The 160-day heatwave and more amazing Australian weather facts
Peter Moore
04 September 2023
Wild weather in Oz
Ingo Oeland/Alamy Stock Photo
El Nino (and La Nina) hit Australia hard
Rob Walls/Alamy Stock Photo
Only Antarctica receives less rainfall than Australia
Ingo Oeland/Alamy Stock Photo
Drought has always been Australia’s nemesis
Penny Tweedie/Alamy Stock Photo
A drought brought an end to squattocracy
Courtesy of the National Library of Australia
Dust storms are killing Australia’s coral... and bananas.
Dinodia Photos/Alamy Stock Photo
A dust storm dumped 16 million tonnes of dust off the coast of Sydney
AP Photo/Rob Griffith
Dust devils have inspired folklore
totajla/Shutterstock
Tasmania is the wettest state
MrForever/Shutterstock
The 2010–2011 La Nina event broke rainfall records across Queensland
Bill Bachman/Alamy Stock Photo
Australian Aboriginal peoples have weather stories that are 10,000 years old
robertharding/Alamy Stock Photo
Townsville is Australia’s most flood-prone city
Australian Associated Press/Alamy Stock Photo
The death toll from Australia’s deadliest flood could have been much worse
Penta Springs Limited/Alamy Stock Photo
Waterfalls have been known to cascade off Uluru
J Mundy/Shutterstock
Australia is buffeted by at least 13 cyclones a year
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A cyclone nearly destroyed the nation’s nascent pearling industry
Courtesy of the State Library of Victoria
The storm surge created by Cyclone Mahina was a world record
Courtesy of the National Library of Australia
This pioneering meteorologist named storms after politicians who annoyed him
Courtesy of the State Library of Queensland
Australia’s most notorious cyclone hit on Christmas morning
Associated Press/Alamy Stock Photo
The highest ever wind speed was recorded in Australia
Suzanne Long/Alamy Stock Photo
Heatwaves kill more people in Australia than any other natural disaster
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Australia has two different hottest days on record
Zoonar GmbH/Alamy Stock Photo
The longest heatwave in the world was at Marble Bar in Western Australia
imageBROKER.com GmbH & Co. KG/Alamy Stock Photo
It got so hot in Adelaide in 2019 that beer was given away for free
Boaz Rottem/Alamy Stock Photo
Australian heatwaves are location specific
Courtesy of the National Museum of Australia
The summer of 2012-2013 was Australia's hottest
Zoltán Csipke/Alamy Stock Photo
Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology has had to add new colours to its heat scale
Courtesy of the Australian Bureau of Meteorology
The 2009 heatwave in Victoria led to Black Saturday bushfires
William Caram/Alamy Stock Photo
Australia does freeze over
Suzanne Long/Alamy Stock Photo
It has snowed in the outback – and in the tropics too
David Bigwood/Alamy Stock Photo
Aboriginal communities can predict the weather by observing nature
Bill Bachman/Alamy Stock Photo
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