January
hottest month on record in Australia
2
February, 2013
Australia
experienced its hottest month on record in January, despite floods
and storms that devastated parts of the country's east, according to
officials. Australia experienced its hottest month on record in
January, despite floods and storms that devastated parts of the
country's east, officials said.
The
Bureau of Meteorology said both the average mean temperature of 29.68
degrees Celsius (85.42 degrees Fahrenheit) and the average mean
maximum temperature of 36.92 Celsius surpassed previous records set
in January 1932.
The
nation's central outback sweltered under a "dome" of heat
for much of the month, with the Northern Territory posting its
hottest mean temperature on record for January of 31.93 Celsius, the
bureau said.
"The
heatwave in the first half of January was exceptional in its extent
and duration," it said in a statement released Friday.
"The
national average maximum temperature on 7 January was the highest on
record. Numerous stations set records for the most days in succession
above 40 degrees Celsius, including Alice Springs (17 days) and
Birdsville (31 days)."
The
bureau said a large number of weather stations set all-time record
high temperatures during the heatwave, including Sydney (45.8 Celsius
on January 18) and Hobart (41.8 Celsius on January 4).
The
highest temperature recorded during the heatwave was at Moomba in
South Australia, which hit a scorching 49.6 Celsius on 12 January.
The
bureau said the heatwave, which aided bushfires in the eastern
states, was followed by extreme rainfall and flooding for some
coastal areas of Queensland and New South Wales caused by ex-tropical
cyclone Oswald.
The
rain caused extensive flooding in the Queensland towns of Bundaberg,
where some houses were washed away and roads destroyed, and Gladstone
among others.
"Gladstone
received 820 millimetres (32 inches) of rainfall in four days, which
exceeded its previous record for a whole month, and more than the
annual rainfall recorded in 2011 or 2012," the bureau said.
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