Disrupting the Borg is expensive and time consuming!
Google Search
-
Recent Posts
- Heatwaves Of 1980
- More Proof Of Global Warming
- Shutting Down The Climate
- ChatGPT Research Proposal
- Warming Twice As Fast
- Understanding Climate Science
- Recycling The Same News Every Century
- Arctic Sea Ice Declining Faster Than Expected
- Will Their Masks Protect Them From CO2?
- Global Warming Emergency In The UK
- Mainstream Media Analysis Of DOGE
- Angry And Protesting
- Bad Weather Caused By Racism
- “what the science shows”
- Causes Of Earthquakes
- Precision Taxation
- On the Cover Of The Rolling Stone
- Demise Of The Great Barrier Reef
- Net Zero In China
- Make America Healthy Again
- Nobel Prophecy Update
- Grok Defending Climategate
- It Is Big Oil’s Fault
- Creative Marketing
- No Emergency Or Injunction
Recent Comments
- arn on More Proof Of Global Warming
- arn on More Proof Of Global Warming
- Bob G on Heatwaves Of 1980
- Bob G on More Proof Of Global Warming
- conrad ziefle on More Proof Of Global Warming
- conrad ziefle on Shutting Down The Climate
- arn on Shutting Down The Climate
- conrad ziefle on ChatGPT Research Proposal
- william on ChatGPT Research Proposal
- David M Kitting on ChatGPT Research Proposal
Expert : “Present Drying Trends In Australia Due To Humans”
This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.
Due to a disruption of the jet stream, dry turned into wet. Another such disruption could just as easily cause a turn from wet to dry.
Until CO2 reached 350 PPM, rainfall in Australia was always perectly distributed. That fact was withheld from the rest of the world for fear Australia would become overpopulated.
Steve,
Where did you get that photo of the mulga roots?
Louis Hissink
Louis,
It is contained in the link in the article.
The climate of the SW of Western Australia is Mediterranean, with hot dry summers and cool wet winters. Winter rain comes from frontal systems which blow in from the west, off the Indian Ocean. Declining “evaporation from catchments” isn’t going to have much effect.
This area has seen declining rainfall for decades. I suspect it has something to do with temperature oscillations in the Indian Ocean, but unlike the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans I haven’t found much information. Anyone know of anything? Bob Tisdale perhaps?