University of Adelaide

‘It could be the death of the museum’: why research cuts at a South Australian institution have scientists up in arms

Retrieved on: 
Friday, April 19, 2024

“It could be the death of the museum,” says renowned mammalogist Tim Flannery, a former director of the museum.

Key Points: 
  • “It could be the death of the museum,” says renowned mammalogist Tim Flannery, a former director of the museum.
  • “To say research isn’t important to what a museum does – it’s sending shock waves across the world,” she says.

What’s the plan?

  • According to the museum’s website, this skeleton crew will focus on “converting new discoveries and research into the visitor experience”.
  • Others have tackled global questions such as the evolution of birds from dinosaurs, how eyes evolved in Cambrian fossils, and Antarctic biodiversity.

What’s so special about a museum?

  • Their remits are different, says University of Adelaide botanist Andy Lowe, who was the museum’s acting director in 2013 and 2014.
  • Unlike universities, he says, the museum was “established by government, to carry out science for the development of the state”.
  • “They’re crucial for what goes on above; you need experts not second-hand translators,” says University of Adelaide geologist Alan Collins.
  • He wonders what will happen the next time a youngster comes into the museum asking to identify a rock.
  • The museum’s Phillip Jones now uses this collection in his research, delivering more than 30 exhibitions, books and academic papers.

Continuity and community

  • Without attentive curation and the life blood of research, the collections are doomed to “wither and die”, says Flannery.
  • That raises the issue of continuity.
  • In Flannery’s words, the job of a museum curator:
    is like being a high priest in a temple.
  • Over Jones’ four decades at the museum, his relationships with Indigenous elders have also been critical to returning sacred objects to their traditional owners.
  • Besides the priestly “chain of care”, there’s something else at risk in the museum netherworld: a uniquely productive ecosystem feeding on the collections.
  • Here you’ll find PhD students mingling with retired academics; curators mingling with scientists; museum folk with university folk.
  • In the year ending 2023 for instance, joint museum and university grants amounted to A$3.7 million.

DNA and biodiversity

  • The museum has also declared it will no longer support a DNA sequencing lab it funds jointly with the University of Adelaide.
  • “No other institute in South Australia does this type of biodiversity research,” says Andrew Austin, chair of Taxonomy Australia and emeritus professor at the University of Adelaide.
  • “It’s the job of the museum.” The cuts come while the SA government plans new laws to protect biodiversity.


Elizabeth Finkel does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Carina Biotech to Present Three Poster Presentations at AACR Annual Meeting 2024

Retrieved on: 
Monday, March 18, 2024

ADELAIDE, Australia, March 18, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Carina Biotech Limited (Carina), a clinical stage cell therapy immuno-oncology company, today announced three poster presentations from studies of its LGR5-targeting CAR-T program in colorectal cancer and ovarian cancer at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024 that will take place in San Diego, California, on April 5-10.

Key Points: 
  • ADELAIDE, Australia, March 18, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Carina Biotech Limited (Carina), a clinical stage cell therapy immuno-oncology company, today announced three poster presentations from studies of its LGR5-targeting CAR-T program in colorectal cancer and ovarian cancer at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024 that will take place in San Diego, California, on April 5-10.
  • “We are looking forward to sharing data related to our LRG-5 targeted CAR-T program in three poster presentations at the upcoming AACR annual meeting.
  • One of the posters will highlight the GMP manufacturing and testing findings for our lead LGR5-targeted CAR-T cell therapy candidate CNA3103, that is currently being evaluated in a Phase 1/2 clinical trial for the treatment of adult patients with metastatic colorectal cancer,” stated Deborah Rathjen, PhD, Carina’s Chief Executive Officer.
  • “Our research team will also be presenting preclinical data that demonstrate the potential to develop our LGR5-targeting CAR-T cells as a novel immunotherapy for ovarian cancer and that expand the preclinical body of evidence across a diverse range of cancer families, including ovarian, brain, liver, and stomach, where LGR5-targeting CAR-T cells may be harnessed.”
    Lead Author: Jade Foeng, PhD, Chemokine Biology Laboratory, Department of Molecular and Biomedical Science, The University of Adelaide, South Australia

The Coretec Group to Host a Shareholder Call on January 11 to Highlight 2023 Milestones and Endurion Update

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, December 20, 2023

2023 has been a year of exciting developments for The Coretec Group’s Endurion battery program, CSpace display technology, and expansion of its corporate footprint.

