- 1950 Australian rainfall records
The 1950 rainfall records for the
Australia n states ofNew South Wales andQueensland reported probably the most remarkable record highrainfall totals ever recorded anywhere in the continent. Averaged over both of these states, 1950 is clearly the wettest year since adequate records became available "circa" 1885. Queensland recorded a statewide average rainfall of around convert|1125|mm|in|1 as against a mean since 1885 of around convert|640|mm|in|1, [ [http://www.bom.gov.au/web01/ncc/www/cli_chg/timeseries/rain/0112/qld/latestsort.txt Queensland sorted annual rainfall] ] whilst New South Wales recorded around convert|930|mm|in|1 as against an instrumental mean around convert|520|mm|in|1. [ [http://www.bom.gov.au/web01/ncc/www/cli_chg/timeseries/rain/0112/nsw/latestsort.txt New South Wales sorted annual rainfall] ] Australia's wettest town,Tully also recorded it's highest annual rainfall total in 1950 with a phenomenal convert|7898.0|mm|in|1 [ [http://www.bom.gov.au/jsp/ncc/cdio/weatherData/av?p_nccObsCode=18&p_display_type=dataFile&p_stn_num=032042] ]Evolution and causes of the abnormal rainfall
First four months
The year 1950 opened quite quietly over Australia, with a relatively inactive
monsoon and generally very cool conditions further south. A major cyclone [ [http://www.ema.gov.au/ema/emadisasters.nsf/c85916e930b93d50ca256d050020cb1f/1559126b165dd043ca256d330005800d?OpenDocument&Highlight=0,1950 January 1950 storm surge] ] in the third week of January gave substantial rain to most of New South Wales and caused high winds that killed seven people, but it was not until February that the pattern of abnormal rainfall over NSW and Queensland became firmly established.Especially heavy rainfall occurred over the southwest of New South Wales (extending into most of Victoria) during February, but it was in March, normally at the end of the wet season, that the heaviest rainfall occurred. The monsoon trough, which normally is situated around Cape York Peninsula, moved to a latitude near Boulia. At the beginning of that month some of the worst flooding on record occurred over the Barron and
Herbert River s, and with a majortropical cyclone following the contour of the Queensland coast for over a week from March 4 to 11 and then moving inland, the heavy rain extended deep into the interior of Queensland and even to that part ofSouth Australia northeast of theFlinders Ranges . The flood on theDiamantina River was measured as the highest ever recorded, and Windorah on the lower Cooper recorded for the entire month convert|442|mm|in|1, which is about 145 percent of its mean annual rainfall. Most pastoral areas were described as having a "superabundance of feed" ["Queensland Year Book", 1950] and losses of sheep in theLake Eyre Basin due to blowfly strike were as serious as experienced in the frequentdroughts characteristic of the basin's extraordinarily variable climate. [Bureau of Meteorology, Commonwealth of Australia, Melbourne; "Meteorological summary for selected climatological stations, Australia; 1950, March and April"]With the interaction with a cold front mid-month, the heavy rainfall shifted southward to the
Murrumbidgee River basin. In three days,Canberra received convert|150|mm|in|0 and the heavy rain continued over southeastern New South Wales and adjacent Victoria until the end of the month. Major flooding - unusual for this time of year - occurred on all rivers draining from theAustralian Alps and over the South Coast. By the time the rain eased after further heavy falls early in April, Canberra had had its second wettest month on record. Over the North Coast up to Brisbane and inland to theDarling Downs , however, March rainfall had been below normal.In these regions, however, the moist easterly flow of March continued to bring heavy rainfall later in April; however, in much of western and far southern New South Wales April was very dry. The continuing rain, aided by falls near Lake Eyre that prevented the rivers drying up, allowed the lake to begin filling during that month to the astonishment of many people who had seen the lake during the dry era from 1922 to 1938 and concluded that the lake could never fill with water. [Royal Geographical Society of Australasia. South Australian Branch. Lake Eyre Committee; "Lake Eyre, South Australia : the great flooding of 1949-50 / the report of the Lake Eyre Committee"]
econd four months
May and the first week of June saw a relatively typical winter circulation over most parts of Australia. However, the tendency of strong frontal depressions to move inland combined with generally weak anticyclones meant that temperatures were generally mild, whilst a major low pressure system off the south coast gave that region further flooding rains.
