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"Our researchers are making a difference in the world."

Australia's cultural revolution
In June 2005, the University of Adelaide and the Australian Ballet signed a memorandum of understanding, the aim of which was to increase collaborative endeavour and relations between the two organisations. The Memorandum follows the receipt of a major ARC Linkage Project grant awarded to the University of Adelaide, the Australian Ballet and the National Library of Australia.
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Commercialising insulin-like growth factors
Insulin-like Growth Factors (IGF-I and IGF-II) are small, highly-related proteins which stimulate the growth and differentiation of a wide variety of cell types. Professor John Wallace from the School of Molecular and Biomedical Science, is an expert on IGFs, which are produced by the liver and circulate in the blood.
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Increasing road safety, preventing injuries
Research in road safety and injury control at the Centre for Automotive Safety Research at the University of Adelaide, contributes to the reduction of the human and economic costs of road crashes. The Centre began life in 1973 as the Road Accident Research Unit (RARU) with the planning and undertaking of an in-depth study of road accidents in the Adelaide metropolitan area.
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Lighting flames for a greener future
Combustion is the very foundation of the world's industrial society. It underpins the current standard of living in the industrial world as well as being a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. The Turbulence, Energy and Combustion (TEC) group at the University works with industry and international collaborators to develop environmentally responsible, cost-effective energy technologies for industries. The group's members are drawn from the Schools of Mechanical and Chemical Engineering.
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Reducing foam waste, making great savings
TRC Mathematical Modelling has worked together with the Dunlop Foams Group to reduce the foam wastage in processing operations. Foam is produced in large blocks that are subsequently converted into smaller products, such as cushions and mattresses.
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Reducing the risk of complications in late pregnancy
The Research Centre for Reproductive Health and the Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, through Dr Claire Roberts and Professor Gus Dekker, is receiving $2.37m from the Premier's Science & Research Fund to further their work on Screening for Pregnancy Endpoints (SA SCOPE).
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Saving water to make wine
In the 1990s basic research at the University of Adelaide, CSIRO Plant Industry and South Australian Research and Development Institute (SARDI) through the Cooperative Research Centre for Viticulture on plant hormone responses in drought situations led to the development in the late 1990s of an innovative irrigation technique known as "partial root zone drying" (PRD).
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Transforming cereals and farming industries
Wheat, barley and oats are the three cereals crops on which South Australia's dryland farming industries are based. Their farm gate value is over $1 billion with over 80% exported and the rest substantially value-added. University of Adelaide plant breeders, Dr Tony Rathjen, Mr Gil Hollamby, Dr David Sparrow and Professor Andy Barr, have collectively bred, developed and commercialised varieties of wheat and barley that occupy over 90% of the South Australian area sown.
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