SciSchmoozing Fun!
May 31, 2026

Hello again science fans,
Salam sejahtera sekali lagi kepada peminat sains,
About 300 million people speak Malay in Malaysia and Indonesia.
This SciSchmooze focuses on fun.
The explosion of ping pong balls pictured above is one of hundreds of fun stunts - science stunts - Mark Rober has created over the years. He - a former NASA engineer - is now in the middle of creating public school science curricula complete with teacher training materials - a $60 million endeavor - to be supplied completely free. He has years of experience making science fun and will soon be sharing that fun in schools world-wide.
If you have gone to a demonstration/protest to express your dissatisfaction with the gutting of good science by this administration, you already know how fun that was. You joined like-minded folk on a serious mission while eliciting hand waves and horn honks from other like-minded folk. Perhaps you even struck up a new friendship. Those gatherings are growing and continuing, so i encourage you to continue in this serious fun for science (& for peace & morality & politics & justice & .…)
A good source to find a demonstration/protest near you is Action Together - West.
If you are like me, adding a new word to my vocabulary is fun. Allow me to offer you this one: Kakistocracy: Government by the most inept, corrupt, or unprincipled individuals.
RAFFLE
Science t-shirts continue to jiggle my funny-bone. Bill won the above t-shirt for his wife with his guess of 225. (The eOracle had laid down “226”.) So let’s continue with a science t-shirt of your choosing. Just send an email before noon Friday to david.almandsmith <at> gmail <dot> com with your guess of an integer from 1 to 1,000.
ENVIRONMENT
I enjoy building models, putting puzzles together, and SCUBA diving (not recently, though). Therefore these projects look like fun - AND they are restoring reefs.
The divers above are assembling concrete pieces into a picturesque artificial reef near Pom Pom Island, Malaysia where the natural reefs were destroyed by decades of dynamiting to gather fish.
This diver has just finished tying pieces of coral to a wire frame that is supplied with a mild electric current. Low voltage electricity promotes coral growth!
Another project in the “Environment” realm is using sharks to measure ocean temperatures at various locations and depths. The measurements were integrated into a computer-generated climate model. Result: the forecasts improved. Frankly, it must be fun to return such an elegant - albeit dangerous - animal back into its natural environment - and with its own internet connection.
My EVENT PICKS
Action Together - West - Protest demonstrations happening every day
Ocean Impacts on Whales and Arctic Sea Ice - Livestream - Wednesday 11am
Are There Gray Foxes in Your Backyard? - Saturday 1pm - Fremont
Summer Family Hiking - Sunday 10am - 2pm - Tilden Park, Berkeley
Insect Palooza - Sunday Noon - 3pm - San Francisco
SkeptiCal - 27 June (a Saturday), 9am - 5:30PM, Oakland, $
PHYSICS PHUN?
¿Want to learn “why” we perceive time to move slower in a fast-moving space ship zooming past us? It’s called time dilation. You can show yourself that time dilation is true by watching this animation of “light clocks”.
Experiments reveal that the speed of light is the same no matter where or how you observe it.
— Our earth-bound light clock on the left is a flash of light bouncing between lower and upper mirrors.
— The interval that the earth-bound flash goes from bottom to top and back is one “tick” of time.
— A rocket ship travelling from left to right has an identical light clock.
— The astronauts in the rocket ship perceive their “tick” of time to be just as quick.
— We see the rocket ship’s flash moving at the same speed as ours but it has farther to travel.
— Therefore we see that the ship’s clock is running slower than ours. Time Dilation!
— Conversely, the astronauts zooming by us conclude that our clocks run slower.
— The faster the difference in speed, the slower the other clock runs for us.
YOU now know “why” we perceive time to move slower in a fast-moving space ship zooming past us!

Einstein is usually credited with giving us the mathematical formula for relating time to speed, but credit instead goes to Hendrik Lorentz in the 1890s. Lorentz, however, did not believe that time dilation could be ‘real’.
If we did not adjust the clocks in the Global Positioning System - GPS - satellites taking into account Einstein’s theories of Special and General Relativity, locations would be off by another 10 kilometers every day.
FUN NERDY VIDEOS
250 to 250 - Heather Cox Richardson & friends
One-minute videos celebrating our 250th Anniversary
How to weigh things on the ISS - Sophie Ardenot - 1.5 mins
Nifty!
