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Short
but sharp - The 1982-83 droughts
In
terms of short-term rainfall deficiencies (up to one year) and their
overall impact, the 1982-83 drought was perhaps the worst in Australia
for the 20th Century.
In
autumn 1982 reasonable rains were fairly widespread, except for southern
Western Australia, which had an exceptionally dry autumn. With the coming
of winter, however, intense drought became established in most areas
east of a line from Alice Springs to Ceduna. There were frequent sharp
frosts in June and July, accompanying clear skies and low atmospheric
moisture levels. By the end of August the wheat crop in eastern Australia
was on the verge of failure, and sheep prices plummeted as graziers
reduced flocks. Very dry conditions persisted through spring over eastern
Australia (except in coastal areas of northern New South Wales), with
extensive areas experiencing record or near-record low rainfall totals
from April to December.
By
November, dry soil in northwestern Victoria was blown away as dust;
water restrictions were imposed in Melbourne; and on 24 November the
earliest Total Fire Ban in 40 years was proclaimed in Victoria. The
upper Murrumbidgee River became a chain of waterholes: by years
end reservoirs fell to levels not known for many years. The remains
of Tallangatta and Bonnie Doon, Victorian towns relocated in the 1950s
to allow enlargement of Lake Hume and Lake Eildon, emerged from the
shrinking waters. The summer Wet season failed in the Northern Territory
and north Queensland, with record low summer rainfall in some areas.
What little rain there was often fell on bare earth and without follow-up,
and was therefore of little use. Only northeastern NSW and southeastern
Queensland truly escaped the drought.
The
nadir was reached in February 1983, with record low rainfall in parts
of Tasmania, and virtually none at all in Victoria. Fires flared in
southeastern Tasmania on the 1st and 8th, spectacular dust-storms swept
Victoria on the 8th, and the Ash Wednesday fires devastated Victoria
and South Australia on the 16th. In far eastern Victoria, fires burned
unchecked for most of the month. Relief came at last in March: ironically,
the first rains arrived inopportunely at grape harvest time in South
Australia and Victoria. An intense low pressure system then developed
over northwestern Australia on the 12th, and over the next week drifted
eastward with heavy rain and flooding. It then tracked south over NSW
and Victoria to Tasmania by the 23rd. Substantial rain fell over almost
all the drought area, with many record March totals. Abundant follow-up
rains in April and May signified the end of the drought.
Total
losses attributed to this drought exceeded $3 billion. Its association
with the very strong El Niño event of 1982-83 marked the transformation
of El Niño from abstract climate phenomenon to common lexicon,
and set the scene for many of todays climate forecasting techniques.
Lake
Eildon, in Victoria, at an extremely low level. This scene has recurred
several times during the more severe droughts of the 20th Century (photo
courtesy of Catherine Beesley).
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