Technology pioneered at ANSTO
Technology at heart of award-winning wastewater innovation from BioGill.
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Technology at heart of award-winning wastewater innovation from BioGill.
Whilst at ANSTO’s Australian Synchrotron today, Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced new funding for the Australian Precision Medicine Enterprise (APME) Project. The Australian Government will contribute $23m in grant funding under the Manufacturing Collaboration Stream of the Modern Manufacturing Initiative (MMI) towards the $71.2m project.
New three year study with UNSW for Cotton Research Development Corporation.
Koala is one of the leading small-molecule crystallography instruments in the world for determining the complex crystal structure of a wide range of chemicals and minerals.
Radiocarbon dating at ANSTO’s Centre for Accelerator Science provided strong evidence that some culturally significant trees on Minjerribah (North Stradbroke Island) have persisted for up to more than 500 years
You are invited to submit to the various awards from ANSTO, User Advisory Committee (UAC) and Australian Neutron Beam User Group (ANBUG).
A high-level strategy for ANSTO to support environmental sustainability
Explore the many roles that glass plays in our lives, from phone screens to optical fibres in the 2022 hackathon theme of Glass: More Than Meets the Eye
Using geoarchaeology to reconstruct the history of an ancient Khmer city.
Rutherford backscattering primarily provides information about the concentration of elements VS depth in a light material.
Cracking the code for crop nutrition and food quality with X-ray fluorescence microscopy.
Useful in some mineral processes but a major problem in others, jarosite may be the key to unlocking the geological history and environmental context of water on Mars.
Imaging protocol assesses molecular mechanism of work in the treatment of deadly childhood cancer neuroblastoma.
A major study has identified urbanisation and climate change as future threats to drinking water quality.
Recently, a small delegation, including Yandruwandha Yawarrawarrka representatives from the remote outback settlement of Innamincka SA, travelled to ANSTO to deliver rare wooden Aboriginal archaeological artefacts for measurements to determine their age and origin.
In a world-first study, Australian environmental scientists have used cave stalagmites as a record of groundwater replenishment over time, that showed the current level of rainfall recharging groundwater in southwest WA is at its lowest for at least the last 800 years.