BAMOS Vol 31 Special Issue October 2018 Bulletin Vol 31 Special Issue 01 2018 | Page 13

BAMOS Special Issue Indigenous Weather Knowledge To me, a major change that occurred during the 30 years is the recognition of the value of the weather and climate knowledge accumulated over tens of thousands of years before European settlement. The original inhabitants of Australia coexisted with the continent’s extremes of climate. They had a lifestyle that made use of the seasonal variations and the daily extremes. A formal recognition of the value of this is the Indigenous Weather Knowledge website (Figure 5) maintained by the Bureau of Meteorology. It is a major statement that to learn about indigenous knowledge of the seasons, one goes to the official Bureau website, the same source referred to for daily radar maps, weather forecasts and seasonal climate outlooks. Changes in meteorological knowledge Scientific understanding of both the atmosphere and the ocean has progressed enormously over the 30 years. Some changes that strike me as being particularly important are the following: • the recognition of the important role of multi-decadal variability in understanding climate; climate trends and return periods for extreme events; and in making projections for human-induced climate change • the importance of intraseasonal variability, including but not restricted to the Madden Julian Oscillation • the role of extreme events in climate change studies and projections • the changes in forecasting which now involves Next Generation forecast work stations, automatically worded forecasts from numerical weather prediction model output, convection resolving operational numerical models, and ensemble prediction systems • changes in our knowledge of the climate drivers for interannual variability. In 1987, the only known climate driver was the El Niño Southern Oscillation phenomenon (ENSO). Climate drivers have now been expanded to include the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) and the Southern Annular Mode (SAM). Changes in the meteorological oceanographic community and Thirty years ago, professional meteorology in particular, was dominated by the major institutions in Melbourne, including the Bureau of Meteorology, CSIRO’s Division of Atmospheric Physics, and the meteorological sections of departments at Monash and Melbourne Universities. This has completely changed, with large university groups across the country, as well as active Regional Centres for AMOS. Prior to AMOS there was no national forum for presentation of research results or to meet with fellow meteorology and oceanography science professionals. Now, the Annual AMOS Conference is a highly attended meeting, running four parallel sessions, and is the major forum for presentation of research to peers. Prior to AMOS the physical oceanographers and meteorologists were separate communities. AMOS changed this overnight. The two sciences are now very closely linked through operational coupled models and through seasonal variability studies and forecasts, particularly involving ENSO. A major beneficiary of the combined profession in our Society has been climate change science, which is fundamentally a coupled science. Lastly, a major achievement of AMOS over thirty years has been the activities of the AMOS education and outreach committees. Through these committees AMOS has run summer schools and conferences for professional development, organised public talks, presentations to schools, adult education courses, school weather competitions and the AMOS weather tipping competition. Figure 5. The Bureau of Meteorology’s Indigenous Weather Knowledge website. 13