Desert Dust goes On Tour...
Wow. Weren't those , as swirls of red Outback dust enshrouded the city? It was like some special effects from an Armageddon sci-fi blockbuster. I almost expected The Terminator to appear from the gloom.
It's not the first time Australian cities have experienced this sort of dramatic weather. Back in February 1983, it was , blown-in from the parched interior of
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The smaller-scale mechanism bringing such drama varies. Sometimes, it's the passage of a 'dry' cold front, carrying the dust aloft as it moves across the landscape; at other times, the urban sandblasting comes courtesy of thunderstorms, as powerful outflow of winds whips-up the parched landscape into an ominous approaching wall of dust.
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Here in
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But we also get our share of desert dust, too. And it's quite likely you've seen it.
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In fact, I can think of a number of occasions in the past decade when - often after a spell of overnight summer showers - - I've discovered my car windscreen, roof and bonnet covered in a fine film of curious fine dust, ranging in colour from a light grey-yellow to almost ochre-red.
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It's been carried here all the way from the Sahara - originating in parched dustbowl regions, such as southern
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Sometimes, this all gets blown westward off the Sahara and out over the Atlantic, where vast quantities - estimated at around 500 million tonnes a year - . Some of it journeys even further afield. Around 40 million tonnes of dust blows out of
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Once over the Atlantic, the Saharan dust can get caught-up in the train of depressions running back towards the
More often however, the dust is carried fairly directly - on a warm southerly flow, straight up from Northwest Africa, across
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But cleaning it off our cars is a mild repercussion of this amazing process. It could deliver far more potent effects to our shores.
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Some scientists hypothesized that the costly outbreak of Foot and Mouth in the
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Maybe
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