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Old Harry and No Man’s Land

Australian bushfires

In GCSE courses you are required to study extreme weather events and the impacts that they have on people and the environment. This article looks at the devastating bushfires in Australia in February 2009.

Bushfires in southeast Australia are a frequent event, but those of early 2009 were catastrophic. There were many reasons for the fires but the extreme weather was a major cause. It is thought that events such as these may become more frequent in a planet experiencing climate change.

At least 173 people died as the worst bushfires in living memory swept through the state of Victoria, to the north and east of Melbourne, on 7 February 2009 — aday that has become known as Black Saturday. The fires injured a further 500 people, destroyed more than 2,000 homes and torched 400,000 hectares of land. For several weeks, firefighters continued to battle against the blazes at ground level, assisted by bulldozers (to build firebreaks) and water-bombing helicopters. Fire crews from other states and countries were called in to assist them.

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Old Harry and No Man’s Land

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