With barely 30 years' knowledge of this new country, farmers needed reliable information about the climate and growing conditions. In 1865
George Goyder, the then
Surveyor-General of the colony, was asked to map the boundary between those areas that received good rainfall and those experiencing
drought. After traversing an estimated on horseback (not including the
Eyre Peninsula) in November 1865, he submitted his report and map to the colonial government on 6 December. The map included a line of demarcation, the areas north of which being those Goyder judged "liable to drought", with the areas to the south deemed
arable. He discouraged farmers from planting crops north of his line, declaring this land suitable only for light
grazing. Goyder's report was based on the information already in his office, supplemented by the observations made during the 1865 journey to observe the effects of drought. He was guided in drawing the line by the changes in vegetation, especially various kinds of saltbush. Ample rains fell in most years between 1867 and 1875, prompting farmers to ignore Goyder's report and settle in the north, starting farms and planting crops. The idea that
rain follows the plow, developed during the contemporaneous westward expansion of cropping in the
United States, encouraged this trend. A few years later, many had to abandon their properties. The land was indeed unsuitable for crops, and Goyder was proved correct. Many
farmhouse ruins can still be seen in the vicinity of Goyder's line. There were other periods of development north of the line but, invariably, adverse conditions proved decisive. Entire towns and farms were abandoned when there was a return to longer-term average rainfall patterns. The line has proven highly accurate, a notable feat given the relatively limited knowledge of the local climate and overall
climatology at the time it was surveyed. In December 2015, climate scientist Peter Hayman stated that the current "warming, drying trend" of South Australia's climate would definitely "put a downward shift on Goyder's Line" towards the south. ==Location==