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Showing 1–8 of 8 results
Advanced filters: Author: Elizabeth J. Tasker Clear advanced filters
  • Data collected from more than 2,000 taxa provide an unparalleled opportunity to quantify how extreme wildfires affect biodiversity, revealing that the largest effects on plants and animals were in areas with frequent or recent past fires and within extensively burnt areas.

    • Don A. Driscoll
    • Kristina J. Macdonald
    • Ryan D. Phillips
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 635, P: 898-905
  • For the first time in 2024, the Astronomical Society of Australia Annual Scientific Meeting was held as an online-first conference, incorporating unprecedented use of immersive spatial venues. This Comment presents findings from this experiment in accessible conferencing and reflects on their implications in the current academic climate.

    • Vanessa A. Moss
    • Glen A. Rees
    • Ron D. Ekers
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 9, P: 11-15
  • In August 2024, the International Astronomical Union General Assembly was held for the first time on the African continent, as a fully hybrid and open-access conference. This opportunity to approach such a traditional and historical event from a new perspective encouraged a spirit of innovation enabled by emerging technologies.

    • Vanessa A. Moss
    • Ramasamy Venugopal
    • Lara van Zyl
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 9, P: 6-10
  • The traditional conference format has been with us for more than a century, and yet the contemporary version remains similar in many ways. Can emerging technologies enable conferencing to evolve? The Future of Meetings community of practice present their findings from bringing virtual reality to three recent conferences.

    • Vanessa A. Moss
    • Glen A. Rees
    • Ron D. Ekers
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 7, P: 1412-1414
  • After the return of Hayabusa from asteroid Itokawa in 2010, the Japanese space agency JAXA developed a plan to investigate how our planet became habitable. The Hayabusa2 spacecraft mission to the asteroid Ryugu is just one part of this exploration that aims to track water and organics throughout our Solar System.

    • Masaki Fujimoto
    • Elizabeth J. Tasker
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 3, P: 284-286