There ’s always a lot going on behind the scene at museums . For instance , in the basement of Chicago ’s Field Museum , researchers prepare the specimens that will be studied and displayed at the museum — and then they stake that gnarly goopiness on YouTube through a channel the museum maintain .
Some of the videos below are quite graphic , so if animal bod is n’t your affair , now ’s the sentence to sail away . We ’ll embark on off tame , with an ant in a petri knockout . Learn how they can run around even if segment of their bodies are rip off in a conflict :
And now have ’s go from zero to 100 : Skinning a zebra .

“ This is gon na finish up on that one subreddit , I just know it , ” innkeeper Emily moan , as goo is squished out of a skinned , severed squirrel head . Its brains are compare to homemade Thousand Island salad dressing .
Here ’s one video simply entitle “ skin the Wolf ” :
We ’ll go out with the two - channelize sura .

Most of the videos on The Brain Scoop , though , are whole well-disposed to your jest reflex , and are innocent of any beast insides . Like this explainer that breaks down the conflict between horns and antler :
drawer full of duckbill :
The joyfulness of devilfish gender :

And an introduction to pangolins , an animal innkeeper Emily foretell “ basically a Sandshrew ” :
AnimalsMorning InspirationScienceYouTube
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