Posted 18 September 2015
Connected Waters Initiative Research Centre students recently showcased their research findings at the 2nd Australian Cotton Research Conference in Toowoomba Queensland on 8-10 September 2015.
Hosted by the Association of Australian Cotton Scientists (AACS), Toowoomba was a natural location for the conference, being close to major Qld and NSW cotton growing districts, and many universities engaged in research related to the industry.
CWI researchers have a long history of investigating rural groundwater management, particularly associated with the cotton industry, and our undergraduate and graduate students are continuing this tradition.
Calvin Li, Charlotte Iverach, Mark Hocking and Muklis Mah presented their findings with great confidence, and all received complimentary feedback on the quality of their presentations and research. They presented on day two in the Natural Resource Management session, chaired by Jane Trindall. More than 40 people attended this well-moderated and engaging session.
The titles of their presentations were:
Calvin Li, Martin Andersen, Bryce Kelly, Gabriel Rau and Andrew McCallum -
The decline and rise of groundwater levels in the Maules Creek Catchment (Upper Namoi): implications for water resource management
Charlotte Iverach, Dioni Cendón, Stuart Hankin, David Lowry, Rebecca Fisher, James France, Euan Nisbet, Andy Baker and Bryce Kelly -
Detecting connectivity between an overlying aquifer and a coal seam gas resource using methane isotopes, dissolved organic carbon and tritium
Mark Hocking, Craig Beverly and Bryce Kelly -
Quantifying the Potential Impact of Abandoned Exploration Wells on Groundwater
Mukhlis Mah and Bryce Kelly -
Impulse Response Groundwater Model of Western Border Rivers Catchment
Full copies of the abstracts are available in the conference booklet, which can be downloaded from: http://www.cottonresearch.org/Program/Conference_Booklet
Professor Andy Baker features in American Water Resources Association ‘Water Resources Impact’, September 2020 edition.
The Connected Waters Initiative (CWI) is pleased to welcome Taylor Coyne to its network as a postgraduate researcher. If you’re engaged in research at a postgraduate level, and you’re interested in joining the CWI network, get in touch! The CWI network includes multidisciplinary researchers across the Schools of Engineering, Sciences, Humanities and Languages and Law.
The Grand Challenge on Rapid Urbanisation will establish Think Deep Australia, led by Dr Marilu Melo Zurita, to explore how we can use our urban underground spaces for community benefit.
On the 21 August 2020, CWI researchers made a submission to the National Water Reform Inquiry, identifying priority areas and making a number of recommendations as to how to achieve a sustainable groundwater future for Australia.
Results published from a research project between the Land Development Department (LDD) Thailand and UNSW has demonstrated how 2-dimensional mapping can be used to understand soil salinity adjacent to a earthen canal in north east Thailand (Khongnawang et al. 2020).