Earth Observation Laboratory
The Earth Observation Laboratory is located in the Llandinam Tower and maintains state-of-the-art software and hardware for the processing, analysis and interpretation of spatial information. For general processing of remotely-sensed data, IDL ENVI, Erdas and eCognition are available, whilst for specialised processing of LiDAR and SAR data, Cyclone, TerraScan and Gamma SAR processing software are available. The Laboratory has also developed its own code base for processing a range of data (RSGISlib). The laboratories are equipped with dedicated Windows and Linux workstations. Field equipment includes a Leica Terrestrial Laser Scanner, differential Global Positioning Systems and forest inventory measures. There is also a dedicated research laboratory for PhD and Masters students with 15 workstations.
Palaeoecology Laboratory
The Palaeoecology Laboratory is part of the Quaternary Environmental Change Research Group in the Department of Geography and Earth Sciences. Researchers investigate the sedimentary records of climatic and vegetational change from lakes in Ethiopia, Kenya and Mexico. Other projects concern environmental history in Morocco, Turkey, Ireland and Wales, and computerised pollen recognition. The laboratory is equipped with a range of sediment coring devices, plus water and sediment samplers. The pollen preparation laboratories are second to none, and the microscopy lab has Nikon, Zeiss and Leica microscopes, and several networked PCs. The pollen reference collection has material from Europe, North America, North Africa and East Africa. Analytical techniques carried out in the Laboratory include pollen, charcoal, ostracod and diatom analyses, resin-embedded thin-section sedimentology, stable-isotope analyses of lacustrine carbonates (in collaboration with the NERC Isotope Geochemistry Lab), and trace-element chemistry of water and calcareous microfossils using the Institute's ICP-MS and Dionex DX-100 ion chromatograph facilities.
For the analysis of sediments, an XRF core scanner is available.
Aberystwyth Luminescence Research Laboratory
Aberystwyth Luminescence Research Laboratory (ALRL) prides itself on being a world-class research laboratory investigating the physical mechanisms involved in the production of luminescence by naturally occuring minerals, and applying this to the dating of sediments to elucidate Quaternary events, to enlighten our knowledge of the evolution of anatomically modern humans and to define the rates of geomorphological processes.
The laboratory's primary aim is to undertake innovative, world-class research in the development and application of luminescence dating. Research is undertaken by staff, postgraduate students and post-doctoral fellows on a range of topics. Many of the PhD students and PDRAs trained at ALRL have gone on to run their own laboratories around the world. Additionally, the laboratory often hosts distinguished overseas visitors, either scientists from other luminescence laboratories around the world who wish to spend time interacting with researchers at ALRL, or people who have limited previous experience of luminescence and wish to learn the technique.
ALRL is a NERC recognised facility, both for collaborative involvement in specific dating projects, and for training researchers in the field of luminescence dating. In addition, since 2004 the journal Ancient TL dealing with issues in the application of luminescence and electron spin resonance dating has been published from ALRL.