John Lawson is a Specialist Hydrometallurgist working with the ANSTO Minerals business unit.
Showing 581 - 600 of 703 results
Some of Sydney’s best science teachers meet its best science infrastructure
New round of IAEA Regional Cooperative Agreements projects announced
ANSTO is coordinating and facilitating a new cycle of Australian project proposals for the Regional Cooperative Agreement (RCA).
Iron and Fire
Using geoarchaeology to reconstruct the history of an ancient Khmer city.
Synchrotron reveals an elusive molecular chameleon
2021 Shorebirds Competition Summary and Results
Shorebirds Competition 2021 results.
Research challenges assumptions about deep-sea volcanic eruptions
ANSTO features in latest round of collaborative research grants
Call for Proposals
Proposals at the Australian Centre for Neutron Scattering and National Deuteration Facility.
Role at ANSTO
What's new in nuclear power technologies
It's ANSTO's role to keep Australia across the very latest developments in nuclear science and technology from around the world. Part of this responsibility is keeping us abreast of the latest developments in nuclear power technologies.
Services - Koala
Sample environments, Data analysis and reduction on the Koala instrument.
Understanding corrosion in concrete sewer pipes
Using neutron imaging techniques at ANSTO, researchers from Macquarie University have gained a better understanding of how corrosion forms and spreads through concrete that is commonly used in sewer pipes.
Role at ANSTO
Using ocean water to understand feeding habits of Humpback Whales
ANSTO User Meeting 2023 - Themes
ARC Discovery project funding for geometry of the genome and the engineering of solid-state sodium batteries announced
Three ANSTO scientists are contributing to two recently awarded Australian Research Council Discovery Project grants.
Keeping it dense
ANSTO’s international development activities captured in Australian Development Corporation Performance Report 2022-2023
Synchrotron techniques powerful tool to reveal inner workings of volcanoes
An article in Nature Geosciences has highlighted the power of synchrotron techniques to reveal the inner workings of volcanic systems that could potentially help with predictions of eruptions.