Abstract

AbstractAnalysis of time series for 157 stations with records covering the period 1910–1972 and for fewer stations with records extending back to 1880 suggests that the commonly held view that South Africa, as a whole, is undergoing progressive desiccation must be questioned. Instead the data suggest the specific regional occurrence of weak (but nonetheless readily discernible) oscillations of 16–20 and 10–12 years, the ubiquity of 3–4 year fluctuations and the spatially distinctive occurrence of a quasi‐biennial oscillation.

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