On a new episode of Monash University’s ‘What Happens Next?’ podcast, we examine whether mining and sustainability can go hand-in-hand as we transition to a decarbonised future,
On a new episode of Monash University's "What Happens Next?" podcast, learn about efforts to preserve languages, and how our words can build a more inclusive society.
A five-million-year-old fossil that sat in a Melbourne museum for more than a century has rewritten the history of turtles in prehistoric Australia’s tropical climate.
Monash University Architect Shelley Penn AM’s commitment is to enrich society by refining the built environment.
Some snakes have tough, blunt fangs for cracking crabs, while others have sharp needles for getting a grip on mice.
A new study shows Palorchestes azael had unique elbows unlike any other mammal – which may have contributed to its extinction.
Contemporary life is being breathed into First Peoples stories across generations, under the watch of Yorta Yorta woman Kimberley Moulton.
The “Tasmanian tiger” was hunted to extinction based on its perceived size as a predator big enough to take sheep, but new research shows it weighed just 16.7kg.
During the COVID-19 crisis, we need the arts more than ever to feel connected, but it's also exposed the fragility of the sector.
A rare fossil tooth discovery has shed light on an extinct group of seals from Australia’s deep past.
Around the world, populist-nationalist politicians are stoking anti-immigration sentiment through scaremongering.
Protesters have urged a boycott of Sydney's Real Bodies exhibition over claims that it could be displaying remains of executed Chinese political prisoners.
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