biodiversity of their forest home. This is a segment in a series about The Field Museum's Rapid Inventory No. 27, a journey through the forests between the rivers Tapiche and Blanco in Peru. Every year, the Museum's conservation group [the Action Center!] gathers together leading scientific experts across a number of disciplines (botany, zoology, geology, and anthropology) in order to gain an understanding of little-known areas of the rainforest. They work with local communities and their governments to help inform decisions made for conserving these unique, precious, and threatened parts of the world.

  • S2015E02 Ask Emily #10

    • January 21, 2015
    • YouTube

    Taking a break from our Amazon Adventures to bring you answers to all of life's biggest questions! .... or, just whatever you asked me on Twitter (@ehmee) or the Facebooks.

  • S2015E03 Bird Calls of Amazonia

    • February 4, 2015
    • YouTube

    Considering how sweaty and dehydrated I became during this film shoot, it's remarkable that Ernesto and the rest of the bird team were diligently out for long periods of time, at all hours of the day and night, to listen for the birds of the Amazon.

  • S2015E04 Mummy Brains

    • February 18, 2015
    • YouTube

    Mummies: Images of the Afterlife will begin touring in September, 2015. Stay tuned to see them visiting a museum near you!

  • S2015E05 Jungle Atop A Desert

    • March 4, 2015
    • YouTube

    Not every part of the rainforest is filled with towering canopies! We discovered an area with trees only twice my height, and it took a couple of geologists to help us figure out why.

  • S2015E06 How to Taxidermy a Squirrel

    • March 25, 2015
    • YouTube

    Wherein Emily and Anna learn taxidermy from Katie Innamorato, founder of AfterlifeAnatomy! There are a number of significant differences between the art of taxidermy and the preparation of animal specimens for research. Join us as we gut it... together!

  • S2015E07 Project Hyena Diorama: Indiegogo Campaign!!

    • April 6, 2015
    • YouTube

    YOU can be a part of The Field Museum's History -- Donate to the #ProjectHyenaDiorama and help the hyenas !!

  • S2015E08 How To Taxidermy A Squirrel: Part II

    • April 8, 2015
    • YouTube

    Check out these extra bits and pieces from our How To Taxidermy a Squirrel episode -- and be sure to check out our Indiegogo campaign!

  • S2015E09 An Electric Eel and a Caiman

    • April 22, 2015
    • YouTube

    Wherein Isobel and Maria show us the ropes -- or nets -- for surveying fishes in the Amazon. The distribution of fish in tropical river systems is important to understanding how animals move around these waterways. Where there are big fish -- like the electric eel -- we know there must be an ample supply of prey species, too!

  • S2015E10 How to Cut a Trail in Amazonia

    • May 7, 2015
    • YouTube

    The Amazon rainforest is a dense, seemingly impenetrable place. Before our scientific team can accurately document the biodiversity of an area they need a map to follow and clear trails on which to walk. Enter Alvaro del Campo, the Rapid Inventory logistics guru!

  • S2015E11 Dissecting Ants

    • May 20, 2015
    • YouTube

    Wherein Dr. Corrie Moreau shows us how she dissects ants to learn about their gut microbiomes for her research!

  • S2015E12 Bullet Ant Venom

    • June 3, 2015
    • YouTube

    Bullet ants (Paraponera clavata) have the most intense sting of any insect -- but what makes it so painful? Dr. Corrie Moreau walks us through how she extracts their venom to learn more about the chemistry of this remarkable species!

  • S2015E13 The Naked Mole-Rat

    • June 18, 2015
    • YouTube

    Naked mole-rats are some of the most fascinating members of the animal kingdom - but just how unique are they? Turns out, they diverged from their nearest relative more than 31 MILLION years ago! Field Museum curator Dr. Bruce Patterson, and Yale postdoctoral researcher Nate Upham have determined they ought to be in their own scientific family. Now, can someone please update their Wikipedia page?

  • S2015E14 How to Protect the Rainforest

    • July 1, 2015
    • YouTube

    For our final installment in the Amazon Adventures series, I interviewed expedition leader Corine Vriesendorp about what it means to protect and conserve areas of the rainforest in spite of the overwhelming global demands for its natural resources.

