Type | Public university |
---|---|
Established | 1889 |
Academic affiliations | Space-grant |
Endowment | $47.7 million (2018)[1] |
President | Dr. Daniel H. Lopez (interim) |
Academic staff | 175[2] |
Undergraduates | 1,244 (Fall 2021)[2] |
Postgraduates | 490 (Fall 2021)[2] |
Location | Socorro , New Mexico , United States [ ⚑ ] : 34°04′00″N 106°54′20″W / 34.0668°N 106.9056°W |
Campus | Rural, 320 acres (130 ha) central, 40 mi² (100 km²) adjoining |
Nickname | Miners |
Website | www.nmt.edu |
The New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology (New Mexico Tech or NMT), formerly New Mexico School of Mines, is a public university in Socorro, New Mexico.
It offers over 30 bachelor of science degrees in technology, the sciences, engineering, management, and technical communication, as well as graduate degrees at the masters and doctoral levels.[3]
With 1,244 undergraduate students as of 2021, New Mexico Tech is a relatively small university focused on science and engineering.[4] It was founded by the New Mexico Territorial Legislature in 1889 as the New Mexico School of Mines, with the goal of boosting the territorial economy by teaching mining specialties at the college level.[5]
During the 1930s, petroleum engineering and technology also became an important field of study at the institute. In 1946, New Mexico Tech began offering graduate degrees. The institute adopted its current name in 1951, but the change was not legally effective until 1960, through an amendment of the New Mexico State Constitution, Art. XII, Section 11.[5]
New Mexico Tech's well-known areas of research and teaching include hydrology, astrophysics, atmospheric physics, geophysics, information technology, information security, Earth Science, energetic materials engineering, and petroleum recovery.[6]
In 2003, with funds from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, New Mexico Tech purchased the town of Playas, New Mexico, and the surrounding 1,200 acres (490 ha) to develop the Playas Training and Research Center, operated by the school's EMRTC, which provides training and research for the university's first responders, counterterrorism,[7] and Air Force programs.[8]
According to the National Science Foundation, as of 2022, New Mexico Tech ranks 18th among the top 50 universities that produce Ph.D. students, sixth nationwide among all Physical Science and Earth Science universities, and first among all public universities for the percentage of bachelor’s students who later complete a Ph.D.[9] In the 2022 college rankings for the western United States, U.S. News and World Report ranked New Mexico Tech the 18th best Regional University and fifth among public colleges.[10]
NMT hosts an annual Performing Arts Series that is free to students, and, along with the broader Socorro community, city, and county, supports a great number of special events each year. New Mexico Tech is located approximately an hour south of Albuquerque in a region of high deserts to subalpine mountains that offers considerable outdoor recreation opportunities, including rock climbing, road and mountain biking, a triathlon, and hiking opportunities.[12][13] New Mexico Tech also hosts numerous active student clubs, a Part 15 AM radio station, and a biweekly student newspaper, Paydirt. The campus includes an 18-hole championship golf course.[14]
The campus population has historically been predominantly male, but it has moved increasingly towards a balance between the sexes.[15] The gender distribution at New Mexico Tech (As of 2021) is 68% male and 32% female.[2]
A number of television shows have focused on New Mexico Tech faculty, students, and research. TruTV's Man vs. Cartoon features attempts by Tech's Energetic Materials Research and Testing Center to re-create contraptions and situations found in Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner cartoons. MythBusters, National Geographic Explorer, BBC Horizon and Nova have also featured Tech in various episodes.[16] Another TV show featuring Tech's Energetic Materials Research and Testing Center, Blow Up U, began filming in the spring of 2009.[17]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology.
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