Monday, 11 July 2022

Heat and Fires Scorch Northern Canada: Hundreds of Fires Raging in Northwest Territories and Yukon *** Hundreds of Wildland Fires Darken Skies Over Alaska

By ADAM VOILAND, NASA EARTH OBSERVATORY JULY 10, 2022

July 6, 2022

In early July 2022, a combination of dry weather, lightning, and unusual heat fueled hundreds of wildland fires in northern Canada. 136 fires were burning in The Yukon and 65 in the Northwest Territories on July 6, according to the Canadian government.

The image above was captured on July 6, 2022, by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite. Thick plumes of dense smoke billowed from several of the largest fires, sometimes sending smoke streaming north toward the Beaufort Sea and Canadian Arctic. In addition, Environment Canada has posted heat and air quality warnings for several communities in the Northwest Territories.

The second image (below), from the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8, is a closer view of fires burning near Great Bear Lake, a lake in the boreal forest of Canada. At least 96 fires have been reported in the Northwest Territories this year, and 131,380 hectares (507 square miles, 1,313 square kilometers) have burned. Fires in The Yukon have charred another 62,336 hectares (241 square miles, 623 square kilometers).

July 6, 2022

Many parts of The Yukon and Northwest Territories have experienced record-breaking temperatures in recent weeks. The extreme heat dries out vegetation and makes it easier for fires to ignite and burn.

Research also indicates that hot weather has made thunderstorms and lightning more likely in this region. In a research study published in 2017, scientists found connections between temperatures, lightning strikes, fire size, and burned area since 1975. “We expect an increasing number of thunderstorms, and hence fires, across the high latitudes in the coming decades as a result of climate change,” said study co-author Brendan Rogers of the Woodwell Climate Research Center.

Despite notable fire activity in northern Canada, Alaska, and the U.S. Southwest, overall emissions from global fire activity have been low in recent months, according to data shared by Mark Parrington, an atmospheric scientist with the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). Parrington tracks fires for the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) using a satellite-based data record that began in 2003. CAMS estimates near-real-time wildfire emissions using its Global Fire Assimilation System (GFAS), which aggregates observations of fires made by NASA’s Aqua and Terra satellites.

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Hundreds of Wildland Fires Darken Skies Over Alaska

By NASA EARTH OBSERVATORY JULY 10, 2022

July 1, 2022

Satellite images show smoke from hundreds of wildland fires darkening Alaskan skies.

Alaskan summers are usually described as brief and mild. In the early summer of 2022, the word that stood out as most descriptive was “smoky.”

In a smoldering scene that was repeated several times in June and early July, the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the NASA-NOAA Suomi NPP satellite observed smoke spreading throughout large portions of Alaska. On July 1, 2022, intense fires were located in the southern and interior regions of the state, but strong southeasterly winds pushed smoke into the far north as well.

Smoke from one particularly smoky fire northwest of Iliamna Lake (southwest Alaska) obscured visibility on the Seward Peninsula, more than 400 miles (600 kilometers) to the northwest. The influx of smoke led to extremely high particulate matter readings (AQI above 700 at times) in the city of Nome, according to University of Alaska Fairbanks climatologist Rick Thoman.

Alaska surpassed 2 million acres (8,000 square kilometers, 3,000 square miles) burned on July 2, 2022, matching the earliest date for the milestone in the past 20 years. On July 5, 2022, the Alaska Interagency Coordination Center reported 210 active fires in the state. Forty-two were large fires with firefighters working on them, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. Wildfires are a regular feature of Alaskan summers, but this year’s fires have been exacerbated by drought, unusual heat, and several intense lightning storms. According to Thoman, in early July, the area burned was on track to be among the largest on record.


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