  • S2015E15 The Chicago Peregrine Program

    • July 15, 2015
    • YouTube

    By the 1960s the peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) was extinct in many states - including Illinois - because of the negative effects of the pesticide DDT. But, thanks to dedicated reintroduction and monitoring efforts over the last 30 years in part from Field Museum scientist Mary Hennen and The Chicago Peregrine Program, just recently these birds were removed from the Illinois threatened species list!

  • S2015E16 Banding Baby Dinosaurs

    • July 29, 2015
    • YouTube

    BABY DINOSAURS IN THE CITY!... and we've been studying them for years! We talked with Field Museum ornithologist Josh Engel about how scientists gather information and take risks while monitoring these impressive aerial predators.

  • S2015E17 The First Brachiosaurus

    • August 12, 2015
    • YouTube

    Joyce Havstad, PhD holds the title Philosopher-in-Residence at The Field Museum.* We had the joy of interviewing her about some of the fascinating concepts she researches and explores -- in this case, what is a holotype? And how can paleontologists determine new species of prehistoric life based off of incomplete fossil skeletons? *It's probably the only job title that can compete with 'Chief Curiosity Correspondent', really.

  • S2015E18 Millipedes: The First Land Animals

    • September 23, 2015
    • YouTube

    More than 420 million years ago ancient millipedes took their first many -- many many many -- steps onto land. Today they remain largely cryptic animals, as there are tens of thousands of species still unknown to science. Associate Curator Dr. Petra Sierwald, arachnologist and millipede expert, is working to create a visual atlas to help with our understanding and identification of these mysterious creatures!

  • S2015E19 Spiders: The First Web Developers

    • October 14, 2015
    • YouTube

    Out of any creatures in the animal kingdom, spiders seem to have the worst reputation. Their many legs and unpredictable movements elicit a fear response in even the most stoic of individuals. Let's take a moment to put our fear aside and learn more about these global dominators with Dr. Petra Sierwald!

  • S2015E20 Ask Emily #11

    • October 21, 2015
    • YouTube

    WASSAP YOUTUBE comin' at you with some answers to your FAQ's! Got another query?! Leave it in the comments!

  • S2015E21 Clearing and Staining Fishes

    • November 4, 2015
    • YouTube

    Diaphonization -- otherwise known as clearing and staining -- is one of the most photogenic preparation methods used by research scientists. It's beautiful, but is it practical? We interviewed Dr. Caleb McMahan, Collection Manager of Fishes, on how he uses this technique to answer questions about the evolution of fish!

  • S2015E22 The Origin of Mammal Movement: Harvard Adventures, Part I

    • November 23, 2015
    • YouTube

    Paleontologists today look at more than just fossil evidence to learn about organisms that lived millions of years ago. In this case, we're seeking to answer the question: how, and when, did mammals evolve their specialized movements? Turns out, the next step in this process involves dissecting a giant weasel...

  • S2015E23 Fisher Dissection: Harvard Adventures, Part 2

    • December 3, 2015
    • YouTube

    Paleontologists today look at more than just fossil evidence to learn about organisms that lived millions of years ago. For this episode we visited Dr. Katrina Jones at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology to learn how she dissects and examines animals living today in the search for answers about the movements and evolution of early synapsids!

  • S2015E24 Bending Fossils: Experiments In Paleontology (Harvard Adventures, Part 3)

    • December 17, 2015
    • YouTube

    Our ability to use today's technology in unique and novel ways is a major part of scientific discovery. In this episode, Dr. Stephanie Pierce shows us how she uses 3D modeling software to experiment on the bones of animals that went extinct millions of years ago, in order to figure out how they moved and walked. This is the final installment in a three-part series supported in part by The Field Museum, the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University, and The National Science Foundation (!!!!).

  • S2015E25 Death Rocks

    • December 30, 2015
    • YouTube

    DEATH ROCKS! An episode about deadly rocks! Really, it's about some minerals which may contain harmful elements that through the repeated, ongoing, and/or prolonged exposure to them in unregulated environments may cause damage over time... but that doesn't fit in the title.

