Acknowledgement of CountryCSIRO acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the land, sea and waters, of the area that we live and work on across Australia. We acknowledge their continuing connection to their culture and pay our respects to their Elders past and present.Child safetyCSIRO is committed to the safety and wellbeing of all children and young people involved in our activities and programs. View our .The opportunity
- Key role for a Laboratory Technical Officer - Soil Biogeochemistry
- Contribute to the delivery of key data on soil carbon concentrations and stability across national projects
- Join CSIRO, Australia's premier scientific research organisation.
- Under limited supervision, design and perform straightforward experiments and routine laboratory analyses, design new processes or apparatus by adapting existing techniques and components to meet special circumstances or undertake modifications to methods requiring some innovation.
- Deliver high quality and consistent data on concentrations, vulnerability and dynamics of soil carbon and nitrogen, and the processes that drive these.
- Perform some non-routine analyses activities using a range of techniques, often working on a number of parallel and competing tasks.
- Work collaboratively as part of a multi-disciplinary, regionally dispersed research team to carry out tasks in support of CSIRO's scientific objectives.
- Other duties as directed.
plus up to 15.4% superannuationTenure: Specified term of 3 years/Full-timeReference: 96262To be considered you will need:Essential
- Relevant bachelor's degree or equivalent combination of qualifications and demonstrated relevant work experience in soil science, agricultural science, environmental science, analytical chemistry, or similar fields of science.
- Demonstrated hands-on experience in the measurement of soil chemical and biological properties, including the use and maintenance of laboratory equipment.
- A clear understanding of the requirements of conducting analysis in dynamic biological systems and the precautions required to limit or avoid experimental artefacts.
- Practical knowledge of how stable isotopes may be used in experiments in order to trace source and fate of C and N in plant-soil systems.
- Demonstrated practical knowledge of Australian landscapes and soils, their constraints and opportunities.
- The ability to work effectively as part of a multi-disciplinary or regionally dispersed research team, and the motivation and discipline to carry out autonomous work components.
- A current Australian driver's licence.
- Demonstrated hands-on experience in measuring soil properties using proximal tools such as infrared spectroscopy (e.g. FT-IR, Vis-NIR) in a laboratory setting, and knowledge of, or clear evidence in developing a skillset in the laboratory and data requirements for soil inference calibration and validation.
- Demonstrated programming skills in one or more scientific coding languages including (but not limited to) Python and R.