Following Gough Island's seabirds
Gough Island is one of the most important seabird breeding sites in the world. Geolocation Journeys has supported the Fitzpatrick...
Gough Island is one of the most important seabird breeding sites in the world. Geolocation Journeys has supported the Fitzpatrick...
Geolocation Journeys received funding through the Marine, Antarctic and Maritime Research Theme at the University of Tasmania to...
Dr. Annalise Rees showing off Geolocation Journeys at the Depths and Surfaces Conference in Hobart which is supported by the Expert Group...
Geolocation Journeys supports marine conservation and scientific discovery by providing tracking devices (called geolocators) to projects...
Geolocators have helped reveal the foraging strategies of fur seals during the Antarctic winter. Our new paper published this week used a...
Geolocators are miniature tracking devices that record ambient light levels, water temperature and time. The light curve produced over...
For many years researchers at the University of Tasmania's Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) have been tracking Antarctic...
Geolocation Journeys was successfully launched on September 9th to a full house on the Hobart waterfront at the Institute for Marine and...
As human beings we are inherently curious about the world around us. The sciences and the arts both harness this curiosity to research,...
Using ‘retired’ light-level geolocators, marine predator scientists at the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies and artist, Dr....