Biorock Electrified Coral Reefs - Clint Hansen - 2 mins
Who’d of thunk?
Cannabis Plastics? - Cup o’ Joe - Joe Schwarcz - 3 mins
Cool, man.
¿Is AC the Wrong Kind of Electricity? - Sabine Hossenfelder - 7 mins
AC/DC
Energy Policies: Denmark & the U.S.A. - PBS NewsHour - 8.5 mins
No brainer?
New York Preparations for the Next Superstorm - PBS Terra - Maiya May - 11.5 mins
¿Are you listening, Zohran?
Mark Rober & the Future of Science Education - TED Talk - 14 Minutes
Explosions, falling squirrels, fart spray, and science education
Laser Light Opens a New View of Reality - NOVA PBS Special - 14 mins
Einstein’s Gravity Waves!
¿What’s Hidden Under Antarctica? - HUGE If True - Cleo Abram - 18 mins
Not just more ice.
Restoration of Chile’s Chabuco Valley - Apex Origin - 20 mins
Importance of apex predators in a Chilean ecosystem
Black Hole Apocalypse - PBS NOVA & GBH Boston - Caitlin Saks - 25 mins
The existence of Black Holes was predicted by Einstein’s equations.
Radium - Tales from the Periodic Table - Ron Hipschman - 49 mins
My parents gave me a radium-dial watch! (and took it away later)
Einstein’s Crumbs - StarTalk - Neil deGrasse Tyson, Jana Levin - 53 mins
His ideas are still leading to insights and Nobel Prizes.
Have a fun week,
Dave, Bay Area Skeptics
“Es ist die wichtigste Kunst des Lehrers, die Freude am Schaffen und am Erkennen zu wecken.”
“The most important art of the teacher is to awaken the joy of creating and discovering.”
— Albert Einstein (1879-1955) German-born theoretical physicist
Upcoming Events:
Click to see the next two weeks of events in your browser.
Monday, 06/01/2026
Inside Salesforce’s AI Sustainability Strategy - 06/01/2026 04:30 PM
Hewlett Teaching Center Stanford
In this seminar, Sunya Norman, Senior Vice President of Impact at Salesforce, will explore how the company operationalizes sustainability alongside AI innovation. Learn how Salesforce’s three pillar approach to AI sustainability - smart demand, efficiency, and clean supply - supports its ongoing work to understand and reduce the environmental impact of AI while delivering on its potential for good.
Speaker: Sunya Norman, Salesforce
Attend in person or watch online (see weblink)
The Fall and Rise of Forward Physics - Livestream - 06/01/2026 04:30 PM
Stanford Linear Accelerator
Particle colliders have been the workhorse tool for particle physics since they were invented over 60 years ago. Forward particles are those that are produced at colliders and then travel in a direction close to the beamline. For decades, forward particles were largely ignored, and all of the large detectors currently operating at colliders are blind to them. In the last few years, however, our understanding of the forward region has been transformed and we now know that this region contains a treasure trove of physics, including the most energetic neutrinos ever produced by humans, possible evidence for dark matter, milli-charged particles, and new forces, and a wealth of other valuable information. To capture some of this potential, the Forward Search Experiment (FASER) has been operating in the forward region of the Large Hadron Collider since 2022. FASER’s latest results will be described, along with lessons learned and their implications for the future of particle physics.
Speaker: Jonathan Feng, UC Irvine
Watch online (see weblink)
Tuesday, 06/02/2026
Coherent Control for Precision Measurements - 06/02/2026 03:30 PM
Hewlett Teaching Center Stanford
Precision measurement has long been advanced by the necessity of satisfying our curiosity. In this talk I will describe how 3 threads: quantum metrology, AI driven experimental design and control are being used in the gravitational-wave detection world, and also to look for signatures from the weakest force.
Speaker: Rana Adhikari, Caltech
The Godmother of Silicon Valley - 06/02/2026 07:00 PM
Computer History Museum Mountain View
What if the roots of Silicon Valley’s culture weren’t written in code but taught in a classroom?
A new documentary, The Godmother of Silicon Valley, reveals the quiet but profound influence of Esther Wojcicki, a trailblazing educator, journalist, and mother of tech leaders (Susan Wojcicki, YouTube / Google; Janet Wojcicki, UCSF; and, Anne Wojcicki, 23andMe). Through radical teaching methods that encouraged curiosity, independence, and resilience, Wojcicki helped cultivate a mindset that would ripple far beyond the campus and into the heart of global technology.
