One billionaire has made a strikingly optimistic investment, banking on an invention which does not yet exist.

Published on: EngineeringCareer

There has been some word on the public-private arrangement planned for the new $1.8 billion Sunshine Coast University Hospital.

Published on: EducationCareer

Trials are underway in Melbourne of a possible new blood test for mothers, which can check for changing oxygen levels in utero.

Published on: HealthCareer

A GP has been charged and will now have to give a consent form to all his patients, after falsely claiming he could cure cancer with green tea.

Published on: ExecutiveCareer

Researchers are working on a way to re-enable the creation of a form of foetal haemoglobin, which could lead to a new therapy for sickle cell disease (SCD).

Published on: HealthCareer

A rose by any other name would smell just as sweet, but new findings suggest a rose smelled by any other nose would actually smell quite different.

Published on: HealthCareer

An award has been given for a research project looking at how new jobs, the journey to work and the meaning of home play a role for men adjusting to being fired.

Published on: TradesCareer

Crossroads are common on the path of life and everyone has different motivations for the direction they choose, but a new study suggests many of our choices are made by random fluctuations in the brain.

Published on: EducationCareer

One of the oldest challenges in the teaching profession is keeping students interested in maths and science - this is as true in Australian schools as it is in German ones, according to researchers in a new study aimed at boosting kids’ interest in the art of arithmetic.

Published on: TradesCareer

Schools today are quick to roll-out the tablet PCs in the hope of finding a key to unlock new levels of interest and engagement, but a new study has asked whether the push for hand-held tech in the classroom is a help or hindrance.

Published on: EducationCareer

Anyone wishing to re-enact the favourite past time of Scrooge McDuck may soon get their chance, with a Swiss bank auctioning-off a pile of 8 million coins.

Published on: TradesCareer

Everybody knows someone with the memory of a goldfish or the grace of a boar, but it is important to note that we are animals too – and for the most part not that much smarter than our biological neighbours.

Published on: GreenCareer

Some people are capable of incredible feats of perseverance and motivations, while others give up as soon as the going looks tough – but what if a switch in the brain could be flipped, causing an individual to anticipate a challenge and possess a strong motivation to overcome it.

Published on: EducationCareer

Anti-trust regulators have fined six big banks A$2.5 billion for their role in rigging international interest rates, with an ongoing investigation to shine a sliver of light on the unknown mechanisms underlying global economies.

Published on: TradesCareer

Indigenous Affairs Minister Nigel Scullion has put the future of the National Congress of Australia's First Peoples up for review.

Published on: TradesCareer

The Public Service Commission has released its State of the Service Report for 2013, and it contains some interesting revelations, big criticisms and places for improvement.

The Coalition Government and the Greens party have agreed on something, for what may be the first and last time.

Published on: GreenCareer

Many councils and ratepayers may soon get up to half their money back, after the collapse of merchant bank Lehman Brothers short-changed them to the tune of millions.

Published on: ExecutiveCareer

One regional community has started a push to boost local food production, hoping to plump the supply of fresh produce for the cyclone season.

Published on: GreenCareer

The Mayor of the Gold Coast has rejected allegations he has a conflict of interest in a proposed high-rise development.

Published on: TradesCareer

Criticisms are being laid at the Victorian Coalition government’s efforts to cut costs, which have seen 4500 full-time public servants sacked while $145 million was spent on contractors to fill the gaps.

Published on: TradesCareer

Feature Story

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For the last few weeks we have been bogged down in the very Earthly matters of royalty, budgets, politics, humanity and celebrity - all good prompts to look away, up into the infinite. 

Health authorities, politicians and scientists have been slowly introducing the world to the concept of ‘One Health’ - an all-inclusive approach to health that extends from the human body right through the global environment. 

This year’s Nobel Prizes honour discoveries that unwind our notion of truth, our understanding of ourselves and the human story, the complexities of cells and the very basics of the universe. 

XENOTRANSPLANTATION - sounds like something that would happen to an ill-fated crew member in Star Trek, but it is also a technical term for using non-human parts to treat or enhance our own bodies. 

Even though many of us have been forced indoors, the COVID-19 crisis is eroding our privacy.

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