Potential good news for a warming world
Collaboration finds that old carbon reservoirs are unlikely to cause a massive greenhouse gas release in a warming world.
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Collaboration finds that old carbon reservoirs are unlikely to cause a massive greenhouse gas release in a warming world.
Connect with the businesses and organisations driving advanced manufacturing and supporting green technologies.
Connect with the businesses and organisations seeking better understanding decommissioning oil and gas infrastructure and the potential impact of contaminants on marine life.
Join us for this online webinar to explore and discuss the huge opportunities in growing a dynamic and impactful future nuclear workforce.
Planetary science is an emerging research theme in Australia, and research at ANSTO is embedded in the heart of this.
The ANSTO Innovation Series is a live and virtual meet-up that focuses on the key capacities of ANSTO’s people, partners and facilities and how they are meeting global challenges in sustainable industries, medicine, advanced manufacturing and in accelerating small business.
ANSTO’s trusted advisor on Dharawal cultural heritage Les Bursill OAM has passed away suddenly following illness. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are advised that this webpage contains images of people who have died.
Atmosphere scientists find link between indigenous weather knowledge and Sydney air pollution.
The role of trace elements as palaeoclimate proxies has been explored in ANSTO-led collaborative environmental research.
Research is being undertaken through an Australian Research Council Discovery Project "Reconstructing Australia’s fire history from cave stalagmites", led by Professor Andy Baker at UNSW Sydney and Dr. Pauline Treble at ANSTO. The project aims to calibrate the fire-speleothem relationship and develop coupled fire and climate records for the last millennium in southwest Australia.
Stay updated with the latest news and notifications impacting ANSTO's landmark research infrastructure in both Sydney and Melbourne.
ANSTO’s Centre for Accelerator Science measures extra-terrestrial plutonium in a study to clarify the origin of the heavier elements
Virtual activities celebrating the benefits of nuclear science and technology held for National Science Week
Bushfires heat soil to extreme temperatures and this causes oxidation of chromium to a highly toxic and carcinogenic form.
ANSTO recently hosted a public Ask Us Anything event on nuclear medicine, sharing information on how we safely manufacture and distribute nuclear medicine across Australia each week to hundreds of hospitals and clinics.
Read about an ANSTO scientist and their work to prepare for a school project or interview.