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Faculty of Sciences, Engineering & Technology
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Добавлен 18 янв 2010
The Faculty of Sciences, Engineering and Technology is a multidisciplinary hub of cutting-edge teaching and research at the University of Adelaide.
We develop future leaders and actively partner with innovative industries to solve scientific problems.
We're a synergy of research intensive schools; thriving research centres and groups; and strong cross-institutional collaborations.
Study science with us and get more than just a degree. Start your career and help shape the future by choosing science, engineering and technology at The University of Adelaide.
We develop future leaders and actively partner with innovative industries to solve scientific problems.
We're a synergy of research intensive schools; thriving research centres and groups; and strong cross-institutional collaborations.
Study science with us and get more than just a degree. Start your career and help shape the future by choosing science, engineering and technology at The University of Adelaide.
Ecology & Evolution Series - August 2021 - Irene Gallego Romero | Erol Akcay | Bastien Llamas
Dr Irene Gallego Romero
Melbourne Integrative Genomics - University of Melbourne
"What have the Denisovans ever done for us, anyhow?"
Irene studies the contributions of gene regulatory change to human and primate evolution. Her recent research has focused on the evolutionary challenges of peopling Island Southeast Asia, with particular focus on the population genomics of the Indonesian archipelago.
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Associate Professor Erol Akcay
Department of Biology - University of Pennsylvania
"Coevolution of social networks, cooperation, and cumulative culture"
Erol is a theoretical biologist interested in the evolution of complex biological and social organisation. He works on how individuals with conflict...
Melbourne Integrative Genomics - University of Melbourne
"What have the Denisovans ever done for us, anyhow?"
Irene studies the contributions of gene regulatory change to human and primate evolution. Her recent research has focused on the evolutionary challenges of peopling Island Southeast Asia, with particular focus on the population genomics of the Indonesian archipelago.
--
Associate Professor Erol Akcay
Department of Biology - University of Pennsylvania
"Coevolution of social networks, cooperation, and cumulative culture"
Erol is a theoretical biologist interested in the evolution of complex biological and social organisation. He works on how individuals with conflict...
Просмотров: 179
Видео
Paw & Order: Could the legal definition of an 'animal' be changing in Australia?
Просмотров 592 года назад
University of Adelaide animal and veterinary scientists are leading research into animal welfare law. They say that the future definition of an animal could change in Australia to more widely reflect all species of creatures. 'What is an animal?' should be a simple question. However, the legal definition across Australia’s various Animal Welfare Acts differs greatly from the biological definiti...
Waite Arboretum BB&B: Bee, Butterfly and Bird Garden
Просмотров 4662 года назад
The Waite Arboretum not only hosts a 5-star Bee Hotel, but now it offers further accommodation: a BB&B! The Bee, Butterfly and Bird Garden (BB&B) is a new feature that provides our native bees, butterflies, birds and other creatures that inhabit the arboretum grounds, a beautiful place with flowers and plants, for food and shelter all-year round. Our goal is to enhance the biodiversity in the W...
Wheat Hub - Breeders - Intergrain
Просмотров 1172 года назад
A critical contribution to the Hub’s success came from the collaboration with the three most important wheat breeding companies in Australia - Australian Grain Technologies, InterGrain and LongReach Plant Breeders. Members of the Hub worked together with several researchers from each of these companies and the results were extremely positive. Hear from our partner Intergrain.
Wheat Hub - Breeders - LongReach Plant Breeders
Просмотров 1112 года назад
A critical contribution to the Hub’s success came from the collaboration with the three most important wheat breeding companies in Australia - Australian Grain Technologies, InterGrain and LongReach Plant Breeders. Members of the Hub worked together with several researchers from each of these companies and the results were extremely positive Hear from our partner LongReach Plant Breeders.
Wheat Hub - Breeders - AGT
Просмотров 992 года назад
A critical contribution to the Hub’s success came from the collaboration with the three most important wheat breeding companies in Australia - Australian Grain Technologies, InterGrain and LongReach Plant Breeders. Members of the Hub worked together with several researchers from each of these companies and the results were extremely positive Hear from our partner Australian Grain Technologies.
