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Aquagirl

Aquagirl (also Aqua-Girl) is the name of several characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, depicted as the female counterpart to Aqualad and junior counterpart of Aquaman. Originally, the first two incarnations of the characters, Lisa Morel and Selena, were introduced as one-off characters in one-off stories.[1][2]

Aquagirl
Aquagirl (Tula Marius)
Art by Victor Ibanez
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceLisa Morel:
Adventure Comics #266 (November 1959)
Selena:
World's Finest Comics #133 (May 1963)
Tula:
Aquaman #33 (May 1967)
Created byMorel:
Robert Bernstein
Ramona Fradon
Selena:
Jack Miller
Ramona Fradon
Tula:
Bob Haney
Nick Cardy
In-story information
Alter egoTula Marius
SpeciesAtlantean
Place of originAtlantis
Team affiliationsAtlantean Royal Family
Teen Titans
Black Lantern Corps
The Drift
The Kingsguard
Aquaman Family
Supporting character ofAquaman, Mera
Notable aliasesAqua-Girl
Aquagirl
Abilities
  • Atlantean physiology allows for breathing underwater, superhuman strength and durability, withstand the extreme pressures of the ocean, swim at enhanced speeds, and enhanced senses
  • Limited telepathic powers
  • Proficiency in armed and unarmed combat, politics, espionage, and military tactics

The mainstream version of the character, Tula, first appeared in Aquaman #33 (May–June 1967) as the third incarnation of the character. Originally one of Aquaman's partners, the character also served as a love interest to Aqualad and was a member of the Teen Titans until being killed off in the Crisis on Infinite Earths in 1985. After the New 52 reboot, the history of the character was retroactively changed with Tula being the sole character to be referred to as Aquagirl. Unlike prior depictions, Tula Marius is the half-sister of Ocean Master and does not actively use the Aquagirl codename. Tula has also been portrayed as a high-ranking commander of an Atlantean-based covert black-ops faction, a regent for Aquaman's administration, and a honor guard during Mera's administration.[3]

Several incarnations of Aquagirl have appeared in media, including the Tula incarnation in Young Justice and Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox, although she is not identified as her codename in either. Original incarnations of the character appear such as Mareena, the future daughter of Aquaman and Mera present in the Batman Beyond series.

Publication history

 
Aquagirl (Tula, left) in her first appearance on the cover of Aquaman #33 (May 1967). Art by Nick Cardy.

The Tula version of the character was introduced in Aquaman #33 (May–June 1967), created by Bob Haney and Nick Cardy.[4][5]

Fictional character history

After losing her parents soon after her birth, she had been found and adopted by one of the royal families of Atlantis. Given the title Princess of Poseidonis, Tula is schooled in Atlantean traditions, and never leaves the royal palace until she meets Aqualad at age fifteen.[6]

Tula would sometimes helps Aqualad with missions during his time with the original Teen Titans, using the name Aquagirl.[7] When Aquaman leaves his throne to search for his then-missing wife Mera, Narkran takes over Atlantis as a dictator. His reign falls only when Tula leads a rebellion against him. Tula and Garth resume their romance when he returns to Atlantis and they later appear in the 1980s revival series New Teen Titans to aid the Titans in bringing down the H.I.V.E. During the Crisis on Infinite Earths limited series (1985–1986), Aquagirl is killed by the villain Chemo when she drowns in water that he has poisoned.

Years later, in the Tempest miniseries, a woman claiming to be Tula enters Garth's life. In truth, it is a doppelgänger created by the villainous Slizzath as part of an elaborate plan to siphon Garth's mystical energies for his own dark purposes. Garth sees through the ruse, is able to defeat Slizzath and finally gain a sense of closure about Tula's death. It is also at this time that Garth adopted a new identity as "Tempest".

