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The climate of
South Australia varies, from hot and dry in the interior to the milder,
wetter climates of the southern Mount Lofty Ranges and the southeast
coast of South Australia. Median annual rainfall ranges from about 100
mm in the area east of Lake Eyre to more than 1000 mm on the higher
parts of the Mount Lofty Ranges.
Physical
features
The State of South
Australia occupies approximately the central third of the southern half
of the continent of Australia with the ocean to the south. From the
head of the Great Australian Bight, near the State's western border,
the coastline tends southeastwards to the Victorian border. This trend
is interrupted by two major indentations, Spencer Gulf and Gulf St Vincent.
The waters of these two gulfs have a moderating influence on temperatures
along their coasts. Kangaroo Island, to the west of Victor Harbor, is
the predominant island off the South Australian coast. . Large parts
of South Australia are relatively flat or slightly undulating and approximately
half the State is less than 150 metres above sea level. The most significant
mountain ranges are the Flinders and the Mount Lofty Ranges that extend
from Cape Jervis in the south to the northern end of Lake Torrens. North
of Peterborough there is a divergence from the main range that stretches
via the Glary Ridges to the Barrier Range and Broken Hill in New South
Wales. These ranges influence the climate by enhancing the rainfall
in their immediate vicinity. Temperature also decreases with increasing
altitude. The western half of the State is largely occupied by a low
plateau, over which an intermittent series of low ranges stretches from
the Flinders to the somewhat higher Musgrave Ranges in the far northwest.
Climate
controls
The seasonal variation
of weather in South Australia is controlled by the position of the subtropical
ridge of high pressure: During the warmer half of the year (November
to April), this ridge is located along latitudes to the south of the
Australian continent. High pressure systems (anticyclones) generally
move eastwards along the ridge but have a favoured position south of
the Great Australian Bight. Consequently, the most frequent air stream
across most of South Australia during this period is from the southeast
to east. Although cold fronts associated with southern low pressure
systems penetrate the ridge from time to time during summer, they generally
fail to produce much useful rain.
Warm moist air
of tropical origin occasionally moves into the State from the north
during summer and thunderstorms may then develop.
In autumn the subtropical
ridge moves north and remains over the Australian continent for most
of the colder half of the year (May to October). During this period
favoured locations for centres of anticyclones are the Great Victoria
Desert and central New South Wales. The most frequent winds are from
the northwest to southwest. Frontal systems associated with depressions
traveling eastwards across the ocean have a significant influence on
the weather in southern South Australia during this season.
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