Wheat Hub - Program Highlights
Просмотров 492 года назад
Over the past five years the Wheat Hub researchers, including our Partners and PhD students, have made significant progress in their respective areas of research leading to several key highlights. Our most recent Hub Director, Associate Professor Stuart Roy, details these achievements here together with the Hub’s other Program Leaders - Drs Penny Tricker, Ute Baumann, Melissa Garcia, Mamoru Oka...
Wheat Hub - The Need for a Wheat Hub
Просмотров 532 года назад
Associate Professor Sigrid Heuer and colleagues were successful in securing funding for the Wheat Hub from the Australian Research Council and the Grains Research and Development Corporation allowing the commencement of research in 2015. The Mission for the Wheat Hub was to enhance productivity and secure high grain quality for wheat in the hot and dry Australian climate. In order to do this, o...
Welcome to sciences: Online info session January 2022
Просмотров 602 года назад
Hear from University of Adelaide science students about their opportunities and experiences. Chat to staff about securing the offer you want and what to do before uni starts. Recording from online event held 6 January 2022. About to start uni? Check out the Sciences Survival Guide at sciences.adelaide.edu.au/2022
Get Ready! Studying Sciences at Adelaide
Просмотров 822 года назад
Join us on campus and discover what’s next, when you study science at the University of Adelaide. We’re excited you’ve chosen one of our science degrees in your 2022 SATAC application. With STEM jobs growing faster than any other industry*, you’ve made the right choice by preferencing South Australia’s top university for Science^. We understand you (and your family members) might have questions...
Ramsay Fellowship Seminars - 2021- Fiona Whelan | James Quach | Jack Evans | Gabriel Collin
Просмотров 1382 года назад
Hear about exciting research happening in the Faculty of Sciences from our Ramsay Fellows. The Ramsay Fellowships support outstanding young Australian scientists to realise their potential as scientific leaders at the University of Adelaide. Current Fellows Dr Fiona Whelan and Dr James Quach will update on their on-going research in this webinar. We will also meet our newly appointed Ramsay Fel...
SA Science Awards Finalist - Dr Richard Lilly
Просмотров 1102 года назад
Congratulations to our Dr Richard Lilly who is a finalist in the STEMM Educator of the Year category of the 2021 South Australian Science Excellence and Innovation awards! The awards recognise South Australia’s top scientists, researchers, educators and innovators for their outstanding contributions to the advancement of science and research. #SAScienceAwards #UAMakeHistory #AdelaideResearch
SA Science Awards Finalist - Dr Tahlia Perry
Просмотров 422 года назад
Congratulations to our Dr Tahlia Perry who is a finalist in the PhD Research Excellence category of the 2021 South Australian Science Excellence and Innovation awards! The awards recognise South Australia’s top scientists, researchers, educators and innovators for their outstanding contributions to the advancement of science and research. #SAScienceAwards #CitizenScience #UAMakeHistory #Adelaid...
