This report is the official account to the government funding body, the Department of Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs of GEMOCís achievements and activities for 1998. It also serves many other purposes as it is the general source, through 1999, of information on GEMOC for a wide range of our end-users; undergraduate and postgraduate students, the mineral exploration industry, the technology manufacturing sector, the scientific community and the general public.
1998 was GEMOCís third year and perhaps most satisfying year with all of our programs flourishing and many coming to fruition in the first stages. GEMOC has been very visible nationally and internationally through 1998 with over 100 presentations at 18 conferences, 55 peer-reviewed publications, and many international visitors and postgraduate exchange programs. It is difficult to choose highlights from the many achievements, but these include the following (as well as the Research highlights in this Report):
The funding climate continues to be difficult in both the university
and mineral exploration sectors but there is well-placed fundamental optimism
in GEMOC. Our University support through the Vice-Chancellor and
all the Executive remains extremely strong. There was a renewed agreement
by Macquarie to honour GEMOCís strategic plan for staff maintenance and
for continuation of GEMOC after the six years of DETYA funding, as well
as continuing resources for infrastructure, laboratory refurbishment, and
funding for research and equipment. Support and interaction from industry
is increasing, especially through leveraged collaborative schemes (eg Macquarie
University and SPIRT).
The first two years of GEMOC were foundation years, building infrastructure, new contacts and conceptual strategies, and ensuring the optimum personnel mix within the resource constraints. The Geology and Geophysics Disciplines were amalgamated in 1998 and under Macquarie Universityís major restructuring for 1999, Geology and Geophysics now form the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences. We have now reached a strong platform from which to implement and extend our programs.
We anticipate an exciting and challenging year in 1999.
Suzanne Y. O'Reilly