
Highlights - Water Isotope Network
Highlights on the Water Isotope Network project.
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Highlights on the Water Isotope Network project.
A rare collection of traditional Aboriginal wooden objects in varying degrees of preservation found along a dry creek bed in South Australia have been dated to a period spanning 1650 to 1830 at the Centre for Accelerator Science at ANSTO.
Scientists from UNSW and ANSTO have characterised the structure of two-dimensional transition metal carbides, carbonites, and nitrides (MXenes) materials, that could be used as a lightweight fire-retardant filler and in energy storage devices.
ANSTO has safely managed its radioactive waste for over 60 years. Waste is managed in accordance with national and international standards.
Originating from regional NSW, Thom moved to Melbourne in 2006 to commence studies at Swinburne University. In 2008 he undertook an exchange at Kunsthochschule Weißensee, Berlin before graduating with first-class honours in 2009.
Environmental scientists at ANSTO will contribute to major Antarctic research project in Antarctica funded by the Australian Research Council.
Young researcher accepted into the Australian Antarctic Science Program.
ANSTO groundwater experts have collaborated with the NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment on a comprehensive survey of groundwater resources in the state.
This week palaeontologists from Curtin University announced that a specimen from the collection of the Australian Age of Dinosaurs Museum in Winton Queensland as the first near complete skull of a sauropod, a massive, long-tailed, long-necked, small-headed plant-eating dinosaur, found in Australia and other parts of the world.
ANSTO Instruments involved in reconstructing Australia's fire history.
Mathematical insights explain inconsistencies in experimental data: pyrochlore transformation into defect fluorite or not?
A large collaboration of European investigators gained insights into how the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein (S protein) impacts with lipid metabolism in the body with implications for COVID-19 infection and mRNA vaccination.
Australia and Sri Lanks signs new partnership to fight chronic kidney disease.
Groundbreaking research published today in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology by the Museums Victoria Research Institute and Monash University unveiled a landmark discovery – fossils of the world’s oldest known megaraptorid and the first evidence of carcharodontosaurs in Australia.
Consultant appointed to consider a variety of financial, manufacture and import options.