The golf-ball-size debris that led to beach closures across the Australian city was not tar balls as first thought, but was instead 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 ...
Thousands of mysterious blobs that closed several Sydney beaches last month have been revealed to contain materials ...
Investigations revealed that the blobs were a gross combination of human faeces, cooking oil, chemicals and illicit drugs.
Richard Holden, a professor of economics at the University of New South Wales, said the changes would not ease students' cost ...
Amid ongoing criticism regarding frequent derailments, the Indian Railways has received praise for its dedicated freight ...
Worldwide Search For Olympic Medal Winning Coach To Spearhead Sydney University Performance Centre New South Wales sporting ...
Heat is dangerous at far lower wet bulb temperatures, too. But that 35 Celsius level was absolute, Dr. Huber and Dr. Sherwood ...
Lead investigator Associate Professor Jon Beves from the University of New South Wales described the odour as “worse than anything you’ve ever smelt.” Professor William Alexander Donald noted that the ...
The University of South Wales has been praised for being at the centre of a project which has addressed inequalities in and around Newport.
Students and staff at universities across Sydney are facing a wave of repression for pro-Palestine political views and activism.
FOUL-SMELLING black balls have been spotted on multiple Australian beaches – and experts are baffled as to where they came from. The black spheres have been putting off scientists with their ...