Aquagirl is brought back to life by Brother Blood—along with Hawk and Dove, Phantasm, and Kole—to fight against the Titans. After being freed by Beast Boy and Raven, Kid Eternity is able to lay the deceased Titans back to rest. Tula has a statue in the "Hall of Fallen Titans" at Titans Tower, alongside the original Hawk and Dove, Kole and others. A year later, Tula is channeled by Kid Eternity when the Titans face Blood again. She angrily beats the villain, claiming to be enraged about being resurrected as his puppet. She later is then returned to the afterlife after her time limit in Eternity's body is reached.

Blackest Night

In the Blackest Night miniseries, Tula, Aquaman and Dolphin appear as a group of reanimated Black Lanterns who attack Tempest and Mera. Tula and Dolphin argue over Tempest, at the same time mocking him for not saving them. Sensing Garth's hope that she could fight what had been done to her, Tula tore out his heart, killing him and bringing about his reanimation as a Black Lantern.[8] Tula later appears to battle the Titans. However, her body is soon destroyed by a burst of white light emanating from Dawn Granger.[9]

The New 52

In The New 52, DC Comics' relaunch of all of its monthly titles and the rebooting of the DC Universe continuity as well as altering Tula's character. Unlike her previous depiction, Tula shares the surname "Marius" with Ocean Master, whom is revealed to be her half brother as the two character share the same father (Orvax Marius). Little details has been revealed of her early life, her career as a member of an elite special faction in the Atlantean Army (The Drift) is described as being short.[3] Some reference books also state her to be both mentored by Aquaman and using the Aquagirl alias, although the character's codename has not been referenced in any story.[10]

Aquaman: The Others

In the Aquaman: The Others storyline, Tula briefly appears as a shadowy female Atlantean reporting to the current King of Atlantis, Orm Marius, about attacks made to Garth due to his purple eyes Idyllist trait. Ocean Master orders Tula to return Garth back to his mother unharmed.[11]

Justice League: Throne of Atlantis

In the Justice League: Throne of Atlantis crossover, shortly after an attack seemingly made by the United States, Orm launches an invasion of the surface world and wages war. Tula's Drift unit is sent to the United States and she later battles Cyborg during the invasion. Eventually, Tula alongside others learn the true architect of the invasion was done by Vulko, Aquaman re-asserts himself as King of Atlantis, and Orm (christened Ocean Master by the media) is arrested. She would inquire Orm's fate with Aquaman, revealing to him that the two are half-siblings sharing the same father and having some concern for it.[11]

Powers and abilities

In her original iteration, Tula possess the typical abilities of an Atlantean; able to breathe underwater, possessed a level of superhuman strength, durability, and senses that enabled her to withstand the intense pressures of the ocean. She also possessed telepathic powers and was skilled in hand-to-hand combatant.

In more recent continuities, Tula retains most of her original abilities typically seen of an Atlantean as her previous iterations (breathing underwater, superhuman strength, swimming at extreme speeds, enhanced senses and reflexes) though portrayed at a greater degree and unlike Atlantean, is trained to be able to survive outside the surface for extended periods of time similarly to a human. She is also considered a adept Atlantean warrior, skilled with many weaponry possessed by Atlantis[3] and has considerable skill as a special forces commander, her skills including espionage, military tactics, and military training.[12] Tula is also proficient in politics, having enough experience and leadership qualities to act as a regent of Atlantis under Aquaman's administration.[13] Due to her status as regent, Tula possessed special governmental privileges during and even after her tenure.[14]

Other versions

Other incarnations

Lisa Morel

Lisa Morel is introduced in Adventure Comics #266 (November 1959) as one of several violet-eyed Atlantean children born unable to adapt to the watery world. They had been sent to the surface in waterproof lifeboats so they might survive among land-dwellers, and Lisa was adopted by the scientist Dr. Hugo Morel and his wife. With Aquaman in danger, Lisa's water-breathing and telepathic powers awaken; she makes herself a costume identical to Aquaman's, takes on the name "Aquagirl" and fights alongside him. However, her new-found powers are short-lived, and she loses them permanently. This is the first and last appearance of the character.[1]

Selena

Selena is a young Poseidonis teenager who temporarily teams up with Aquaman under the name "Aqua-Girl" in World's Finest Comics #133 (May 1963) to make her former boyfriend jealous. She succeeds, making Aqualad jealous of her temporary status as Aquaman's sidekick as well. This is the first and last appearance of the character.[2]

Lorena Marquez

Lorena Marquez is another fictional character to use the codename Aquagirl and the fourth to use it after Tula's death prior to the New 52. She is a comic book superhero published by DC Comics. Lorena debuted in Aquaman vol. 6 #16 (May 2004), and was created by Will Pfeifer and Patrick Gleason.

