
The Australian Bureau of Meteorology is a calendar for 2018
• The Australian Bureau of Meteorology is a calendar for 2018
Every year, the Australian Bureau of Meteorology selects its best calendar in the country Lightning pictures of cloud formations and Northern Lights.

January
Sunset through fog on the mountain Hotem, Victoria, Australia. (Photo by Jon Bagge | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

February
Pierce in Mornington, Australia. (Photo by Jennifer Erlandsen | Australian Bureau of Meteorology)

March
Lightning in Mount Isa, Queensland. (Photo by Grant Szabadics | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

April
Clouds over Richmond, Queensland, Australia. (Photo by Captain Victoria Harrison | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

May
Rain in Sydney. (Photography Nitin Saksena | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

June
Victoria - a state in south-eastern Australia, the smallest of the territory of the state in the continental part of the country. But here is the capital and largest city - Melbourne. (Photo by Andrew Thomas | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

July
Lake Argyle is the second largest (volume) of the artificial lake in Australia and is located near the East Kimberley, Western Australia. (Photo by Ben Broady | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

August
Airplane in the clouds over Adelaide, South Australia. (Photo by Asbjorn "Aussie" Kanck | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

September
Mc Donnell - mountain range in Australia, located in the Northern Territory. (Photo by Peter Nunn | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

October
Windmills. (Photo Seenivasan Kumaravel | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

November
The storm and the ships of the Northern Territory. This is a subject as part of the Australian federation in the north of the mainland. (Photo ABIS Kayla Hayes | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):

December
Northern Lights at Davis Station - operating a year-round research station in Antarctica, owned by Australia. (Photo Barend Becker | Australian Bureau of Meteorology):
