ANSTO's innovative approach to treating cancer gets funding
An international team led by ANSTO has been awarded a prestigious program grant from the Foundation for Australia-Japan Studies.
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An international team led by ANSTO has been awarded a prestigious program grant from the Foundation for Australia-Japan Studies.
Research has revealed the Lapita cultural group interacted with the indigenous people of Papua New Guinea more than 3,000 years ago and set the stage for the peopling of the Pacific
Australia’s new state-of-the-art nuclear medicine facility gets green light.
ANSTO undertakes a rigorous environmental monitoring program and shares expertise nationally and internationally.
New technology is being developed in Sydney to recycle used Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and turn it into raw materials for 3D printing.
The Multi-wavelength absorption black carbon instrument (MABI), a technology designed and built at ANSTO to measure black carbon in the atmosphere is now commercially available from Thomson Environmental Systems.
On average, there is now 17 per cent less rainfall across Western Australia’s south-western region than was recorded prior to 1970. This rainfall reduction has economic, social and environmental implications for the region, in particular for the growing capital of Perth, as well as water-dependent industries in the state.
Research explores how structure contributes to function in food
Australian scientists from ANTSO have congratulated their British colleagues for a major advance in their quest to develop practical nuclear fusion.
Recent catastrophic Australian bushfires produced extremely high levels of fine particle pollution.
Australian-first detector to accelerate cancer research unveiled.
Two ANSTO environmental scientists are part of a large team led by the Australian National University (ANU), who have received an Australian Research Council Discovery Project grant to investigate how environmental change and human activities since industrialisation have impacted the transport and deposition of toxic metals on the south coast of Australia, Tasmania, and remote Southern Ocean islands.