Promotional Material
Type of resources
Keywords
Publication year
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Topics
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2-page A4 flyer advertising a GA workshop in Perth (10 June 2016) on Australia's potential for intrusion-hosted Ni-Cu-PGE mineral deposits.
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2014 Open Day Promotional Material
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National Geographic Information Group (NGIG) capability flyer for the upcoming Surveying & Spatial Sciences Conference 15-19 April here in Canberra.
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Satellite Earth observation data presents unique opportunities for society to respond to major challenges like climate change, food security and sustainable development. But significant technical challenges, including to enable different data streams to be integrated and the sheer volume of the data, are preventing that full value from being realised. The explosion in free, highresolution, global data from next-generation satellites, linked with the potential of new highperformance ICT infrastructure and architectures, positions us to meet this challenge. As the 2016 CEOS Chair, and as a sophisticated user of multiple EO satellite data streams, Australia is proposing that CEOS explore how these new technologies can ensure CEOS agency satellite data can be 'unlocked and put to work'.
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Coastal Marine and Climate Change Group Magnetic Display Panels
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This USB has been produced for promotional purposes and will be handed out (free) at domestic and international conferences. The USB contains a selection of reports, flyers, maps and data. Products are grouped into 4 categories: Reports and Brochures, Mineral Deposits, Surface Geology and Geophysical Data, and Data Visualisation Tool.
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This USB has been produced for promotional puposes and will be handed out (free) at domestic and international conferences. The USB contains a selection of reports, flyers, maps and data. Products are grouped into 4 categories: Records and Brochures, Mineral Deposits, Geophysical Data and Surface Geology.
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media pack with information on new national datasets, map and book releases related to the IGC.
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Calibrated amplitude image of Canberra on 26 September 2011 produced using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data from the German TerraSAR-X satellite.
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The Australian Geoscience Data Cube (AG-DC) Display Poster explains the key concepts of the AG-DC including the use of high performance comuting to analyse data efficiently across time and space by dicing images along a regular set of geographic 1 degree by 1 degree grid-lines to produce tiles which are then stacked according to time.