Dr Erinn Fagan-Jeffries - SA Science Excellence & Innovation Awards - PhD Research Excellence
Просмотров 293 года назад
Dr Erinn Fagan-Jeffries - SA Science Excellence & Innovation Awards - PhD Research Excellence
Microbial communities in the Coorong - Uni of Adelaide
Просмотров 343 года назад
Microbial communities in the Coorong - Uni of Adelaide
Simulating Species Extinction - Uni of Adelaide
Просмотров 333 года назад
Simulating Species Extinction - Uni of Adelaide
Marine Plastic Pollution - Uni of Adelaide
Просмотров 1023 года назад
Marine Plastic Pollution - Uni of Adelaide
Our secret weapon against climate change - Nicole Foster - Uni of Adelaide
Просмотров 903 года назад
Our secret weapon against climate change - Nicole Foster - Uni of Adelaide
How to Choose a Major - Bachelor of Science & Bachelor of Science (Advanced)
Просмотров 1963 года назад
How to Choose a Major - Bachelor of Science & Bachelor of Science (Advanced)
Fertiliser Technology Research Centre - University of Adelaide
Просмотров 6133 года назад
Fertiliser Technology Research Centre - University of Adelaide
Insect Investigators - New citizen science project to create a buzz in rural Australian schools
Просмотров 1273 года назад
Insect Investigators - New citizen science project to create a buzz in rural Australian schools
Meet Uni of Adelaide Agricultural Sciences graduate Nigel Dolenec
Просмотров 2733 года назад
Meet Uni of Adelaide Agricultural Sciences graduate Nigel Dolenec
Echidna CSI - Help conserve one of Australia’s most iconic animals - University of Adelaide
Просмотров 2813 года назад
Echidna CSI - Help conserve one of Australia’s most iconic animals - University of Adelaide
Earth Sciences & Critical Minerals - Prof Alan Collins - Uni of Adelaide
Просмотров 2163 года назад
Earth Sciences & Critical Minerals - Prof Alan Collins - Uni of Adelaide
Wildlife Conservation with Drones - Molly Hennekam - Uni of Adelaide
Просмотров 4343 года назад
Wildlife Conservation with Drones - Molly Hennekam - Uni of Adelaide
How do we detect the impact of rising sea levels? - Sulfur isotope research
Просмотров 883 года назад
How do we detect the impact of rising sea levels? - Sulfur isotope research
Meet Biochemistry, Microbiology & Immunology student Ella 🧫 University of Adelaide
Просмотров 4493 года назад
Meet Biochemistry, Microbiology & Immunology student Ella 🧫 University of Adelaide
Meet Chemistry student Joe 🧪 University of Adelaide
Просмотров 5263 года назад
Meet Chemistry student Joe 🧪 University of Adelaide
Meet Ecology, Genetics and Education student Masha 🧬 University of Adelaide
Просмотров 1203 года назад
Meet Ecology, Genetics and Education student Masha 🧬 University of Adelaide
Why does australia look like a rhino on this
DR K F SOCCER S-P-C KNOWS THAT THE EARTH HAS TWO MAJOR 50 YEAR CYCLES 1-CYCLE HAS THE EARTH CLOSED UP THE TECTONIC PLATES FOR ABOUT 25 YEAR PEROID EVERY 50 YEARS 2-CYCLE HAS THE EARTH OPENS UP AND CLOSES UP IN A 25 YEAR PEROID EVERY 50 YEARS THAT SIMPLE 1-CYCLE 1985 TO 2011 2-CYCLE 2012 TO 2035 SO WE ARE HALF WAY THROUGH DR K F SOCCER S-P-C KNOWS THAT SURPRISED YOU DO NOT KNOW THAT????????????
the cambrian peroid actally was at the tons of islands that were china
I'm no flat earther, but.. how is this possible. If this were true then why haven't our lands moved in centuries? There's no way that these massive pieces of land have detached from our earth's core and just floated around the globe as illustrated in this video. When dirt hits water it separates and sinks, and stays there, it doesn't cruise around like a bunch of bumper cars. And why has it stopped? Why aren't we still cruising around changing shape and taking new forms? Why? You go anywhere in the world where water is present and you'll see small changes on land, but it hasn't relocated or moved across the earth since man has been living on it, cool story though. I mean it'll put the kids to sleep if used as a bed time story.
This is a laughable crock of crap.
damn this video is awesome too bad the comments are a shitshow
Well done , can you do past to present , perhaps even future movement in the next 100myr
Hey idiots.. The first land appears from water 40.000.000 years ago was OLYMPUS IN GREECE.. 25.000.000 years ago appears Himalayas.. in China etc..etc..with the rest mountains ⛰️
This is not the real history. Google - Growing earth. And you will see what really shaped our earth as we know it now.
