Oceanography

The oceanography graduate degree program offers a major in oceanography with tracks in biological, chemical, and physical oceanography. Each of these is offered at both the Ph.D. and M.S. levels. While students pursuing an M.S. in oceanography typically pursue a thesis-based track, each M.S. major also includes a non-thesis option. In addition to these tracks in oceanography, the oceanography degree program is also home to the Aquatic Environmental Science (AQES) Program, which offers two M.S. majors.

Students in the oceanography and AQES programs work closely with faculty in EOAS to conduct ground-breaking, interdisciplinary research. Our students work in all of the world’s major oceans and combine open-ocean or coastal field work with cutting-edge laboratory analyses, satellite remote sensing, and artificial-intelligence-aided numerical modeling. Research projects span such diverse topics as sea turtle conservation, genomic analyses of marine microbes, characterization of organic matter in glacial meltwater, climate change impacts on marine fisheries, and ocean-atmosphere coupling in coastal ecosystems.

Any degree seeking student with at least a B.S. or B.A. degree in a basic science may apply to enter the master’s program. Most successful applicants without a master’s degree in oceanography or a closely allied field are accepted into the master’s degree program. However, such applicants, as well as applicants with master’s degrees in oceanography or a related field, may also apply directly to the Ph.D. program. Admission to the M.S. or Ph.D. program is granted upon a favorable majority vote of the faculty admissions committee and upon agreement of a faculty member to act as a major professor.