Unearthing the lush, vibrant past of the world’s largest desert
Study finds 9,000-year-old Arabian lake flooded the Empty Quarter and drove early human movements.
Study finds 9,000-year-old Arabian lake flooded the Empty Quarter and drove early human movements.
The Governor-General has announced the 2025 Australia Day Honours List, with several members of the Griffith University community recognised for...
Leading Griffith University disability researcher and advocate, Professor Elizabeth Kendall, has been honoured with a Member of the Order of...
Griffith Business School has again proved itself to be among the best in the world. With the release of the...
Last Thursday evening marked the final public event of the year for Griffith Asia Institute as it played host to...
Researchers live-stream marine sounds between 30th October and 1st November.
Whales found to roll around and 'play' with clumps of kelp as 'body scrub'.
Griffith University will inspire future students to imagine their future and ‘make it matter’ as it rolls out the red carpet for an expected turnout of more than 6,000 at Open Day 2023, Sunday 13 August.
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.
Much has been written, and rightly so, about the political impact, significance and legacy of Mikhail Gorbachev (1931-2022). However, in addition to his grand and historic roles in changing the shape of Europe and Russian, and bringing to an end a Cold War that threatened to end in nuclear annihilation and mutually assured destruction, Gorbachev was also an environmentalist.