Uluru experiences ‘heaviest rain’ on record for September

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The Northern Territory’s Uluru has experienced record-breaking rain for the month of September, says Sky News Weather Meteorologist Rob Sharpe.

“We’ve already had 32 millimetres for Uluru overnight,” Mr Sharpe said.

“And that is the heaviest rain for Uluru for September on record.”
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Keep in mind, records for that area are less than 100yrs old. There are no written records before that. Most of australia has no written records of weather past 100yrs

bestestusername
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No one cares about a rock that nobody can climb.

lispyDribbler
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The thing about the swing in climate is that none of us know where will become hotter and drier, and where will become colder and wetter. Has anyone noticed the shift in the polar axis, with where the actual north and south auroras are now positioned in the earth? As the south pole has shifted further north, melting ice that is also further north now, somewhere it is freezing ice where it once wasn't. Look at the aurora photos and see where the centre of the poles actually are. So if some places are melting, some are freezing, who knows, maybe the desert might experience change and evolve from beyond a dry dusty desert that only those clinging to traditions they can't remember even want to live in.

Kerri-od
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Oh no John Ayers rocks suffering climate change😂

merlinite-
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Who would know, we're not allowed to go there?

boxerdally
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Australians can't go up most don't give a fuck if it rains there or not! :P

maxlasthero
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Ayers Rock, always was, always will be

hebbsylicious
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Aboriginal people didn’t keep records so this is all bs

GeorgeMcphillips-it
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This should only concern first nations people after all it is their rock.

rabidsminions
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Intense rainfall events and floods are increasing due to Climate Change.

HansReichhardtsohn