Published:20 September 2022
At Geoscience Australia we are committed to best practice in land, air and marine access and protecting Australia's cultural heritage and environment. As we prepare to undertake fieldwork activities we seek to establish mutually respectful and transparent relationships by engaging and informing as many stakeholders as possible about our proposed activities. Stakeholders may include, state and territory government partners, local communities, landholders, land managers, Native Title holders, Traditional Owners and Custodians.
With advances in technology we are able to study Australia's geology to great depths with minimal or no ground disturbance using different techniques. Each technique measures different properties below the surface of the earth, to different depths. These techniques can be difficult to explain and therefore be understood by everyone. To help improve people's understanding, and to support informed decision making, Geoscience Australia has developed a series of short (1-2 minute) 2D animations on the various field activity techniques.
The animations are part of the Exploring for the Future program's Geoscience Knowledge Sharing project.
The current suite of animations provide easy to understand explanations of airborne and ground survey techniques, including:
The animations are designed for non-technical audiences. They explain the fieldwork techniques, what the equipment looks like, how it works and what it is measuring, what the data looks like, and how it is used.
You can view the series of fieldwork techniques animations on our YouTube channel.
In recognition of the diversity of our stakeholders some animations are available in a range of community languages commonly spoken in Exploring for the Future project areas, including the First Nations Australians' languages (see the links below to our YouTube playlists for translated animations):
More translations are currently in development.