Alternate versions

In the 1996 limited series Kingdom Come, Aquagirl is Tula II, the estranged teenage daughter of Garth (formerly Aqualad, now Aquaman).[15] She is named Tula after her father's late girlfriend and is part of a team consisting of the other original Titans' children who end up taking Batman's side in the story's key conflict. In her appearances, Tula seemingly demonstrates a partial shapeshifting ability, changing parts of her body to resemble those of sea creatures. She is last seen battling Donna Troy during the climactic battle at the superhuman Gulag and is possibly killed by the nuclear explosion that ends the conflict.

This Tula's mother is possibly Deep Blue, described in annotations for the series as "Mizuko Perkins", daughter of Tsunami and Neptune Perkins. In standard DC Comics continuity, Deep Blue is Aquaman's half-sister Debbie, the daughter of Tsunami and Atlan, raised by Tsunami and Neptune Perkins.

In the Titans Tomorrow timeline, Lorena is Aquawoman, a member of the Titans. It is revealed that she has developed telepathic powers which she had used to kill (or paralyze) former Titan member Garth.

In other media

Television

 
Mareena as she appears in Batman Beyond (left) and Justice League Unlimited (right).
 
Tula as she appears in Young Justice.
  • A futuristic incarnation of Aquagirl appears in series set in the DC Animated Universe, voiced by Jodi Benson. This version, Mareena, is a member of a future Justice League and daughter of Aquaman who possesses hydrokinesis. She first appears in the Batman Beyond two-part episode "The Call", and later has a non-speaking appearance in the Justice League Unlimited episode "Epilogue".
  • In the second season of Entourage, Mandy Moore portrays Aquagirl as part of an in-universe Aquaman film.
  • Tula appears in Young Justice, voiced by Cree Summer. This version is Kaldur'ahm's childhood friend who entered a relationship with his best friend Garth after the former left Atlantis to become Aquaman's sidekick and was trained by Mera in aquamancy. In between seasons one and two, as depicted in Young Justice: Legacy (see below), Tula joined the Team, but died while on a mission.

Film

An alternate timeline version of Tula appears in Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox as a member of Aquaman's army who is eventually killed in battle against Wonder Woman's Amazons.

Video games

The Young Justice incarnation of Tula / Aquagirl appears in Young Justice: Legacy, voiced again by Cree Summer. She serves as the Team's mission coordinator, providing information on the Light's attempts to steal pieces of an ancient statue and keeping them safe. After Klarion the Witch Boy tricks her into giving him the pieces and kidnaps her to revive Tiamat, the Team free her and defeat Klarion before a weakened Tula eventually defeats and re-imprisons Tiamat, though she is killed by falling debris.

