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The Love Life of the Horseshoe Crab | A mating ritual 450 million years old || Wild Lives ep. 3

A MATING RITUAL 450 MILLION YEARS OLD. When you first see a horseshoe crab, it’s impossible to tell if it’s even alive. But as the tide eats away at the coastline along the eastern seaboard each spring, and the sun sets over the horizon, these seemingly-dead creatures come to life with one singular purpose: to…

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A MATING RITUAL 450 MILLION YEARS OLD. When you first see a horseshoe crab, it’s impossible to tell if it’s even alive. But as the tide eats away at the coastline along the eastern seaboard each spring, and the sun sets over the horizon, these seemingly-dead creatures come to life with one singular purpose: to mate.

Horrific creature? Maybe—but only if you look at its underbelly. From above, it’s really just a bicycle helmet looking for love. Learn all about the wild mating rituals and weird reproductive cycle of the horseshoe crab.

► WATCH! every single episode of WILD LIVES here:

► THIS IS THE MOST INTERESTING LION IN THE WORLD. After all, how many lions have movies and songs made about them because of never before seen animal behavior? Just one lion—Frasier, the Sensuous Lion… I mean, how is fathering 35 cubs when you’re 20 lion years old even possible?!:

► LIKE, THIS REALLY HAPPENED. Alfred Hitchcock’s classic THE BIRDS is, in part, inspired by a very real phenomenon that occurred in Santa Cruz, California in 1961. One night, inexplicably, thousands of sooty shearwater birds lost their minds, dive-bombing into homes and even biting people. But, for 50 years, no one knew why… That is, until now. This is a Hitchcockian mystery wrapped in a scientific paper—a biological whodunnit:

► HAVE YOU EVER WONDERED about what makes an animal hibernate? PopSci formed an orchestra of hibernating animals to tell you about their winter’s sleep:

► DID YOU KNOW the first underwater film ever recorded was lost to history until PopSci found it mislabeled in a Dutch archive? It’s a story too strange to be fiction (and, yes, it involves a shark and a horse). Also, it’s the first footage of a shark ever recorded:

► DO YOU LOVE DOGS? WHAT ABOUT SPACE? Watch our video about Laika, our hero:

► SUBSCRIBE! to Popular Science for more WILD LIVES on YouTube: …

In their own words. Well, approximately their own words—they are wild animals after all.

CREDITS
Video by: Tom McNamara & Eleanor Cummins
Animation: Beth Wexler
Narrator: Elizabeth Ollier
Executive Producer: Amy Schellenbaum
Editor-in-Chief: Corinne Iozzio

Media
“A Trip to the Moon” (1902, Georges Méliès), Pond5, “The Astronomer’s Dream” (1898, Georges Méliès), The Birth of Venus (1485-1486, Sandro Botticelli)

Music
APM Music

Thank You
Helen Cheng, Chester Zarnoch, Erin Chapman, Keiko McNamara (APM Music)

#popularscience #horseshoecrab #horseshoecrabs #arthropod #blueblood #animalmating #animalbehavior #popsci #mating #biology #ocean #love #lovestory #crab #horseshoe #wildlives #science #moon

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12 Comments

12 Comments

  1. Sarah Barker

    May 26, 2022 at 9:39 pm

    “A bicycle helmet looking for love” is a sentence I didn’t think I’d hear today.

  2. @srbarkerchan

    May 26, 2022 at 5:39 pm

    “A bicycle helmet looking for love” is a sentence I didn’t think I’d hear today.

  3. Jaak Dol

    May 26, 2022 at 9:54 pm

    Felicidades, es un buen ejemplo. 4 sentadillas son unos SEXopornoo.Uno muchas y un buen ejercicio. Se deja ver que hay muy buenos resultados 😍👍 Saludos desde la Cd.. de world 🌹😉💖 los mortalesy abian apreciado tan hermosa mujer.k

  4. Иван Сочников

    May 26, 2022 at 9:57 pm

    La légende de QUINZAA.Monster snowquen’s est mon idole. C’est la personne que j’aspire à êtreh, c’est ma lumière du jour

  5. Alonzo Marsh

    June 14, 2022 at 5:11 am

    𝓟Ř𝔬𝓂𝔬𝐒ϻ

  6. Saffron4546

    August 18, 2022 at 8:13 am

    I’m here because on a whim I looked up a random Youtube video and found this. Suffice to say, I clicked on it immediately.

  7. @Saffron-mb8mp

    August 18, 2022 at 4:13 am

    I’m here because on a whim I looked up a random Youtube video and found this. Suffice to say, I clicked on it immediately.

