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East Australia’s Submarine Landslides

February 17, 2015by Samantha Clarke Leave a comment

Getting the Word Out!  This week Geocoastal Research Group member A/Prof Thomas Hubble was invited to talk at the Engineers Australia Sydney Chapter meeting held at Chatswood. Tom presented his […]

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GRG Activities, Presentations

Clear As Mud!

February 17, 2015by Samantha Clarke 1 Comment

Wingara Mura – Bunga Barrabugu Summer Program What messages can sediment tell us about the past? A little piece of GRG news from over the Christmas Break…On 12th January 2015, […]

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Education, GRG Activities, Outreach

Special Issue: Carbonate response to sea-level and environmental changes: Reading the past, informing the future

January 28, 2015by jodywebster Leave a comment

Hi All, For those interested in coral reefs and carbonate dominated sedimentary systems. Check out the link below to the special issue Gilbert Camoin and I guest edited in SEDIMENTOLOGY […]

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New GBR research published in the journal GEOLOGY

January 28, 2015by jodywebster Leave a comment

Hi all, Please check out the links below to media associated with the new GRG paper just published in GEOLOGY. http://sydney.edu.au/news/84.html?newscategoryid=2&newsstoryid=14522 And for those fluent in Spanish! (go Ana) http://www.20minutos.es/noticia/2354134/0/gran-barrera-coral/calentamiento-global/aumento-mar/ […]

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The Investigator having a break

December 21, 2014by ghinestrosa Leave a comment

Some of my fellow ‘spies’ have just sent me a photo from Hobart… the Investigator, the new CSIRO’s purpose-built research vessel, resting at her mother port! This photo took me […]

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The story of Helen the Hydra and the five groovy pirates

December 16, 2014by anavilaconcejo Leave a comment

I spent the last week on One Tree Island Research Station. A little paradise on Earth. We were a team of five including myself, Steph Duce, Allison Phillips, Tommy Fellowes […]

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Field Work, GRG Activities, Research
Allison and Tommy looking into the microscopes searching for foraminifera

Counting Sand

November 21, 2014by anavilaconcejo Leave a comment

Tommy Fellowes, Allison Phillips and I spent much of our time this semester staring down a microscope in a basement laboratory on the hunt for foraminifera. We have spent hours […]

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Research

In case you missed it: women in science

November 19, 2014by anavilaconcejo Leave a comment

Just over a week ago, National Geographic published a thought-provoking article about the importance of women in science.  They make the case that it is not only about social equality, […]

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GRG and life
Mantoloking Bridge, New Jersey connecting to the Ocean County barrier island immediately after Hurricane Sandy (left), and the 100 days after the storm (right). Source: http://photoblog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/07/16885463-100-days-after-hurricane-sandy-the-jersey-shore-slowly-recovers?lite

New GRG event: ‘Failure to Adapt! The US experience following Hurricane Sandy’

November 11, 2014by anavilaconcejo 1 Comment

‘Failure to Adapt! The US experience following Hurricane Sandy’ Monday 17 November 2014, 6 – 7:30pm History Room S223, The Quadrangle University of Sydney I am happy to announce that […]

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GRG Activities

Update from Heron Island. Pulling up those fossil coral monsters!

November 6, 2014by Geocoastal Research Group Leave a comment

After some initial mechanical troubles and bad weather, the Heron Island reef coring is now going well. Over the last days we have been recovering some beautiful sequences of insitu […]

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Recent Blog Posts

  • Hot off the Press: Twenty Years Exploring the Great Barrier Reef’s Drowned Reefs
  • Hot off the press! Coral community responses to glacial–interglacial sea-level and environmental change on the Great Barrier Reef
  • Hot off the press! sub-meter resolution mapping and terrain classification of Halimeda bioherms for the first time.
  • Hot off the Press! What really controls the shape of beaches in estuaries and bays?
  • Hot off the press! Spurs and Grooves on forereefs can act as channels to bring sediment onto reef flats
  • Hot off the Press! Carbonate platform evolution in response to the Mid – Pleistocene climate transition on the North-West Shelf of Australia: Insights from forward stratigraphic modelling
  • Hot off the press! Longest-ever experiment in the Great Barrier Reef on coral skeleton erosion and accretion reveals how reef zones shape long-term reef framework loss
  • IODP Exp. 389 (Hawaiian Drowned Reefs) fully funded PhD position available (University of St Andrews, UK)
  • Hot off the Press! Deep-water Canyon Systems Reshape the Queensland Plateau
  • HOT OFF THE PRESS! Neutron scanning of fossil corals reveals hidden secrets of Earth’s climate history

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Geocoastal Research Group

School of Geosciences,
Madsen (F09),
The University of Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia
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