
'Fire clouds' over Arizona and Utah wildfires are creating their own erratic climate
In Arizona the wind-whipped wildfire that destroyed the Grand Canyon Lodge is 9 percent contained and has charred more than 164 square miles (424.7 square kilometers) to become the largest fire now burning in the continental US. Another large fire in Monroe Utah has burned 75 square miles (194 square kilometers) since July 13 and is 11 percent contained officials said Thursday. Evacuation orders were issued Wednesday for several towns in the fire's path and scorched power poles caused electricity to be shut off in other nearby communities in south-central Utah.
Fire clouds present challenges for firefighters Towering convection clouds known as pyrocumulus clouds have been spotted over Arizona's blaze for seven consecutive days fueling the fire with dry powerful winds fire information officer Lisa Jennings said. They form when air over the fire becomes super-heated and rises in a large smoke column. The billowing clouds can be seen for hundreds of miles and can look like an anvil or a dark spear jutting into the atmosphere. Their more treacherous big brother a fire-fueled thunderstorm known as the pyrocumulonimbus cloud sent rapid winds shooting out in all directions this week as a smoke column formed from the Utah fire then collapsed on itself said fire team information officer Jess Clark. 'If they get high enough they can also create downdrafts and that's something we really watch out for because that can quickly spread the fire and can be very dangerous for firefighters who are doing their work on the ground,' Jennings said.
Multiple fire crews in Utah were forced to retreat Wednesday as the unpredictable climate created by the clouds threatened their safety officials said. The same type of cloud which the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has dubbed 'the fire-breathing dragon of clouds' recently formed a fire tornado that tore through an eastern Utah neighborhood with wind speeds estimated at 122 miles (196 kilometers) per hour.
Think of the fire as kind of like a hot air balloon so it adds buoyancy and things rise as a result said Derek Mallia an atmospheric scientist at the University of Utah who studies pyrocumulonimbus clouds and tracks fires in Utah and Arizona. You get this towering thunderstorm over the fire and just like any other thunderstorm it gets really windy underneath it. Because it's the West these thunderstorms tend to be very dry. These clouds he said may appear more frequently as climate change causes a longer fire season drought conditions and extreme weather events.
Dry conditions fuel Grand Canyon megafire The Dragon Bravo Fire burning on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon was sparked by lightning on July 4. It was about a week later that conditions deteriorated with hot dry and windy weather helping to push the flames toward the Grand Canyon Lodge and the historic cabins that surround it.
The fire destroyed dozens of buildings and forced the closure of the national park's North Rim for the rest of the season as hundreds of firefighters struggled to gain an upper hand. Thursday marked the eighth straight day of historically dry conditions Jennings said. Humidity levels have been in the single digits fuel moisture levels are extremely low and wind gusts were expected to crank up to 35 miles per hour (54.7 kilometers per hour). The pyrocumulus clouds have reached heights of at least 25000 feet (7620 meters) and fire behavior analyst Arthur Gonzales said they could go higher.
The direction of the wind has been fairly consistent for crews working the Dragon Bravo Fire and although they've been strong the predictability has allowed fire managers to more easily position crews on the fire lines. But when pyrocumulus clouds form and the winds become less predictable Jennings said firefighters often have to be pulled back to safety.
Fire prompts power outages in Utah Hot dry winds fanned the flames of the Monroe Canyon Fire on Thursday as firefighters worked to contain the spread. The fire has burned 12 power poles and many homes have been without electricity since Wednesday afternoon.
The National Weather Service issued red flag warnings for extreme fire danger in much of central and southwest Utah this week. In Antimony Utah 54 miles (87 kilometers) south of Monroe the town's 123 residents were without power Thursday afternoon.
Mayor Kasey King who was helping people gather food and supplies at a community center said they could be without power for a week. The power company Garkane Energy Cooperative said it's working to restore power as quickly as possible and has brought in backup generators.
Marnie Reynolds a resident of Antimony worried for the town's many elderly residents. She has been using a camp stove to offer hot meals to neighbors and is using a generator to help people refrigerate groceries and medications. 'We have been facing a lot of challenges but we have the best community,' she said.
In Richfield Utah 10 miles (16 kilometers) north of Monroe Lee Stevens said his yard was coated in ash. He and his wife who has asthma and is sensitive to the smoke have not yet been told to evacuate but are making preparations in case the fire spreads.
The National Interagency Fire Center in Idaho said Thursday that even with fewer acres having burned so far this year than average many parts of the country remain vulnerable to new starts and fast-moving flames.