After the screening, a live Q&A will feature Esther Wojcicki and one of the filmmakers.
Register at weblink
Wednesday, 06/03/2026
At the Ice Edge: Ocean Impacts on Arctic Whales and Sea Ice - Livestream - 06/03/2026 11:00 AM
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute Moss Landing
The Arctic is warming over three times faster than the global average, transforming marine ecosystems and climate. Sea ice extent has declined by nearly half, ocean temperatures are rising, and marine mammals are shifting their behavior and habitat use. In this seminar, I will present multidisciplinary research exploring how changing ocean conditions affect Arctic whales and sea ice. I will introduce the role of passive acoustic monitoring and its integration with ocean and sea ice observations, highlighting studies from West Greenland and the Pacific Arctic. By analyzing beluga and narwhal vocalizations, we can track seasonal movements and detect migratory shifts linked to sea ice declines. I will also discuss anticipated impacts of an increasingly ice-free Arctic on these species and the ocean’s role in sea ice formation, based on findings from NASA’s SASSIE (Salinity and Stratification at the Sea Ice Edge) campaign.
Speaker: Marie Zahn, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Attend in person or register at weblink to watch on Zoom
UC Santa Cruz Whole Earth Seminar - 06/03/2026 12:00 PM
Earth and Marine Sciences Building Santa Cruz
Speaker: Danny May, Stanford University
UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory Seminar Series - CANCELED - 06/03/2026 03:00 PM
UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory
Speaker: TBA
Register for Zoom at weblink
Rewilding San Francisco - 06/03/2026 07:30 PM
Shaping San Francisco San Francisco
World Environment Day with its Global Call for Climate Action is June 5. Restoring nature reduces our climate impact while making our life-places more resilient to climate disruption. Join us for a panel discussion with community stewards caring for and rewilding San Francisco’s public open spaces. Learn about current stewardship work and strategies for helping nature thrive in San Francisco so that San Franciscans can thrive in nature. Tom Radulovich, Peter Brastow, and others TBA.
Thursday, 06/04/2026
PARC Forum: Nobel laureate John M. Martinis discusses the quantum frontier - 06/04/2026 05:00 PM
SRI International Palo Alto
John M. Martinis, 2025 Nobel laureate, for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantisation in an electric circuit, will join this exciting PARC Forum to talk about today’s quantum ecosystem, emerging real-world applications, and more.
After Dark: Home Away from Home - 06/04/2026 06:00 PM
ExplOratorium San Francisco
Kick off Queer and Trans Asian and Pacific Islander Week with a drag show and other dazzling activities - then contemplate home off-planet guided by scientists.
Ages 18+
NightLife - 06/04/2026 06:00 PM
California Academy of Sciences San Francisco
Thursdays hit different at NightLife. The museum comes alive after hours - wilder, more curious, and full of exciting creatures. Grab your friends, grab a hand-crafted drink, and let yourself wander into whatever weird or wonderful corner calls you. You never know what you’ll stumble into next, and that’s the whole point.
Step inside the iconic Shake House earthquake simulator and our four-story Osher Rainforest, where you can explore the Amazon’s treetops surrounded by free-flying birds and butterflies.Wander our newest exhibit, Vivid: Immerse Your Senses, for an unforgettable, embodied experience that awakens the senses and unlocks hidden worlds and unexpected perspectives.Venture into our aquarium exhibit Venom, to encounter live venomous animals and learn the power of venom to both harm and heal.Bask in the glow of one of the largest living indoor coral reef displays in the world: our 212,000-gallon Philippine Coral Reef habitat.Take in the interstellar views from the Living Roof, then grab a bite from the Academy Café and head to the West Garden to drink and dine under the stars.
Open Question: Living in Space - 06/04/2026 07:00 PM
ExplOratorium San Francisco
As we advance further in our ability to launch rockets - and people - into space, countries and companies alike are exploring how humans might be able to live in space. But is life in space the next exciting frontier, or an escape from our responsibilities on our home planet? In other words … should we live in space?
Explore the feasibility and ethics of this question and more at our thought-provoking panel, featuring exciting speakers with diverse expertise and perspectives.
