Tag: Harvard

  • Sunday, November 14, 2:00 pm – Robots From Nature: How Bugs Inspire Technology

    Humans have always been fascinated by how bees fly, cockroaches crawl, and worms wiggle.  Today, scientists from Harvard’s Microrobotics Lab are building tiny insect robots that look and move just like these critters! Join graduate students Ben Finio and Rebecca Kramer in a family program for a close look at these amazing micro-robots, and hear how and why this lab is hard-at-work building these tiny wonders.  The program, which will take place Sunday, November 14 beginning at 2 pm, will be held at the Harvard Museum of Natural History, 26 Oxford Street in Cambridge, and is free with Museum admission ($9 – $6),  For more information, log on to www.hmnh.harvard.edu/family_programs/index.php.  Image below from Counter Surveillance Devices.

  • Thursday, November 18, 6:00 pm – Thoreau as Climatologist: Tracking 160 Years of Climate Change

    Over 160 years ago, Henry David Thoreau initiated a study of flowering times at Walden Pond. Today, a research team including, Charles Davis, Assistant Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and Curator in the Harvard Herbarium (below,)  has updated Thoreau’s records with current data and integrated them with modern evolutionary biology to reveal how climate change and earlier flowering times have affected Walden’s plants. Those that have greatly declined include many charismatic native wildflower species, while those that have thrived include many nonnative and invasive species. Davis will explore how an integration of historical records combined and cutting edge science can help us potentially mitigate the impacts of climate change on biodiversity. This program, taking place Thursday, November 18 at 6 pm, is free and open to the public, at the Geological Lecture Hall, 24 Oxford Street. Part of the Asa Gray Bicentennial series. For more information, log on to www.hmnh.harvard.edu.

  • Thursday, October 21, 6:00 pm – Corresponding Naturalists: Asa Gray, Charles Darwin, and the Making of American Botany

    Asa Gray’s extensive correspondence with naturalists shaped the early years of exploration and botanical research in North America. These letters brought Gray into contact with Charles Darwin, who became a close friend. With the publication of Darwin’s On the Origin of Species, Gray soon emerged as the key proponent and defender of natural selection in the U.S.  On Thursday, October 21, beginning at 6 pm, Janet Browne, Aramont Professor of the History of Science at Harvard, will discuss their letters , which reflect a warm personal relationship as well as the making of an intellectual revolution. Free and open to the public, Geological Lecture Hall, 24 Oxford Street. Part of the Asa Gray Bicentennial series.  For more information, log on to www.hmnh.harvard.edu.

  • The Vertical Gardens of Patrick Blanc

    We recently received the following letter and web site recommendation and pass it along to our readers.  Patrick Blanc came to our attention when he spoke last year at Harvard.  For all who follow green architecture, the photography is a treat, and the site may be accessed both in French and in English:

    “When I created my first Vertical Garden thirty years ago, I couldn’t foresee that every city of the world would be impacted by this invention.

    On this Year of  … Biodiversity, I invite you to visit my new website www.verticalgardenpatrickblanc.com.

    All along the pages you will see all the achievements since 1986 when my first public creation was displayed at la Cité des Sciences et de l’Industrie in Paris.

    Each new project in the world is a way for me to answer with new shapes and new plant species.

    The Vertical Garden is no longer a vertical panel; it is now possible to freely create it on various structures like columns, spirals or even vegetal ceilings.

    Of course, it’s always a pleasure to work in familiar places (Museums, Hotels, Shopping Malls, …) but my still increasing experience is the best step towards places where plants are not expected like tunnels, underground parking lots and high-rise buildings.”

