The golf-ball-size debris that closed beaches across the Australian city wasn't tar balls as first thought. It was made up of decomposed cooking oils, hair and food waste.
Thousands of mysterious blobs that closed several Sydney beaches last month have been revealed to contain materials “consistent with human generated waste”, scientists at the University of New South ...
A University of New South Wales Sydney study estimates that the near-complete project can contribute around Rs 16,000 crore ...
Thousands of mysterious blobs that closed several Sydney beaches last month have been revealed to contain materials ...
Richard Holden, a professor of economics at the University of New South Wales, said the changes would not ease students' cost ...
LIFELONG learning is crucial for preparing the Philippine work force for the future. This was underscored by experts at the “CanvasCon Philippines 2024”—a yearly event for the education community by ...
A recent survey reveals that smaller Australian universities have higher international graduate employment rates, ...
In an interview with 9News, lead investigator Associate Professor Jon Beves from the University of New South Wales said, ...
New research has revealed the make-up of the mysterious black balls that washed up on Sydney beaches last month.
Students and staff at universities across Sydney are facing a wave of repression for pro-Palestine political views and activism.
The University of South Wales said it was predicting a shortfall of about £20m in 2024-25 and the action it was taking to address this was likely to include some redundancies. In an update last ...
Mysterious black blobs that washed ashore in Sydney a few weeks back are not merely tar balls, as identified earlier. In fact ...