Fires
are raging again across Russia
22
June, 2012
Back
in April, thousands of hectares were burning when NASA captured above
image of fires in a rural area north of Omsk, a city in south central
Russia near the Kazakhstan border, according to the NASA
report accompanying the
image.
In May 6, 2012, the Voice of Russia reported some 11000 hectares (about 42.4 square miles) of forests in Siberia to be on fire.
In May 6, 2012, the Voice of Russia reported some 11000 hectares (about 42.4 square miles) of forests in Siberia to be on fire.
Lena
River, Siberia - Wikipedia
|
Earlier
this month, eight Russian paratroopers died fighting a massive forest
fire in southern Siberia, reports
UPI.
Russia has now declared a state of emergency in several eastern regions, due to hundreds of wildfires, reports NASA.
Smoke from fires burning in Siberia can travel across the Pacific Ocean and into North America. A NASA analysis of satellite images shows that aerosols from fires took six days to reach America's shores. In certain cases they saw smoke that actually circles the globe, describes NASA.
These fires are causing a lot of emissions, including soot that can be deposited on the ice in the Arctic, resulting in more sunlight to be absorbed which will speed up the melt.
Furthermore, high temperatures in Siberia will warm up the water in rivers, causing warm water to flow into the Arctic, as illustrated by above Wikipedia image highlighting the Lena River and the August 3, 2010, satellite image below, showing warm river water heat up the Laptev Sea (degrees Celsius).
Russia has now declared a state of emergency in several eastern regions, due to hundreds of wildfires, reports NASA.
Smoke from fires burning in Siberia can travel across the Pacific Ocean and into North America. A NASA analysis of satellite images shows that aerosols from fires took six days to reach America's shores. In certain cases they saw smoke that actually circles the globe, describes NASA.
These fires are causing a lot of emissions, including soot that can be deposited on the ice in the Arctic, resulting in more sunlight to be absorbed which will speed up the melt.
Furthermore, high temperatures in Siberia will warm up the water in rivers, causing warm water to flow into the Arctic, as illustrated by above Wikipedia image highlighting the Lena River and the August 3, 2010, satellite image below, showing warm river water heat up the Laptev Sea (degrees Celsius).
The image below was edited from a report by NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center, describing that the globally-averaged temperature for May 2012 marked the second warmest May since record keeping began in 1880.
NOAA
image, temperature anomalies for May 2012
|
The
image below was edited from a recent NASA
report describing
a total of 198 fires burning across Russia. As the inset shows, the
fires on the main image are part of an area where further fires are
raging.
NASA
satellite image, acquired June 18, 2012
|
Below
are two maps from the NOAA
Climate Prediction Center,
showing temperature anomalies in Southern Russia for the week from
June 10th to 16th, 2012, of over 7 degrees Celsius (12.6 degrees
Fahrenheit), with temperatures in areas around the Caspian Sea
reaching over 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).
Perhaps
even more worrying than high temperatures in Southern Russia are high
temperature anomalies in Northern Siberia, some of which were in the
16-18 degrees Celsius range for the week from June 10-16th, 2012 (see
NOAA image below).
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