AuScope is excited to be selected in the fifteenth round of CSIRO ON Prime, a free, nine-week program that will help us develop a deeper understanding of the diverse people who could benefit the most from AuScope.Share your perspective!
Read MoreWelcome to the first edition of our AuScope Data Update. In this recurring newsletter piece, we reflect on recent progress and provide a glimpse into what lies ahead for our data-driven endeavours.
Read MoreAuScope Opportunity Fund is open. We are inviting EOIs by May 3rd to fuel NCRIS-enabled projects, driving impactful research and infrastructure enhancements.
Read MoreThe AuScope community is out in full force at #EGU24 this year showcasing their latest AuScope and NCRIS enabled research. From town halls, splinter meetings to research presentations. Discover the events on offer.
Read MoreVia new research infrastructure delivery partner ANZIC, AuScope is proud to support eight Indigenous geoscience professionals and undergraduate students in joining the JOIDES Resolution (JR) Academy, a two-week ‘science at sea’ experience on board the JR vessel from Naples to Amsterdam in April 2024. Participants can generate cross-cultural thinking towards a new paradigm in geoscience practice and impact globally. Jump aboard from online!
Read MoreA new NCRIS enabled cross-disciplinary collaboration between AuScope and TERN is applying cutting-edge geophysical sensor technology to biological ecosystem research.
Read MoreA $45 million funding boost for AuScope will be used to accelerate a number of major geoscience infrastructure projects, including national coverage of AusLAMP by mid-2027.
Read MoreCan natural emissions of hydrogen from the Earth be a new energy source for the future? The ‘NCRIS enabled’ AuScope Earth Imaging teams aim to cast light on where hydrogen is sourced, how it moves to the surface and where industry can target exploration drilling to commercialise this low-cost clean energy resource.
Read MoreWhat exactly froze the planet nearly solid and how it remained that way for 56 million years has finally been unraveled, all thanks to the groundbreaking research conducted by AuScope's NCRIS-enabled EarthByte Group
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