Tropical
Cyclone Owen brought flash flooding, storm surges and destructive winds to
Queensland, Australia in the last week. Gaining its strength over the Gulf of
Carpentaria, it made landfall on Saturday morning as a category 3 cyclone and
brought winds gusts up to 124mph and torrential downpours – 17cm of rain fell
in just two hours in places on the Cape York Peninsula. Weakening to a tropical
low, it then continued to track down Queenland’s east coast, with further
torrential downpours causing flash flooding to Whitsundays and Central Coast
regions, before moving offshore into the Coral Sea on Monday.
Extreme
flash flooding has also hit parts of South Africa, as a sudden extreme hailstorm
occurred on Saturday in Sun City, to the northwest of Johannesburg. The hail
caused damage to building and vehicles, forcing holiday makers to evacuate the
area.
In America,
a heavy snowstorm swept through south-eastern states on the weekend of 8th-9th
December. The highest snowfall total was received on Mount Mitchell in North
Carolina, where 86cm fell. The weight of the snow brought power lines down,
with 300,000 people affected by electricity outages. A large number of flights
were cancelled and 670 vehicle collisions were reported in North Carolina.
Link to Guardian feature: https://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/dec/19/world-weatherwatch-flash-flooding-australia-south-africa
