The Chronicle

VIRTUAL VIEW A SITE ADVANTAGE

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REBECCA Marsh says mining is “not all just digging and dirt”. The graduate mechanical engineer at Downer MEI (mining, energy and industrial) is based in an office in Sydney for most of her work. While she does visit mine sites, she spends more time viewing them on a computer than she does in person.

“As a graduate mechanical engineer, what I do daily tends to vary quite a lot,” she says.

“Some days I could be doing project work and some days I could be working in the digital engineerin­g sector. I came in not really knowing what I would be doing so I suppose it’s not what I expected, but that’s a good thing.

“What I love most would be how varied it is – I could be visiting a site, or I could be in the office where I’m usually based, I could be doing project work on a computer, I could be doing meetings with a client.

“Or, I could be working on our digital technology and expanding into virtual reality.”

One of Marsh’s projects has been taking drone scans of mines, working with a fixedwing drone operator to take digital images of a mine site.

From there, a three-dimensiona­l model is developed, which can be used to create virtual reality, giving an up-to-date view of the mine.

“Technology has changed the way I work quite a lot, because how we used to do projects, we’d have schematics and drawings of our site and most of the time they would be out of date because they could be decades old – we try and fit new equipment in and it just wouldn’t fit,” she says.

“But now we can take a scan of the site and we’d have a digital twin where we can work directly in the model and put in our design and then we know straight away that our design’s going to work.

“An important skill for my job is the ability to be flexible and pick up on different things quickly and be able to adapt to change.”

Marsh studied engineerin­g at university, deciding to specialise in mechanical while studying, and was initially an intern at the mining contractor.

“At school I was interested in maths and science and I was really good at it, so engineerin­g was the natural progressio­n,” she says.

“I’ve stayed here (at Downer after the internship) then I’ve moved through the different sectors and then I’m working in mining.

“My career so far in Downer has already changed paths a few times and I’m looking into the digital engineerin­g space but later on, who knows where I could end up?”

FOR MORE CAREERS INFORMATIO­N READ THE MORE TO MINING CAREERS GUIDE AT MINERALS.ORG.AU/CAREERS

DIGITAL MODEL: Graduate mechanical engineer Rebecca Marsh, who has been working with a fixed-wing drone operator to take digital images of mine sites, uses technology to visit sites without leaving her office.

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