States in Australia are set to get further battered by extreme weather and resultant flooding in the coming days. Image / Nasa
States in Australia are set to get further battered by extreme weather and resultant flooding in the coming days. Image / Nasa
Australia is on track to record one of its wettest Marches in history as a relentless “double-tap” of monsoon weather batters the nation’s north and west.
After a week when Queensland and the Top End were lashed by record-breaking rainfall, the focus has shifted to a dangerous tropical low nowanchored near the Northern Territory-Kimberley border.
Satellite images from Nasa show the difference in Queensland’s Channel Country, with floodwaters arriving along the Georgina and Diamantina Rivers.
The Bureau of Meteorology predicts that in the next four days, the western half of the NT and adjacent parts of Western Australia could receive between 50 and 100mm of rain.
This could climb to 200mm in some isolated pockets.
The system is threatening to dump several months’ worth of rain in just 48 hours.
Australia is on track to record one of its wettest Marches in history. Image / Nasa
Since the start of March, numerous rivers across Queensland and the NT have breached major flooding thresholds.
Water levels are expected to recede in areas that have been most affected by the recent flood, such as Katherine, according to senior bureau meteorologist Angus Hines.
However, there is a forecast for showers for those areas for the next couple of days, but “not as much as rain as what led to the floods in the first place”, he said.
West of the Daly River has “major record flooding” at the moment, with residents being evacuated.
This is likely to continue for several more days before water levels drop, with rivers across the east coast that had moderate to severe flooding now starting to subside.
This includes the Burnett River that flows through Bundaberg, where flood levels neared the devastating heights reached in 2010.
Katherine has endured its worst flooding in decades, with the river surging past the major 17.5m mark on March 6.
Parts of Queensland recorded their highest three-day rainfall totals on record between Sunday and Tuesday of last week, with the extreme weather proving deadly.
Chinese tourists Qingwei Qui, 26, and Yuchen Guo, 23, were found dead inside their car near Kilkivan on Thursday, with the alarm raised on Wednesday after the pair failed to reach their destination on the North Burnett.
Their car had veered off tracks from the bridge into flood water.
Another desperate search is underway for a man who vanished in floodwaters near Bundaberg after he fell from his houseboat.
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