References

  1. ^ a b "Aquaman Meets Aquagirl!" Adventure Comics #266 (November 1959). The Grand Comics Database. Retrieved on December 4, 2008.
  2. ^ a b "Aquaman's New Partner, Aquagirl." World's Finest Comics #133 (May 1963). The Grand Comics Database. Retrieved on December 4, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c Manning, Matthew K.; Wiacek, Stephen; Scott, Melanie; Jones, Nick; Walker, Landry Q.; Cowsill, Alan (2021). The DC Comics Encyclopedia (New ed.). New York, New York. ISBN 978-0-7440-2056-4. OCLC 1253363543.
  4. ^ "Aqualad's Deep-Six Chick!" Aquaman #33 (May–June 1967). The Grand Comics Database. Retrieved on December 4, 2008.
  5. ^ McAvennie, Michael (2010). "1960s". In Dolan, Hannah (ed.). DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 123. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. Aqualad found romance under the sea when scripter Bob Haney and artist Nick Cardy introduced him to fellow young Atlantean Tula, also known as Aquagirl.
  6. ^ Greenberger, Robert (2008), "Anthro", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, London: Dorling Kindersley, p. 17, ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1
  7. ^ "Some Call It Noise." Teen Titans #30 (November–December 1970). The Grand Comics Database. Retrieved on March 14, 2009.
  8. ^ Blackest Night #2 (August 2009)
  9. ^ Blackest Night: Titans #3 (October 2009)
  10. ^ Wiacek, Stephen (2021). The DC Book. Grant Morrison, Dorling Kindersley Limited (First American ed.). New York, NY. ISBN 978-0-7440-3980-1. OCLC 1285929768.
  11. ^ a b Johns, Geoff (2013). Aquaman. Volume 2, The Others. Ivan Reis, Joe Prado. New York. ISBN 978-1-4012-4016-5. OCLC 846910683.
  12. ^ Parker, Jeff (2014). Aquaman. Volume 5, Sea of storms. Charles Soule, Paul Pelletier, Sean P. Parsons. New York. ISBN 978-1-4012-5039-3. OCLC 883749205.
  13. ^ Abnett, Dan (2017). Aquaman. Vol. 1, The drowning. Scot Eaton, Oscar Jiménez, Mark Morales, Brad Walker, Andrew Hennessy, Wayne Faucher. Burbank, CA. ISBN 978-1-4012-6782-7. OCLC 957554649.
  14. ^ Aquaman. Deep dives. Steve Orlando, Marv Wolfman, Tom Taylor, Cecil Castellucci, Andrea Shea, Dave Wielgosz. Burbank, CA. 2021. ISBN 978-1-77951-124-9. OCLC 1202772096.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  15. ^ from: . Archived from the original on 2008-01-29. Retrieved 2008-01-16.

