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Drops of water stick to a blade of buffalo grass in this microscopic image, taken by Gibson Bethea, that was part of the "HOOKEd on Microscopy" competition at the Clemson University Light Imaging Facility, Oct. 28, 2014. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Dr. Kevin Burgess' research lab in chemistry
Glove box
This graduate student is handling air sensitive catalysts in a glove box. The catalysts are being used to synthesize complex compounds, especially ones of medicinal interest. They are being developed in the labs of Dr. Kevin Burgess, Department of Chemistry, College of Science, Texas A&M University. Dr. Burgess is the Rachel Professor of Chemistry at Texas A&M University. His research interests focus on peptidomimetics for mimicking or disrupting protein-protein interactions, development of asymmetric organometallics catalysts for syntheses of valuable chirons, and fluorescent dyes for applications in biotechnology.
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
Installation Image
Visit Elizabeth Hawes: Along Her Own Lines at The Museum at FIT.
On view March 1–26, 2023
The eighth annual Texas A&M University Workshop in the History of Books and Printing. This five-day workshop provides an intensive, hands-on introduction to the history of books and printing. The workshop is intended for librarians, archivists, students, teachers, collectors, and private individuals who have an interest in the first three and a half centuries of the printed book. The course consists of a unique combination of labs and seminars designed to provide students with practical experience, as well as a broad historical survey of the field. The lab sessions will concentrate on printing in the hand press era and its allied technologies--typecasting, papermaking, bookbinding, illustration, and ink-making. During these sessions, students will have the opportunity to cast type in a hand mould. They will also set type, prepare it for the press, and print on a period-accurate common press. The seminar sessions will provide a chronological survey of book and printing history, with the collections of Cushing Memorial Library providing examples of some of the most significant artifacts and books in the history of recorded culture. These classes will begin chronologically with Mesopotamian clay tablets and medieval manuscripts, before focusing on developments in the hand press era.
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
Visiting Artists as Social and Education Change Agents: Step Two of the TAMU Interdisciplinary Ceramic Water Filter Project & Receptacle Exhibition *
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
The 2019 Student Research Conference gives students the opprotnity to present their research to faculty and peers during poster sessions and oral presentations.
Lauren Kenner (left), a third year graduate student at the Clemson University school of Architecture from Columbia, SC, explains the design of the Indigo Pine house, which was designed by her team for the U.S. Department of Defense Solar Decathlon 2015, Dec. 4, 2014. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
Dr. Kevin Burgess' research lab in chemistry
Polymers (Cliferson Thivierge)
The photograph is of synthetic organic polymers which are used to make
fluorescent nanoparticles. These particles are not only useful to image
cells but can potentially be used to detect and bind tumors in living
organisms while delivering drugs and other cargo to them. The dispersed
fluorescence (from blue to near infra-red) makes it possible to observe
different elements of interest simultaneously. Graduate student Cliferson Thivierge works with his advisor, Dr. Kevin Burgess, in Texas A&M University’s department of chemistry. Dr. Burgess is the Rachel Professor of Chemistry at Texas A&M University. His research interests focus on peptidomimetics for mimicking or disrupting protein-protein interactions, development of asymmetric organometallics catalysts for syntheses of valuable chirons, and fluorescent dyes for applications in biotechnology. For more information about his research, contact Dr. Burgess at burgess@tamu.edu or (979) 845-4345.
Photo by Jean Wulfson, Division of Research and Graduate Studies, Texas A&M University.
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research and Graduate Studies for further information: rgscomm@gmail.com or (979) 458-1475.
Cal Poly’s Liberal Studies Department creates the teachers of tomorrow. Graduates are high-quality elementary school teachers with a distinctive edge in the arts, science, technology, and mathematics. Liberal Studies students earn a bachelor’s of science degree that puts them on the fast track to a teaching credential.
A research team at Texas A&M University is studying the genome of sorghum in hopes of making use of sorghum as a bioenergy crop for biofuels production. Sorghum is among a group of plants known as C4 grasses (which also include corn, Miscanthus, and sugar cane) that are some of the most productive plants on earth. They are especially well adapted to hot, dry environments, and they have developed a special type of photosynthesis that aids in collection and use of light energy for conversion of carbon dioxide into biomass.
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
Visiting Artists as Social and Education Change Agents: Step Two of the TAMU Interdisciplinary Ceramic Water Filter Project & Receptacle Exhibition *
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
Katie Love from Florence, S.C., an undergrad doing research at Clemson University, takes in one of the microscopic photographs in the "HOOKEd on Microscopy" competition Oct. 28, 2014. (Photo by Ken Scar, Clemson Public Information Director)
Visiting Artists as Social and Education Change Agents: Step Two of the TAMU Interdisciplinary Ceramic Water Filter Project & Receptacle Exhibition *
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.
Dr. Kevin Burgess' research lab in chemistry
Glove box
This graduate student is handling air sensitive catalysts in a glove box. The catalysts are being used to synthesize complex compounds, especially ones of medicinal interest. They are being developed in the labs of Dr. Kevin Burgess, Department of Chemistry, College of Science, Texas A&M University. Dr. Burgess is the Rachel Professor of Chemistry at Texas A&M University. His research interests focus on peptidomimetics for mimicking or disrupting protein-protein interactions, development of asymmetric organometallics catalysts for syntheses of valuable chirons, and fluorescent dyes for applications in biotechnology.
Texas A&M University may or may not have model releases for people photographed on campus, in classrooms, research laboratories, or other areas related to Texas A&M. Use of the images for non-university purposes is subject to approval. Please contact the Office of Communications and Public Relations, Division of Research for further information: vpr-communications@tamu.edu or (979) 845-8069.