It's a matter of where the Brisbane River flows.
The Brisbane floods were largely a result of the massive amounts of water that had to be released from Wivenhoe Dam into the Brisbane River. The Brisbane River does not flow anywhere near the Gold Coast, but empties into the sea at Moreton Bay.
No, Sydney was not directly affected by the tsunami that hit Brisbane, Australia. Tsunamis are usually localized events and their impact is limited to specific areas along the coastline where they make landfall.
The Brisbane floods of 2011 were primarily caused by heavy rainfall associated with Cyclone Yasi, which formed in early February 2011. Although Cyclone Yasi itself did not directly hit Brisbane, the extensive rainfall and weather patterns influenced by the cyclone contributed significantly to the flooding in the region. These floods resulted in widespread damage and displacement across Southeast Queensland.
There have been no cyclones reported in Brisbane, capital of Queensland, Australia. Brisbane can be affected by cyclones which occur further north, but no cyclone has ever directly hit Brisbane.
The Japanese tsunami in 2011 hit the northeastern coast of Japan, specifically the Tohoku region. The most heavily affected prefectures were Fukushima, Miyagi, and Iwate.
Hurricane Irene never hit California. Irene struck the U.S. Atlantic coast. California is on the Pacific coast.
Not at all. The Gold Coast was completely free of the Brisbane floods. At most, there were a couple of king tides, but they caused no problems for the coast.
Springfield, west of Brisbane, will not be affected by the floods that are coming to Brisbane in January 2011.
No, Sydney was not directly affected by the tsunami that hit Brisbane, Australia. Tsunamis are usually localized events and their impact is limited to specific areas along the coastline where they make landfall.
It didn't. Cyclone Hamish veered away from the coast before actually doing any damage or hitting Brisbane.
* January 1974 - Cyclone Wanda hit the Queensland coast and developed into a rain depression which ultimately resulted in the Brisbane floods * Christmas 1974 - Cyclone Tracy destroyed most of the city of Darwin, in the Northern Territory.
Parts of southern Queensland were affected by the floods that hit 75% of Queensland in the summer of 2010-2011. Goondiwindi in the southwest and several other southern towns such as Warwick and Stanthorpe were affected, as was the state's capital, Brisbane. However, many pockets of southern Queensland escaped any impact; these areas included the Gold Coast and Redland City.
Cyclone Wanda was responsible for the 1974 floods in Brisbane and Ipswich. Cyclone Tracy, which hit Darwin at the end of the year, brought very little rain.
Darwin has a tropical climate, whereas Brisbane's climate is temperate. The ocean waters around Darwin are warmer, and this generates more cyclones and tropical depressions during summer, whereas Brisbane is rarely hit by cyclones (except for the year Cyclone Wanda contributed to the 1974 Brisbane floods).
Brisbane doesn't get hit by Cyclones that often but they can strike the area anytime in the warmer months. They normally form in the Coral Sea (around 10'S) between November and April and sometimes track south and head towards Brisbane and can cause extreme damage and flooding, even if they do not make landfall.
Four major floods have occurred in Brisbane.The first was on 14 January 1841. This was the biggest flood of the Brisbane River since records began with the river being approximately 8.6 metres above the high tide mark. There was limited destruction to property as the town was still very young and undeveloped.The next major flood began on 5 February 1893. These floods came within 7cm of the 1841 levels.The worst floods in terms of death and loss of property occurred in January 1974 when tropical Cyclone Wanda developed into a rain depression that dumped hundreds of millimetres of rain on an already saturated southeast Queensland. This flood reached a height of 5.5 m. Since the construction of Wivenhoe Dam on the Brisbane River within a few years of this flood, Brisbane was believed to be flood-proof.The most recent major floods to hit Brisbane occurred on 11 January 2011. On this date, the Brisbane River again broke its banks. The flood was the result of a La Nina weather pattern, together with the state being saturated by the rainfall resulting from a cyclone system that hit in the north on Christmas Day 2010. Wivenhoe Dam, which was designed to prevent any further floods, exceeded 160% capacity, requiring the release of a massive amount of water, comparable to the volume of Sydney harbour.
Four major floods have occurred in Brisbane.The first was on 14 January 1841. This was the biggest flood of the Brisbane River since records began with the river being approximately 8.6 metres above the high tide mark. There was limited destruction to property as the town was still very young and undeveloped.The next major flood began on 5 February 1893. These floods came within 7cm of the 1841 levels.The worst floods in terms of death and loss of property occurred in January 1974 when tropical Cyclone Wanda developed into a rain depression that dumped hundreds of millimetres of rain on an already saturated southeast Queensland. This flood reached a height of 5.5 m. Since the construction of Wivenhoe Dam on the Brisbane River within a few years of this flood, Brisbane was believed to be flood-proof.The most recent major floods to hit Brisbane occurred on 11 January 2011. On this date, the Brisbane River again broke its banks. The flood was the result of a La Nina weather pattern, together with the state being saturated by the rainfall resulting from a cyclone system that hit in the north on Christmas Day 2010. Wivenhoe Dam, which was designed to prevent any further floods, exceeded 160% capacity, requiring the release of a massive amount of water, comparable to the volume of Sydney harbour.
Cheltenham and Gloucester were hit with floods in the summer of 2007. these were the worst floods in living memory.