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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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Charlotte Ramotswe

Imposing Our Prejudices on the Value of Flood Waters: A Note from Cathy Green

February 28, 2009 By Charlotte Ramotswe

WHEN nutrient rich water flows into Lake Eyre it is considered good for the environment, but when nutrient rich water flows into the Great Barrier Reef lagoon it is considered bad for the environment. 

Indeed every time that Lake Eyre in central Australia floods, our oh-so-sensitive-to-nature journalists provide us with the sort of happy purple prose that we see on the front page of today’s The Australian, where Jamie Walker says:

“The torrents that swept down the swollen Georgina and Diamantina rivers, mixing in Goyder Lagoon before surging through Warburton Creek and into the lake proper, carry a bounty of new life: nutrient-rich sediments to feed the thirsty native vegetation that has erupted all around it, and in turn herbaceous native rodents; fish for the mass of birds tracking the flood; all the water the wild camels from the Simpson Desert can drink.”

Meanwhile, every time it rains hard enough in north Queensland for rivers to flood into the Great Barrier Reef lagoon, which represents precisely the same phenomenon as the Diamantina feeding Lake Eyre, journalists at The Australian provide us with much lamenting and concern like the following:

“A MASSIVE surge of polluted water has spewed onto the Great Barrier Reef following heavy rains that hit north Queensland last week, environmentalists say.

The WWF estimated up to one million megalitres – enough polluted water to twice fill Sydney Harbour – entered the reef after a monsoon brought drenching rain to north Queensland.

Mr Heath said satellite imagery confirmed water flows travelled to mid-shelf…”

Nature herself simply doesn’t care about the big environmental impacts and changes, no matter how much birthing, killing or (from our perspective) environmental degradation they may cause – it’s all just part and parcel of being a dynamic planet.

*******************

Cathy has a PhD and lives in Far North Queensland.

The photograph of the pelicans was taken by Jennifer Marohasy below the Torrumbarry Weir, Central Murray Valley, in October 2007.  Pelicans (Pelecanus conspicillatus) can be found in coastal and inland Australia – where ever there are fish.  Some fishermen say that when there are floods on the land there is bounty in the sea.

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Birds, Floods

Satellite to Monitor Emissions

January 25, 2009 By Charlotte Ramotswe

Japan has launched the world’s first satellite dedicated to monitoring global greenhouse gas emissions, as part of efforts to tackle climate change.  Read more here.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Oil and Gas Exploration to Continue Under Obama

January 24, 2009 By Charlotte Ramotswe

The US Interior Department estimates that the Outer Continental Shelf holds 86 billion barrels of oil and 420 trillion cubic feet of natural gas that have yet to be discovered.  Read more here.

Filed Under: News

More Cosmic Ray Correlations

January 24, 2009 By Charlotte Ramotswe

The number of high-energy cosmic-rays reaching a detector deep underground, closely matches temperature measurements in the upper atmosphere.  Read more here.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

John Stossel on Global Warming

January 24, 2009 By Charlotte Ramotswe

Lots of “good scientists” don’t agree that the debate is over.  Watch the video here.

Filed Under: News, Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

How to Save the Planet, James Lovelock

January 24, 2009 By Charlotte Ramotswe

There is one way we could save ourselves and that is through the massive burial of charcoal. It would mean farmers turning all their agricultural waste – which contains carbon that the plants have spent the summer sequestering – into non-biodegradable charcoal, and burying it in the soil.  Read more here.

Filed Under: News, Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

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Jennifer Marohasy Jennifer Marohasy BSc PhD has worked in industry and government. She is currently researching a novel technique for long-range weather forecasting funded by the B. Macfie Family Foundation. Read more

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