  • Saturday and Sunday, August 21 and 22, 9:30 am – 3:30 pm – Elements of Drawing: Larger Than Life

    The Arnold Arboretum, in collaboration with the Wellesley College Friends of Horticulture, offers a two day workshop on Saturday, August 21 and Sunday, August 22, from 9:30 to 3:30 each day at the Wellesley College Botanic Garden in Wellesley, Massachusetts. Focus in on a flower blossom and record your observations as an attention grabbing enlargement. Under the guidance of Jeanne Kunze, draw the blossom magnified to show shape and form. See flowers in a new way and record detail not possible not possible at a smaller scale. Increase your ability to infuse subtle nuances and detail into your drawing. For beginners as well as more advanced artists. Develop confidence in your observation and illustration skills through Jeanne’s class demonstrations, individual teaching moments and directed practice. For beginners as well as more advanced artists. Bring your own lunch or walk to local shops.

    Fee $150 member, $190 nonmember of either the Arboretum or WCBG.  To register online, log on to www.arboretum.harvard.edu.

  • Wednesday, June 30, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – Boston Modern: The Spirit of Reinvention

    The National Trust for Historic Preservation invites the public to a free event – Boston Modern: The Spirit of Reinvention -  on Wednesday, June 30, beginning at 6:30 pm, celebrating the history and debating the future of the Boston area’s Modern and recent past architecture.  Join some of the preservation movement’s sharpest thinkers and most outspoken commentators for a provocative evening exploring the critical, and often controversial, issues facing the future of Greater Boston’s 20th century structures and landscapes.  Journalist and author Anthony Flint of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy will moderate a panel featuring David Fixler, FAIA of EYP and DOCOMOMO-US/New England, Kathy Spiegelman, Chief Planner, Harvard’s Allston Initiative, and others.  After hearing the experts, add your voice to the conversation during the public forum.

    A Special Insiders Tour of The First Church at 6:30 pm will be limited to the first 45 registrants.  The reception and program will begin at 7 pm.  RSVP to my.PreservationNation.org/BostonModern.

    The Boston Modern event is presented by the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s Modernism + Recent Past Program and Northeast Office, in partnership with the Boston Preservation Alliance, Boston Landmarks Commission, Boston Society of Architects, Common Boston, DOCOMOMO-US/new Engld, Historic New England, and Preservation Massachusetts, with sponsorship from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Henry Luce Foundation.

    http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_rlhZCdZl2is/R8pKkwj-UoI/AAAAAAAAFGc/zN4Os4uWSA0/s400/boston-ica-1032.jpg

  • Saturday, May 22 – Sunday, January 2, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm – Headgear: The Natural History of Horns & Antlers

    The Harvard Museum of Natural History announces a new multi-media exhibition, Headgear, an in-depth look at the natural history of horns and antlers. The exhibition opens to the public on May 22, 2010, and runs through January 2, 2011. Showcasing an astonishing collection of unique specimens—some on exhibit for the first time, Headgear will intrigue and engage learners of all ages.

    Horns and antlers are the often-dramatic head structures that characterize many cloven-hoofed mammals including cattle, antelope, sheep, and deer—collectively known as the artiodactyls. These animals exhibit enormous variation in the structure, size, and shape of their headgear, which are distinctive among species and also vary with sex and age.

    Why have artiodactyls evolved these extraordinary structures, many of which are so heavy and unwieldy? Did horns and antlers evolve as a defense against predators, to repel or intimidate rivals, or as an ornament designed to impress females? In this exhibition, visitors will explore these and other fascinating questions about how horns and antlers are formed, how they have evolved, and how they function.

    Headgear will feature dramatic arrays of horns, antlers, and head mounts of a wide variety of species drawn from the collections of Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology, as well as 3-D diorama and video presentations illustrating the use of horns and antlers in combat. Visitors will be invited to explore some of the properties of horns and antlers by touching real specimens and comparing their own body height to the world’s largest antlers, those of the extinct Irish Elk, which span as much as 12 feet. In addition, through specimens and text, visitors will learn about the structure and function of horn-like structures in other animals from tiny beetles to massive dinosaurs.

    Drawing from the collections of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology and Harvard’s Semitic Museum, the exhibition will display artifacts fashioned from the horn and antler of hoofed animals around the world and introduce visitors to the cultural significance of horns, antlers, and animals that wear them, both real and imagined.

