Australian Coral Reef Society Conference 2024

ACRS24 - We welcome ACRS members and all coral reef scientists, practitioners and enthusiasts to participate in our 2024 annual meeting.

Location: University of Western Australia Campus, UWA Club, Perth

Dates: 6th-8th May 2024.

Abstract submission now open!

We are delighted to open abstract submissions for the 2024 ACRS conference in Perth, WA. Abstracts close 30th January 2024.

Speakers who submitted an abstract will be notified whether their abstract has been accepted and/or type of presentation awarded in early February.

Reef Resilience Symposium 2024

Join us for the most important conference on reefs in 2024

As the world races to slow global heating by reducing carbon emissions, coral reefs around the world are already struggling to cope with the rate of environmental change. Ignoring their decline is not an option. How can we best support the resilience of these ecosystems, and the communities that depend on them, in the coming decades?

Save the date 16-18 April, 2024

Pre-conference workshops on Monday, 15 April

Reef field trips on Friday, 19 April

Community day on Saturday, 20 April

Locate Conference - Registrations and Abstract Submissions Now Open

ABSTRACT, WORKSHOP & GRANT SUBMISSIONS NOW OPEN

The Geospatial Council of Australia are excited to announce that abstract, workshop and grant submissions for the Locate24 Conference are officially open.

You are encouraged to put forward your best ideas for the enjoyment of our diverse range of delegates including geospatial professionals, industry and government representatives, our research community, and those within education and training.

EARLY-BIRD REGISTRATIONS AVAILABLE UNTIL MONDAY 4TH MARCH

Registration for the Locate24 Conference is officially open! Come and join us in Sydney at Australia’s premier geospatial conference where you will have an opportunity to network with national and international colleagues, have direct access to industry and subject matter experts, see the newest technology, and be introduced to the newest ideas in the geospatial sector.

Register before 5pm AEDT on Monday the 4th of March to ensure you receive the early-bird discount.

We’re pleased to announce that due to the valuable feedback received from past delegates, there has been a significant decrease in registration fees, making this premier geospatial event even more accessible to professionals, enthusiasts, and students alike.

XPRIZE Wildfire Challenge

The $11M XPRIZE Wildfire is a 4-year competition to innovate firefighting technologies that will end destructive wildfires.

THE CHALLENGE

Globally, Extreme Wildfire Events (EWEs) are becoming more frequent. EWEs burn bigger, at a higher intensity, and can quickly sprawl out of control. While they represent only around 3% of all wildfires, EWEs account for 80% of total associated fire-damages and are increasingly contributing to global greenhouse gas emissions and worsening health impacts from pollutants.

These large and destructive wildfires wreak havoc on ecosystems worldwide, especially in the expanding Wildland-Urban Interface, where homes, businesses, and major infrastructure are most at risk, and where wildfire control and suppression activities are increasingly outperformed.

HOW TO WIN

In the Autonomous Wildfire Response track, teams have 10 minutes to autonomously detect and suppress a high-risk fire in a 1000 km2, environmentally challenging area, leaving any decoy fires untouched.

In the Space-Based Wildfire Detection & Intelligence track, teams will have one minute to accurately detect all fires across a landscape larger than entire states or countries, and 10 minutes to precisely characterize and report data with the least false positives to two ground stations.

The $1M Lockheed Martin Accurate Detection Intelligence Bonus Prize incentivizes innovations in accurate and precise detection of wildfires.

EMIT - Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigation

The effects of airborne dust go beyond congesting noses, irritating lungs, and covering windshields with a gritty film.  Research has shown that dust can fertilize rainforests and algae blooms while also affecting the rate at which snow melts, and there is more to learn about how dust might affect climate and weather.  NASA’s Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigation (EMIT) mission aims to advance climate researchers’ understanding of those effects.

Managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), EMIT is providing significantly more detail than previously available about the composition and colour of surface minerals in the regions of the planet that produce the most dust.  Researchers will use this information to refine climate models, which currently can account for the temperature effects of atmospheric dust.

All of EMIT’s currently processed data products are available through the Land Processes Distributed Active Archive Center. More than 18,000 EMIT image cube data sets from six continents have been delivered to date.  The planned EMIT prime mission lifetime is one year.

In February, three informative workshops were held to showcase how to find, access, and work with EMIT radiance and reflectance data products:

  • Workshop 1 - Intro to EMIT Mission and Data

  • Workshop 2 - Working with EMIT Data: Basics

  • Workshop 3 - Working with EMIT Data: Advanced

The recordings for all workshops are available from the link below.