What causes southeast Australia's worst droughts?
UNSW Sydney · CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Since 1995, a large region of Australia has been gripped by the most severe drought in living memory, the so‐called “Big Dry”. The ramifications for affected regions are dire, with acute water shortages for rural and metropolitan areas, record agricultural losses, the drying‐out of two of Australia's major river systems and far‐reaching ecosystem damage. Yet the drought's origins have remained elusive. For Southeast Australia, we show here that the “Big Dry” and other iconic 20th Century droughts, including the Federation Drought (1895–1902) and World War II drought (1937–1945), are driven by Indian Ocean variability, not Pacific Ocean conditions as traditionally assumed. Specifically, a conspicuous absence of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.92
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
8- CCCaroline C. UmmenhoferCorresponding
UNSW Sydney
- MHMatthew H. England
UNSW Sydney
- PCPeter C. McIntosh
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Collaboration for Australian Weather and Climate Research
- GMGary Meyers
University of Tasmania, Integrated Marine Observing System
- MJMichael J. Pook
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Collaboration for Australian Weather and Climate Research
Topics & keywords
- Metropolitan area
- Geography
- Economic shortage
- Agriculture
- Indian ocean
- Climatology
- Dry zone
- Precipitation
- Life below water