Panel: Phnam Bagley, Nonfiction Design Studio; Aenor Sawyer, UC Space Health Program; Aparna Venkatesan, UC San Francisco; Regina Barbar, National Public Radio, Moderator
This event is listed as separate from After Dark and requires its own ticket. However, the ticket link takes you to an After Dark ticketing page which says it also grants you admission to After Dark.
How scientists are building the AI-powered laboratory - 06/04/2026 07:00 PM
SLAC Public Lecture Series
How do we find the next super material? How do we discover the next breakthrough drug? How do we unlock the mystery of dark matter and the structure of the universe? Scientists develop theories about these questions and test those theories with two powerful tools: laboratory experiments and computational models. But these tests can be costly: Each experiment can use hours or days of person-power on specialized equipment, and simulations can take days or weeks on a supercomputer. Access to these resources is limited; every measurement needs to count. This talk explores how scientists are using artificial intelligence to accelerate discovery, not only to analyze data more effectively, but to actively guide choices about the best next measurements to take to meet scientific goals. Along the way, I will explain what is unique about using AI for scientific research, share examples from my own work, and offer a glimpse of where AI-powered science is headed.
Speaker: Stan Gasiorowski, SLAC
Friday, 06/05/2026
UC Santa Cruz IGPP Seminar - 06/05/2026 12:00 PM
Earth and Marine Sciences Building Santa Cruz
Speaker: Anastasia Yanchilina, SETI Institute
First Friday Nights at CuriOdyssey - 06/05/2026 05:00 PM
CuriOdyssey San Mateo
Swing into the weekend with science, animals, music, food trucks, and fun! On the first Friday of every month, parents and kids celebrate together at CuriOdyssey.
Dance to some of your favorite hits, while enjoying animal presentations and science activities. Activities and programs are different each time, so make it a monthly tradition!
In Town Star Party - 06/05/2026 09:30 PM
San Jose Astronomical Association San Jose
Come join San Jose Astronomical Association (SJAA) for an evening of stargazing. Event details:
Events are held at the parking lot of our headquarters, Houge Park, San Jose. The event duration is 2 hours. SJAA volunteers will share night sky views from their telescopes.Please refrain from bringing your own telescopes (Binoculars are welcome). If you like to be a volunteer with or without a telescope, please email at “itsp@sjaa.net“.
Register at weblink to attend
Saturday, 06/06/2026
First Saturday Tour at the Santa Cruz Arboretum - 06/06/2026 11:00 AM
UC Santa Cruz Arboretum Santa Cruz
First Saturday Tours are a wonderful way to introduce yourself to the Arboretum or to deepen your knowledge of the Arboretum’s plant collections. Each tour is a little different depending on the time of year, the interests of the tour guide, and the people who join in. For example, you might learn about the birds and mammals that make this land their home or about the amazing physical adaptations that plants have evolved to better deal with our extreme weather and climate conditions.
East Bay Green@Home Tour - 06/06/2026 11:00 AM
Varies
Acterra’s East Bay Green@ Home Tour! This tour will showcase a range of green homes in the East Bay renovated with sustainability in mind.
This summer, Acterra is proud to present the East Bay Green@Home Tours 2026! This is a community-powered event that invites the public to explore innovative, electrified homes. Explore homes throughout Alameda and Contra Costa Counties, ranging from new construction to those transitioning from gas. Gain valuable insights from tour hosts on appliance selection, contractor decisions, installation processes, tax credits and incentives, making your transition to electric living informed and cost-effective.
Attendees will have the chance to see firsthand a wide variety of electric appliances and environmentally-conscious home upgrades including energy-efficient heat pumps for heating and cooling, heat pump water heaters, induction cooktops, rainwater catchments, compost bins, electric vehicles (EVs), solar panels, battery storage systems, and more. Attendees will also be able to engage with tour hosts to learn about their choices, including financial considerations, rebate programs, contractors, and appliance models.
Register at weblink
Are There Gray Foxes in Your Backyard? - 06/06/2026 01:00 PM
Don Edwards Refuge Headquarters & Visitors Center Fremont
Learn all about our local gray foxes and how to identify evidence of their presence!
On a walk/talk from the Visitor’s Center out into the refuge, Bill “The Fox Guy” Leikam will show you how to identify indications of the presence of foxes, and tell stories about gray foxes that he’s studied and learned from. Bill will answer questions along the way and at the end reveal something about the foxes right here at the Visitor Center that not many people know is even there!