Season 2016

  • S2016E01 Painting the Diorama

    • January 13, 2016
    • YouTube

    Last year, The Brain Scoop kicked off Project Hyena Diorama, an Indiegogo campaign aimed at raising the funds necessary to build a brand new permanent habitat diorama at The Field Museum that would house a quartet of striped hyenas taxidermied by Carl Akeley in 1896. In six weeks we raised 91% of the funds thanks to Brain Scoop and museum fans from all over the world, and so began the long process of research and construction. The diorama will be officially open to the public on January 27th, 2016!

  • S2016E02 Carl Akeley's Striped Hyenas

    • January 28, 2016
    • YouTube

    In 1896, taxidermist Carl Akeley ventured to Somalia on a research expedition with Field Museum scientists, and procured a quartet of striped hyenas (among many other things). For more than six decades, these taxidermied mounts sat in an unfinished diorama case - and we wanted to do something about it! Fast forward to last year, when we launched our Indiegogo campaign, "Project Hyena Diorama." Today, thanks to more than 1,500 donors, 50+ staff, viewers of The Brain Scoop, and many many more supporters who shared and promoted Project Hyena Diorama, the Field Museum is celebrating the opening of its first full-scale habitat diorama in more than six decades.

  • S2016E03 Periods and Fieldwork

    • February 10, 2016
    • YouTube

    Field work can be the most exciting part of research science, but unfortunately there aren't a lot of resources for adventurers when it comes to managing your period in oftentimes remote locations, which can lead to a lot of nervousness about your upcoming trip. Never fear! We talked with a number of experienced field scientists in order to compile some tips and tricks to help you plan for the next adventure. Explore on!

  • S2016E04 Restoring Habitats with Magic Beans

    • February 25, 2016
    • YouTube

    145-year-old beans from the Field's botanical collections are being used today to help restore a local native plant habitat. How does that work? We talked with Robb Telfer - a poet, and a passionate 'plant nerd' - about how he became involved in working to de-extinct rare species of endangered legumes and flowers!

  • S2016E05 What is a species?

    • March 10, 2016
    • YouTube

    New species of lifeforms are being discovered and described on our planet every single day -- but, when we talk about a species, what are we really referring to? Turns out, the answer is... complicated. This video is by no means comprehensive. Species concepts are some of the most complex and, at times, controversial topics in biology. This video ought to serve as your window down into the rabbit hole.

  • S2016E06 The Taxonomy of Candy

    • March 24, 2016
    • YouTube

    In our previous video 'What is a Species?,' we talked about the many ways scientists approach classifying organisms. So, I thought it'd be fun to get a few scientists from The Field Museum to apply their taxonomic know-how on something we're all familiar with: candy! How would you have organized these various confections? This experiment in classification can be used with anything from pasta, to cell phones, beverages, cereals... seriously, start asking your friends and family if they think Pepsi and Coca-Cola are synonymous species, or similar via convergent evolution, and you're sure to have a lively Tuesday night.

  • S2016E07 Crystal and her Water Beetles

    • April 7, 2016
    • YouTube

    Want to travel the world? Become a biologist! Crystal Maier - Collections Manager of Insects at The Field Museum - spent a month in New Zealand, going from stream to stream in search of hobbits. And by hobbits I mean beetles that spend their entire lives underwater. How?! Why?! We get answers. Thanks to Crystal for taking the time to talk with us about her research!

  • S2016E08 Beetles, Mites, Cockroaches Oh My! [Insect Collection Tour]

    • April 20, 2016
    • YouTube

    The insect collection is the largest at The Field Museum, with more than 12 million specimens - only (only?!) 4 million of those are pinned in the dry collection. Crystal is in charge of all of them- no pressure. Want to search the zoological collections on your own? Look no further!: http://bit.ly/fmnhzoology Big thanks to Crystal for showing us around! Can we come back some time!?

  • S2016E09 Tully monster mystery SOLVED!

    • May 5, 2016
    • YouTube

    How is it that a Museum can have 1,200+ fossils of a particular species in its collection since the 1960's... and not even know what it is? For decades, it was thought the 'Tully monster' -- a bizarre animal that lived 307 million years ago -- was an invertebrate, like a kind of worm. But in March, Field Museum scientists helped finally crack the mystery of the monster, to reveal it's actually related to lamprey fish. BOOM.

