
Credit:
NASA image by Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team. Caption by Michon Scott.
Multiple clusters of fires burned in British Columbia, sending a thick plume of smoke over the Pacific Ocean in mid-August 2010. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite captured this natural-color image on August 13.
East of the snowcapped Coast Mountains, numerous fires, many of them clustered into large groups, send smoke plumes toward the south-southwest and west-southwest. Red outlines—most of them at the bases of smoke plumes—indicate unusually high surface temperatures associated with actively burning fires. Over the Pacific Ocean, smoke has coalesced into a large plume that blows past the northwestern tip of Vancouver Island. Over the Coast Mountains, skies are clear. The clear-sky gap between the active fires and the plume over the Pacific might result from a temporary shift in wind direction.
On August 15, 2010, the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre reported that, over the previous 24 hours, a dozen new fires had started in British Columbia, half of them from lightning, and the other half from human activity. As of August 15, a total of 201 fires were burning in the province, although 152 of them were under control. On August 16, The Globe and Mail reported that more than three-fourths of British Columbia was under high or extreme wildfire danger, following a weekend of scorching temperatures.
References
- The Globe and Mail. (2010, August 16). B.C. evacuations expand as 25 new wildfires join existing blazes. Accessed August 16, 2010.
Images & Animations
File
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- JPEG
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- JPEG 4 MB
- KMZ 13 KB
This image originally appeared on the Earth Observatory. Click here to view the full, original record.
Metadata
Sensor:
Aqua - MODISData Date:
August 13, 2010Visualization Date:
August 16, 2010

