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The
Great Australian Byte
The Newsletter of the Australian Geoscience Information Association (Inc)
April 2013, Volume 14 Part 1 ISSN 1325–3700
7.30am, Tuesday 11th June 2013
Bocelli’s Espresso, Forrest Place Perth
RSVP Friday 7th June to [email protected]
Click here for Bocelli’s Espresso location and review
CONTENTS AGIA News ................................................................................................. 2 AGIA Easter Breakfast & Website Launch ....................................................... 2 Geoscience Information 101 Seminar ............................................................. 4 2013 AGLTN Workshop Wrap-Up ................................................................... 5 USGS National Geologic Map Database .......................................................... 6 AGIA Christmas Breakfast 2012 .................................................................... 8 AGIA’s New Life Member – Kerry Smith .......................................................... 9 National Rock Garden ................................................................................ 11 Articles & Presentations of Interest .............................................................. 12 Upcoming AGIA Events .............................................................................. 13 Upcoming Conferences and Symposia .......................................................... 13 Web Sites & Mailing Lists of Interest ............................................................ 13 Australian Geoscience Information Association Inc. National Committee 2012–13
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AGIA is a member of the Australian Geoscience Council
Join us at the
AGIA Winter Warmer
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AGIA NEWS
AGIA WEBSITE 2ND EDITION
The new AGIA website was officially launched at the Easter Breakfast on 26th
March 2013. See the full article on page 3.
® AGIA GROUP DISCUSSIONS
Request for feedback on commonly used commercial databases
AIG geocientist employment survey
GSIS information
Library reboot
Do-it-yourself research data management kit
Mobility strategies infographic
Science @ Risk: Toward a national strategy for preserving online science
"How to maximize the value of unstructured material - The resurgence of
the librarian in digital form as a knowledge and learning source"... paper
at Houston PPDM Symposium
SharePoint for library catalogues – presentation link
AGIA sponsorship of the Australian Tertiary Geoscience Teaching
Workshop
ANDS guide to digital file formats
Data management for librarians - Mendeley Group
Research data curation bibliography
THE AGIA OCCASIONAL PAPER SERIES
The AGIA National Committee is bringing the AGIA Occasional Paper series into
the digital age. There are currently seven papers in the series (published between
1985 and 1993) and they cover topics such as guidelines for bibliographic
databases, map workshops and directories of geoscience information resources.
The papers will be scanned (with optical character recognition) and made
available via the AGIA website on the AGIA Publications page. The National
Committee hopes this will inspire AGIA’s members to consider writing some new
papers for the series.
FROM THE NEWSLETTER EDITOR
Thank you to Maree Corkeron for providing the GAB with an informative wrap-up
of the AGLTN workshop held in January this year.
In the spirit of international collaboration, Kerry Smith contributed an article to
the American Geoscience Information Society’s (GSIS) December newsletter,
which can be viewed here. The President of the GSIS - Linda Zellmer - has kindly
reciprocated and contributed a review of the United States Geological Survey’s
(USGS) National Geologic Map Database which can be found on page 7. The
review is due to be published in the Spring, 2013 GSIS Newsletter.
As always, articles for the GAB are warmly received!
Thanks, and happy reading!
Vanessa Johnson
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AGIA EASTER BREAKFAST & WEBSITE LAUNCH
Fourteen dedicated AGIA members and their guests braved a wet and windy
Perth morning to attend the Easter Breakfast & Website Launch on 26th March. It
was difficult to judge the greatest draw card: the opportunity to network, the
chance to see inside the much talked about new BHP Billiton building, or the
Easter eggs! A big thank you goes to Liz Amann for organising the wonderful
venue and breakfast.
AGIA Easter Breakfast 2013
Discussion was lively and wide-ranging, encompassing topics such as:
managing information with non-specialist applications – the move away
from specialised library databases and the challenges of ensuring
preservation of and access to information & data through applications such
as SharePoint;
the vulnerability of information services & information professionals –
playing the corporate political game to secure your position;
the struggle of managing added information management responsibilities
without additional resources; and
the impact of the different approaches of Records Managers and Librarians
toward information: Records Managers can be more focused on the
preservation of documents, whereas Librarians are strongly driven by
providing access for their clients.
