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Events for November 12, 2025

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Sea Monsters: Wonders of Nature and Imagination

June 29, 2024 - June 26, 2026

Embark on a daring voyage into the depths of human imagination at the Harvard Museum of Natural History’s new exhibition, Sea Monsters: Wonders of Nature and Imagination. Featuring ancient mariners' maps, literature, works of art, and natural history specimens, this exhibit explores the allure of serpents, krakens, and other monsters of the deep. Peer into […]

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Evening

Decoding the Pyramid Statues of King Menkaure

November 12 @ 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm

Free Hybrid Lecture Location: Geological Lecture Hall, 24 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA Speaker: Florence Dunn Friedman, Visiting Scholar, Department of Egyptology and Assyriology, Brown University King Menkaure’s Fourth Dynasty pyramid temples at Giza were once filled with statues. The surviving statues represent some of the finest in ancient Egyptian sculpture. Crafted for eternity, these statues […]

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Nikolay Kukushkin

November 12 @ 6:00 pm
Free

For our Science Book Talks series with the Harvard University Division of Science and the Harvard Library, we're welcoming neuroscientist Nikolay Kukushkin, clinical associate professor at New York University’s Liberal Studies, to discuss his award-winning book, One Hand Clapping: Unraveling the Mystery of the Human Mind, the story of humans and our inner worlds, spanning the entire journey […]

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Live Blues & Roots Music Returns to Harvard Square: Wednesday Nights @ The Sea Hag Restaurant & Bar

November 12 @ 6:30 pm

The Sea Hag Restaurant & Bar and The Barrett Anderson Band are excited to announce a new weekly series, Blues & Roots Wednesdays, bringing live music back home to historic Harvard Square. “Cambridge, our fair city, and I share deep roots, and I’m thrilled to find a new musical home at The Sea Hag,” says […]

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Joseph Luzzi

November 12 @ 7:00 pm
Free

Joseph Luzzi, award-winning scholar of Italian culture and professor at Bard College, discusses The Innocents of Florence: The Renaissance Discovery of Childhood, the story of how, beginning in 1445, a Florentine orphanage cared for nearly 400,000 young lives over the next five centuries, revolutionizing childhood education and pediatrics amid the splendor of Renaissance art.

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