282 



Agricultural Journal of Victoria. 



RAINFALL IN VICTORIA. 



Months of June and July, 1903. 

 By P. Baracchi. 



Fi 



SUBDIVISIONAL AREAS OF THE STATE OF VICTORIA REPRESENTING TYPICAL 

 DISTRIBUTION OF RAINFALL. 



North-west — Mallee country, including the counties of Millewa, Taila, Weeah.and 

 Karkarooc. 



Central West — Including the counties of Lowan and Borung. 



Western Districts — Including the counties of Follett, Dundas. western half of 

 Ripon and Hampden. 

 . South-western Districts and West Coast — Including the counties of Normanby^ 

 Villiers, Heytesbury, and Polwarth. 



Northern Country — Including the counties of Tatchera and Gunbower, and the 

 northern half of Kara Kara, Gladstone, and Bendigo, and the north-west 

 portions of Rodney and Moira. 



Northern Country — Including the greater part of the county of Moira, the north- 

 eastern quarter of the county of Rodney, and the extreme north-west of 

 the county of Bogong. 



Central North — Including the county of Anglesey, the west and northern parts of 

 the county of Delatite, the extreme south of the county of Moira, and the 

 south-east quarter of Rodney. 



Upper Murray — Districts from Wodonga to Towong. 



Central Districts North of Dividing Ranges — Including counties of Talbot and 

 Dalhousie, southern half of the counties of Kara Kara, Gladstone, and 

 Bendigo, and the south-west quarter of the county of Rodney. 



Central Highlands and Ranges from Ararat to Kilmore 



South Central Districts on the west and north side of Port Phillip Bay— Includ- 

 ing the counties of Grant, Grenville. and Bourke, and the eastern parts of 

 the counties of Hampden and Ripon. 



South Central Districts east of Port Phillip Bay, &c. — Including the counties of 

 Mornington and Evelyn. 



Regions of Heaviest Rainfall — Including all the mountainous Eastern Districts, 

 and South Gippsland. 



South-eastern Districts— Gippsland, and counties on the New South Wales Border. 



Extreme East Coast. 