From the second week of June to the end of winter, the weather patterns became quite unusual. Strong high-pressure systems over
Tasmania and Victoria were virtually constant and allowed moist easterly air to flow consistently over New South Wales and Queensland. Combined with a series of upper-level lows lifting the moisture, this caused remarkably heavy rain except over the extreme south of New South Wales, where it was dry and the ski season extremely poor. June 1950 wasSydney 's wettest month on record with convert|643|mm|in, whilst at Dorrigo on the edge of the coastal escarpment, over convert|1400|mm|in fell in the last three weeks of the month and convert|624|mm|in on the 24th alone. Even at normally dry Longreach, convert|160|mm|in fell for June and convert|140|mm|in for July. Most extraordinary, however, was on the Central Coast of Queensland, where Bowen received over convert|400|mm|in, or "twenty times its normal July rainfall"!Owing to the moist easterly flow, temperatures for the winter were remarkably mild. At Inverell, the mean minimum for July was convert|6|C|F|0, which is as much as 6°C above normal and an incredible 10°C (18°F) higher than had been recorded just four years previously. [Bureau of Meteorology; "Meteorological summary for selected climatological stations, Australia; 1950, July and 1946, July"]
The consequences of this heavy rain falling on saturated catchments with absolutely no drying westerly winds was disastrous. Most rivers on the coast of New South Wales, and many further inland, reached record levels. Food shortages were particularly prevalent in Sydney and surrounding cities, and
railway s and roads were repeatedly cut as each successive storm flooded all major rivers.Vegetable crops on the Hawkesbury River were hardest hit, with most being completely destroyed and prices skyrocketing.Except for a central portion of New South Wales, August was fairly dry. However, the continued absence of
frost or westerly winds meant that at the end of winter catchments were still extremely wet. With theSouthern Oscillation Index firmly established as strongly positive after a couple of years near zero, it was clear that further heavy rain was always imminent.Last four months
September continued mild with rainfall ranging from nil in western NSW to again very heavy around
Dubbo andNyngan , but October and November, with cold air continually interacting with moist easterly winds, saw a return to the extreme wet conditions of June and July. In these two months Dubbo received a total of convert|420|mm|in of rain and the flooding of March returned to the reprieved southeastern areas of New South Wales. By the end of October a large number of stations had already exceeded annual records set in the1890s .Wheat crops in all of Queensland and all but the
Riverina in NSW, which had needed some fine weather to finish, were almost completely destroyed by the excessive rainfall. Many farmers had no crop at all because ofrust and many other crops were fed to cattle as their quality as grain was extremely poor.The continued rain and mild conditions (warm in the south, cool in the tropics) led to outbreak of
Murray Valley encephalitis which killed 19 people during the subsequent summer.cite web
publisher=Bureau of Meteorology
url=http://www.bom.gov.au/lam/climate/levelthree/c20thc/flip8.htm
title=Rain and disease
accessdate=2008-03-30 ] It had the remarkable positive, however, of allowing the first curbs to therabbit plague in Australia viamyxomatosis , which had not spread in the dry era since 1922 because of the absence of standing water formosquito es to breed.December was very wet in the north, with many rainfall records in the
Georgina River basin, but was hot and dry in New South Wales except aorundTibooburra in the far northwest. Between Sydney and Dubbo it was the first drier-than-normal month since 1949.Evaluation
The extremely widespread flooding that resulted from record rains and unusually low evaporation caused at least 26 deaths on the North Coast during the winter. [ [http://www.ema.gov.au/ema/emadisasters.nsf/c85916e930b93d50ca256d050020cb1f/d978920aaeb6d1cdca256d33000581cb?OpenDocument Eastern NSW Floods] ]
Although record rainfall occurred over about "two-thirds" of New South Wales and half of Queensland, the most remarkable rainfalls occurred over the central inland of New South Wales. At many stations in the basins of the Macquarie and
Bogan River s, the 1950 annual rainfall are as much as convert|250|mm|in|0 higher than that of the second-wettest year in a record of around 130 years:Some stations show similar differences in 1974 (central Australia) and 2000 (
Northern Territory , Kimberley andPilbara ). However, it is probable that by thenglobal warming and possiblyAsia naerosol s were influencing Australia's climate and thus these are "not" natural variability, which the record 1950 rainfalls above undoubtedly are.Using a
normal distribution one can estimate thereturn period of 1950-level annual rainfall for the Dubbo region as around 375 years, or about three times the length of instrumental rainfall data. For areas even a little further west, however, theskewness is too high to use this method, but there can be little doubt that the return periods are similar. Excluding records post-1968, when enhancedgreenhouse gas es has undoubtedly impacted Australian rainfall beyond (admittedly generally high) natural variability, there are no other totals over a substantial area that compare for improbability of being repeated.A noteworthy fact is that the extreme absence of westerly winds meant that unlike 1956, 1973 and 1974, the year 1950 was not uniformly wet over Australia: [ [http://parlinfoweb.aph.gov.au/piweb/repository1/library/jrnart/w27g60.pdf An assessment of recent trends in Australian rainfall] ] indeed, in much of Tasmania and Western Australia the anticyclonic control associated with the moist airflow over New South Wales and Queensland produced unusually dry conditions. (A remarkable statistic associated with this is that, although the fourth wettest year averaged over Australia, 1950 had a higher proportion of Australia in the "lowest 10 percent" than 68 out of 106 other years since 1900! [ [http://www.bom.gov.au/web01/ncc/www/cli_chg/timeseries/raindecile01/0112/aus/latestsort.txt Sorted data set of proportion of Australia in first decile] ]
ee also
*
Climate of Australia
*La Niña
*Lake Eyre
*Southern Oscillation Notes
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