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The "Federation Drought" 1895-1902 |
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The 1914-15 Drought |
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The Droughts Of 1937-45 |
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| Short but Sharp - The Drought Of 1982-83 | ||
| The 1965-68 Drought | ||
| The Long El Niño - 1991 Through 1995 | ||
DROUGHTDrought. The word evokes images of barren fields, dying stock, and waterholes and reservoirs drying to cracked mud. Shrivelled hopes, failed crops, and often economic ruin are its trademarks. Drought is also part and parcel of life in Australia, particularly in the marginal areas away from the better-watered coasts and ranges. Of all the climatic phenomena to afflict Australia, drought is probably the most economically costly: major droughts such as that of 1982/83 can have a major impact on the national economy. Moreover, apart from crop failure and stock losses, droughts set the scene for other disastrous phenomena, such as fires, dust-storms, and general land degradation. Why is Australia drought-prone? Denuded earth and dry watercourses during drought near Gunnedah, in the normally well-watered Namoi Valley region of New South Wales (photo courtesy of the NSW Dept of Land and Water Conservation). Long-term droughts
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