The
first paragraph expresses my own sentiments exactly. We are seeing, from the Russians a cover-up as we are with the Japanese and Tepco.
Russia
Experiences Great Burning: Satellite Shots Show ‘Sea of Smoke and
Fire’ Blanketing Russia
Great Burning in Russia, August 5, 2013.
26
January, 2013
I
don’t know what’s more troubling — the vast size and extent of
smoke and wildfires blanketing Siberia and Russia, or the almost
complete silence from Russia and the mainstream media on what appears
to be a massive, ongoing climate disaster
.
In
2010, Russia experienced a deadly heatwave that set off terrible
wildfires that belched smoke over many of its more populous cities.
These fires spread over a region closer to Europe and so they had
great impacts on both property and lives. In
2012, Russia experienced a second spate of massive fires,
but these raged over more remote sections of Siberia. At first,
Russia was slow to respond. Then, it mobilized an army of
firefighters — thousands and thousands — to fight scores of
blazes raging across its large, remote Arctic regions. The smoke
cloud from these fires was so large it eventually covered a section
of the Northern Hemisphere from Siberia to the west coast of North
America. Valleys in British Columbia filled with the stench of
burning from fires thousands of miles away spurring phone calls from
concerned Canadian locals to fire departments there.
Then
comes 2013. From spring to summer, central Siberia sweltered under a
near constant drought and intermittent heatwaves as a very high
amplitude ridge in the Jet Stream enabled a powerful heat dome to
form during June and then re-form during late July and early
August. The
late July heat surge appeared to be the final insult setting off an
enormous rash of fires throughout central Siberia and Russia.
By early August the number of fires raging out of control swelled to
170. Today, the number is probably closer to three hundred.
Human-caused climate change is, yet again, scarring Russia with a
terrible set of burn marks.
It
is difficult to look at today’s Aqua satellite shot and not stand
in fear and awe.
What we are looking at in this shot is the entirety of north-central Russia covered by a boiling cloud of smoke under which a massive field of fires burn. In the north, the large smoke cloud is now spilling out over the Kara Sea. In the south, we can see it just reaching northern Mongolia. In the east, a string of very large fires are roaring through tundra and boreal forest near western Kamchatka. And in the west, a broad tongue of smoke juts off the map and on toward Moscow whose skies are just starting to darken with smoke.
Though
normally this massive swath of smoke would be driven eastward over
Kamchatka and then into the Pacific Ocean, a combination of a very
weak Jet Stream flow and powerful heat dome high pressure system is
funneling this smoke westward in retrograde to the prevailing upper
level wind flow. This anomalous pattern is similar
to an upper level low that took a backward course over more than
3,000 miles of the US, marching all the way to the Pacific Ocean and
into climate change weather weirdness history.
But, in this case, smoke from hundreds of wildfires is being driven
backward against the prevailing wind flow for nearly 5,000 miles. In
both the former and the latter cases, the typical Jet Stream pattern
has been completely compromised as large backward eddies dominate
major Northern Hemisphere regions for extended periods.
Closer
in Modis shots with heat map imagery provide us with fire locations
beneath the smoke dome (Hat
tip to Colorado Bob for his sharp eye).
If
you cut the ‘Great Burning’ image I posted above in half, this
shot would represent its western portion. Each red dot in the image
represents a single wildfire. Some, which you can identify by their
smoke plumes, are readily visible. Others are entirely masked by the
massive covering smoke cloud.
On
the eastern side of this great burning area in Russia, we find new,
very large fires raging over Arctic Siberia and spreading into
Kamchatka. It is difficult to exaggerate the immense side of some of
these burn zones with the largest measuring 250×250 miles at its
widest points. In this image, the large scorch marks left over by
some of these fires begin to become visible. But zooming in on
today’s Modis image provides even more clairity:
In
this shot, we find a massive 70X30 mile scorch mark scarring both
tundra and boreal forest land in Arctic Siberia. Other, smaller
scorch marks from past fires are also visible in this image. But this
single, recent burn mark is just one of many that are now spreading
out over similar regions of the Russian Arctic.
Unfortunately,
heat and dry weather is expected to persist in this region for at
least the next week. The forecast for Monday, August 12 calls for
77-86 degree or higher temperatures to remain in place over much of
Arctic Russia with cooling confined to only the most northerly
regions.
Large
swath of 77-86 degree temperatures predicted to remain over Arctic
Russia on Monday, August 12.
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