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Supplementary Information

Supplementary Information

By Supplementary Information

In this seven-episode series, co-hosts Dr Nathan Jankowski and Dr Kelsie Long speak to seven researchers about their endeavours to understand the natural and cultural history of Australia and its closest neighbours.

Dr Nathan Jankowski is a geologist at the University of Wollongong, on the lands of the Dharawal nation.
Dr Kelsie Long is an archaeological scientist from the Australian National University in Ngunnawal country.

SuppInfo is a podcast from the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage (CABAH).
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Meet the presenters

Supplementary InformationMar 23, 2021

00:00
06:55
Marsupial on the Move with Shimona Kealy
Jun 29, 202136:01
Pollen Potential with Matthew Adeleye

Pollen Potential with Matthew Adeleye

Pollen isn’t just the stuff that gets up your nose during the hayfever season. Pollen, an integral part of plant reproduction, also serves as a time capsule of past environments; by analysing these microscopic marvels, researchers can determine what plants were present in a landscape thousands to millions of years ago. 

In this episode, Matthew Adeleye (@matt_adeleye) from the Australian National University helps us understand the journey of pollen grains – from a plant to being trapped in the mud at the bottom of lakes to the microscope slides examined by palynologists (people who study pollen). By counting and measuring these grains, palynologists like Matthew can discover invaluable information about past landscapes and vegetation.

For more information, go to: http://bit.ly/pollensi 

Got questions? We'll get you answers. Tweet us @SuppInfopod or click here and follow the prompts.


Jun 15, 202130:00
Rainforest Redux with Michael-Shawn Fletcher
Jun 01, 202134:06
Fish for Thought with Ariana Lambrides

Fish for Thought with Ariana Lambrides

In this episode, we talk to Dr Ariana Lambrides about her work pulling together the data on fish remains excavated from archaeological sites all along the Queensland coast since the 1950s. This meta-analysis provides some useful information about diverse fish exploitation along the coast by Indigenous people throughout the Holocene (last ~11,700 years) but highlights the large gaps in data for these regions.

Got a question for any of our guests? We'll get you answers. Send us your questions via Twitter @SuppInfoPod #SuppInfo or click here and follow the prompts.

More information: http://bit.ly/fishforthought



May 18, 202136:10
Pots and Puzzles with Holly Jones-Amin

Pots and Puzzles with Holly Jones-Amin

Do you know what it takes to put together a broken thousand-year-old pot scattered among 20,000 other pieces? This is just another day’s work for Holly Jones-Amin, Senior Objects and Archaeological Conservator at the Grimwade Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation at the University of Melbourne.

In this episode, Holly takes us through the careful reconstruction of the Ruisasi 1 incised pot, excavated from an archaeological site in Caution Bay, Papua New Guinea.

Got a question you'd like us to get answers to? Let us know. We're on Twitter @SuppInfoPod #SuppInfo.

More information: http://bit.ly/potspuzzles


May 04, 202134:35
Rewild the Isles with Matthew Fielding

Rewild the Isles with Matthew Fielding

In the Bass Strait Islands, the removal and eradication of Wedge-tailed Eagles, quolls and Tasmanian devils and the introduction of livestock and invasive predators like cats have brought about drastic declines in native wood bird populations. Could the reintroduction of these native predators help to rebalance this ecosystem? This week we talk to Matthew Fielding about roadkill, ravens, currawongs and the pros and cons of trophic rewilding, a form of ecosystem management where top-level predators are reintroduced, aiming to restore the natural structure of food webs.

For more information, go to: http://bit.ly/rewildtheisles

Got a question you'd like us to get answers to? Let us know. We're on Twitter @SuppInfoPod #SuppInfo.

Apr 20, 202132:06
The Dogma of Dingoes with Kris Helgen

The Dogma of Dingoes with Kris Helgen

Professor Kris Helgen, a mammologist interested in how modern mammals evolved reduces some of the mystery around the dingo, walking us through the evolution of dogs from wolves and the arrival of dingoes in Australia.

Prof Kris Helgen is Chief Scientist and Director of the Australian Museum Research Institute (AMRI) at the Australian Museum. Prof Helgen studies mammals and has documented over 100 previously overlooked species of mammal from the Skywalker hoolock (Hoolock tiaxing) gibbon of southern China to the olinguito (Bassaricyon neblina) a member of the racoon family in the cloud forests of Columbia, Ecuador and the northern Andes.

For more information, go to: https://bit.ly/dogmaofdingoes

Got a question you'd like us to get answers to? Let us know. We're on Twitter @SuppInfoPod #SuppInfo.



Apr 06, 202142:34
Introducing Supplementary Information

Introducing Supplementary Information

Introducing Supplementary Information, a podcast series digging into the research that's revealing new information about Australia's natural and cultural heritage.

Mar 23, 202102:44
Meet the presenters

Meet the presenters

Meet Supplementary Information co-hosts Dr Nathan Jankowski and Dr Kelsie Long who go digging behind the scenes of research at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage (CABAH).

Dr Nathan Jankowski is a geologist at the University of Wollongong node of CABAH.

Dr Kelsie Long is an archaeological scientist at the Australian National University node of CABAH. 

 


Mar 23, 202106:55