Sydney turns red: dust storm blankets city

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srainhoutx
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Sydney turns red: dust storm blankets city

#1 Postby srainhoutx » Tue Sep 22, 2009 7:41 pm

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#2 Postby HURAKAN » Tue Sep 22, 2009 7:51 pm

WOW. That's impressive
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#3 Postby JonathanBelles » Tue Sep 22, 2009 11:36 pm

Wow! It really is red!
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Re: Sydney turns red: dust storm blankets city

#4 Postby srainhoutx » Wed Sep 23, 2009 11:51 am

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Re: Sydney turns red: dust storm blankets city

#5 Postby Cyclenall » Wed Sep 23, 2009 7:59 pm

Incredible! I wasn't aware that they got dust storms period and that they would be confined to just the dessert. This stat really hit me though:

"Estimates suggest that during the peak of the storm, the Australian continent was losing 75,000 tonnes of dust per hour off the NSW coast north of Sydney"

(From DustWatch and is also widely seen in the second paragraph of the Wikipedia article currently)
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Re: Sydney turns red: dust storm blankets city

#6 Postby HURAKAN » Thu Sep 24, 2009 6:49 am

Image Image

Image

Huge clean-up after Sydney storm

Australia has been clearing up after its worst dust storm in seven decades, which smothered Sydney and brought transport to a standstill.

Sydney's residents have spent the day cleaning their streets, homes and cars.

Wednesday's storm dumped millions of tonnes of dust over New South Wales before heading north to Queensland.

The skies are now clear, but industry groups are still counting the cost of wasted working hours, the loss of agricultural soil and flight delays.

Seen from space

The storm of red dust which blew into Sydney came from the desert outback; thousands of tons of topsoil from the arid and drought-stricken centre of the country were sucked up by powerful winds and blown eastwards.

The haze was so extensive it could be seen from space, appearing as a huge brown smudge in satellite photographs of Australia.

Visibility in Sydney was so bad that flights were diverted and harbour ferry traffic disrupted. Landmarks such as the Opera House were obscured, and many residents took to wearing masks.

Emergency services reported a surge in calls from people with breathing problems.

Skies over eastern Australia were mostly clear on Thursday, and the country's largest airport aimed to resume normal flight schedules.

The authorities in New South Wales and Queensland have lifted water restrictions - imposed because of the drought - so residents can clean their homes and vehicles.

Weather bureau official Mike De Salis told reporters that there were likely to be more dusty days in the coming weeks, but nothing on the scale of Wednesday's storm.

Dust storms are common in the arid "red centre" of Australia, but they rarely reach the populated coastal regions.

Thursday morning's newspapers were full of coverage of the unusual event.

The Sydney Morning Herald called it "The day the country blew into town," while the headline in the Daily Telegraph was "Doomsday".

"It wasn't, as the saying goes, a good laundry day," an editorial in the Telegraph added.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/a ... 272128.stm
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