Gavin Mudd
Gavin M. Mudd is an associate professor in the Department of Environmental Engineering at RMIT University, Australia. He was awarded a Ph.D. in environmental engineering in 2001, from the Victoria University of Technology.[1] Mudd's research interests include environmental impacts, management of mine wastes, acid mine drainage, sustainability frameworks, life cycle assessment modelling and mine rehabilitation.[1]
In October 2007, Gavin Mudd completed a report on Australia's Mining Industry entitled The Sustainability of Mining in Australia: Key Production Trends and Their Environmental Implications for the Future.[2]
Selected recent publications[1]
- Sustainability of Uranium Mining and Milling: Toward Quantifying Resources and Eco-Efficiency
- Global Trends in Gold Mining : Towards Quantifying Environmental and Resource Sustainability? Resources Policy, 32 (1–2), 2007, pp 42–56.
- Gold Mining in Australia : Linking Historical Trends and Environmental and Resource Sustainability, Environmental Science and Policy, 10 (7–8), 2007, pp 629–644.
- An Analysis of Historic Production Trends in Australian Base Metal Mining, Ore Geology Reviews, 32 (1–2), 2007, pp 227–261.
- An Assessment of the Sustainability of the Mining Industry in Australia Australian Journal of Multi-Disciplinary Engineering, 5 (1), 2007, pp 1–12.
gollark: … ADL has been here for several months?
gollark: The networking stuff is actually quite important. Apparently their silicon photonics stuff can save a lot of power in high speed switches.
gollark: Also fabrication. They're opening that to other companies.
gollark: Also FPGAs.
gollark: Also, they now make GPUs and optical networking gear and WiFi chips and a bunch of other random nonsense.
See also
References
- Dr Gavin Mudd
- "The Sustainability of Mining in Australia: Key Production Trends and Their Environmental Implications for the Future". Archived from the original on 10 November 2007. Retrieved 5 November 2007.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.