There was a good deal of discussion around locating geoscience information, both
through open access sources and commercial databases. There was a positive
response to the new Databases page on the AGIA website, which contains access
sites and links to online databases containing publicly available data in Australia
and nearby regions. Members called for this page to be expanded to include
useful databases which are available via subscription or pay-per-view. Suggested
databases include:
American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) Datapages –
includes pay per view functionality;
Geofacets – includes ability to search geospatially;
Georef – good one stop shop, although it can be difficult to track down
copies of references;
GeoscienceWorld – includes ability to search geospatially, however licence
requires that subscription to Georef is maintained simultaneously;
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Lyell Collection – includes pay per view functionality;
OnePetro – includes pay per view functionality;
Petroleum Abstracts – includes overlap with Georef, but is linked to a
fabulous document delivery service at the University of Tulsa; and
ScienceDirect – includes pay per view functionality.
AGIA is seeking feedback from its members about databases which they
commonly use for inclusion on the website’s Databases page. Please send your
suggestions to [email protected] or join the LinkedIn discussion thread.
GEOSCIENCE INFORMATION 101 SEMINAR
Attendees at the Easter Breakfast were asked to provide feedback on topics they
would like to be addressed in the upcoming Geoscience Information 101 Seminar,
which is tentatively scheduled for October 2013. Initial feedback indicates that
members are very interested in learning about geoscience data and information
resources, and how best to use them. The full sweep of suggestions probably
goes beyond what can be covered in one seminar, and so far includes:
geoscience information & data resources - finding, searching
o databases
o websites
o open access resources
o government repositories
o aggregated searches
o GIS interfaces, mapping;
creating and maintaining trusted data
o data quality
o data remediation
o data governance
o data standards
o successful data management initiatives – examples;
searching for information & data;
knowledge management;
roles in information management;
permissions management;
using Sharepoint in workflows;
new trends & industry directions;
NOPTA – where are they at?
cataloguing seismic data;
information services – how to ensure survival in the corporate sector; and
another Core Library visit.
The National Committee will be preparing a program for the seminar at the next
committee meeting on 21st May 2013. Members are encouraged to
contact the committee with suggestions of potential speakers for the
topics suggested.
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2013 AGLTN WORKSHOP WRAP-UP
SUCCESSFUL 2ND MEETING FOR THE NEW TERTIARY GEOSCIENCE
TEACHERS’ NETWORK, TOWNSVILLE, JANUARY 2013
Australian geoscience university educators met for the second time at a workshop
held at James Cook University, Townsville, in January this year. The meeting has
become an annual event for the new Australasian University Geoscience
Educators Network (AUGEN), a group set up in late 2011 early 2012. The network
aims to provide a mechanism for connection and interaction between geoscience
academics involved in tertiary teaching in the Australasian region. In recognition
of the similar challenges and opportunities we all experience despite our different
locations, the network hopes to encourage collegial exchange and sharing of
teaching and learning ideas through regular discussion and a soon to be
established website. The Australian Geoscience Information Association has
provided generous financial support for running both the 2012 and 2013
meetings.
Themes for discussion in 2013 were derived from current topics of interest
identified by participants. Four broad topics of discussion included Flexible
Learning, Innovative Teaching, Discipline Expertise and Industry Needs, and
Fieldwork Challenges. Lively discussion followed presentations on the first day
addressing the use of Information Technology in curriculum delivery. Examples of
the integration of web-based software and resources such as Google Earth, World
Wind, Integrated Data Viewer and ArcGIS Explorer into practical exercises and
formative assessment for students were presented. The emergence of mass
delivery of curriculum via the internet using programs such as MOOCs (massive
open online courses) was a topic for much discussion about the future role of
‘lecturers’ and indeed universities in tertiary education delivery.
The second day addressed the sometimes-disconnected relationship between
university teaching outcomes for students and industry perceptions of, and need
for, good graduate qualities as new geoscientists enter the work force. The
dearth of discipline expertise in teaching areas such as geophysics and coal
geology was highlighted. One example of an industry/university collaboration in
course delivery as a possible solution was presented. The topic of professional
accreditation in geosciences in Australia and the role academics should be playing
in consideration (and ultimately implementation) of accreditation was also
discussed. This is an area Australian academics have not been engaged in to a
large extent in the past but probably should be considering more seriously at both
school and faculty level.