___ Bryan reported from Albuquerque New Mexico.
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Al Arabiya
a day ago
- Al Arabiya
'Fire clouds' over Arizona and Utah wildfires are creating their own erratic climate
Two wildfires burning in the western United States – including one that has become a megafire on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon – are so hot that they're spurring the formation of fire clouds that can create their own erratic weather systems. In Arizona the wind-whipped wildfire that destroyed the Grand Canyon Lodge is 9 percent contained and has charred more than 164 square miles (424.7 square kilometers) to become the largest fire now burning in the continental US. Another large fire in Monroe Utah has burned 75 square miles (194 square kilometers) since July 13 and is 11 percent contained officials said Thursday. Evacuation orders were issued Wednesday for several towns in the fire's path and scorched power poles caused electricity to be shut off in other nearby communities in south-central Utah. Fire clouds present challenges for firefighters Towering convection clouds known as pyrocumulus clouds have been spotted over Arizona's blaze for seven consecutive days fueling the fire with dry powerful winds fire information officer Lisa Jennings said. They form when air over the fire becomes super-heated and rises in a large smoke column. The billowing clouds can be seen for hundreds of miles and can look like an anvil or a dark spear jutting into the atmosphere. Their more treacherous big brother a fire-fueled thunderstorm known as the pyrocumulonimbus cloud sent rapid winds shooting out in all directions this week as a smoke column formed from the Utah fire then collapsed on itself said fire team information officer Jess Clark. 'If they get high enough they can also create downdrafts and that's something we really watch out for because that can quickly spread the fire and can be very dangerous for firefighters who are doing their work on the ground,' Jennings said. Multiple fire crews in Utah were forced to retreat Wednesday as the unpredictable climate created by the clouds threatened their safety officials said. The same type of cloud which the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has dubbed 'the fire-breathing dragon of clouds' recently formed a fire tornado that tore through an eastern Utah neighborhood with wind speeds estimated at 122 miles (196 kilometers) per hour. Think of the fire as kind of like a hot air balloon so it adds buoyancy and things rise as a result said Derek Mallia an atmospheric scientist at the University of Utah who studies pyrocumulonimbus clouds and tracks fires in Utah and Arizona. You get this towering thunderstorm over the fire and just like any other thunderstorm it gets really windy underneath it. Because it's the West these thunderstorms tend to be very dry. These clouds he said may appear more frequently as climate change causes a longer fire season drought conditions and extreme weather events. Dry conditions fuel Grand Canyon megafire The Dragon Bravo Fire burning on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon was sparked by lightning on July 4. It was about a week later that conditions deteriorated with hot dry and windy weather helping to push the flames toward the Grand Canyon Lodge and the historic cabins that surround it. The fire destroyed dozens of buildings and forced the closure of the national park's North Rim for the rest of the season as hundreds of firefighters struggled to gain an upper hand. Thursday marked the eighth straight day of historically dry conditions Jennings said. Humidity levels have been in the single digits fuel moisture levels are extremely low and wind gusts were expected to crank up to 35 miles per hour (54.7 kilometers per hour). The pyrocumulus clouds have reached heights of at least 25000 feet (7620 meters) and fire behavior analyst Arthur Gonzales said they could go higher. The direction of the wind has been fairly consistent for crews working the Dragon Bravo Fire and although they've been strong the predictability has allowed fire managers to more easily position crews on the fire lines. But when pyrocumulus clouds form and the winds become less predictable Jennings said firefighters often have to be pulled back to safety. Fire prompts power outages in Utah Hot dry winds fanned the flames of the Monroe Canyon Fire on Thursday as firefighters worked to contain the spread. The fire has burned 12 power poles and many homes have been without electricity since Wednesday afternoon. The National Weather Service issued red flag warnings for extreme fire danger in much of central and southwest Utah this week. In Antimony Utah 54 miles (87 kilometers) south of Monroe the town's 123 residents were without power Thursday afternoon. Mayor Kasey King who was helping people gather food and supplies at a community center said they could be without power for a week. The power company Garkane Energy Cooperative said it's working to restore power as quickly as possible and has brought in backup generators. Marnie Reynolds a resident of Antimony worried for the town's many elderly residents. She has been using a camp stove to offer hot meals to neighbors and is using a generator to help people refrigerate groceries and medications. 'We have been facing a lot of challenges but we have the best community,' she said. In Richfield Utah 10 miles (16 kilometers) north of Monroe Lee Stevens said his yard was coated in ash. He and his wife who has asthma and is sensitive to the smoke have not yet been told to evacuate but are making preparations in case the fire spreads. The National Interagency Fire Center in Idaho said Thursday that even with fewer acres having burned so far this year than average many parts of the country remain vulnerable to new starts and fast-moving flames. ___ Bryan reported from Albuquerque New Mexico.


