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The Department of Engineering Technology and Industrial Distribution, College of Engineering at Texas A&M University invites applications for one tenured or tenure-track faculty position in the Industrial Distribution Program at the assistant or associate professor levels starting in Fall 2026. The Industrial Distribution Program is in the Department of Engineering Technology and Industrial Distribution. This nationally recognized program focuses on applying engineering technology, business, mathematics, science, data processing, communications, quality, and supply chain management to the wholesaling and distribution of industrial and technological products.

Preference will be given to candidates with relevant hands-on research and experience aligned with industrial distribution – these include, but are not limited to, operations management, data analytics, optimization, supply chain and logistics, digital distribution, and operations research. Leveraging the latest technologies, such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, and large language models, for advancing these core research areas will be

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Background:

Volcán Popocatépetl, whose name is the Aztec word for smoking mountain, towers to 5426 m 70 km SE of Mexico City to form North America’s 2nd-highest volcano.  The glacier-clad stratovolcano contains a steep-walled, 250-450 m deep crater.  The generally symmetrical volcano is modified by the sharp-peaked Ventorrillo on the NW, a remnant of an earlier volcano. 
At least three previous major cones were destroyed by gravitational failure during the Pleistocene, producing massive debris-avalanche deposits covering broad areas south of the volcano.  The modern volcano was constructed to the south of the late-Pleistocene to Holocene El Fraile cone.  Three major plinian eruptions, the most recent of which took place about 800 AD, have occurred from Popocatépetl since the mid Holocene, accompanied by pyroclastic flows and voluminous lahars that swept basins below the volcano.  Frequent historical eruptions, first recorded in Aztec codices, have occurred since precolumbian

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