    “The number and diversity of specimens in this exhibition are truly breathtaking” said Elisabeth Werby, Executive Director of the Harvard Museum of Natural History. “Headgear is an extraordinary opportunity to contemplate the process of evolution in the context of creatures and images that are at the same time both strange and familiar.”

    Harvard Museum of Natural History
    The Harvard Museum of Natural History is located at 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, a 7 minute walk from the Harvard Square T station. The Museum is handicapped accessible. For general information see www.hmnh.harvard.edu or call 617-495-3045.

    With a mission to enhance public understanding and appreciation of the natural world and the human place in it, the Harvard Museum of Natural History draws on the University’s collections and research to present a historic and interdisciplinary exploration of science and nature. More than 180,000 visitors annually make it the University’s most-visited museum.

    http://www.skullsunlimited.com/userfiles/image/education_4_large.jpg

  • Tuesday, May 11, 7:00 pm – Life and Colony Size Among the Ants

    Entomologist, photographer, and intrepid world-traveler Mark Moffett explores the parallel between ant colonies and human societies in his latest book, Adventures with the Ants. From his travels to the Amazon, the Congo, Borneo, Australia, California and elsewhere, Moffett provides fascinating details on how ants live and dominate their ecosystems through strikingly human behaviors: hunting, fighting, building, recycling, and even creating marketplaces.  Mark Moffett — “Dr. Bugs” — grew up in Beloit and graduated from Beloit College in 1979. His explorations of tropical forests and ecology have taken him around the world, from the top of the world’s tallest tree to deep in unexplored caves. He has discovered new plant and animal species while risking life and limb to find stories that make people fall in love with the unexpected in nature.

    Moffett captivates audiences with first-hand stories of tropical ecology, treetop exploration, teamwork and goal accomplishment under extreme conditions, adventures under a rock (wonderful and weird stories of ants and spiders), and the love of nature and conservation. Television’s Stephen Colbert calls him “Ant-Man” and Conan O’Brien calls him a “frog-licker,” but Moffett calls himself a storyteller.

    The lecture, followed by a book signing, will take place Tuesday, May 11, at 7 pm, at the Harvard Museum of Natural History, 26 Oxford Street in Cambridge. The lecture is free and open to the public. For more information you may call 617-495-3045, or email hmnhpr@oeb.harvard.edu.

    http://www.roychapmanandrews.org//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/Mark-Moffett-I1.jpg

  • Saturday, May 1, 2:00 pm – 4:30 pm – Life is a Dance

    Celebrate May Day on Saturday, May 1 at the Virginia Thurston Healing Garden in Harvard, Massachusetts.  Activities will include dancing with the “Hip-Hop Mamas,” Japanese drumming, a special dedication honoring the Healing Gardeners, art and photography exhibits, an a capella choral performance, kite making, and more.  The afternoon is designed to be cultural, educational, meaningful, kid-friendly, fun, free and open to all.  For more information, contact Tucker Smith at tsmith@groton.org.  The Healing Garden is an educational non-profit dedicated to providing a community of support to facilitate the healing process for women experiencing breast cancer. The staff  offers mind-body medicine, education about choices that contribute to health, methods for managing stress and for improving quality of life, and ways to regain control, both during and after treatment.  For more information, log on to www.healinggarden.net.

  • Saturday, April 17, 6:30 am – 8:00 am – Bird Walk and Exploration

    Get up early on Saturday, April 17 and meet local  birder Wendy Howes at 6:30 a.m. at Fruitlands Museum in Harvard, Massachusetts.  Local residents and early arrivals, including Eastern Towhee (below)  and Rose-breasted Grosbeak, should put in an appearance.  Expect to walk about two miles on trails through meadows and woods, with some wet areas, so dress appropriately.  Bring your own binoculars and field guide.  Free.  For more information, log on to www.fruitlands.org.

    http://www.kersteins.com/blogdepuree//srv/htdocs/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/easterntowhee_05022009.jpg