External links

aquagirl, also, aqua, girl, name, several, characters, appearing, american, comic, books, published, comics, depicted, female, counterpart, aqualad, junior, counterpart, aquaman, originally, first, incarnations, characters, lisa, morel, selena, were, introduce. Aquagirl also Aqua Girl is the name of several characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics depicted as the female counterpart to Aqualad and junior counterpart of Aquaman Originally the first two incarnations of the characters Lisa Morel and Selena were introduced as one off characters in one off stories 1 2 AquagirlAquagirl Tula Marius Art by Victor IbanezPublication informationPublisherDC ComicsFirst appearanceLisa Morel Adventure Comics 266 November 1959 Selena World s Finest Comics 133 May 1963 Tula Aquaman 33 May 1967 Created byMorel Robert Bernstein Ramona FradonSelena Jack MillerRamona FradonTula Bob Haney Nick CardyIn story informationAlter egoTula MariusSpeciesAtlanteanPlace of originAtlantisTeam affiliationsAtlantean Royal FamilyTeen TitansBlack Lantern CorpsThe DriftThe KingsguardAquaman FamilySupporting character ofAquaman MeraNotable aliasesAqua GirlAquagirlAbilitiesAtlantean physiology allows for breathing underwater superhuman strength and durability withstand the extreme pressures of the ocean swim at enhanced speeds and enhanced senses Limited telepathic powers Proficiency in armed and unarmed combat politics espionage and military tacticsThe mainstream version of the character Tula first appeared in Aquaman 33 May June 1967 as the third incarnation of the character Originally one of Aquaman s partners the character also served as a love interest to Aqualad and was a member of the Teen Titans until being killed off in the Crisis on Infinite Earths in 1985 After the New 52 reboot the history of the character was retroactively changed with Tula being the sole character to be referred to as Aquagirl Unlike prior depictions Tula Marius is the half sister of Ocean Master and does not actively use the Aquagirl codename Tula has also been portrayed as a high ranking commander of an Atlantean based covert black ops faction a regent for Aquaman s administration and a honor guard during Mera s administration 3 Several incarnations of Aquagirl have appeared in media including the Tula incarnation in Young Justice and Justice League The Flashpoint Paradox although she is not identified as her codename in either Original incarnations of the character appear such as Mareena the future daughter of Aquaman and Mera present in the Batman Beyond series Contents 1 Publication history 2 Fictional character history 2 1 Blackest Night 2 2 The New 52 2 2 1 Aquaman The Others 2 2 2 Justice League Throne of Atlantis 3 Powers and abilities 4 Other versions 4 1 Other incarnations 4 1 1 Lisa Morel 4 1 2 Selena 4 1 3 Lorena Marquez 4 2 Alternate versions 5 In other media 5 1 Television 5 2 Film 5 3 Video games 6 References 7 External linksPublication history Edit Aquagirl Tula left in her first appearance on the cover of Aquaman 33 May 1967 Art by Nick Cardy The Tula version of the character was introduced in Aquaman 33 May June 1967 created by Bob Haney and Nick Cardy 4 5 Fictional character history EditAfter losing her parents soon after her birth she had been found and adopted by one of the royal families of Atlantis Given the title Princess of Poseidonis Tula is schooled in Atlantean traditions and never leaves the royal palace until she meets Aqualad at age fifteen 6 Tula would sometimes helps Aqualad with missions during his time with the original Teen Titans using the name Aquagirl 7 When Aquaman leaves his throne to search for his then missing wife Mera Narkran takes over Atlantis as a dictator His reign falls only when Tula leads a rebellion against him Tula and Garth resume their romance when he returns to Atlantis and they later appear in the 1980s revival series New Teen Titans to aid the Titans in bringing down the H I V E During the Crisis on Infinite Earths limited series 1985 1986 Aquagirl is killed by the villain Chemo when she drowns in water that he has poisoned Years later in the Tempest miniseries a woman claiming to be Tula enters Garth s life In truth it is a doppelganger created by the villainous Slizzath as part of an elaborate plan to siphon Garth s mystical energies for his own dark purposes Garth sees through the ruse is able to defeat Slizzath and finally gain a sense of closure about Tula s death It is also at this time that Garth adopted a new identity as Tempest Aquagirl is brought back to life by Brother Blood along with Hawk and Dove Phantasm and Kole to fight against the Titans After being freed by Beast Boy and Raven Kid Eternity is able to lay the deceased Titans back to rest Tula has a statue in the Hall of Fallen Titans at Titans Tower alongside the original Hawk and Dove Kole and others A year later Tula is channeled by Kid Eternity when the Titans face Blood again She angrily beats the