Register at weblink
Starry Nights Star Party - 06/06/2026 09:30 PM
Rancho Canada Del Oro Open Space Preserve Morgan Hill
Join the San Jose Astronomical Association (SJAA) and Santa Clara County Open Space Authority (OSA) for an unforgettable night of exploring the night sky. Our knowledgeable docents, members of SJAA, will be your guides to providing valuable insights into the wonders of our universe. The viewing site, Rancho Canada del Oro Open Space Preserve, is just 30 minutes south of downtown San Jose, and features darker skies than viewing from the city. It’s dark enough to see the band of our Milky Way galaxy during the Summer months.
Gather with fellow space fans for an evening under the stars as we set up telescopes for an up-close experience viewing interesting objects in the nighttime sky. Connect with amateur astronomers and space enthusiasts to share in the excitement of observing the night sky in all its splendor. You may even see a meteor or satellite passing overhead. Whether you’re a beginner looking to learn more about the heavens above or a seasoned stargazer seeking to deepen your knowledge, this event promises to spark curiosity and awe for the wonders of our cosmic backyard. Come join us for a star party that will leave you inspired by the beauty and science of astronomy.
Registration required (at weblink). See weblink for additional information.
Sunday, 06/07/2026
Summer Family Hiking - 06/07/2026 10:00 AM
Tilden Regional Park Berkeley
Join the Northern CA Recycling Association’s (NCRA) Membership Engagement and Activities Committee (MEAC) for a day of fresh air, scenic views, and community connection. We’re heading to the beautiful Berkeley Hills for a kid-friendly, stroller-accessible trek that’s perfect for recyclers and Zero Wasters of all ages!
RSVP at weblink
InsectPalooza 2026 - 06/07/2026 12:00 PM
Minnesota Street Project San Francisco
Join SaveNature.Org and the San Francisco Arts Education Project for this free family-friendly event where you can get up close and hands-on with live animals from SaveNature.Org’s Insect Discovery Lab!Bugs make up 90% of all animal species on Earth and are essential to the well-being of the planet. Yet few people have the chance to experience their incredible diversity up close. At InsectPalooza, you can do exactly that!This immersive, hands-on event blends art, nature, and science into an afternoon of fun and discovery for insect enthusiasts of all ages. Meet fascinating creatures like the Australian Walking Stick, Hissing Cockroach, and the fan-favorite Giant African Millipede. You can also create insect-inspired art with local artists and sample our award-winning mealworm chocolate chip cookies!This is an open-house style event. Drop in, explore at your own pace, and stay as long as you like.
Solar Observing - 06/07/2026 02:00 PM
San Jose Astronomical Association San Jose
It’s there for us year round, lighting our days and providing energy for our lives, so maybe it’s time to give it a closer look. Join SJAA for amazing and detailed views of the Sun, and be assured that we’ll be using special telescopes that will keep your eyeballs perfectly safe. We’ll have white-light telescopes with dense solar filters that reveal sunspots. Further, we’ll show you hydrogen-alpha telescopes that isolate a very specific color of red that reveals prominences (colloquially often thought of as solar flares; see video below) and intricate texture within the Sun’s chromosphere (its atmosphere). We can also share with you a little about how the Sun works and how complex magnetic fields drive the number of sunspots and prominences that we’ll see on a given day. A few minutes after 1:30, we’ll have a short, informal introductory talk, and at other times, you can enjoy the views and ask questions about the Sun, telescopes, or astronomy in general. Often we also have a station where you can get a better feel for the huge scale of our solar system! And you’ll get a solar system you can fold up and carry in your pocket. You may bring your own telescope. If you have a properly filtered white light or H-alpha telescope and want to share views with others, please arrive at 1:00 or earlier, so you have time to set up before the event officially starts. Since we’ll be out in the Sun, consider coming prepared with a hat, sunscreen and water. Conditions may be hot!
Sign up at weblink
James Lick Legacy Day: 150 Years of Discovery - 06/07/2026 07:00 PM
Chabot Space and Science Center Oakland
On June 7, 2026 - 150 years after the Act of Congress that granted the top of Mt. Hamilton as the site for the University of California’s Lick Observatory - join us to honor the legacy of James Lick’s visionary gift to fund what became the world’s largest telescope at the time.
