Schools
Roger Williams University Student Will Travel To Antarctica As Part Of Graduate Studies
Teagan Bellitto will work at a lab studying how climate change influences ice formation in the southern ocean.

By Melanie Thibeault
May 12, 2023
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Teagan Bellitto ā23, a Marine Biology and Environmental Chemistry double major and Sustainability Studies minor, will attend Texas A&M University for a Ph.D. in Chemical Oceanography. Bellitto was awarded a merit fellowship and graduate assistantship in a lab that researches ocean biogeochemistry and how climate change influences ice formation in the Southern Ocean. She will begin her graduate work with a research cruise to Antarctica this fall.
Four Years of Hands-On Training: āI had a great experience here. I worked in the Wet Lab all four years, primarily with husbandry and general caretaking of the fish and shrimp. I also tested the water quality. The Wet Lab is primarily for undergraduate students. Other schools have similar setups but for graduate students. This is a unique opportunity that sets Roger apart. I practically live in the Marine and Natural Sciences building. Itās solidified the path I want to go down.ā
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NASA-Funded Research: āIām going to Antarctica to track trace metals in icebergs, which is similar to research Iāve done at RWU. Iām really excited about it. (Stephen) OāShea has been my research advisor. Last summer, I received funding from the NASA Rhode Island Space Grant Consortium and worked with him on a project comparing Martian soil simulant to sediment from Mount Hope Bay. I learned how intensive research is and that things donāt always go your way. We had to rework samples a few times, and I got familiarized with the instrumentation. Itās definitely useful going forward in a research field.ā
Summer Camp Sealed the Deal: āWhen I was a sophomore in high school, I attended RWUās Marine Biology summer camp to see if I wanted to commit to Marine Biology as a field. We got to go out on the boat, do fieldwork and lab work, and tour the facilities. It affirmed that I love Marine Biology and made me really like Roger and the program.ā
Bellitto, of Oradell, N.J., served as president of the Marine Science club and was a member of the Science Alliance, Society of Women Engineers, and in the Tri Beta Honors Society.
Every spring, as Commencement nears, RWU spotlights members of the graduating class. Suggestions are welcome. Email: stories@rwu.edu
This press release was produced by the Roger Williams University. The views expressed here are the authorās own.
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