b'AEGC 2021Presenter biographiesregion, New Zealand using potential field methods integratedMurray River between the end of the river at Lake Alexandrina with geological and geochemical data. Anne began at SGC inin South Australia and Echuca in New South Walesa total 2005 following two years working as an exploration and minedistance of almost 2000 river kilometres. Following his interest geologist at epithermal and orogenic lode gold operations inin environmental geophysics, Mike completed a PhD at the North Queensland and Western Australia for Newmont. She hasUniversity of Adelaide in 2012, specialising in the application of consulted on all aspects of geophysical exploration for gold, basenear-surface geophysics to imaging the floodplain environments metals, iron ore, REEs, and uranium in Australia, New Zealand,of the Murray. Since then he has held research positions at both Southeast Asia, West and East Africa including survey planningthe University of Adelaide and Flinders University in Adelaide, and management, data processing, interpretation and targetSouth Australia, working on projects around Australia, and other generation using potential field and electrical techniques in thecountries. These projects have ranged from using GPR to locate air, at surface and downhole. She has also interpreted potentialand image wombat burrows in far western South Australia, to field datasets for on- and offshore oil and gas exploration. Withimaging shallow soil structure in the Northern Adelaide plains her background in geology, she carries out integrated desktopto assess farmland for irrigation, and then to Laos to expose evaluations of exploration projects including sourcing andlocal geophysicists to new geophysical techniques that will help using legacy data, as well as litho-structural interpretationsthem find groundwater in their country. He is currently working of magnetic, radiometric, gravity, and electromagnetic data.with Professor Graham Heinson at the University of Adelaide Anne is part of SGCs training group delivering aeromagneticon a project to use electrical geophysics to map hydrological interpretation workshops in Australia and internationally. Inproperties at a proposed in-situ mining site in South Australia. 2019, she was elected to SGCs Board of Directors. Anne is anMike also works with Vista Clara Inc., an American company active Member of the ASEG and AIG. She was a Councillor onspecialising in the application of NMR technology to the search the AIG Federal Committee responsible for Membership andfor water, and continues to work for Zonge Engineering for Qualifications (2012-2017), has served on the AIG MembershipAustralia, both on mineral as well as environmental projects. He and Education Committees, and is also a past President of theis an Associate Editor of the ASEGs magazine Preview looking WA Branch of the ASEG. Anne has a strong interest in geoscienceafter the Environmental Geophysics column since 2015.outreach to primary and secondary students and is actively involved in the CSIROs Scientists in Schools programme.285. Mr Laurence Davies laurence.davies@hdr.qut.edu.au280. and 281. Dr Michael Hatch michael.hatch@ Laurence Davies is a PhD candidate at the Queensland adelaide.edu.au University of Technology. His thesis title is Bayesian model inference for geophysics applications, and he previously Michael Hatch has over 30 years of experience in geophysics,worked for Geoscience Australia, CRC-SI and Land and Property specialising in electrical and electromagnetic methods. HeInformation NSW. His current research interests are model started in mineral exploration as a fieldie, working for Zongeselection, sequential Monte Carlo, MCMC methods, and Engineering in the US. Time out was taken for an MSc (1991)airborne electromagnetic geophysics.from the University of Arizona under Jon Sumner where they used high precision GPS data to investigate subsidence due to groundwater over-pumping for agriculture in the Tucson286. Dr Adam Smiarowski adam.smiarowski@gmail.combasin. A transfer to Zonge Australia in 1994 gave him the opportunity to start thinking about the use of electrical methodsAdam has been involved with electrical methods for to environmental problems. He began applying these methodsenvironmental and exploration applications for 15 years. Adam in earnest to groundwater issues along the Murray River incompleted an MSc in geophysics at RMIT University and a PhD 2003. In 2004 through 2006, with Zonge, he participated inin physics and geology at the University of Toronto.He has three projects that produced a continuous high-resolutionbeen involved with airborne EM research, both in frequency and resistivity-depth section image of the sediments under thetime-domain, for the past 10 years.AUGUST 2021 PREVIEW 128'