Dead Man said:For those struggling to make sense of the scale, this image may help:
The area shown is roughly 800 miles wide.
pieatorium said:Too bad it missed by a few hundred kilometers eh fuckwit.
ColeTheMole said:^map
Damn all those rivers, i thought australia is just barren wasteland :lol
sorry.
Dastardly Jerks said:Pretty sure this is just some heavenly beings way of purging North QLD.
evlcookie said:Some footage
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5yNcCuStKA - cars stacked up after it
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJzHqmRRKcQ - more crazy shit
Wow, it never really registered with me that the danger isn't just the water but it's what's in the water that can kill you.evlcookie said:Some footage
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5yNcCuStKA - cars stacked up after it
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJzHqmRRKcQ - more crazy shit
I have a pile of unplayed JRPG's and a pantry stocked with all the nachos-making essentials.seanoff said:Brisbane might be next boys and girls.
Wivenhoe is full and they need to start releasing water.
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Normalcy_biasThe Storyteller said:I never thought the extent of the floods would be this bad.
Veins said:Wow, it never really registered with me that the danger isn't just the water but it's what's in the water that can kill you.
Never thought I'd see the day, back when it was close to 10% in 2007.seanoff said:Brisbane might be next boys and girls.
Wivenhoe is full and they need to start releasing water.
Scary.Wikipedia said:The Wivenhoe dam holds twice as much water as Sydney Harbour.
Just reading this made me tense. Terrifying.Pylon_Trooper said:I think I'd fear things like submerged stormwater drains. Hearing people getting sucked down into them in flooded areas is a nightmare. You'd drown, or get mashed in the concrete network for kilometres. Horrific stuff.
Hope everyone is okay back home in Aus.
seanoff said:Brisbane might be next boys and girls.
Wivenhoe is full and they need to start releasing water.
HolyCheck said:9/11 sucked because cheez tv wasn't on.
Here's a map for you, Dave.SmokyDave said:I still can't really get my head around the scale of flooding. I'm utterly dumb-struck.
All the best to AUS-GAFfers.
:lolSew said:
speedpop said:Some of the rivers swelling to ridiculous levels. Like, breaking records that were at their highest in the 1800s.
Yeah. I wasn't born by the 1974 flood, but I heard it was pretty horrendous. Wikipedia says that the Brisbane River peak was 6.6m at high tide back then - I'm sure it won't get as bad as other river systems up north due to the size, but when you're hearing about those rivers peaking at 9m+ you have to take a step back and be a bit worried.shanshan310 said:What about the Brisbane floods in the 70's (80's?) ? I hear those were pretty bad.
GaryD said:Any Gaffers need help sandbagging or whatever in Brissie PM me and I'll come lend a hand. Stay safe folks
No info here, hope she is okay though.Router said:Radio just said a huge inland Tsunami has hit the King Valley and there are lots of people missing. I have an aunt there and tried calling but no answer yet.
Anyone know anything?
Router said:Radio just said a huge inland Tsunami has hit the King Valley and there are lots of people missing. I have an aunt there and tried calling but no answer yet.
Anyone know anything?
Router said:Anyone know anything?
http://www.smh.com.au/environment/w...vastates-queensland-towns-20110110-19kti.htmlThe Sydney Morning Herald said:At least four people are dead, six missing and dozens more stranded after an "inland tsunami" swept through the Darling Downs city of Toowoomba and the Lockyer Valley.
There have been reports of up to seven deaths. They have not been confirmed, but it is likely the death toll will rise.
Premier Anna Bligh tonight said a woman and a young boy were killed as floods swept through the Toowoomba CBD, while a man and a young boy were killed when they were swept from their home at Murphys Creek.
archnemesis said:
That's awesome of you. I'd love to help, but I'm all the way in Melbourne!GaryD said:Any Gaffers need help sandbagging or whatever in Brissie PM me and I'll come lend a hand. Stay safe folks
Ydahs said:I guess I'll take this opportunity to welcome some Aussies to our dedicated thread over in the online board. Come on by and give an introduction
Bernbaum said:As for Brisbane, well we'll have to wait and see. The river has been overflowing onto the sidewalks in the city since from the week before Christmas. With a controlled drainage of the now-full Wivenhoe Dam, we'll just have to wait and see.
I'm smack bang in the CBD and look right over the river. I take the train but I know of at least busway into the city that crosses a creek which floods at the drop of a hat.
If the banks break, here's what we're looking at: My old university; and Inner-city Brisbane - my office is in a yet-to-exist tower in the top left corner cluster of building.
And then, power outage.Bernbaum said:I have a pile of unplayed JRPG's and a pantry stocked with all the nachos-making essentials.
I'm ready.
Gelry said:And then, power outage.
archnemesis said:
Gelry said:In all seriousness; seeing these pictures is quite shocking. Australia really is a land of extremes. I remember watching a program on our local television (Belgium) talking about years of no rain in the outback of Queensland and now it is nothing but rain (although I don't know if it is raining in the outback too? Seems to be going by the maps posted, but I'm not sure)
The Wet sure is wet this year.
Being on water restrictions during a drought is still a fresh memory. They scaled back on them in late 2009, but from 2005 in the city of Brisbane - the capital of Queensland with a population of about 2 millions - there were limits on what you could use water for, and at what times. Just over a year ago we were technically still in a drought. Things like sprinkling the plants and washing the car were enforced by law.Gelry said:In all seriousness; seeing these pictures is quite shocking. Australia really is a land of extremes. I remember watching a program on our local television (Belgium) talking about years of no rain in the outback of Queensland and now it is nothing but rain (although I don't know if it is raining in the outback too? Seems to be going by the maps posted, but I'm not sure)
The Wet sure is wet this year.
Puts the power of the water into perspective.Veins said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vt-FT-skins
That is a lot of fast moving water.
Veins said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vt-FT-skins
That is a lot of fast moving water.