Your Inner Fish Revisited: New Insights into Our Fishy Past
By
Harvard Museums of Science & Culture
Free
Speaker: Neil Shubin, Robert. R. Bensley Distinguished Service Professor of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, The University of Chicago; President-Elect, National Academy of Sciences
Sign-up Information
- Ages: 10 to Adults.
Optional registration
- Sign-up is ongoing
Cost
This Event is free!
Location
- In-person only.
1 Oxford Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States
Dates and Times
Wednesday, April 15 6PM – 7PM
Additional information
Every organ, cell, and gene preserves traces of life’s long evolutionary journey, from ancient fish that first ventured onto land to primates that ultimately gave rise to humans. In this lecture, Neil Shubin, evolutionary biologist and author of the widely acclaimed national bestseller Your Inner Fish (Vintage, 2009) will explore the deep history embedded within the human body. Drawing on fossil discoveries, comparative anatomy, and modern DNA technologies, he will explain how major evolutionary transitions occur and what they reveal about our place in nature. This talk offers an account of how chance events, evolutionary innovation, and adaptation over billions of years have shaped the human form and linked us to all other life on Earth.
Advance registration is recommended.
Free admission. Free event parking at the 52 Oxford Street Garage starting at 5:00 pm.
Presented by the Harvard Museum of Natural History and the Harvard Museums of Science & Culture, in collaboration with the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University. Supported by the Herman and Joan Suit Lecture Fund.
John McClellan Prather (1864–1938) was a zoologist and educator who primarily taught science at the high school level. He was born in Felicity, Ohio, on September 8, 1864 and earned an A. degree from Antioch College in Ohio in 1891. He then earned an AB degree at Harvard in 1894 and an AM at Harvard in 1896.
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Last updated April 3, 2026.