villain claiming to be enraged about being resurrected as his puppet She later is then returned to the afterlife after her time limit in Eternity s body is reached Blackest Night Edit In the Blackest Night miniseries Tula Aquaman and Dolphin appear as a group of reanimated Black Lanterns who attack Tempest and Mera Tula and Dolphin argue over Tempest at the same time mocking him for not saving them Sensing Garth s hope that she could fight what had been done to her Tula tore out his heart killing him and bringing about his reanimation as a Black Lantern 8 Tula later appears to battle the Titans However her body is soon destroyed by a burst of white light emanating from Dawn Granger 9 The New 52 Edit In The New 52 DC Comics relaunch of all of its monthly titles and the rebooting of the DC Universe continuity as well as altering Tula s character Unlike her previous depiction Tula shares the surname Marius with Ocean Master whom is revealed to be her half brother as the two character share the same father Orvax Marius Little details has been revealed of her early life her career as a member of an elite special faction in the Atlantean Army The Drift is described as being short 3 Some reference books also state her to be both mentored by Aquaman and using the Aquagirl alias although the character s codename has not been referenced in any story 10 Aquaman The Others Edit In the Aquaman The Others storyline Tula briefly appears as a shadowy female Atlantean reporting to the current King of Atlantis Orm Marius about attacks made to Garth due to his purple eyes Idyllist trait Ocean Master orders Tula to return Garth back to his mother unharmed 11 Justice League Throne of Atlantis Edit In the Justice League Throne of Atlantis crossover shortly after an attack seemingly made by the United States Orm launches an invasion of the surface world and wages war Tula s Drift unit is sent to the United States and she later battles Cyborg during the invasion Eventually Tula alongside others learn the true architect of the invasion was done by Vulko Aquaman re asserts himself as King of Atlantis and Orm christened Ocean Master by the media is arrested She would inquire Orm s fate with Aquaman revealing to him that the two are half siblings sharing the same father and having some concern for it 11 Powers and abilities EditIn her original iteration Tula possess the typical abilities of an Atlantean able to breathe underwater possessed a level of superhuman strength durability and senses that enabled her to withstand the intense pressures of the ocean She also possessed telepathic powers and was skilled in hand to hand combatant In more recent continuities Tula retains most of her original abilities typically seen of an Atlantean as her previous iterations breathing underwater superhuman strength swimming at extreme speeds enhanced senses and reflexes though portrayed at a greater degree and unlike Atlantean is trained to be able to survive outside the surface for extended periods of time similarly to a human She is also considered a adept Atlantean warrior skilled with many weaponry possessed by Atlantis 3 and has considerable skill as a special forces commander her skills including espionage military tactics and military training 12 Tula is also proficient in politics having enough experience and leadership qualities to act as a regent of Atlantis under Aquaman s administration 13 Due to her status as regent Tula possessed special governmental privileges during and even after her tenure 14 Other versions EditOther incarnations Edit Lisa Morel Edit Lisa Morel is introduced in Adventure Comics 266 November 1959 as one of several violet eyed Atlantean children born unable to adapt to the watery world They had been sent to the surface in waterproof lifeboats so they might survive among land dwellers and Lisa was adopted by the scientist Dr Hugo Morel and his wife With Aquaman in danger Lisa s water breathing and telepathic powers awaken she makes herself a costume identical to Aquaman s takes on the name Aquagirl and fights alongside him However her new found powers are short lived and she loses them permanently This is the first and last appearance of the character 1 Selena Edit Selena is a young Poseidonis teenager who temporarily teams up with Aquaman under the name Aqua Girl in World s Finest Comics 133 May 1963 to make her former boyfriend jealous She succeeds making Aqualad jealous of her temporary status as Aquaman s sidekick as well This is the first and last appearance of the character 2 Lorena Marquez Edit Lorena Marquez is another fictional character to use the codename Aquagirl and the fourth to use it after Tula s death prior to the New 52 She is a comic book superhero published by DC Comics Lorena debuted in Aquaman vol 6 16 May 2004 and was created by Will Pfeifer and Patrick Gleason Alternate versions Edit In the 1996 limited series Kingdom Come Aquagirl is Tula II the estranged teenage daughter of Garth formerly