
Watch S1, EP6: Silicon, Fluorine, Lithium, Boron, Chromium with Fubo for $0 Today
We take look at the elements, Silicon, Fluorine, Lithium, Boron and Chromium.
We take look at the elements, Silicon, Fluorine, Lithium, Boron and Chromium.
How to watch
More episodes
Everyday Elements
S1, EP8 "Everyday Elements"A look at nitrogen, mercury, copper, magnesium and cobalt.
Everyday Elements
S1, EP7 "Everyday Elements"A look at helium, tin, calcium, palladium, lead and more.
Everyday Elements
S1, EP6 "Silicon, Fluorine, Lithium, Boron, Chromium"We take look at the elements, Silicon, Fluorine, Lithium, Boron and Chromium.
Everyday Elements
S1, EP5 "Everyday Elements"Exploring chemistry in everyday experience, showing the connection to the chemicals and elements of the world and examining the matter that built skies and seas.
More science shows
See allXploration Awesome Planet
Philippe Cousteau Jr. is no stranger to exploration. The grandson of legendary underwater explorer Jacques Cousteau, Philippe hosts and serves as executive producer of this half-hour earth science series that examines the planet. He visits diamond and gold mines to see how gems and metals are formed, travels to active volcanoes to observe what happens inside the Earth's burning core, and checks out weather stations in mountainous areas to get an idea of how weather phenomena form in the atmosphere.
Xploration Outer Space
Americans have been fascinated by the cosmos for decades and rely on NASA to explore celestial bodies seen in the night sky to get a better idea of what is out there. In this series, former NASA employee Emily Calandrelli visits some of the agency's facilities, private companies and universities to speak with people knowledgeable about the topic to help "show off the coolest aspects of the space industry," to use her words. Technology, a potential manned mission to Mars and planetary tourism are some themes.
Drain the Oceans
Maritime mysteries -- old and new -- come to life in this series, combining scientific data and digital re-creations to reveal shipwrecks, treasures, and sunken cities on the bottom of lakes, seas and oceans around the world. Innovative technology allows viewers to see what lies on the floors of large bodies of water such as the Gulf of Mexico, the Nile, the Indian Ocean, the Baltic Sea and the Atlantic Ocean as if they had been drained. Then, in a quest to explain natural wonders and man-made catastrophes, stories tell of how vessels sank, what ancient geological formations reveal about life on Earth, where Nazi secrets now reside, and why so many continue to search for the legendary city of Atlantis.