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21 April 2020 1 min read

Audience and attendees at Sub20 Conference holding hands during Welcome to Country

Over two days, attendees heard from keynotes Lucy Macgregor, Edinburgh Geoscience and Cognitive Geology and Malcolm Sambridge, Australian National University and experts with extensive experience in energy, minerals and inference and discussed challenges on imaging, conceptualisation and prediction of mineral, water and energy resources.

Subsurface 20 also gave attendees the opportunity to identify synergies and gain awareness of methodologies and workflows that are routinely used in one domain but largely unknown or receive limited application in another.

The consensus view in industry, government and academia, highlights the need for advanced geophysical, mathematical and computational tools, along with new geochemical and geological approaches and understanding to more precisely image the subsurface, to direct our exploration efforts and predict processes that form these resources.

An additional challenge and opportunity for those working in the sector is a recognition that social and environmental performance must also be met. All stakeholders should work together to develop and secure our resource base in a sustainable way.

Tim Minday (centre) with aboriginal elders, Jayden Boundary and Shaun Nannup
Sandra Occhipinti, Research Director Discovery and Cathy Foley, CSIRO Chief Scientist
Keynote presenter Lucy MacGregor, Edinburgh Geoscience Advisors, Cognitive Geology discussed the current status of techniques and technology to understand the subsurface, and future directions of research and industry needs
Andrew Fitzpatrick, Chief Geophysicist Independence Group and Michelle Salmon, Australian National University
Peter Schaubs, Research Team Leader 3D Structural Geological and Numerical Modelling presented on numerical simulation of critical mineral system geological processes
Troy Thompson, DownUnder GeoSolutions presenting on full waveform inversion advancements for subsurface interpretation
Professor Boris Gurevich from Curtin University discussing the importance of rock physics for CO2 geosequestration
Professor Richard Smith from Laurentiun University and CSIRO's Thomas Poulet and Peter Schaub checking out the Sub20 poster exhibition


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