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Science & Technology
















Tarpon Fish



shark camp



Verma



Eliza Perz, class of '22, poses with TAMUS Research Symposium Award



Dr. Khan



Galan award



Texas A&M Maritime Academy Sets Sail for Sea-Day Training



Chris Prevost '21



Marcus & Brianne Wharton '21



Jesus Castro '21



Lone Star State



TAMMA cadets in simulator



Dr. Ana Sirovic



Cole Masington



NSMV



MARB Ph. D.



December 2020 Graduate Honors



Asada with a leatherback



Lynch in the SLF



Virtual Commencement



Midnight Yell Oct. 29



Aggieland Saturday by the Sea will be held via Zoom Saturday, October 17, 2020.



Dr. David Wells is a 2020 EDGES Fellow



MAIN & ASEC



Vessel



A nesting Kemp's ridley sea turtle



Sinkhole cistern area on Great Abaco Island



TAMUG evacuation 8/25/20



Miglietta diving



tropical weather alert graphic



tropical weather alert graphic



Tom TinHan '20 and shark



NSMV



Kemp's ridley sea turtle



storm graphic



Debris Davlasheridze collected on campus' Shell Beach recently.



Cleaning oysters



IMO 2016 trip to London



CDR VanVelzen '02 near Alcatraz Island



Dr. Tom Iliffe on a journey to the South Pacific in 1987



Grad Graphic



Clare Shea '20 observes a dolphin in the care of TMMSN during her internship with the organization.



Campus preview Oct. 17



Muster logo















shelter-in-place graphic



Coping tips



Events graphic



TAMUG students practicing social distancing.









TAMUG logo



TAMUG offers new STEM teaching minor



Dr. Tim van Emmerik



Sanjay Kamaran and his TAMUhack 2020 team won the competition's Grand Prize this year



A drone-captured image of a Galveston-area home



TAMUG faculty members pose on the island of Guadeloupe



A Turritopsis dohrnii in the fully-grown medusa lifecycle stage.



Dwarfed by its immense size, a group of Texas A&M University at Galveston students, staff, faculty, Texas politicians and concerned citizens goes on a tour of the Netherlands Maeslant Barrier.



Graduate student Kate Campbell and Dr. Jessica Labonté of the Texas A&M University at Galveston Viral Ecology Laboratory proudly display their certificates of completion at the end of the SEA-PHAGES Discovery workshop, held in Baltimore June 23-28, where they were trained to teach the course.












Gulf Center for Turtle Research



Dr. Daniel Roelke



Dr. David Wells



views of the holotype skull



Dr. Labonté















Texas A&M University at Galveston is the marine and maritime branch campus of Texas A&M University which educates nearly 2,300 undergraduate and graduate students in science, business, engineering, liberal arts and transportation. It is driving the development of the blue economy in the Gulf Coast Region and is a critical contributor to Texas A&M's rare land-, sea-, space-grant mission with nearly $10 million in research expenditures.

Texas A&M-Galveston is also home to the Texas A&M Maritime Academy, one of six state maritime academies and the only one in the southern United States, which trains over 400 cadets annually for maritime service and employment around the world.

Texas A&M-Galveston is located in Galveston, Texas on the Gulf Coast where it is surrounded by industry, environment and programs essential to fulfilling its special-purpose mission. Aggies are known for their deep commitment to the success of each other and their strong desire to serve.