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New South Wales
is entirely in the temperate zone. The climate is generally mild, equable
and mostly free from extremes of heat and cold, but very high temperatures
occur in the northwest and very cold temperatures on the Southern Tablelands.
The Great Dividing Range, running approximately north to south in the
east of New South Wales, has a large impact on the climate, creating
four distinct climate zones; the coastal strip, the highlands, the Western
Slopes and the flatter country to the west.
The climate of
the coastal strip is influenced by the warm waters of the Tasman Sea,
which in general keep the region free from extremes of temperature and
provide moisture to increase rainfall, the annual median of which ranges
from about 750 mm in the south to 2000 mm in the north.
The mountains
of the Great Divide attain a maximum height of 2228 metres at Mt.
Kosciuszko, and there are several peaks in excess of 1500 metres,
extending up to northern NSW. Traveling from east to west across
the range, the elevation abruptly increases away from the coastal
plain, and then west of the divide it gradually descends onto the
Western Plains. Consequently winter snowfalls are experienced over
what are aptly called the Tableland regions.
On the Western
Slopes the rainfall gradually decreases, together with the frequency
of winter snowfalls. Average maximum temperatures gradually increase
as height above sea level decreases.
Further to the
west the land slowly flattens out to the dry inland plains, notable
for cold nights. It is in the far northwest where the hottest temperatures
in the State most commonly occur during summer, and where the annual
mean rainfall drops below 200 mm.
The way in which
the climate changes across the State is reflected by marked changes
in vegetation, which ranges from the subtropical rainforests of the
northeast to the fragile alpine heathlands in the southern Alps, through
the dry forests and undulating pasturelands of the midwest to the dry
plains of the northwest.
Outdoor activities
also vary significantly across the State. Mild winters along the North
Coast favour beach activities whilst at the other extreme the snow fields
of the southern Alps become a winter playground for skiers.
Perhaps the most
basic need of human settlement is water; early Australian history has
many examples of new settlements that foundered due to lack of adequate
water supplies. Settlement to the west of the Great Dividing Range was
made more difficult by a lack of a reliable water supply. Settlement
onto the open plains that flourished during years of good rainfall foundered
during drought periods, In more recent times, irrigation schemes have
been developed to harness some of the heavy rainfall and snowmelt from
the Tablelands and control its release westwards.
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