Fires in Los Angeles County
Fires in Los Angeles County
10 September 2009
Two weeks after an arsonist ignited the drought-dry forest north of Los Angeles, the Station fire had become the ninth largest fire in California since 1933. On the morning of 8 September 2009, the fire had burned more than 250 square miles (about 650 square kilometers) of land, according to theStation Fire Incident Report from 8 September. This image, captured by the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on NASAs Terra satellite on 6 September, shows the extent of the burned area. The newly charred land is black in this false-color image, which was made with near infrared light. Plants are dark red, and man-made surfaces, particularly the dense urban centers of Pasadena and Burbank, are blue and white.
The burned area covers much of the San Gabriel Mountains, edging down into residential areas northwest of Pasadena. Smoke rolls off the eastern edge of the burned land. The fire was still burning, just over 50 percent contained when the image was taken. According to the incident report from September 8, the fire was pushing east into forest with no recorded fire history. The fire had previously burned through tall, thick forest that had not seen fire in the past 40 years.
The image also illustrates why fighting the Station fire has been so difficult. The fire burned over steep mountains riddled with canyons. The rugged landscape looks wrinkled, particularly in the burned area where plants no longer soften the ridgelines and canyons. The steep terrain and the fires extreme, unpredictable behavior led to the death of two firefighters. Nine other firefighters have been injured fighting the fire, reported the Los Angeles Times.
South and east of the fire, the Mount Wilson Communication Facility and Observatory was still surrounded by unburned forest. The historic, 105-year-old observatory hosts two large telescopes, once the worlds largest, and other instruments to study the Sun and the Universe beyond. Mount Wilson also contains communications towers that serve much of the Los Angeles region. The image shows that the fire approached the facility on two sides, but left the forest around the observatory intact.
(source: earth observatory)
The current situation in California is covered by a number of detailed reports (see GFMC Media web page):
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Drought makes California vulnerable to busy fire season (published by www.usatoday.com, 10 September 2009)
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Bad weather delays setting of backfire in Angeles National Forest blaze (published by www.latimes.com, 9 September 2009)
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Calif. senator: Focus on post-fire erosion risks (published by The Associated Press, 9 September 2009)
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Nearly $50 mln spent to fight Los Angeles wildfire (published by news.xinhuanet.com, 8 September 2009)
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Post-wildfire worries: floods, damaged ecosystem (published by The Associated Press, 8 September 2009)
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Station fire 56% contained; another firefighter injured (published by latimesblogs.latimes.com, 7 September 2009)
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Cost of fighting Station fire tops $43 million (published by www.latimes.com, 6 September 2009)
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Wildfires can take a psychological toll (published by latimesblogs.latimes.com, 6 September 2009)
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Perspectives: When a scientist sleeps at the forest fire’s edge (published by www.sgvtribune.com, 5 September 2009)
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California Gov. Schwarzenegger offers $100G reward in L.A. wildfire arson (published by latimesblogs.latimes.com, 4 September 2009)
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LA forest fire said arson, murder investigation mounted (published by www.inlandnewstoday.com, 4 September 2009)