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The science behind the West Coast fires


The science behind the West Coast fires

A collection of research and insights from Stanford experts on wildfires' links to climate change, the health impacts of smoke, and promising strategies for ...

Wildfire climate connection

Wildfires require the alignment of a number of factors, including temperature, humidity, and the lack of moisture in fuels, such as trees, shrubs, grasses, and ...

Science: Wildfire Impacts - California Department of Fish and Wildlife

Drought causes moisture stress in vegetation, which leads to higher susceptibility to wildfire. Although California has received abundant precipitation in ...

Why are California's wildfires getting worse? Experts explain what ...

The reasons fires intensify in forested, mountainous places are different than in coastal shrubland. Human land use plays a major role, with ...

Tracking the West's Growing Wildfires - NASA Science

Climate change is making wildfires more frequent and longer-lasting, as shown by California's recent Washburn fire.

Study Finds Climate Change to Blame For Record-Breaking ...

In that study, researchers with the University of California, Los Angeles found that the leading cause of the rapid increase of wildfires over ...

What's Behind California's Surge of Large Fires?

He is among several experts who say a confluence of factors has driven the surge of large, destructive fires in California: unusual drought and ...

Wildfires | Environmental Defense Fund

Campfires, discarded cigarettes, and electrical equipment like downed power lines all spark wildfires. But climate change — along with poor forest management — ...

The Fossil Fuels Behind Forest Fires | Union of Concerned Scientists

Coal, oil, and gas companies are now directly linked to worsening forest fires across the western United States.

California's wildfire smoke and climate change: 4 things to know

California wildfires every year emit as much carbon as almost 2 million cars, posing a threat to efforts to battle climate change.

Long-term perspective on wildfires in the western USA - PNAS

Fire patterns during the 20th century for example show that large fire years are associated with a strong, persistent trough over the northeastern Pacific Ocean ...

Why Do Wildfires Start in California? - Reiner, Slaughter & Frankel

Science Behind Wildfires ... Wildfires are complex phenomena that occur when three conditions are met: fuel (such as dry wood, grasses, and trees) ...

How climate change supercharges wildfires in the West

Climate change has inexorably stacked the deck in favor of bigger and more intense fires across the American West over the past few decades.

Wildfires and Climate Change - C2ES

Climate change has been a key factor in increasing the risk and extent of wildfires in the Western United States. Wildfire risk depends on a number of ...

Human-sparked wildfires are more destructive than those caused by ...

Fire has always been a part of California's natural history. But several centuries of human settlement have created new conditions that promote its spread.

Wildfires | U.S. Geological Survey - USGS.gov

The frequency of fire in southern California forests has steadily increased over time as a result of ignitions at the growing wildland-urban interface, as well ...

How Climate Change Adds Fuel to the West Coast Wildfires

Scientific research has established a clear link between climate change and the increasing severity and frequency of wildfires, such as the studies from ...

Natural History of Fire and Flood Cycles

It burns periodically, and must burn in order to survive. In much of California, the problem is not so much the fact that it burns but that all too many people ...

California Wildfires: The Science Behind Firefighting

The Science Behind Wildfires. Wildfires require fuel ooxygen and heat forming the fire triangle. Wildfires require three things to exist: fuel, oxygen, and a ...

The science behind California's surging wildfires | PBS News

As three major fires blaze in California, we consider some of their causes, both human and meteorological. Science correspondent Miles ...