Key Points: 
  • 2023 has been a year of exciting developments for The Coretec Group’s Endurion battery program, CSpace display technology, and expansion of its corporate footprint.
  • The continued successes in Endurion battery include full cell development and commercially favorable results.
  • “In addition to the major milestones we reached, we also had team members liaise with fellow industry players, and visit other battery labs to learn and improve our innovation processes.
  • Please follow on X (formerly Twitter) at @CoretecGroupInc or the Company’s LinkedIn page .

The Coretec Group & University of Adelaide’s Research Work on CSpace Technology Selected for Presentation at SPIE Photonics West Conference

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Taking place in San Francisco, CA, on January 30, 2024 at 4:40 pm PST, the presentation details the most recent CSpace research developments.

Key Points: 
  • Taking place in San Francisco, CA, on January 30, 2024 at 4:40 pm PST, the presentation details the most recent CSpace research developments.
  • The presentation is based on Coretec’s CSpace technology that utilizes two invisible infrared lasers to generate visible, 3D image pixels in glass within an imaging chamber.
  • The research evaluated three types of alternative low-phonon-energy types of glass that possess high optical quality and the potential for mass manufacturing.
  • “Our work with The Coretec Group has been highly beneficial and generated encouraging results,” said Dr. Wei, Post Doctoral Researcher at the University of Adelaide’s Institute for Photonics and Advanced Sensing (IPAS).

Tri-lateral alliance set to address critical AUKUS workforce and skilling opportunities

Retrieved on: 
Monday, November 6, 2023

The AWA seeks to address the current and future workforce needs that are required to accelerate sovereign capability, capacity and resilience for Australia’s defense sector.

Key Points: 
  • The AWA seeks to address the current and future workforce needs that are required to accelerate sovereign capability, capacity and resilience for Australia’s defense sector.
  • The AUKUS Workforce Alliance will:
    Establish a proactive, innovative and internationally recognised platform for skill enhancement and leadership to support development of a sovereign, nuclear-powered submarine workforce in Australia.
  • Lead the development and execution of critical upskilling programs, focusing on harnessing the full potential of Australia’s industrial base.
  • This alliance will strengthen and broaden the university’s partnering with industry in developing the workforce for the nation’s naval shipbuilding enterprise.

Smartsheet Invests in Australia-based Data Hosting to Better Serve Global Customer Base

Retrieved on: 
Monday, October 23, 2023

Smartsheet Regions are instances of Smartsheet located in geographic areas around the world that enable customers to comply with data residency requirements, giving organizations the flexibility to pick where they want their content to be hosted and processed.

Key Points: 
  • Smartsheet Regions are instances of Smartsheet located in geographic areas around the world that enable customers to comply with data residency requirements, giving organizations the flexibility to pick where they want their content to be hosted and processed.
  • The Smartsheet Region in Australia will serve new and existing customers across APJ and will operate in multiple locations to provide redundancy, allowing for enterprise-grade availability and scale.
  • Other Smartsheet Regions include the EU , U.S., and FedGov, which supports Smartsheet Gov customers.
  • This, paired with the platform’s best-in-class, enterprise-grade security and governance measures, allows Smartsheet to serve a growing customer base, including organizations and agencies with the most demanding governance and regulatory requirements.

Holes in baby dinosaur bones show how football-sized hatchlings grew to 3-tonne teens

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, October 3, 2023

Despite their public image as torpid, lumbering creatures, many dinosaurs were evidently warm-blooded, highly active animals, capable of prolonged and strenuous aerobic exercise.

Key Points: 
  • Despite their public image as torpid, lumbering creatures, many dinosaurs were evidently warm-blooded, highly active animals, capable of prolonged and strenuous aerobic exercise.
  • In new research, my colleagues and I determined how much energy minibus-sized dinosaurs called Maiasaura used while growing to adulthood.

How bones heal and grow

    • Locomotion and weight-bearing activity cause stresses and strains that result in microfractures in the bones.
    • Fortunately, the leg bones of dinosaurs – like those of birds, mammals and varanid lizards such as the Komodo dragon – repair themselves in a process known as bone remodelling.
    • The main impediment to this research is the shortage of collections of bones from a single dinosaur species at different stages of growth.

