Quote:Freeliar, your argument is that Arnhem Land cannot support farming.
No it isn't. It is more subtle than that.
Quote:You still have not provided any evidence to support such a claim despite every similar area in Australia being farmed in Australia.
You yourself posted a map showing large areas immediately adjacent to Darwin that are not farmed. Of course you left out the bit of the index that indicated this. Was that a conscious choice?
Quote:Every part of mainland Australia except the harshest deserts and has been used for grazing or farming apart from the areas where Macassans traded.
Not true. There are plenty of other areas. Like areas around Darwin, they are clearly unsuitable for farming.
Quote:Arnhem land gets plenty of rain and is rather green. So why could
Like I said, european farming methods are not ideal for tropical coastlines.
Quote:I can't believe how dumb you are Freediver. Can't you see that the existance of cattle station across northern Australia - which have existed for over a century - demonstrates that this land is profitable?
Some of it is marginally profitable - hence the extremely low population density. Some, like a lot of areas near Darwin which are similar to the yolngu areas, are still not profitable even with modern technology and a gradual shift towards adopting tropical farming methods.
Quote:If you can put lots of cattle on barren land, then you can surely put lots more cattle on the green fertile area of Arnhem Land. How can your feeble mind not grasp this.
It is simply not true Falah. The areas in question are unsuiitable for grazing. The drier land to the south is actually more sutiable, and even there it is only marginally suitable - hence the 5000km2 farms. Your own evidence supports my argument on this.
Quote:Cattle stations make profits in deserts, yet you think that they cannot make profits in a green area that receives lots of rain. How is that logical? Do you realise how retarded you are?
Falah, green on an areal map does not mean good grazing country. Yours is an incredibly naive approach to assessing farmability. There are all sorts of problems up north, which is why the drier areas were converted to grazing more unifromly, whereas large areas just near Darwin are not farmed at all.
Quote:I can't believe that you are so retarded that you cannot even grasp the fact that population density has nothing to do with it.
But it does Falah. Repeating yourself won't change the facts. Farm profitability per unit area and population density are very closely linked. It is the closest predictor of population density you will find. How you managed to write a thesis on it without finding this out is beyond me.
Quote:The population density in Arnhem Land is similar to that of much of Australia's agricultural land.
It is similar to much of the marginal land. How many 5000km2 farms do you think there are around the south east coast? How far do you think you have to go from Melbourne to get one that big? Your own example of Mildura disproves your argument - a single inland country town, credited by you to citrus, with a population of one third of the NT's population outside of Darwin, including non-europeans.
Quote:Furthermore, population density does not determine the viability of farmland.
Duh. It is the other way round. Surely you considered this in your thesis. Farmability determines population density. I challenge you to find any other factor that comes even close to farmability as a predictor of population density.
Quote:In less densely populated areas, farms just get bigger. Big farms can still be profitable. Can you understand this simple fact?
Sure. It is the interpretation of the fact that you get backwards. Farms don't get bigger in response to low population density. They have to start out bigger merely to survive, and the lack of people in the area (again due to lack of farmability) makes this possible.
Quote:If cattle stations can exist on more barren lands than Arnhem Land then surely cattle can survive in Arnhem Land. Do your tiny brain not comprehend simple logic?
It is the farms as an economic unit that need to survive. The drier lands further south are better for cattle farming and your own evidence shows this.
Quote:Because cattle are the only type of agriculture understood to work in these areas by Europeans.
No Falah. It is one of the lowest value uses of land - often bordered by 'minimal use' land - like thos areas around Darwin. It is what people do with land that they can't put to more valuable uses like cropping, unless it is too dry.
Quote:Europeans have cleared most of the forests in Victoria to make way for farms.
Because victoria is far more similar to the land the immigrants farmed in the old country.
Quote:No, dumbass, that was minimum, based on a very large farm in a similar climate.
A 'minimum' of twenty family farms in an area the size of Tasmania? Are you sure you are not overstating the huge potential of this area?
Quote:Freeliar, the large Aboriginal reserve in the south of the NT is a desert. Ever heard of the Tanami Desert? It has been left to the Indigenous people because it is desert.
Because it is unsuitable for farming. Just like the Yolngu areas, and areas just outside of Darwin.
Quote:because I got it from a different website dumbass
Which one? Why did they leave out the index when the regions are present in the area they showed?
Quote:This map shows swamplands in northern Australia. Note the area around Darwin surrounded by swamps
Where is it from? It is based on reported swamps, in which case the data may merely reflect awareness. It is hardly a complete survey of swampland.