• MODIS Pic of the Day 12 July 2023

    From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Wed Jul 12 12:00:42 2023
    July 12, 2023 - More Wildfires Erupt in Western Canada

    Wildfires
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    Thanks to exceptionally dry and hot weather, the 2023 Canadian wildfire
    season—which normally runs from April to September—has been a
    record-maker.

    According to media reports, in early July Canadian officials warned
    that the country was likely to face a “long, tough summer”—and that
    prediction seems to already be coming true. A brutal heatwave has
    gripped parts of the country, bringing temperatures of 100.2˚F (37.9˚C)
    to the community of Norman Wells, Northwest Territories (NWT) on July
    9, which is the hottest temperature ever measured north of 65˚N
    latitude in the Western Hemisphere. It was just short of the record of
    100.4˚F (38˚C) set at Verkhoyansk, Russia, a village at a similar
    latitude in June 2020. This is very close to the Arctic Circle, which
    sits at approximately 66.5˚N latitude.

    The scorching temperatures across northwestern and western Canada have
    increased fire danger so much that the Canadian forests have nearly
    become little more than tinder-boxes just waiting for ignition. When
    storms rolled over western Canada on July 7 and 9, there were more than
    23,000 lightning strikes recorded in British Columbia alone, and these
    sparked more than 200 new wildfires according to BC Wildfire Service.
    Because fuel moisture is a key component to how wildfires behave, the
    exceptionally dry vegetation means not only fast ignition but also
    increases the risk for rapid spread.

    As of July 11, the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Center (CIFFC)
    posted that there were 875 active fires burning across Canada, with 48
    new starts in the last 24 hours. 533 of these were listed as “out of
    control”, with 128 “being held”, and 211 classified as “under control”.
    The largest number of fires were found in the west, with the most fires
    burning in British Columbia, with Alberta second. The province of
    Quebec, in eastern Canada, was in third place. The CIFFC also reported
    that there had been a total of 3,904 wildland fires since January 1,
    which is well above the average of 2,751. In the same time, 9.5 million
    hectares have burnt—an area slightly larger than the U.S. state of
    Indiana and well above the previous record of 7.89 million hectares
    burnt in 1989.

    The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on board
    NASA’s Aqua satellite acquired a true-color image of wildfires burning
    across Western Canada on July 10. Each red “hot spot” marks an area of
    heat from an actively burning fire. Provinces visible in this image,
    each containing active fires, include (moving from west to east)
    British Columbia (with the most fires), Alberta, and Saskatchewan. The
    northern tier includes Yukon and Northwest Territories. Dense smoke
    smothers much of the region, stretching from Canada’s far north to
    sweep over the U.S. states of Montana and North Dakota.

    Image Facts
    Satellite: Aqua
    Date Acquired: 7/10/2023
    Resolutions: 1km (2.2 MB),
    Bands Used: 1,4,3
    Image Credit: MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC



    https://modis.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/individual.php?db_date=2023-07-12

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