On 1 December 1987 a dust storm driven by a strong cold front entraine
d soil from 100,000 to 200,000 km(2) of the Simpson Desert, Channel Co
untry and semi-arid woodlands of Western Queensland for eighteen hours
. Between 6.3 and 5.5 million t of soil with average particle sizes of
6.75 to 10.5 mu m, were lost from the dust source, 3.4 to 1.9 million
t was lost off the Australian continent, and from this some 3 to 1.7
million t might have traversed the Tasman sea towards New Zealand. A m
athematical model is used to estimate dust lost from the region. This
approach provides estimates of Total Suspended Particulate (TSP) that
are within a factor of 3 of observations. From statistics of the frequ
encies of dust storms 3.8 to 6.8 million t of dust per year is estimat
ed to fall into the South Pacific and contribute to marine sediments.
These are the largest estimates of soil loss by wind in Australia and
support quantitatively earlier hypotheses of the significance of dust
processes in the evolution of the Australian landscape.