‘Good mother reptile’

    • Fossils from this formation have yielded much information about the eggs, hatchlings and early lives of a dinosaur named Maiasaura (meaning “good mother reptile”).
    • This herbivorous hadrosaur apparently tended her eggs and raised her offspring for more than a year after hatching.

How to measure blood flow from bones

    • A decade ago, I wondered whether the size of the foramen could be an indirect measurement of the rate of blood flow to a bone.
    • This turned out to be true, and since then the “foramen technique” has been used on fossils to estimate blood flow rate and hence how much energy and nutrients were used in the bones of adult dinosaurs.

Rapid growth doesn’t come cheap

    • Blood flow rates calculated from foramen size were similar in one-year-old dinosaurs weighing between 189kg and 455kg and in six- to 11-year-old adults weighing between 1,680kg and 3,200kg.
    • In other words, a one-year-old had about four times as much blood flowing to each gram of its shinbone as a full-grown adult did.
    • These differences reveal how much more energy and nutrients it took to build bones in the early rapid growth stages of a Maiasaura’s life than it did to maintain the bones in adulthood.

Introducing The Conversation's new climate series, Getting to Zero

Retrieved on: 
Monday, October 2, 2023

Australia, like many other countries, has committed to achieving net zero emissions by 2050 – just 27 years from now.

Key Points: 
  • Australia, like many other countries, has committed to achieving net zero emissions by 2050 – just 27 years from now.
  • Drawing on some of Australia’s leading experts on climate change, the series shows how the net zero transition will challenge not only local and global politics but our economy, financial systems and planning schemes.
  • These are just some of the articles that will appear in our Getting to Zero series.
  • The transition to net zero will stand or fall on the support it wins from the Australian public.

Daré Bioscience to Present at The Menopause Society 2023 Annual Meeting

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, September 20, 2023

SAN DIEGO, Sept. 20, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Daré Bioscience, Inc. (NASDAQ: DARE ), a leader in women’s health innovation, today announced that Dr. Andrew Goldstein, Daré Medical Advisor, will present at the 2023 Annual Meeting of The Menopause Society (formerly known as The North American Menopause Society, or NAMS) taking place September 27-30, 2023 at the Marriott Downtown in Philadelphia, PA. Additionally, three poster presentations relating to two of Daré’s investigational products designed to address common menopausal symptoms will be shared at the meeting.

Key Points: 
  • SAN DIEGO, Sept. 20, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Daré Bioscience, Inc. (NASDAQ: DARE ), a leader in women’s health innovation, today announced that Dr. Andrew Goldstein, Daré Medical Advisor, will present at the 2023 Annual Meeting of The Menopause Society (formerly known as The North American Menopause Society, or NAMS) taking place September 27-30, 2023 at the Marriott Downtown in Philadelphia, PA. Additionally, three poster presentations relating to two of Daré’s investigational products designed to address common menopausal symptoms will be shared at the meeting.
  • Pharmacokinetics, Safety and Preliminary Pharmacodynamic Evaluation of DARE-VVA1: A Soft Gelatin Capsule containing Tamoxifen for the Treatment of the Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause
    2.
  • PARC Clinical Research and Robinson Research Institute, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, Australia
    3.
  • Keogh Institute for Medical Research, Department of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, Australia

Ovation Research Included in Four Abstracts Selected for Presentation at ESHRE 2023

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, June 29, 2023

Nashville, June 29, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ovation® Fertility scientists contributed to four pieces of research accepted for poster presentation at the ESHRE virtual 39th Annual Meeting.

Key Points: 
  • Nashville, June 29, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Ovation® Fertility scientists contributed to four pieces of research accepted for poster presentation at the ESHRE virtual 39th Annual Meeting.
  • The event, hosted by the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology, was held this year in Copenhagen, Denmark, June 25-28, 2023.
  • “The Ovation scientific team is incredibly excited about the opportunity to present our collaborative efforts and works in Copenhagen this year,” says Ovation Vice President of Scientific Advancement Matthew “Tex” VerMilyea, PhD, HCLD/CC.
  • Ovation recently joined US Fertility, the nation’s largest partnership of physician-owned fertility practices, to create the leading fertility platform in the United States.