The annual grant program, launched in 2015, provides each Class of 2023 fellow with $15,000 over three years to support academic research or creative work.
July 4 and 5 marked Earth's hottest days since record-keeping began in 1979 — a fitting sequel to the world's warmest June that significantly exceeded the previous record set in 2019. Texas A&M atmospheric scientist and Texas State Climatologist Dr. John Nielsen-Gammon explains the phenomenon and what to expect with regard to future records.
The Cyclotron Institute-led Center for Excellence in Nuclear Training And University-based Research (CENTAUR) has been selected to receive its second five-year award under the Stewardship Science Academic Alliances Centers of Excellence program.
1999 Texas A&M statistics Ph.D. graduate Shane Reese hopes to extend the sense of tradition and connectedness that characterizes Aggieland to Provo, Utah, as he begins his tenure as Brigham Young University’s 14th president.
Anything is possible on any given Saturday in Aggieland, where a t-shirt, a campus landmark and a little hospitality had the power to spark an Aggie connection that is paying dividends for the city of Boerne — all inspired by a casual conversation about weather.
Congratulations to Texas A&M chemist Dr. James Batteas, selected as an inaugural co-editor-in-chief of the Royal Society of Chemistry's newest journal, "RSC Mechanochemistry."
Licensed professional counselor Angie McDonald joined the College of Arts and Sciences staff on July 24 as part of a university-wide initiative to embed a mental health professional in each academic unit.
Chinese politicians have looked toward policies to encourage couples to have more children to offset population decline. Texas A&M sociology professor Dr. Dudley Poston explains why it hasn't worked.
Evan Lloyd ’25 is one of five Texas A&M graduate students among the nearly 600 fellows selected worldwide to participate in the 72nd Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting, dedicated to physiology and medicine and featuring 40 Nobel laureates and guests from 90 countries.
A team of geologists and chemists in the College of Arts and Sciences has taken the quest to more accurately measure ancient ocean temperatures to the atomic level — findings with critical application in reconstructing past climates and the thermal history of sedimentary basins essential for oil and gas exploration.
The annual grant program, launched in 2015, provides each Class of 2023 fellow with $15,000 over three years to support academic research or creative work.
July 4 and 5 marked Earth's hottest days since record-keeping began in 1979 — a fitting sequel to the world's warmest June that significantly exceeded the previous record set in 2019. Texas A&M atmospheric scientist and Texas State Climatologist Dr. John Nielsen-Gammon explains the phenomenon and what to expect with regard to future records.
The Cyclotron Institute-led Center for Excellence in Nuclear Training And University-based Research (CENTAUR) has been selected to receive its second five-year award under the Stewardship Science Academic Alliances Centers of Excellence program.
1999 Texas A&M statistics Ph.D. graduate Shane Reese hopes to extend the sense of tradition and connectedness that characterizes Aggieland to Provo, Utah, as he begins his tenure as Brigham Young University’s 14th president.
Anything is possible on any given Saturday in Aggieland, where a t-shirt, a campus landmark and a little hospitality had the power to spark an Aggie connection that is paying dividends for the city of Boerne — all inspired by a casual conversation about weather.
Congratulations to Texas A&M chemist Dr. James Batteas, selected as an inaugural co-editor-in-chief of the Royal Society of Chemistry's newest journal, "RSC Mechanochemistry."
Licensed professional counselor Angie McDonald joined the College of Arts and Sciences staff on July 24 as part of a university-wide initiative to embed a mental health professional in each academic unit.
Chinese politicians have looked toward policies to encourage couples to have more children to offset population decline. Texas A&M sociology professor Dr. Dudley Poston explains why it hasn't worked.
Evan Lloyd ’25 is one of five Texas A&M graduate students among the nearly 600 fellows selected worldwide to participate in the 72nd Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting, dedicated to physiology and medicine and featuring 40 Nobel laureates and guests from 90 countries.
A team of geologists and chemists in the College of Arts and Sciences has taken the quest to more accurately measure ancient ocean temperatures to the atomic level — findings with critical application in reconstructing past climates and the thermal history of sedimentary basins essential for oil and gas exploration.