NARRATOR:
Canberra — home to the leaders of the country and some unique pieces of architecture. Back in the late 1950s and early 1960s, Canberra was growing fast. And in a sheep paddock just outside the centre of town, a strange dome which looked rather like a spaceship was being constructed. Some doubted it could be built, thinking the massive dome would fall to the ground. It really was an engineering achievement, with the enormous copper dome being larger than that of St Paul's and St Peter's.
ROBYN WILLIAMS:
Well this is the Shine Dome. It's the headquarters of the Australian Academy of Science — the spiritual home of science in Australia.
NARRATOR:
The academy of science was founded in 1954 when the Queen passed over the royal charter to Sir Mark Oliphant. He helped put nuclear physics on the map in the 20th century. He was the right-hand man virtually for the rather clumsy Lord Rutherford who helped split the atom.
SIR MARK OLIPHANT:
The news that the French have detonated a nuclear device in the Pacific horrifies me.
NARRATOR:
Sir Mark Oliphant, who was one of the inspirations of this Academy of Science. The building is like walking into a 1960s time capsule.
FRANK FENNER:
Malaria might be used to combat the Germans by keeping them in the malarious areas of Salonica.
NARRATOR:
But the science is forever changing and being debated.
PROFESSOR ROBERTSON:
On the problem of the crown-of-thorns starfish in the Barrier Reef…
SIR MACFARLANE BURNET:
The next type of universal immunisation…
TIM CLARKE:
Australia should be urgently looking for new sources of fuel, according to a report published today by the Australian Academy of Science.
ROBYN:
I couldn't fail to be impressed by some of the extraordinary people who made the Academy what it is. Like Dorothy Hill, the only woman so far to be president of the Academy of Science, a geologist specialising in the origins of coral reefs. And then further on, there's someone like Jack Eccles, who had a slightly uneasy relationship with Australia — someone who also got the Nobel Prize for working out how the nervous system actually works. And then of course, further on, we've got the abiding genius, one of the top ten scientists of the 20th century — Sir Macfarlane Burnet.
SIR MACFARLANE BURNET:
From the view of science in the world, I think we can say that infectious disease has largely been dealt with. It was rather fortunate that you had so many brilliant brains in this building because when they started to use the conference centre here, they got in and they began to feel strangely unwell. The problem turned out to be the design of the actual room. It turned out to be a problem with these vertical stripes which was making the fellows feel giddy — a syndrome called nystagmus. And so they put in these pieces of string. Problem solved. Well, here we are in the basement of this extraordinary building where the archives, the history, of all those hundreds and hundreds of scientists and the kind of research they did over the years and one of the papers we came across was actually written to Sir Mark Oliphant, whom we met upstairs. And it's about this very building. It says, 'Dear Sir Mark, thank you for your letter and the plan of the headquarters building for the Academy of Science. I am very depressed about Canberra architecture. Whether your building will elevate my spirits, I do not know, but I doubt it. But good luck. Kind regards, Robert Menzies.' History doesn't record whether the then-Prime Minister liked the flying saucer.
NARRATOR:
The Academy has 419 members, many of whom are gathered here today. This is 'Science at the Shine Dome', the Annual General Meeting and induction of new fellows into the Academy. It is a time when fellows and friends come from across the country to celebrate Australian science.
PROFESSOR KURT LAMBECK:
We celebrate the science because we know that scientifically literate people are necessary.
PROFESSOR SUE SERJEANTSON:
We form opinions on scientific issues of the day. We engage in science education at every level.
NARRATOR:
What do some of the young scientists think of the Academy?
DR VANESSA HAYES:
It gives me an eye open to what you can achieve and hopefully what I will achieve in my career here in Australia.
DR IAN MAJEWSKI:
This idea of just working for science, championing science, is so important, I think.
PROFESSOR DAVID LINDENMAYER:
Such an honour. It's tremendous.
ROBYN:
And what's particularly interesting is for someone so involved in environmental research, you know, it couldn't be more timely, really, this Academy recognition.
PROFESSOR LINDENMAYER:
Absolutely. I think that there are such deep-seated environmental issues that need a lot of really good science to unravel them, if we're not going to make a whole series of additional mistakes.
NARRATOR:
And what about Mac Burnet's comment?
SIR MACFARLANE BURNET:
There will still be some need for research but on the whole, we have virtually eliminated infectious disease as an important cause of death.
SIR GUSTAV NOSSAL:
Infectious diseases aren't going to go away, chum, and I salute my good friend up in the big hotel in the sky, but on this, he was very wrong.
ROBYN:
So this is the Australian Academy of Science. It may look a bit cosmic and got Robert Menzies a little concerned. But I think it's a tremendously exciting place — apart from its history — for two main reasons. The first is, it can tell the great science from the rubbish. And the second is, it's for our children and about their scientific future.