  8. Thay The Ong Can

    September 27, 2022 at 12:24 pm

    good video

  9. Jeremy Best

    August 11, 2023 at 7:27 pm

    the way my shit throbbed

  10. @jeremybest708

    August 11, 2023 at 7:27 pm

    the way my shit throbbed

  11. Aiden Har

    August 11, 2023 at 7:28 pm

    The way I busted immediately

  12. @aidenhar3270

    August 11, 2023 at 7:28 pm

    The way I busted immediately

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Popular Science

The Buried Treasure That Took Us To The Moon – They Never Told You

The Space Race, the Cold War, and the Moon Landing all have an origin story connected to a small, obscure silver iron mining operation in the mountains of Lower Saxony in Germany – and it’s such a complex, unbelievable tale that it exposes our most dangerous intersections of science and morality. 14 tons of buried…

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The Space Race, the Cold War, and the Moon Landing all have an origin story connected to a small, obscure silver iron mining operation in the mountains of Lower Saxony in Germany – and it’s such a complex, unbelievable tale that it exposes our most dangerous intersections of science and morality.

14 tons of buried paper determined the fate of the world and kicked off humanity’s exploration of space.

We already know the end of the story: we know about Sputnik and Apollo 11, we know about Werner von Braun, and we know about Operation Paperclip. But pulling the threads of NASA and the Soviet Union’s Vostok program unravels an unknown World War II race between trucks and time, a struggle of secrets and survival, and a twist-filled tale of man, mind, and morality.

What you need to know is that story’s beginning – and if you don’t know it already, that’s because they never told you.

#spacerace #coldwar #science #history

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Popular Science

Planets As Animals – To Scale 3D Mass Comparison

If Earth is a labrador dog and Venus is a human child, then gas giants like Saturn and Jupiter must also match masses with their own animals… like an African forest elephant and a herd of 7 giraffes. You can understand the real scale of vast celestial bodies by comparing their relative sizes to animals…

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If Earth is a labrador dog and Venus is a human child, then gas giants like Saturn and Jupiter must also match masses with their own animals… like an African forest elephant and a herd of 7 giraffes.

You can understand the real scale of vast celestial bodies by comparing their relative sizes to animals on Earth that we’re familiar with — and then you can see them all in 360-degree 3D animation. We’ve paired the real scale of all the planets in our solar system to a range of small and large animals worldwide, like Pluto as a tiny black rat and Mercury as a kitten — and of course, the Sun, which by comparison to the planets has a scaled mass of 78 blue whales.

The cosmos is everywhere, all around us, all the time… it just depends on your perspective.

See you in the future!

#nasa #space #comparison #solarsystem

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Popular Science

Why Do We Put Holes In Our Head?

The $15,000 A.I. from 1983: Scraping, grinding, or drilling a hole through the thick, hard skull that evolution developed to protect our most sensitive contents might be one of humanity’s worst ideas — and also one of our best. We have no idea how it started, or why the first trepanner thought it would fix…

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The $15,000 A.I. from 1983:

Scraping, grinding, or drilling a hole through the thick, hard skull that evolution developed to protect our most sensitive contents might be one of humanity’s worst ideas — and also one of our best.

We have no idea how it started, or why the first trepanner thought it would fix anything. We just know that nearly every civilization worldwide has been drilling holes in heads for at least 7,000 years. Sometimes it actually worked. Sometimes it… didn’t.

Unraveling the impossibly-complex story of trepanning exposes a deep conceptual understanding of the relationship between the brain and behavior. It reveals our desire to take drastic measures to preserve the lives of people who are important to us, whether their value is practical or emotional. And the development of trepanning from Neolithic peoples to the Greeks and Incas and modern trauma surgeons takes a winding road through horrors and genius.

Trepanning evolved alongside our understanding of biology, physics, and even consciousness, with both its tools and practices reflecting our increasing knowledge and our changing attitudes toward health and human life.

Skull jewelry. Headache cures. Experimental psychosurgery. A few people who just wanted to chill. It’s all trepanning.

And the most remarkable thing about this seemingly-crude phenomenon is how it not only persists, but that it might actually be an important part of our plan for tomorrow.

So sharpen an old rock, measure your brainbloodvolume, and grab a watermelon to practice on.

We’ll see you in the future.

** SOURCES / FURTHER INVESTIGATION **

“Bore Hole” by Joe Mellen:

“A Hole in the Head: More Tales in the History of Neuroscience” by Charles Gross:

“Holes in the Head: The Art and Archaeology of Trepanation in Ancient Peru” by John Verano:

“Hippocrates, Vol. III” translated by Dr. E. T. Withington:

“The Popular Science Monthly,” September 1875:

“The Popular Science Monthly,” February 1893:

“A History of Medicine: Primitive and Ancient Medicine” by Plinio Prioreschi:

“A History of Human Responses to Death: Mythologies, Rituals, and Ethics” by Plinio Prioreschi:

The Wellcome Collection:

** SPECIAL THANKS **

Advisor, History of Medicine: Dr. John Dickey, UMass Chan Medical School

The Wellcome Collection, The British Museum, and others who generously license their material with Creative Commons

#science #technology #documentary #history

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