The team is working to preserve Syriac, a 2,000-year-old language that once flourished in the Middle East and Central Asia.

This Presidents Day, learn about the U.S. presidents who have visited Aggieland, including five in just one day.

Texas A&M at Galveston climate researchers found the remains of the Lucayan people who inhabited the Bahamas more than 700 years ago.

An international team of researchers found that wild boars mingled with pigs thousands of years ago to change their genetic makeup.

A Texas A&M researcher's work at an archaeological site in China led to the discovery of more than two dozen elongated skulls dating back between 5,000 and 12,000 years.

A doctoral candidate at Texas A&M is part of a team that identified a new species of ancient rhinoceros from fossilized remains found in the U.S.

Texas A&M researchers examine fossilized fecal material from 1,500 years ago from West Texas shelter and confirm amazing findings about people in the region.

Author Colson Whitehead will discuss his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel ‘The Underground Railroad’ April 9 at Texas A&M Brazos Valley Reads initiative.

Student-led effort to raise money for a statue of Matthew Gaines kicks off.

Henry Clay Dethloff wrote "Texas Aggies Go to War" and "A Centennial History of Texas A&M University, 1876-1976," a title that is considered to be the definitive history of Texas A&M.