Collaborators - Cultural Heritage
The project aims to engage the wider cultural heritage community in addition to our internal research.
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The project aims to engage the wider cultural heritage community in addition to our internal research.
Nuclear science and technology award recipients to deliver Distinguished Lectures at ANSTO.
ANSTO radiocarbon facilities and scientists are featured in a new IMAX documentary film released in the United States.
Training hosted and delivered by ANSTO on behalf of the IAEA assisted the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute (PNRI) to prepare for the successful management of a recent nuclear forensics operation.
Southern Cross researcher Dr Alana Gall, who recently became an ANSTO research Fellow, has been awarded more than $640,000 to lead a research program focused on First Peoples' Cultural Medicines (also called bush medicine) in Australian healthcare.
ANSTO scientists will contribute to a new $1 million ARC Linkage Project grant to evaluate human responses to post glacial sea level rise at Red Lily, Arnhem land led by Griffith University.
Every two years the IYNC bring delegates together to discuss various themes within the nuclear industry - this year's being Diversity in Nuclear.
ANSTO has made a contribution to the successful NASA/JPL Ingenuity helicopter flight on Mars through instrument scientist, Dr Andrew Nelson, who was one of the many developers of the open-source software SciPy used in the flight.
Dr Jamie Schulz is the Director of the Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering.
Hamish is a Chartered Engineer (CEng, MIChemE) with plenty of experience of the pharmaceutical industry and fresh experience in nuclear medicine having recently joined ANSTO.
Emily is a strategic and results-oriented public sector leader with deep expertise in financial administration and operations.
Technology for enclosed spaces recently won global COVID19 NASA hackathon
Advances in radon measurement technology by ANSTO researchers over the past decade have enabled the improved characterisation of the composition of pristine air masses that reach Antarctica.
Study reveals that properties of polycrystalline materials can be derived from microscopic single crystal samples