Al Arabiya
2 days ago
- Al Arabiya
A tiny California city prone to tsunamis saw the highest waves in continental US after quake
A small California coastal city near the border with Oregon that has recorded dozens of tsunamis–including one that killed 11 people more than 60 years ago–saw little damage Wednesday as locals returned to their routines amid sunny skies in the town known as a tsunami magnet. Crescent City recorded waves of up to 4 feet (1.22 meters) early Wednesday–the highest recorded anywhere in the continental United States following an 8.8-magnitude earthquake centered off the coast of Russia's Far East hours earlier. Still, those were far smaller than the 21-foot (6.40 meters) waves caused by the deadly 1964 tsunami. This time no one was injured in the city of 6600, and there was no major flooding, with downtown open later Wednesday morning. A dock at the city's harbor was damaged, and officials warned people to stay away from beaches and waterways. 'A lot of people who aren't from here did evacuate. But they ended up coming right back because nothing happened,' said Rose Renee, who works at Oceanfront Lodge that looks out at the famed Battery Point Lighthouse. A surge of water lifted the dock off its pilings around 2:40 a.m., eventually submerging it, Harbormaster Mike Rademaker said at a news briefing. The dock was engineered to disrupt the waves' force before they reach the inner harbor and appears to have functioned as intended, he said. City has been tsunami magnet for centuries. Crescent City is highly susceptible to tsunamis because of an underwater ridge just offshore known as the Mendocino Fracture Zone. The ridge funnels tsunamis into deeper water where they pick up speed before they hit the town. Forty-one tsunamis have been observed or recorded since the first tide gauge was installed in Crescent City in 1933. The oral history of local native peoples, geologic evidence, and the written records of people elsewhere in the Pacific Rim suggest that tsunamis have battered this shoreline for centuries, according to city records. The 1964 event, considered the worst tsunami disaster recorded in the United States, began with a 9.2 magnitude earthquake in Alaska, according to the Crescent City website. Three small waves caused little damage, but then a big wave–nearly 21 feet (6.40 meters)–devastated 29 city blocks. The quake caused 15 deaths, and the ensuing tsunami caused 124 deaths: 106 in Alaska, 13 in California, and 5 in Oregon, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Centers for Environmental Information. Crescent City rebuilt downtown, and today a walking tour highlights high-water marks posted on surviving buildings, objects pushed by waves, and memorials to those who died. A tsunami caused by the March 2011 earthquake in Japan killed one person in Crescent City and damaged the harbor. Max Blair, a volunteer at the Del Norte Historical Society which manages the town's museum and historic lighthouse, said locals have tsunami drills at least once a year. 'When there is danger of one, cellphone notifications go out, and the tsunami sirens in the town sound warnings. Resident then turn to KCRE radio for information,' Blair said. If ordered to evacuate, people move to higher ground, normally the town's Walmart about 2 miles (3.22 kilometers) from the shore. 'We evacuate if it's forecast to be a big wave. But the first wave was coming in at low tide, and it was only a couple feet, so we just have to stay away from the beach,' Blair said. The city's website warns that a tsunami could happen anytime. Since most of downtown is in the tsunami run-up zone, if there were a near-shore earthquake, people would only have minutes to reach safety. Thirty-two tsunamis have been observed in the city since 1933, including five that caused damage. It is still not safe to head to the beach. The greatest impact from the tsunami event along the coast Wednesday morning was around Crescent City with strong tidal swings including up to 4-foot waves, according to James White, a meteorologist at the National Weather Services Eureka office. Officials stressed that conditions may be improving, but it wasn't yet safe to head to the beach on Wednesday. 'There were still dramatic tide fluctuations that must carry high currents,' the city manager said. 'It seems like whenever we have these events, it's also time that we lose someone just because they're in the wrong place, and they get caught off-guard, and then they're swept out,' Weir said.


Al Arabiya
3 days ago
- Al Arabiya
Portugal gains control of some wildfires
Firefighters gained control over some of the dozens of wildfires scorching Portugal on Wednesday, as fears mounted that weather conditions could further fan the flames. Some 1,500 firefighters were deployed to four major fires in the north and centre of the country, while hundreds of others remained focused on controlling blazes that were 'in the process of resolution that do not pose a risk of spreading', according to the latest bulletin from the civil protection agency. A fire that started in the Peneda-Geres national park near Ponte da Barca in the country's north Saturday night was unrelenting. Meanwhile a fire in the center near Arouca that ignited Monday afternoon continued to demand the most resources, with 750 firefighters and 260 vehicles on site. Residents of the northern village near Melres endured a harrowing night as the flames encroached. 'It's terrible,' exclaimed Maria Da Conceicao, 64, to AFP. 'Last year it already burned on the other side, it was madness... and now here.' Other fires near Santarem, Penamacor and Nisa, in the centre of the country were declared under control overnight, according to the National Authority of Civil Protection. But weather conditions Wednesday are expected to pose a challenge to firefighters, with strong winds and high temperatures pushing 40C in the center. Large swathes were under a 'maximum, very high, or high' fire risk, according to the Portuguese Institute of Sea and Atmosphere (IPMA), prompting authorities to reinforce the wildfire response system. 'Our entire system is operational to respond as quickly as possible,' Prime Minister Luis Montenegro had said Tuesday. Like many countries, Portugal faces wildfires every summer. Experts say climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of droughts and fires around the world.