Stupid. Utterly stupid. Way worse than flat earth. So it's all floating earth? Why not get a few ships together and move back or forth a few countries. The is no science (shame!) this is for kids underthree years old.
Apperently florida has always been and always will be.
Just another fantasy, the creation of the corrupt, perverted fallen human mind. Science Fiction! The truth is in the bible in Genesis chapter 10:25. Peleg was born to Eber. Peleg means division because in his days the earth was divided or cleaved!
So. Why doesn't it move anymore? Or does it?
Moves extremely slowly. Only a few millimeters a year I believe
they do though. earthquakes are mostly caused by that movement, which is why some places suffer with earthquakes more often than others
@carol127v ah. Makes sense. Thank you!
This is why I believe in the idea that we've done all this before and the earth resets itself, the stories of floods and catastrophic events that wiped us out many times over. As Graham Hancock says "we are a species with amnesia" there's no way to know but the earth slowly shows us. What's 25,000 years of history that we have compared to one million years? Or 25 millions, such a tiny percentage we know about
Quick , tax the average joe because "climate change"!!!
The earth is 6,000 years old according to the Bible in Gen 1-2. This book is true and historical science.
k
Yes, and it has much more geological "evidence" to back it up than the theories that assume billions of years. Continents may have changed during the great flood, explaining similar fossils being found on different continents, potentially unrelated to tectonic movement at all.
@@lyalld7852 Has a fossil told you that it is 60,000,000 years old. And I know that radiometric dating is unreliable. So do not fool me.
I forgive you that you have deleted my reply. I will leave this place and I hope you will repent to Jesus and we will see each other in heaven.
So indians rly came from south africa... well well well that explains a lot
crazy how alot of these places are literally at the opposite place on earth compared to today during some periods.
The strongest weapon is time..
Amen to that my man
I fw father time
@@benmcmorran2831 To you sir. I may wish you happiest life ahead of you and all your love onese. <3
This is so called north south of map is so much wrong and this is due to both USA and Europe are in norther side Older maps which are made in Asia and Africa are in different orientation
Wow
It's a shame it doesn't go as far back as Columbia Also it's funny to think that the continents only separated just long enough for human beings to come around and think that they were always like that. Had we evolved at any other point in history we could have walked everywhere
You may wonder how scientists can reconstruct ancient landmasses and their location on the world map. Scientists can get a rough estimate based on data from rocks. Scientists can find the age of rocks by looking at radioactive isotopes that have a known half-life in igneous rocks. In addition, the orientation of magnetic minerals can indicate which direction and in which hemisphere an igneous rock formed in since these minerals orient themselves toward the Earth's magnetic poles. Fossils can also be used to get an idea of where a landmass was located in the past. For example, if abundant coniferous plant fossils are found the landmass was likely located in a cold temperate or subpolar latitude, which means it must have been located near either the North or South pole. On the other hand, plants that appear to be tropical in the fossil record would indicate the landmass was closer to the equator. The fossils can be dated by estimating the approximate age of the sedimentary rock the fossils are found in, which involves estimating the age of the surrounding rocks that are above and below the rock layer with the fossils being examined. If the rock layers above and/or below are igneous then a direct age can be found from isotopes in the igneous rock layers and then the rock layer with the fossils can be dated relative to the surrounding igneous rocks, especially if both the layer above and below are igneous. If the rock layers above and/or below the layer with the fossils being examined those other layers can still be estimated if they are part of a known formation, have fossils of species whose ages are already known from previous studies, or can also be estimated if they are above or below igneous rock layers themselves. However, these methods become more difficult the further back in time you go since there are less and less rocks the further back you go (less and less fossils too), so maps depicting the world 1 billion years ago are more likely to be inaccurate compared to a map of the world 100 million years ago.
India was at the place where Greenland is 1BYa
How do we know of this I am curious of the process.
And through all of this, Florida NEVER changed?
Actually, the foundations of Florida were formed 500 million years ago. And at times during the Pleistocene (2 million to 10.000 years ago), sea levels dropped over 300 feet causing Florida to double in size. So Florida definitely didn't stay the same.
