Prophecy and Prediction: Forecasting Drought and Famine in British India and the Australian Colonies

Author:

Morgan Ruth A.

Abstract

In British India and the Australian colonies, drought and famine, as well as other hazards, were challenges facing local and metropolitan meteorologists. In this article, I examine the colonial and environmental contexts that animated the studies of both Indian and Australian scientists and the meteorological futures they sought to realise. Colonial scientists in India and Australia were eager to develop means of seasonal weather prediction that could aid the advancement of Empire underway in their respective continents. As this article shows, meteorologists in both places understood that the climate knowledge emerging on each side of the east Indian Ocean could be mutually beneficial in related ways. Their vast continental scales, imperial bonds, geographic orientation and telegraphic connection made them worthy partners in colonial efforts to discern and predict weather patterns, while contributing to the wider field of meteorological science. The threat to colonial security and prosperity that drought and famine posed helped to thicken the bonds between these reaches of the empire, as their meteorologists sought to impose their territorial logic of the skies above.

Publisher

White Horse Press

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,History,Global and Planetary Change

Cited by 4 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. ‘All the Men at the Pump’: Water, Wool, and Squatter Anne Drysdale’s Diaries, 1840–1851;Australian Historical Studies;2024-04-22

2. Imperialism, colonialism, and climate change science;WIREs Climate Change;2023-06-21

3. El Niño and the Human–Environment Nexus: Drought and Vulnerability in Singapore, 1877–1911;Droughts, Floods, and Global Climatic Anomalies in the Indian Ocean World;2022

4. Southern skies: Australian atmospheric research and global climate change;Disaster Prevention and Management: An International Journal;2020-12-15

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