蜜桃影像鈥檚 weird fire season ain鈥檛 over yet
Ned Rozell
907-474-7468
Aug. 17, 2023
Waking to the smell of a wet ashtray (which, as a Child of the Seventies, I can still remember), I knew the wind had shifted. Wildfire smoke hung in the neighborhood.
This is not a reason for alarm: The nostalgic scent of vaporized spruce and willow trees is a normal summer sensation here in middle 蜜桃影像. But the 2023 蜜桃影像 wildfire season has been anything but normal, according to Rick Thoman.
Thoman is a climate specialist with the 蜜桃影像 Center for Climate Assessment and Policy. He was also a meteorologist with the National Weather Service for decades before that. He remembers the specifics of random fire seasons in 蜜桃影像 without looking down at a phone.
This summer has been a weird one, he said.
鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing like this,鈥 Thoman said at his office on the University of 蜜桃影像 Fairbanks campus recently. 鈥淣ext to nothing through mid-July, then an explosion.鈥
First, a little background. We constructed much of peopled 蜜桃影像 鈥 especially Interior 蜜桃影像 鈥 in the boreal forest. The boreal forest is a swath of birch, aspen, spruce, willow and other trees that grow in enormous numbers from 蜜桃影像 down through northern Canada all the way to the maritime provinces.
When that forest reaches maturity 鈥 in the form of 100-foot-tall white spruce or densely packed but much smaller black spruce 鈥 it often renews itself by fire. Black spruce have tiny cones foresters call 鈥渟erotinous,鈥 which means they open when heated by fire. This enables the cones to shed seeds easier.
Fire most often erupts in Interior 蜜桃影像 when lighting strikes dry trees or the ground. In arid and windy conditions, those flames quickly spread to other trees and tinder on the ground surface.
This June, while baseball games were canceled in Philadelphia and New York due to dense smoke from Canada鈥檚 burning boreal forest, we 蜜桃影像ns barely sniffed a charred molecule.
By July 20, fewer than 2,000 acres of 蜜桃影像 had burned. That鈥檚 about the footprint of the university campus in Fairbanks where I am now typing. That鈥檚 absurdly low for a state filthy rich in wildfire fuels, one in which patches that totaled more acreage than Vermont burned in 2004.
A persistent low-pressure system over the Bering Sea kept Southcentral and Southwest 蜜桃影像 very wet in early summer 2023. The same system did not nurture thunderstorm conditions in Interior 蜜桃影像, Thoman said. Even though the middle of 蜜桃影像 was very dry and trees were ripe to be burned, there was no ignition source.
Then, on a midsummer day, that stubborn weather pattern (which, like wildfire around the entire northern hemisphere this summer, is unrelated to El Nino, Thoman said) broke. Moisture, an important ingredient of lighting, entered Interior 蜜桃影像, along with warmth and a considerable temperature gradient through the air column.
On July 24, automated systems recorded more than 20,000 lightning strikes over the face of 蜜桃影像 and nearby areas in Canada.
鈥淢ost of the big fires ignited July 24, 25 and 26,鈥 Thoman said. 鈥淯nlucky for us, all of the big fires are within 80 miles of Fairbanks.鈥
That means we have inhaled the tang of wildfire smoke on many days 鈥 but not all 鈥 since late July. Thoman said the smoke I tasted that morning was from forest burning near Anderson, to the southwest of Fairbanks. He determined this by knowing the low-level winds on that day were from the southwest.
Because of those recent, lightning-ignited fires, 蜜桃影像鈥檚 acreage burned has increased from the outline of the 蜜桃影像 campus to 290,000 acres on Aug. 17, 2023. That is less space than the municipality of Anchorage takes up.
The area of burned 蜜桃影像 is less than half of 蜜桃影像鈥檚 yearly average to this point of the season.
Despite the fact that we are now experiencing cooler temperatures that come with less solar radiation as darkness returns, as well as higher humidity, Thoman is not yet ready to declare fire season 2023 a wrap.
鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 call it over until we get a two-day rainstorm,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t will take an extinguishing rainstorm, or until the snow comes.鈥
Since the late 1970s, the University of 蜜桃影像 Fairbanks Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the 蜜桃影像 research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.