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E-grāmata: Drought Country: The Dry Times That Have Shaped Australia

  • Formāts: 304 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Feb-2025
  • Izdevniecība: CSIRO Publishing
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781486314065
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  • Formāts: 304 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 03-Feb-2025
  • Izdevniecība: CSIRO Publishing
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781486314065
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Droughts have lurked behind Australia’s major nation-shaping moments from European settlement at Port Jackson to Federation. They have caused catastrophic damage to Aboriginal, colonial and modern societies and, of course, to the very land itself. Indeed, by depriving humans and animals of water, that element most fundamental to life, droughts cut to the very essence of living in Australia.

Weaving historical accounts with scientific theory, Robert Godfree will take you on a journey through the most brutal Australian droughts of the past three centuries, encountering mythmaking, colonialism, smallpox, economic depression, a "dust bowl," heatwaves, ecosystem collapse and the coming of the second "age of coal." With analysis and insights informed by his childhood in rural Australia and career in research science, he reflects on the choices made during each of these crises and looks to the future of what is becoming a more volatile and human-dominated continent.

Drought Country is a timely exploration of this continent’s harsh climate, providing useful insights for land managers, the scientific community, environmentalists and general readers.

Features:
  • Takes an in-depth look at the history of Australian droughts from European settlement to present day.
  • Identifies the worst droughts that have occurred over the past three centuries and the ways they affected agriculture, natural ecosystems and people.
  • Explores significant droughts, including the great Settlement, early- and mid-1800s, Millennium and Black Summer droughts, and the Federation to World War II "dust bowl."
  • Discusses how we can learn from our past to help our future on an increasingly water-scarce continent.
Foreword

Preface

Acknowledgements

Cultural sensitivity warning

Introduction: A land fertile for drought



Part 1: Big feller dry

1: Legends

2: Calamity on the Coquun

3: Vanishing waters



Part 2: An ingratious country

4: Unsettling times

5: The summer of discontent

6: An uncommon and tedious drought

7: Bass and the South Coast drought



Part 3: A sky untroubled by clouds

8: The poverty of confinement

9: The stillness of death

10: Depressed times

11: Transitions



Part 4: Hells half century

12: The Titans grip

13: The living drought

14: Niobes ruin

15: Crucified

16: The desert of dry bones



Part 5: Life in the Anthropocene

17: River of tears

18: The great divide

19: What lies beneath

20: Day zero

21: Hung out to dry



Conclusion: Obscured horizons

Index
Robert Godfree is an ecologist who developed a passion for understanding the history and environmental impacts of drought while growing up in northern New South Wales. He has worked as a Research Scientist at CSIRO since 2000.