Pollen research not to be sniffed at

Updated December 11 2015 - 10:53pm, first published October 9 2011 - 4:00am
Palynologists (pollen scientists) at the Australasian Pollen and Spore Atlas at ANU are working with CSIRO image analysts to train the 'Classifynder', an automated pollen microscope from Massey University in New Zealand, to identify and classify Australian pollen grains. Minimal human intervention is required. Image: Carl Davies, CSIRO
Palynologists (pollen scientists) at the Australasian Pollen and Spore Atlas at ANU are working with CSIRO image analysts to train the 'Classifynder', an automated pollen microscope from Massey University in New Zealand, to identify and classify Australian pollen grains. Minimal human intervention is required. Image: Carl Davies, CSIRO

POLLEN may annoy allergy sufferers in springtime but, viewed under the microscope, a pollen grain is a thing of beauty.

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