SMOKE READY
Smoke Ready Flyer
Smoke Ready Campaign Flyer | The Ember Alliance |
Smoke Exposure & Health
Prepare & Protect Indoor Air Quality
Track Air Quality
AirNow Fire & Smoke Map | EPA & Partner |
PurpleAir Touch Indoor Sensor | PurpleAir |
Interagency Wildland Fire Air Quality Response Program | USFS |
Local Smoke, Wildfire & Prescribed Fire Resources
Extreme Wildfires
The Return of Conflagration in our Built Environment | IBHS Wildfire Research Report |
Simultaneous Megafires Will Increasingly Plague the Western U.S. | Scientific American |
Urban Conflagration
Definition: An urban conflagration is a phenomenon where wildfire spreads rapidly from building to building in an urban area in the absence of significant burnable vegetation.
It needs extreme weather conditions to occur – the same conditions that occur in the 2% of fires that cannot be suppressed.
The Marshall Fire in Louisville and Superior, CO which destroyed 1,036 structures in 2021, and the East Troublesome Fire in Grand County, CO which destroyed 580 structures in 2020 are examples of fires where urban conflagration occurred in Colorado.
Megafire
Definition: Megafires, typically defined as covering more than 100,000 acres (40,000 hectares or 400 square kilometres), are accelerated by high temperatures and drought.
As their name suggests, megafires are wildfires of extreme size with great destructive potential, which can make them especially challenging to manage.
Colorado’s Largest Fires by Acreage, include
- Cameron Peak 208,913 acres – 2020
- East Troublesome 193,812 acres – 2020
- Pine Gulch 139,007 acres – 2020
- Hayman 137,760 acres – 2002
- Spring Creek 108,045 acres – 2018
Video Resources
Network Resources
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