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Posted: 2018-05-24 06:47:57

In late 2017, the pair approached the ANU Climate Change Institute with the idea of collaborating on small tangible visualisations for the Institute’s 2018 State of the Climate event.

The result was - what else but? - a beer coaster.

Sitting on desks, bars or tables, the aim of the coaster was to prompt discussion and reflection on Australia’s rapidly changing climate.

Climate change coasters created by the ANU School of Art and Design.

Climate change coasters created by the ANU School of Art and Design.

The coasters, which visualise 12 months of climate data against long term averages for Australian capital cities, proved so popular that the researchers decided to build a website showing the same visualisation for more than 100 different locations around the country.

“Everyone at the event was captivated,” Dr Hinchcliffe said.
“People were handling them, smelling them, asking about them, and everyone wanted more copies.

“So this online version is an opportunity for people to have a look through the
visualisations for themselves.”

Visitors to the site can download coaster images for print and social media sharing, or for laser cutting their own coasters.

The researchers, who have also made bracelets that represent 12 months of Canberra weather data, believe tangible visualisations of data are a powerful way of helping people understand complex topics.

“They are engaging in a way that traditional graphs just aren’t,” Dr Whitelaw said.
“Graphs can be static and hard to read, by having these visualisations live and online it lets people have a play around with them.

“I hope, in particular, that schools can use this website to discuss climate change and build data literacy.”

Each coaster shows two rings that represent 12 months of climate data from the Bureau of Meteorology.

The inside ring compares daily temperatures to that location’s long-term average. The outer ring shows the same visualisation for monthly temperatures.

Of the 112 locations shown on the Climate Coaster website, Charleville in Queensland had the highest temperatures in 2017 compared to long-term averages – with an increase of 2.6 degrees.

Of the capital cities, Canberra came out top with 2017 temperatures, 1.7 degrees above the city’s long-term average.

Halls Creek in the East Kimberly region of Western Australia was the only location that didn’t experience any temperature increase in 2017.

You can visit the Climate Coasters website here: http://gravitron.com.au/climatecoaster/

"We hope that printed coasters will occupy coffee tables across Australia and spark conversation and reflection on our rapidly changing climate,'' the website says.

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