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Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies

Institute for Marine & Antarctic Studies
Type Public
Established 2009
Chairman Mary O’Kane
Chancellor Michael Field AC
Vice-Chancellor Peter Rathjen
Director Richard Coleman
Location Hobart, Tasmania, Australia Australia
Nickname IMAS
Affiliations University of Tasmania
Website www.imas.utas.edu.au

The Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) in Hobart, Tasmania, was established in 2010 as a teaching and research institute of the University of Tasmania. IMAS builds upon more than 20 years of university core partnership in cooperative Antarctic research, and aspires to a similar key role in temperate marine and Southern Ocean research.

Marine geophysicist Prof Mike Coffin was appointed founding Executive Director of IMAS in 2010. Prof Richard Coleman, an oceanographer and cryospheric scientist, was appointed Executive Director of IMAS in July 2015.

“To improve understanding of temperate marine, Southern Ocean, and Antarctic environments, their resources, and their roles in the global climate system through research, education, and outreach”.

The Institute takes a multidisciplinary, whole-system approach to research, education, and outreach. IMAS was established with a core research and education capability, initially consisting of significant and internationally recognised expertise in the following foundation themes:

These programs are linked by three key cross-disciplinary themes to meet integrative and multidisciplinary research goals:

The Australian Research Council’s (ARC) Excellence in Research for Australia (ERA) initiatives provide a specific benchmark for the core IMAS disciplines of oceanography and fisheries sciences, and in 2012 IMAS strongly contributed to the University of Tasmania achieving grade 5 scores (well above world standard) in oceanography, ecology, and geology, and a grade 4 score (above world standard) in fisheries sciences.

A new ~69,000 m² building on the Hobart waterfront is being constructed to co-locate IMAS, Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS), the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre (ACE CRC), and the Tasmanian Partnership for Advanced Computing (TPAC) staff and students. The new building, adjacent to CSIRO, will create an exceptional research and educational environment supported by state-of-the-art technology, and will serve as a hub for collaborative marine and Antarctic studies. The project is an initiative of the Australian Government as part of the Education Investment Fund.

Planning is under way for existing research and educational infrastructure totalling ~4,500 m2 south of Hobart at Taroona to be significantly expanded with new aquaculture and controlled-environment experimental saltwater facilities. Planned new capabilities include temperate/polar ocean simulations, and greatly enhanced aquaculture research.


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