Welcome to the Oberon Citizen Science Network (OCSN) website
This is the website for the newly formed Oberon Citizen Science Network (OCSN, pronounced “oxen”). At this stage, we are seeking expressions of interest from potential members and contributors. Please read on for more information!
This web site should be readable and navigable on a smart phone, but it is best viewed on a tablet computer in landscape mode or a laptop or desktop computer. Some features such as interactive maps may be difficult to use on a phone.
Oberon is located in the Central Tablelands of NSW, Australia, about 140km west of Sydney Harbour, and about 80km west of the Blue Mountains, but at a slightly higher elevation than the top of the Blue Mountains (most of Oberon LGA sits at between 1100 and 1300m elevation).
OCSN is a newly formed collective of people living in and around the Oberon local government area (LGA) in the Central Tablelands of NSW who are interested in science and in participating in scientific investigation of interesting and/or important aspects of our environment. By science we mean STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) activities in general. These include biology and ecology, and the impacts of human activity on those domains, as well as earth science, astronomy and any other safe and non-harmful scientific investigations members may wish to pursue. Projects involving technology and engineering are also in-scope for OCSN, particularly projects involving development of sensor and other methods to study the world around us. Creating peer-reviewed summaries of current scientific findings is also in scope, to help provide reliable and unbiased sources of information about STEM matters which are important to the local community. A list of current and potential activities and projects can be found in the list on the left. This list may expand or contract depending on the interests of OCSN participants.
Participants in OCSN do not need to be trained scientists, engineers, technologists or mathematicians – just having an interest in science (or more broadly, STEM) and an allegiance to the scientific method (which is embodied in the OCSN Mission Statement and OCSN Articles of Association for the organisation) is enough. All projects and activities undertaken or promoted by OCSN will include trained scientists and engineers, acting in a voluntary capacity or, in some cases, in academic roles affiliated with universities and research institutes. The idea is to promote and transmit an appreciation of STEM subjects and the scientific method to both OCSN participants and the wider community.
The founding members of Oberon Citizen Science Network are Alan Sheehan and Tim Churches, both of whom are Oberon LGA residents with a common interest in all (or at least many) matters relating to STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics).
Oberon Citizen Science Network (OCSN) is a strictly non-political organisation that does not and will not have any allegiances with or accept any support from political parties or organisations associated with political parties, nor any lobby group seeking to influence the political process or political decisions, at any level of government.
Individual members and participants of OCSN may hold such political allegiances or be members of lobby groups, as is their right as individuals, but they must not represent such views or allegiances as those of OCSN. Please see the OCSN Mission Statement and the OCSN Articles of Association for more details.
OCSN may accept funding for its activities from government, corporations or individuals, but all such funding will be declared and only be accepted if it does not come with conditions which limit what OCSN may say or publish about the science and other STEM activities it undertakes – that is, we will not accept any funding that comes with conditions of censorship.
Oberon Citizen Science Network acknowledges the Traditional Owners of Country throughout Australia. The Oberon region is located on the territory of the Wiradjuri, Gundungurra and Dharug people who are the traditional custodians of the land on which we live, work and carry out our scientific enquiry. We pay our respects to Elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
Please do read on using the link below or the links at the left to learn more about OCSN and its aims and potential activities.