Back to Show
It's Okay to Be Smart
The Ruin and Rise of Monterey Bay
Season 3
Episode 41
Before people came to Monterey Bay to watch fish, they came here to catch them. And they caught a LOT of one fish: the sardine. But when you empty one species out of the ocean, bad things can happen. Learn how one Monterey Bay scientist, with the help of his friend John Steinbeck, changed how we view our relationship with nature and helped give birth to the field of ecology.
Support Provided By
12:44
Let's learn the story of one of the worst natural disasters that’s ever happened!
27:56
We learn about all the reasons that Earth’s climate changes, natural and otherwise.
12:31
Turns out, we can blame it all on neutron stars and some oddities of the periodic table.
10:00
Join Joe in this whirlwind tour of the endocrine system to find the answers.
8:29
Is Everest the tallest mountain on Earth? The answer is not as simple as you might think.
17:59
Turns out we’re all at risk of being overconfident about something.
19:10
There's an absolutely weird, but surprisingly common phenomenon called sensory adaptation.
11:50
Scientists in Florida can recreate a Category 5 hurricane in a box the size of a bedroom.
10:41
Are humans still evolving? And how have our technological advances affected the process?
19:07
Illusions teach us how our brain constructs a three-dimensional reality using 2-D images.
22:18
Joe talks biology with science communicator extraordinaire Prof. Brian Cox.