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CMEG in Sydney, Australia | School



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CMEG

Locality: Sydney, Australia



Address: Science Road, A11, The University of Sydney 2006 Sydney, NSW, Australia

Website: sydney.edu.au/science/bio/eicc/about/index.shtml

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25.01.2022 Talk from Prof Morgan Pratchett today at Usyd



21.01.2022 "Academics tend to be averse to discussing mental health openly, and higher education’s mental health safety net is patchya forgotten footnote that all too oft...en fails its students. I am lucky that I have a supportive adviser and health insurance that covers mental health care. And I am lucky that I made it to therapy when I considered suicide. I could easily have waited too long."

21.01.2022 Could seaweed be the solution to our growing plastic problem?

17.01.2022 How do you find out what lives in our Australian Marine Parks?? You put food on the end of an underwater camera and wait... You never know who might drop by! ...Prof. Brendan Kelaher and his team National Marine Science Centre are monitoring grey nurse sharks and reef fish assemblages at Cod Grounds #MarinePark this data will help us understand the overall health of the park. #MarineLife #Humpback #WhaleOn See more



15.01.2022 Huge congratulations to Professor Maria Byrne who has been elected as a Fellow to the Australian Academy of Science! To hear about her research on the impacts o...f ocean acidification and warming on marine invertebrates and her work in our Research Aquarium here at SIMS click the link below. For the full story head to https://bit.ly/2XhASHH University of Sydney Faculty of Science, University of Sydney

10.01.2022 http://sydney.edu.au//photo-essay-travelling-cooks-river-/

09.01.2022 http://www.nature.com//jou/v543/n7645/abs/nature21707.html



09.01.2022 https://www.nature.com/articles/nature25968

09.01.2022 These sea rescues are AMAZING the whale even says thanks!

08.01.2022 This woman sticks her hands in sharks’ mouths to help when they get caught on hooks

08.01.2022 Santa brought more than 20,000 specimens from the deep ocean to biologists and Parks Australia marine park managers sampling coral communities from CSIRO Invest...igator. With more than 200 of the taxa undescribed, the booty is being sleighed to museums around Australia for identification. Thank you to all our indefatigable elves. And happy taxonomic 2019 to Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery [a medley of molluscs and corals], Museums Victoria, [good luck sorting those 1000+ brittlestars] Australian Museum [new marine worms under the microscope?]. Read more about their incredible journey. https://www.nespmarine.edu.au/seamounts/landing-page

08.01.2022 Celebrating Natasha’s submission today



07.01.2022 8th June World oceans day http://www.worldoceansday.org/

06.01.2022 Plastic Free July is a global movement that helps millions of people be part of the solution to plastic pollution so we can have cleaner streets, oceans, and ...beautiful communities. Will you be part of Plastic Free July by choosing to refuse single-use plastics? No matter who we are or where we live we can all take part and by starting with one item to avoid or one reusable to remember for this month we can start to change our habits and make a difference. Take the challenge today, link in our bio. Alone we are a drop, together an ocean. See more

04.01.2022 "Saruhashi’s first major contribution to the field involved a methodology to determine CO2 levels in seawater. She was the first to determine carbonic acid levels based on temperature, pH Level, and chlorinity. Today, oceanographers call this Saruhashi’s Table. Her second major area of research was to quantify nuclear pollution caused by testing in the 1950s. She measured the amount of radioactivity in seawater and found that fallout from U.S. atomic tests in the Marshall I...slands in the 1950s reached Japan after about a year and a half. Her findings on how radioactivity spreads helped led to restrictions on oceanic nuclear experimentation in 1963. In 1981, Saruhashi founded the Saruhashi Prize, an annual award to recognize the research contributions of female scientists." http://time.com/5210207/katsuko-saruhashi-google-doodle/

03.01.2022 ATTENTION: SUPERVISORS We’re recruiting 150 expeditioners to support Australia’s Antarctic Program. Learn more and apply online at https://jobs.antarctica.gov.au

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