Need videos showing complimentary perspectives, e.g. a video of the same thing but centred on the South Pole.
I believe the earth is only 6-8 thousand years old.
Why
@@quantumfall9930Because Bible. Unless he can prove that through research in a ton of different fields ranging from dendrology to astronomy, his comment is so wrong.
@@quantumfall9930 because the worldwide geological and fossil evidence fits the Biblical flood much better. Research on human mitochondrial DNA also supports the Bible account.
@@lyalld7852 Young Earth creationists are convinced all fossils exist because of a single global flood two millennia ago, rejecting centuries of scientific development and knowledge and the fact that the earth is billions of years old (and some even that it’s round and not flat) simply because it is incompatible with their ingrained worldview. The second bit of mitochondrial DNA also doesn’t make any sense at all, as biblical writers would have had no clue what mitochondria even were.
I can’t wait!!!!! Haha
Right & Wrong It's not 100 Million years from now as I saw it heard it seen it in person Rainbows are tectonics Plates Tectonics Plates moving Milehouse Plymouth Rainbows are moving are and Derriford Plymouth United Kingdom 🇬🇧 Tectonics Plates Are moving Antarctic Icebreg melting earth heating up by 1% to 15% Sun Temperature 🌡 Rises Sea Level Rises cities under water 💧 by 2030 2050 2100 1AD I Don't have computer to comfim the data aa scientists 250 Millions years ago 2008 sunmer autumn 2019 march 2020 2024
@0:22 the island called Sudarsana seen in the lunar disc (from the moon?). Two of its parts seem to be a peepul tree, while two others look like a large hare. - Bhishma Parva (Canto) of the Mahabharata, 5th chapter
There were no humans 620 million years before
How we figured this out (albeit with potential faults) is incredible
እስሙክ
The comment section of this video shows who passed geology class and who didn’t.
I know right 😭🙏 "I can't wait for this!!" Honey that's NOT how it works 😁..
I like geography.. but wish I learn that and become scientist.
0:00 Modern continents 0:08 Laurasia and Gondwana 0:12 Pangea 0:22 Pannotia 0:40 Rodinia
im from florida. one of the good things about living here is that we are so easy to spot on the globe. that includes this video. we can track florida all the way back to one billion years ago. awesome video. (waits for florida/florida man jokes)
correction. almost one billion years. it seems to pop out of existence in the end lol
@@buudorobuudronovich1507yes also being from Florida or rather having moved here from New York I noticed that as well. It just kind of popped into existence about 965 million years ago as if to start its unholy dominance on the world
@@buudorobuudronovich1507ya very interesting on that end haha
Does anyone know if there are any videos showing how earth transformed from just water into it's current state?
😭:"Noooo, you can't just guesstimate plate locations past 500MYA!!! There's too much subduction to account for!!" geologists: "haha continental shelves go squiisshh"
what did it look like when it started or first finished forming? what was the original shapes?
This is hypothesis, not a theory and it raises more questions, e.g when a plate is moving --> this way, that happens on the lateral sides of the plates?
they sides of the plates brush past the borders of other plates, scraping along them, a real world example is the San Andreas Fault in California, where the North American plate and the Pacific Ocean plate scrape against each other, which produces the earthquakes in California
These are almost proven correct. Fossil records, rocks and their chemical make-up tells everything.
Nonsense, tectonic plates not there.mitholgy.mountains of trillian years are in same place, science fooling.
oogabooga ufo
Wait what are the green parts?
What are these white lines on the green areas?
How can i apply for postgraduate/ Master studies in veterinary science and How many master programs are there in veterinary sciences.
I love this but am actually looking for a model that moves forward from the present. Specifically the Cascadian subduction zone but global is fine, too.
Tectonic musical chairs.
Why is Rodinia Wrong?
this is the best video, it makes it much easier to see which places move where
I want to study here!!!!
I’ve always heard the wheels of justice turn slowly but this is tectonic time!!!