This, together with Anthony Chabot’s gift in 1883 to establish the Oakland Observatory (later the Chabot Space & Science Center), and the founding in 1889 of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, helped shape modern astronomy.
While initially scheduled to be celebrated atop Mount Hamilton, severe windstorm damage to Lick’s historic dome and main building in December 2025 has brought this special event to Chabot, continuing a shared tradition of public access to science.
The evening features a Planetarium presentation by Alex Filippenko, Distinguished Professor of Astronomy at UC Berkeley: “Research, Technology, and Education at Lick Observatory, and its Shared History with Chabot.” This will be followed by a light reception and telescope viewing (weather permitting) through Chabot’s three historic telescopes.
Join us to celebrate 150 years of discovery and inspiration under the stars!
Monday, 06/08/2026
Arctic Unfrozen - 06/08/2026 05:30 PM
Commonwealth Club San Francisco
Nowhere is the dual threat of climate change and geopolitical competition felt more strongly than in the Arctic. Sea ice is declining rapidly, wildfires are burning, and permafrost is thawing. At the same time, global interest is growing rapidly as the region transforms from being a frozen desert into an international waterway.
Mia Bennett, a geography professor at the University of Washington and the co-author, with Klaus Dodds, of the new book Unfrozen: The Fight for the Future of the Arctic, will join us to examine the state of the Arctic today. She’ll explore how the region is becoming a space of experimentation for everything from Indigenous governance to subsea technologies. Growing geopolitical competition is accompanying environmental disruption. Countries - including Russia, China, and the United States - are investing in the Arctic and consolidating their interests in strategic access, resource exploitation, and alliance-building.
The consequences of this emerging “Arctic Anthropocene” are truly global - from rising sea levels due to melting glaciers to tensions between great powers determined to protect their territories and resources, and the well-being of Indigenous peoples who have fought for centuries for rights and recognition.
Use promo code WONDERNAUTS for a $10 ticket discount.
Tuesday, 06/09/2026
Quantum Sources of Gravity in the Lab - 06/09/2026 03:30 PM
Hewlett Teaching Center Stanford
Wonderfest: An Innovative Future for Planet Earth ... via Space - 06/09/2026 07:00 PM
Hopmonk Tavern Novato
Skeptics in a Real Pub - 06/09/2026 07:00 PM
Fiddler’s Green Millbrae
Wednesday, 06/10/2026
The Monterey Bay White Shark Project - Tracking Predators and Prey - 06/10/2026 11:00 AM
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute Moss Landing
Building the Conditions for Restoration; Community, Capacity, and Marine Science on the North Coast - Livestream - 06/10/2026 03:00 PM
UC Davis Bodega Marine Laboratory
Thursday, 06/11/2026
Science on Tap: Sharks - 06/11/2026 05:30 PM
Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History Pacific Grove
After Dark: Live in Space - 06/11/2026 06:00 PM
ExplOratorium San Francisco
NightLife - 06/11/2026 06:00 PM
California Academy of Sciences San Francisco
Birding the Southern Oceans and Antarctica - Livestream - 06/11/2026 07:00 PM
Marin Audubon Society
Friday, 06/12/2026
Bair Island Sunset Walk - 06/12/2026 07:00 PM
Bair Island Wildlife Refuge & Trail Redwood City
Saturday, 06/13/2026
BubbleFest - 06/13/2026 10:00 AM
Chabot Space and Science Center Oakland
NEW Exhibit at the Seymour Marine Discovery Center, Grand Opening Weekend - 06/13/2026 10:00 AM
Seymour Marine Discovery Center Santa Cruz
Life in Space Festival - 06/13/2026 11:00 AM
ExplOratorium San Francisco
Family Bird Walk - 06/13/2026 12:00 PM
Don Edwards Refuge Headquarters & Visitors Center Fremont
Sunday, 06/14/2026
NEW Exhibit at the Seymour Marine Discovery Center, Grand Opening Weekend - 06/14/2026 10:00 AM
Seymour Marine Discovery Center Santa Cruz
Life in Space Festival - 06/14/2026 11:00 AM
ExplOratorium San Francisco
Marine Science Sundays: Sea Lions of the World - 06/14/2026 10:30 PM
Marine Mammal Center Sausalito