One significant outcome of this meeting was the recognition that Australia’s
geoscience professional bodies are deeply interested in geoscience teaching in our
universities and how we as educators will impact the future of geoscience in this
country. The network participants were greatly appreciative of the financial
support given by groups such as AGIA to facilitate a meeting such as this. As co-
conveyor of the 2013 meeting I was pleased with the positive feedback from
participants at the conclusion of the meeting. There was an overwhelming view
that a face-face forum of this kind with much opportunity for discussion was of
great value. There seemed to be positive air of enthusiasm with which
participants headed into the start of semester 1 for 2013 that bodes well for the
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continuation and development of this network. Future activities for this year
include development of a web presence for the network and preparation for the
next meeting in 2014, to be hosted at QUT, Brisbane. If you would like more
information on the network or to be added to the mailing list, contacts are listed
below.
Maree Corkeron
USGS NATIONAL GEOLOGIC MAP DATABASE
This article comes to AGIA from the President of the GSIS, Linda Zellmer. The
review is due to be published in the Spring, 2013 GSIS Newsletter.
The United States Geological Survey recently redesigned the National Geologic
Map Database (http://ngmdb.usgs.gov/ngmdb/ngmdb_home.html). The main
site contains links to four different resources. The Map Catalog is an index to
published geologic maps
throughout the United
States. Stratigraphy
provides access to
GeoLex, also known as
the Geologic Names
Lexicon, an index to
information on named
geologic rock units in
North America. MapView
is a map interface to
geologic maps in the
Map Catalog. Finally,
Mapping in Progress
provides information on
mapping work being
done through the
National Cooperative
Geologic Mapping
Program.
The newly redesigned Map Catalog is a free index to maps and geospatial data
related to the geological sciences. It is a cooperative project of the Association of
American State Geologists and the United States Geological Survey (USGS) that
indexes maps and geospatial data on geology, geophysics, marine geology,
geologic resources and hazards for the U.S. and its Territories published from the
1880s to the present. The Catalog can be searched to find maps of a specific
location by using a pull-down menu to select a state and county, entering
keyword place names, or using a map to zoom in on an area of interest. The
number of maps for that area is shown in a search count box at the upper right
side of the page. Users can narrow the search topic by using pull-down menus in
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the Theme area of the site. When all selections have been made, results are
retrieved by clicking the “Search” button. Results, which are displayed 100 at a
time from large to small scale, include a list of maps, both separately published
sheet maps and maps that were published in the pockets of US and state
geological survey publications. The system also provides information on and links
to geology related geospatial data on the area and topic of interest and scanned
geologic maps. These are denoted by a disk and an arrow. Once a map for an
area is identified users can view digital maps online or determine whether they
are available through the USGS Store. People using standard monitors can only
view parts of a map, not the entire map.
In using the new site, I found two problems. The old site directed users to
Regional Depositories to obtain maps; the new site no longer mentions that these
maps and publications might be available in Libraries. The other problem is that
the old site was more forgiving; results of a search on my home county used to
include the USGS Folios in the area, but the new site does not.
The other major part of the National Geologic Map Database is the Stratigraphy
section, which includes the Geologic Names Lexicon or GeoLex
(http://ngmdb.usgs.gov/Geolex/). GeoLex, which is a free index to publications
about named geologic rock units in North America, is the online equivalent of the
print Lexicon of North American Geology. Most non-geologists are not aware that
there are rules for describing and naming geologic units (the North American
Stratigraphic Code, which is linked to the GeoLex site), just as there are rules for
naming and describing animals, plants, fossils, planets and microbes. People who
are researching a particular geologic unit sometimes need to find all of the
information about a unit, such as when it was originally named and described, the
location of the original type exposure and changes that have been made to its
extent or age. GeoLex provides just this information. It includes entries on over
16,000 geologic units (75% of all of the units) in the United States, and links to
the lexicons for Canada and Mexico. GeoLex can be used to search for information
on a rock unit by its name, age or the author of an article that described the unit.
GeoLex provides information on a unit’s age, location, extent (areal distribution),
type locality (where it was first recognized and described) and history. The initial
Unit Name History display provides a brief description about the content of each
publication, with the word History hyperlinked. Clicking on this link connects users
to a more extensive summary of the naming and revision history of the rock unit,
which includes full citations to and a brief summary of each publication.
Although some of the information in GeoLex is available in GeoRef, results in
GeoLex are much more focused. A GeoRef search may yield hundreds of results
on the rock unit, but may also miss publications indexed in GeoLex because the
unit name may not have been used as an indexing term in GeoRef. The GeoLex
search provides more focused search results on the naming and description of the
rock unit in a particular area.
