From any eye and all angles, the Murray-Darling River Basin conjures a grand but vexing vista. It stretches over a thousand miles across southern Australia. Its tributaries, wetlands and billabongs determine the landscape of those who live there — thousands of lives that in turn shape its fate too.
J. Carl Ganter, an award-winning photojournalist, writer and broadcast reporter, is the co-founder and director of Circle of Blue. Reach Ganter at carl.ganter@circleofblue.org. For a complete list of credits, acknowledgements and other resources related to Circle of Blue’s coverage of “The Biggest Dry” please click here.
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TAGS: Aborigine, Adelaide, Agriculture, Australia, Climate, climate change, Coorong National Park, Deaths, disaster, Drought, Environment, Farmland, Food Industry, food security, Food Shortages, global warming, globalization, Gum Trees, Industry, Irrigation, Murray Darling, Population, Rainfall, Rainwater, Research + Reports, Rice, South Australia, U.S. Infrastructure, U.S. Pollution, U.S. Rivers, Victoria, Water infrastructure, Water Policy, Water Pollution, Water Scarcity, Water Shortages, Weather, wetlands, wildfire
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i want notes about the polution