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nature.net Living with Fire A search of the Internet turned up a number of sites that deal with the dilemma: how to reconcile increasing development of the landscape with the natural forces of fire. My first stop was a Web page published by the National Humanities Center in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina. The essay on this page, by Stephen J. Pyne of Arizona State University in Tempe, provides a good overview of the problem. To the right of the title to Pynes essay, you can click on Links to Online Resources for more detail about the human interaction with fire. Following one of the links took me to the National Weather Service’s National Fire Weather Page, which shows a map of the United States. You can check out the predictions for fire hazards by clicking on your area on the map. The report provides a thorough weather forecast in the area you've chosen. Thanks to the Terra and Aqua satellites orbiting Earth, and the publishing capabilities of the Internet, wildfires can be tracked as readily as hurricanes. At the site of the U.S. Forest Services MODIS Active Fire Mapping Program, you can view a map that displays daily wildfire sightings in the continental U.S. (on the menu bar under the title, click Fire Detections). You can also discover where fires are burning in your region on a given day: on the menu bar, click Regional Maps; when a colored map appears, click on your geographical area, then select the kind of image you want to view from the choices at the right. For a more thorough global perspective on wildfires, go to the NASA Earth Observatory’s (Global Fire Monitoring). This site makes it clear that extensive and long-burning fires can actually affect climate by pumping greenhouse gases and aerosols such as smoke particles into the atmosphere. After huge fires in Indonesia ignited the peat-covered forest floors there in 1997, atmospheric scientists recorded the largest annual jump in atmospheric carbon dioxide since CO2 concentrations were first measured in 1957. See Fires in Indonesia, a science bulletin published by the American Museum of Natural History. The vast boreal forest that girds the northern latitudes has emerged recently as a new area for investigators studying climate change. Information at the Woods Hole Research Center, Boreal Forest Regrowth Dynamics, explains why more frequent and intense fires in the north could have powerful effects on climate worldwide. Robert Anderson is a freelance science writer living in Los Angeles. Copyright © Natural History Magazine, Inc., 2005 |