The recent Living Laboratories workshop on Emerging Technologies in Environmental Monitoring was hosted jointly by ICE WaRM, DWLBC, the Water Industry Alliance and Solution City.
More details on the workshop can be found on the Living Laboratories website. You can subscribe to the Living Laboratories RSS feed to download podcasts of the technical presentations from this and other Living Laboratories workshops.
Speakers at the event were (hyperlinks are to podcasts of each presentation):
- Richard Hopkins, ICE WaRM: Welcome and introduction to Living Laboratories
- Glen Scholz, DWLBC: Challenges in environmental monitoring
- Andrew Skinner, MEA: Environmental Measurements: lessons from 25 years in the Australian Bush
- Tanya Monro, University of Adelaide: Fibre optics for environmental monitoring
- Alfio Grasso, University of Adelaide: RFID and Sensor Networks for Rural Environments
- Anthon van den Hengel, University of Adelaide: Photosynth and visualization technologies
- Sandra Leigh, SARDI: Fish passage monitoring
- Jim Rowe, SRA Information Technology: Simultaneous management of large amounts of data from a variety of monitoring programs
- Peter Toome, Adcon Telemtry Australia: How Convergence is changing the face of environmental monitoring
- Jeremy Austin, University of Adelaide: Using genetic traces to monitor environmental processes
- Maylene Loo, SARDI: PCR techniques as an indicator of organic enrichment, and marine pests, in marine systems
- Chris Saint, AWQC: The Environmental Laboratory of the Future
Posted by Paul Dalby, 14 February 2007
Tags: convergence, dwlbc, environmental, fibre optic, fish, genetic traces, ice warm, icewarm, living laboratory, monitoring, nrm, paul dalby, pcr, photosynth, rfid, solution city, water, water industry alliance