The National Geologic Map Database and GeoLex are both essential resources for
research in the earth sciences. They would be especially useful for people writing
papers on a specific location, such as the geology, hydrology or natural resources
of a town or county.
Linda Zellmer, Western Illinois University
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AGIA CHRISTMAS BREAKFAST 2012
The AGIA Christmas
Breakfast moved to the
western end of Perth City in
2012. As you can see from
the photos, members
looked resplendent in their
red Xmas hats. The
highlight of the breakfast
was the induction of a new
AGIA Life Member, Kerry
Smith, who has worked
tirelessly for AGIA since
1983. You can read more
about Kerry on the next
page.
Photographs supplied by Kerry
Smith.
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AGIA’S NEW LIFE MEMBER – KERRY SMITH
PRACTITIONER, EDUCATOR, RESEARCHER, ADVOCATE, MENTOR
It was with great pleasure that Kerry
Smith was welcomed as AGIA’s
newest life member at the 2012
Christmas Breakfast. Kerry is a long-
standing member of AGIA, joining the
Association in 1983, and has served
on the committee in a variety of
roles: she established AGIA (WA) and
was its Founding President from June
1984 - 1986, and since then has been
involved both at the Branch and
national level, most recently as
Membership Secretary.
Kerry developed a passion for geoscience information while working as a new
librarian from June 1981 to March 1987, first for Bob Hewitt’s Australian Mineral
Ventures (AMV) Library and later for companies under Bob’s directorship in West
Perth. Why geoscience? Being married to an enthusiastic geologist may have
provided some small inspiration as the photos below of Kerry as his field assistant
when “courting” and on their “honeymoon” with their little Honda field vehicle in
1965-66 show.
Above: Kerry hammering for fossils at Long Reef & in the field with Ray & the little Honda
In 1991 Kerry joined the Information Studies Department at Curtin University,
teaching in areas of library and information services management, knowledge
management and auditing, information policy and special librarianship. In her
early days at Curtin University she ran workshops on geoscience information
management and also on one person librarianship. During this time Kerry was
awarded the Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA) Special
Libraries Section (WA Group) Special Librarian of the Year. Kerry went on to
become Head, Deputy Head, and Acting Head of various areas including the
Department from June 1999, and retired as Head of the Department of
Information Studies at the end of 2012.
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Kerry has been actively engaged in
research throughout her career. Kerry’s
projects reflect her interest in
geoscience information, from her
Master’s research project: The influence
of computer technology on the
geological map for the Australian
geoscience community: an information
policy investigation; her PhD thesis
(2004) Performance measurement of
Australian geoscientific minerals
researchers in the changing funding
regimes, through to her most recent
project Access to geoscience
information: a tragedy of the
commons? (2007, ongoing).
In June 1996 Kerry took on the position of editor-in-chief of the electronic journal
LIBRES, an open access refereed international journal in library and information
studies research, and recently has managed the RIC, a virtual commons for those
with an interest in Researching the Information Commons which can be
represented in many ways, including: information in the public domain (hence her
interest in the e-journal LIBRES), information re-use, enabling access to public
information, and the role of the publicly accessible library.
Kerry has committed herself enthusiastically to a range of professional
associations. Her many years of service to the Australian Library and Information
Association as a member of its General Council from 1992 and then its President
in 1997 has been acknowledged through the award of Fellowship of ALIA in 2002
(for outstanding contributions to the Association), and the ALIA Silver Pin in 2003
(for 5 years or more of voluntary contribution and service as ALIA
representative). More recently she convened the ALIA Research Committee
(2005-2010). Kerry has also contributed to the library profession at an
international level through the International Federation of Library Associations
and Institutions (IFLA) attending her first IFLA conference in Copenhagen, as
ALIA President, in 1997. She is currently Secretary of the Education and Training
Section of IFLA and will be stepping down from this position at the IFLA 2013
Singapore conference.
Kerry retired from Curtin University at the end of 2012, but her retirement looks
like it will be a busy one. Her commitment to AGIA as Membership Secretary
continues, as does her engagement with ALIA. And there will also be time for
some of her other passions – the Wildflower Society of WA, growing WA native
flora, and importantly her grandchildren.