  • S2016E10 Endangered Species: an explainer

    • May 20, 2016
    • YouTube

    What does it mean to be an endangered species? Are endangered species destined for extinction? We're exploring some of these ideas in celebration of Endangered Species Day, May 20th!

  • S2016E11 The MAGNETO SNAIL! (and other marine gastropods)

    • June 2, 2016
    • YouTube

    In 2015, a deep-sea discovery was described to be unlike anything else in the animal kingdom. It was a snail with a shell made out of iron sulphide, with some populations also having magnetic properties in their unique exoskeletons. It made me wonder - what other magnificent marine snails are out there?

  • S2016E12 Ask Emily: Hotline Edition

    • June 15, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E13 A Lifetime of Curiosity

    • June 30, 2016
    • YouTube

    Datuk Dr. Robert F. Inger published his first scientific paper in 1942 and hasn't looked back since. I'm inspired by his dedication to science, and his commitment to curiosity - and although it's impossible to cover his 74+ year career in a 10-minute video, I hope you'll take away the lesson I did: never stop asking questions and seeking answers!

  • S2016E14 The Flapper and the Panda

    • July 15, 2016
    • YouTube

    In 1936, Ruth Harkness - a dressmaker from New York -- set off to China in search of the rare, elusive Giant Panda. Her goal? Bring one back alive to share the wonder of China's wildlife with the western world. She became the first explorer to do so, and so set in motion a public fascination with these creatures that continues 80 years later.

  • S2016E15 The Search for the Kankakee Mallow

    • July 27, 2016
    • YouTube

    Original Title: This flower only grows in the wild on a single tiny island... in Illinois. The Kankakee Mallow (Iliamna remota) is a special little flower. The only place in the world it's found in the wild is on a single small island in the middle of the Kankakee River in Illinois - but until last year, it hadn't been seen in over a decade, and was feared to be extinct. Thanks to volunteer efforts, we got to be some of the first to see it back in bloom!

  • S2016E16 Campaigning for CHANGE! Don't be Shallow - Vote for Mallow

    • August 11, 2016
    • YouTube

    In our last video we got to see one of the rarest flowers in the world blooming in its habitat for the first time in over a decade. It's the Kankakee mallow (Iliamna remota), under threat of extirpation and completely unique to Illinois... and we want to make it the official state flower! Field outreach coordinator Robb Telfer kicked off the campaign and we're TAKIN' IT TO THE STREETS. It's an election year, after all.

  • S2016E17 The Man-Eating Lions of Tsavo

    • August 24, 2016
    • YouTube

    In 1898, two African lions began attacking and consuming railway workers in Tsavo, Kenya. First reports estimated that 135 people fell victim to these "man-eaters," but further research published in 2009 lessened that number to 35 individuals. Over the years, different theories as to what motivated these attacks have varied, and recently we got to talk with two experts who are working towards finding an answer.

  • S2016E18 Dinosaur Discovery & Updates on Cloud Rats | Natural News from The Field Museum | Ep. 1

    • September 14, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E19 Sex Lives of Peregrine Falcons & Time Travel Discoveries | Ep. 2

    • September 29, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E20 Botflies, Chicago Parakeets, and the Smallest Collection | Ask Emily #13

    • October 5, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E21 Get out and #voteIRL - for SCIENCE

    • October 7, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E22 Sucky Fish & Relationship Advice from Ants | Natural News from The Field Museum | Ep. 3

    • October 12, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E23 Why did King Tut have a flat head?

    • October 19, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E24 Spooky Stories & Tailless Tenrecs | Natural News from The Field Museum | Ep. 4

    • October 27, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E25 How Bird Vomit Helps Us Understand History

    • November 3, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E26 2 Extinctions, 1 New Species, and… chess?| Natural News from The Field Museum | Ep. 5

    • November 10, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E27 The Amazing Laser

    • November 17, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E28 A Commitment to Curiosity

    • November 21, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E29 Mammoths vs. Mastodons: Can we 'de-extinct' them both?

    • December 2, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E30 T. rex Arms & BEARDOGS! | Natural News from The Field Museum | Ep. 6

    • December 9, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E31 Shoes

    • December 14, 2016
    • YouTube

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