Greenery booms after a year's worth of rain hits Australian Outback
Drenching rains and resulting floodwaters led to renewed life amid the rusty red deserts of interior Queensland. Satellite imagery revealed vast fields of lush greenery in the days and weeks following the deluge.
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Australia has had it rough over the past few months. Just weeks after Cyclone Alfred and its remnants brought heavy rain and strong winds to southeastern Queensland, another prolonged heavy rainfall event struck the western half of the state.
The Bureau of Meteorology reported that more than 400 mm of rain fell across a region of interior Queensland known as Channel Country between March 22 and 29, dropping more than a year's worth of rain in just one week. A series of upper-level troughs over the region tapped into vast reserves of humid air moving inland, turning on the atmospheric tap to produce prolific rainfall.
Torrential rains falling on desert ground is a recipe for widespread flooding. Numerous rural communities were inundated by the rising waters, according to ABC News. 'I'm not sure there's even been anything like this before, not that I know of anyway,' one of the affected residents told the news outlet.
Desert areas are well-known for their resilient plant life, and bouts of rain can bring that vegetation to life in spectacular form—a phenomenon often seen in the American Southwest. Recent imagery released by NASA revealed the extent of rejuvenated life across the Australian Outback through the month of April.
Certain bands of satellite imagery can detect the difference between surfaces like water and vegetation, easily allowing us to see the vast blooms of desert life that flourished in the days and weeks after the extreme rains.
Contains files from Australia's ABC News.
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