You can read more about Kerry here:
Kerry Smith Retires, Incite January/February 2013, 34(1/2), pp. 12-13
http://www.alia.org.au/publishing/incite/2013/01-02/de/
Dr Kerry Smith, Curtin University, Humanities School of Media, Culture and
Creative Arts Staff
http://humanities.curtin.edu.au/schools/MCCA/staff.cfm/K.Smith
Photographs for this article supplied by Kerry Smith
Above: Kerry on Cliefdon Outcrop
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NATIONAL ROCK GARDEN
Australia’s geology has been a major source of our economic
prosperity for over two hundred years, and the current resources boom
looks set to continue. However, geology is more than just mining and
resources, it underlies the landscapes, history and culture of our
nation.
The National Rock Garden is a tribute to this geological legacy,
displaying rock specimens from across the continent in a single
location in the nation’s capital city, Canberra.
http://www.nationalrockgarden.org.au/about-us/vision/
Work progresses on the National Rock Garden (NRG) in Canberra, with ANU
pledging $100,000 toward the project, and eight rocks scheduled to be on site for
the inauguration ceremony on 13th October 2013.
Chair of the NRG Steering Committee, Professor Brad Pillans, was pleased to
announce that the NRG “have engaged the well-known landscape architects,
Taylor Cullity Lethlean (TCL) to do our master plan for release at the inauguration
ceremony on 13th October. TCL is well known for some impressive landscape
design projects, such as the National Arboretum in Canberra and the Australian
Garden at Cranbourne in Melbourne, and we are confident that they will produce
an NRG master plan with a real wow factor”.
Find out more about the NRG here
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ARTICLES & PRESENTATIONS OF INTEREST
How to maximize the value of Unstructured Material - The Resurgence of The Librarian in Digital Form as a Knowledge and Learning Source - A paper
presented at the PPDM 2013 Houston Data Management Symposium Conference,
March 2013, by Dirk Adams and Volker Hirsinger, Petrosys USA Inc., Houston,
Texas Robert Winsloe, Digital Earth Inc., London, UK Back in February Volker Hirsinger of Petrosys requested anecdotal contributions
from AGIA members which might be of interest to use in conjunction with a paper
he was co-authoring for the Houston PPDM Symposium. Volker indicated that the
authors are likely to develop the paper for presentation at the PPDM conference
scheduled for Perth in August 2013.
Abstract With over 100 years of a largely profitable history, the E&P industry has accumulated a wealth of knowledge in a range of human readable formats. The keys to a better understanding of subsurface geology, reservoir behaviours, petroleum economics and many other aspects of the exploitation of energy resources are often locked into paper
reports, tables, charts and maps. And although an increasing amount of this historical and largely unstructured information is now being transformed from paper to digital forms, it is primarily with the aim of ensuring long term retention and reducing storage and distribution costs. Similar arguments are made for submission of present day reports in
digital form. Practical extraction of knowledge from these stores by manual searching is time consuming and inefficient, and automated forms of adding structure to the content
are desirable. This paper discusses technologies for automatically indexing unstructured data, the role of taxonomies, managing and using the resulting indexes in PPDM, and potential future uses of improved unstructured data indexing.
Petronas – a structure for IM competence - An interesting article in the Digital
Energy Journal about establishing information management competencies &
developing career paths at Petronas.
Science @ Risk: Toward a National Strategy for Preserving Online Science - by NDIIPP Staff and Abby Smith Rumsey
- The Historical Value of Ephemeral Discussion of Science on the Web, by
Fred Gibbs
- Ten Years of Science Blogs: A Definition, and a History, by Bora Zivkovic
- Case Study: Developing a “Health and Medicine Blogs” Collection at the
U.S. National Library of Medicine, by Christie Moffatt and Jennifer Marill
- Appendix: Eleven Brief Ideas for Web Archives of Online Science Discourse
Intranets for information management and accessibility - Alison Jones
Presentation for the ARK Group event “Information Management for the legal
profession”: August 25, 2011. Although this presentation is not new, it has some
interesting insights into SharePoint from an information professional’s point of
view.
You can view the accompanying speaker’s notes here, and further author
comments are available on the AGIA website.
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UPCOMING AGIA EVENTS
NATIONAL COMMITTEE MEETING
4.30pm, Tuesday 21st May 2013
Department of Mines & Petroleum, Plain St Perth.
