Search results for: snow

Showing 1 - 10 of 43 results

5 September 2012

End of Australian snow in sight

Researchers have found Australian skiers may need to head overseas in search of higher ground thanks to global warming. Griffith’s...

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16 November 2023

Cass makes a big splash at Griffith Sports Blues Awards

Elite athlete and Bachelor of Psychology student, Cassiel Rousseau, has capped off a stunning 12 months by being named the recipient of the Most Outstanding Sporting Achievement at the University's annual Blues Awards for Sporting Excellence

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11 July 2023
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25 October 2022

Between different worlds

Antarctica is both a physical locality and an imaginary possibility – as a pivot around which the world turns, it has proven historically to be a space where human ideas of exploration, investigation and fantasy have played out.

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22 October 2022

Central Asia identified as key route for early human migration

Findings indicate the desert zones of Central Asia may have served as key areas for early hominin dispersals into Eurasia.

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29 September 2022

Griffith filmmaker selected for prestigious Venice festival

  Associate Professor Peter Hedegus has been selected to premier his film, Sorella’s Story to the world at the prestigious...

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11 July 2022
Lakefield National Park, Cape York

Uncovering the changing rhythms of rivers and people

Rivers follow rhythmic changes; they flow with the seasons and respond to longer climatic shifts and often to the actions of people. In turn, people and their societies are shaped by the rhythm of rivers. This relationship where both nature and people’s social habits are synchronized with the rise and fall of river water over time is referred to as river rhythmicity, in a new paper that describes the important implications of this idea for river conservation and water management.

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10 June 2021
Grace Tame

In Conversation with Grace Tame

In conversation with Kerry O’Brien, Grace explored these complex and personal issues and how they go to the heart of power relations. Listening begets action. This is a conversation not to be missed.

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9 June 2021
Cotter Dam

Can Australia be drought-proofed?

Water is critical to life and jobs, and large infrastructure projects tend to sway voters at the polling booth. Paired together, it’s easy to understand why the New Bradfield Scheme remains an issue for Queensland and Australia.

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31 May 2021
Bruce Pascoe

In Conversation with Professor Bruce Pascoe​

In this conversation, renowned journalist Kerry O’Brien and celebrated Indigenous author Professor Bruce Pascoe explored the way Bruce’s critically acclaimed book Dark Emu: Aboriginal Australia and the birth of Agriculture challenges conventional thinking about the First Australians as hunter gatherers.

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