Quote:Based on CSIRO mapping on the cattle-grazing prospects of the NT, I would estimate about a quarter of Arnhem Land is in this category.
Does that mean you will reduce your estimate from 20 down to 15 viable farms in Arnhem land?
Quote:But according to Freeliar, because one quarter of the region is rugged and inaccessible, then Europeans wouldn't want the rest of it!
No Falah, you are the only one leaping to absurd conclusions, like describing the stone country as a fertile plateau.
Quote:What if we applied the same theory to Tasmania? Tasmania is roughly the same size as Arnhem Land. About a quarter of Tasmania is uninhabited due its rugged inaccessibility. Did Europeans give up on the rest of Tasmania?
Tasmania is far more suited to European agricultural methods. The reason I have asked you about the stone country 20 times is because you ignored it 19 times, after initially describing it as a fertile plateau.
Quote:According to CSIRO research, most of Arnhem Land would support up to 4 or 5 head of cattle per square mile. Not the highest yielding land used for cattle; but not the lowest yielding land used for cattle in the NT either.
Did they actually say this, or is this you reading from map colours?
Do you think this implies productivity or farmability? The example given in this wikipedia article is of a stocking rate 100 times higher.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livestock_grazing_comparison
This is just the beginning when it comes to assessing the ability of European immigrants in the 1800s to establish a viable farm - which is why your own examples list climate as the primary cause of farm failure. The farms further south on the marginal territory do not have to deal with such severe monsoonal rains and have the advantage of huge tracts of flat land that require relatively low effort to turn into a viable farm.
Quote:We can find lands with far lower yield being used for grazing in the NT
How much lower? Would it be fair to say that the only places in the NT where viable cattle farms have lower stocking rates is on land that looks like desert and is very easy to get around on and is not crocodile infested? That is, Arnhem has the stocking capacity of a desert in one of the most difficult to manage areas in Australia.
Quote:Have a look at this CSIRO map. I know that you will mention that the soil qualities in Arnhem Land are not considered great.
LOL. I haven't even started on that.
Quote:How much is a cow these days? $1500?
You literally have no clue at all.
Quote:Now if we say that Arnhem Land is roughly 40,000 square miles, and we can put 4 or 5 cattle per square mile on about three quarters of it. that would give us well in excess of 100,000 head of cattle.
Falah, this is only slightly more than the cattle farm you used as an example earlier in this thread. That is a single farm with nearly the same number of cattle as the total stockability of the entire Arnhem land (not just the little Yolngu corner you tried to paint as an agrticultural paradise). Previously you said you could fit at least 20 such farms into Arnhem land. Would you care to revise your estimate down?