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- Channel Country bursting back to life after the floods + PICTURES
The Channel Country in flood May 2025 Image supplied Helen Commens Mc Mackenzie said overall 12 shires were impacted by the floods and it is estimated 213,000 head of sheep, cattle and goats were lost in the event (90,000 sheep, 90,000 cattle and the rest goats and horses)
- Channel Country transforms after record-breaking flooding in outback . . .
Record-breaking floods have parts of the Channel Country in south-west Queensland springing to life, a haven for flora and fauna across thousands of kilometres of inland waterways
- Flood-hit Outback turns lush green in stunning once-in-a . . . - 7NEWS
From above, the Channel Country of southwest Queensland resembles a network of veins — rivers and streams pumping lifeblood into the land, reviving grasses, blooms and everything in between The red heart of the outback has been revived by floodwaters and is flourishing with green
- Queensland floods: graziers count staggering cost - Brisbane Times
The Tullys run sheep and cattle on 66,000 hectares just south of the town of Windorah in Queensland’s channel country, where more than a year’s worth of rain fell in the record-breaking monsoon
- Floodwater cuts through dry Channel Country - Geoscience Australia
Images of what could be described as a slow-moving inland sea in southwest Queensland show the waters cutting along through the aptly named Channel Country This is the parched landscape that scrapes across the Simpson Desert, flowing south through south-western Queensland to South Australia and down to Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre
- Floodwaters Surge Through the Australian Outback - NASA Earth Observatory
Heavy rainfall in Queensland sent floodwaters sweeping across vast stretches of the Australian outback in late March 2025 More than a year’s worth of rain fell in one week in some places The deluge caused major flooding along multiple rivers in Channel Country, submerging small towns and grazing lands in southwestern Queensland
- Western Queenslands Channel Country has sprung to life after tragic . . .
Unprecedented flooding has transformed Western Queensland’s Channel Country with a once-in-a-decade explosion of life, locals say Usually barren landscapes across the interior have been transformed into a network of oasis-like veins that support millions of birds, wildflowers and lush pasture
- Channel Country floods: Satellite images reveal scale of floods . . .
Satellite images show full scale of floods in Channel Country, worse than 1974, isolating towns and affecting livestock
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