Aqualad now Aquaman 15 She is named Tula after her father s late girlfriend and is part of a team consisting of the other original Titans children who end up taking Batman s side in the story s key conflict In her appearances Tula seemingly demonstrates a partial shapeshifting ability changing parts of her body to resemble those of sea creatures She is last seen battling Donna Troy during the climactic battle at the superhuman Gulag and is possibly killed by the nuclear explosion that ends the conflict This Tula s mother is possibly Deep Blue described in annotations for the series as Mizuko Perkins daughter of Tsunami and Neptune Perkins In standard DC Comics continuity Deep Blue is Aquaman s half sister Debbie the daughter of Tsunami and Atlan raised by Tsunami and Neptune Perkins In the Titans Tomorrow timeline Lorena is Aquawoman a member of the Titans It is revealed that she has developed telepathic powers which she had used to kill or paralyze former Titan member Garth In other media EditTelevision Edit Mareena as she appears in Batman Beyond left and Justice League Unlimited right Tula as she appears in Young Justice A futuristic incarnation of Aquagirl appears in series set in the DC Animated Universe voiced by Jodi Benson This version Mareena is a member of a future Justice League and daughter of Aquaman who possesses hydrokinesis She first appears in the Batman Beyond two part episode The Call and later has a non speaking appearance in the Justice League Unlimited episode Epilogue In the second season of Entourage Mandy Moore portrays Aquagirl as part of an in universe Aquaman film Tula appears in Young Justice voiced by Cree Summer This version is Kaldur ahm s childhood friend who entered a relationship with his best friend Garth after the former left Atlantis to become Aquaman s sidekick and was trained by Mera in aquamancy In between seasons one and two as depicted in Young Justice Legacy see below Tula joined the Team but died while on a mission Film Edit An alternate timeline version of Tula appears in Justice League The Flashpoint Paradox as a member of Aquaman s army who is eventually killed in battle against Wonder Woman s Amazons Video games Edit The Young Justice incarnation of Tula Aquagirl appears in Young Justice Legacy voiced again by Cree Summer She serves as the Team s mission coordinator providing information on the Light s attempts to steal pieces of an ancient statue and keeping them safe After Klarion the Witch Boy tricks her into giving him the pieces and kidnaps her to revive Tiamat the Team free her and defeat Klarion before a weakened Tula eventually defeats and re imprisons Tiamat though she is killed by falling debris References Edit a b Aquaman Meets Aquagirl Adventure Comics 266 November 1959 The Grand Comics Database Retrieved on December 4 2008 a b Aquaman s New Partner Aquagirl World s Finest Comics 133 May 1963 The Grand Comics Database Retrieved on December 4 2008 a b c Manning Matthew K Wiacek Stephen Scott Melanie Jones Nick Walker Landry Q Cowsill Alan 2021 The DC Comics Encyclopedia New ed New York New York ISBN 978 0 7440 2056 4 OCLC 1253363543 Aqualad s Deep Six Chick Aquaman 33 May June 1967 The Grand Comics Database Retrieved on December 4 2008 McAvennie Michael 2010 1960s In Dolan Hannah ed DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle Dorling Kindersley p 123 ISBN 978 0 7566 6742 9 Aqualad found romance under the sea when scripter Bob Haney and artist Nick Cardy introduced him to fellow young Atlantean Tula also known as Aquagirl Greenberger Robert 2008 Anthro in Dougall Alastair ed The DC Comics Encyclopedia London Dorling Kindersley p 17 ISBN 978 0 7566 4119 1 Some Call It Noise Teen Titans 30 November December 1970 The Grand Comics Database Retrieved on March 14 2009 Blackest Night 2 August 2009 Blackest Night Titans 3 October 2009 Wiacek Stephen 2021 The DC Book Grant Morrison Dorling Kindersley Limited First American ed New York NY ISBN 978 0 7440 3980 1 OCLC 1285929768 a b Johns Geoff 2013 Aquaman Volume 2 The Others Ivan Reis Joe Prado New York ISBN 978 1 4012 4016 5 OCLC 846910683 Parker Jeff 2014 Aquaman Volume 5 Sea of storms Charles Soule Paul Pelletier Sean P Parsons New York ISBN 978 1 4012 5039 3 OCLC 883749205 Abnett Dan 2017 Aquaman Vol 1 The drowning Scot Eaton Oscar Jimenez Mark Morales Brad Walker Andrew Hennessy Wayne Faucher Burbank CA ISBN 978 1 4012 6782 7 OCLC 957554649 Aquaman Deep dives Steve Orlando Marv Wolfman Tom Taylor Cecil Castellucci Andrea Shea Dave Wielgosz Burbank CA 2021 ISBN 978 1 77951 124 9 OCLC 1202772096 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link from Titans Tower Kingdom Universe Titans Archived from the original on 2008 01 29 Retrieved 2008 01 16 External links EditAquagirl on DC Database a DC Comics wiki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aquagirl amp oldid 1139252552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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