AGIA members are welcome to attend – RSVP Friday 17th May to
WINTER WARMER
7.30am, Tuesday 11th June 2013
Bocelli’s Espresso, Forrest Place Perth (opposite the GPO)
Following on from the success of the Easter Breakfast, the Winter Warmer will
provide a networking opportunity for AGIA members.
RSVP Friday 7th June to [email protected]
NETWORKING BREAKFAST
9th August 2013 – time and venue to be confirmed.
This breakfast will be held hot on the heels of the PPDM conference in Perth, and
we anticipate an informal presentation on a topic of interest to petroleum data &
information managers. We hope this will be an opportunity for AGIA members
from around Australia to network.
AGIA AGM - SEPTEMBER 2013
AGIA SEMINAR/WORKSHOP – OCTOBER 2013
UPCOMING CONFERENCES AND SYMPOSIA
APEA ANNUAL CONFERENCE & EXHIBITION
26th - 29th May 2013, Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre
http://www.appea.com.au/events/appea-annual-conference-a-exhibition.html
PPDM 2013 PERTH DATA MANAGEMENT SYMPOSIUM
7th - 8th August, Parmelia Hilton, 14 Mill St, Perth WA
https://ppdm.org/event/view/upcoming/84
WEB SITES & MAILING LISTS OF INTEREST
GeoEdLink subscribe, archives
National Geologic Map Database http://ngmdb.usgs.gov
Australian National Data Service (ANDS) http://ands.org.au/
WAIN mailing list subscribe
Search4Oil http://www.search4oil.com/DigitalEarth/index.jsp,and find
out more about Search4Oil via its LinkedIn group
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AUSTRALIAN GEOSCIENCE INFORMATION ASSOCIATION INC.
NATIONAL COMMITTEE 2012–13
PRESIDENT
ANGELA RIGANTI WA Geology Online Content Manager GSWA, Department of Mines and Petroleum, 100 Plain Street, EAST PERTH WA 6004 PH: (08) 9222 3063 FAX: (08) 9222 3633 Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://au.linkedin.com/pub/angela-riganti/50/90/744
VICE-PRESIDENT
JENNY MIKUCKI Upstream Technical Computing Team Lead Chevron Australia Pty Ltd L15, QV1, 250 St Georges Terrace PERTH WA 6000 PH: (08) 9485 5176 FAX: (08) 9216 4353 Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://au.linkedin.com/pub/jenny-
mikucki/4b/31b/191
SECRETARY
LYN TROUCHET Barrick Gold of Australia Limited Level 9, Brookfield Place, 125 St Georges Terrace, PERTH WA 6000 PH: (08) 6318 5880 FAX: (08) 6318 5555
Email: [email protected]
TREASURER
SANDY HAYWARD 18 Ord Street NEDLANDS WA 6009 PH: (08) 6162 8841, M: 0417 095227 Email: [email protected]
MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY
KERRY SMITH c/o Department of Information Studies School of Media, Culture & Creative Arts Curtin University of Technology GPO Box U1987, PERTH WA 6845 PH: (08) 9266 7217 FAX: (08) 9266 3152 EmaiL: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://au.linkedin.com/pub/kerry-smith/52/730/425
NEWSLETTER EDITOR and SOCIAL MEDIA COORDINATOR
VANESSA JOHNSON IM Analyst Technical Library Shell Development (Australia) Pty Ltd 2 Victoria Ave PERTH WA 6000 PH: (08) 9338 6000 Email: [email protected] LinkedIn: http://au.linkedin.com/pub/vanessa-johnson/17/930/7b5
COMMITTEE MEMBER
MARGARET ELLIS Coordinator Exploration Incentive Scheme, GSWA, Department of Mines and Petroleum, 100 Plain Street, EAST PERTH WA 6004 PH: (08) 9222 3509 FAX: (08) 9222 3893 Email: [email protected]
COMMITTEE MEMBER
CAMILLE PETERS Information Resources Specialist Apache Energy Ltd 100 St Georges Terrace PERTH WA 6000 PO Box 477 WEST PERTH WA 6872 PH: (08) 6218 7253, FAX: (08) 6218 7200 Email: [email protected]
COMMITTEE MEMBER
LIZ AMANN BHP Billiton Nickel West Central Park Level 17, 152–156 St Georges Tce PERTH WA 6000 PH: (08) 6274 1339 FAX: (08) 6274 1339 Email: [email protected]
AGC REPRESENTATIVES:
MARGARET ELLIS, ANGELA RIGANTI