Wildfires
Amidst Winter Snow on Russia’s Baltic Shores
(The Aqua satellite captured this image on Feb. 17, 2015 of multiple hot spots scattered throughout the Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia landscape. Credit: Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team. )
On
Wednesday, NASA posted the above satellite shot indicating an
outbreak of numerous wildfires along a Baltic Sea coastal lowland
that is among a furthest western holdings of current day Russia.
18 February, 2015
The
shot displayed a relatively significant outbreak of more than 20 hot
spots in a temperate deciduous forest zone bordering the
oxygen-starved Baltic Sea. NASA sensors pick up anomalous warm spots
and link them to fires when smoke plumes are also present. For
reference, the fire outbreak zone depicted above occurred in a region
roughly 120 by 60 miles in size.
Temperatures
in the region have ranged 3-5 C above normal — putting it around
the freezing mark for most of the past week. The warmer than average
weather hasn’t however, precluded snowfall, which has lent a thin
covering to the area despite a relative dryness as storms have tended
to track either north or south this year.
It
is this dryness and a persistent wind off the Baltic which may have
helped to ignite the recent outbreak of wildfires. NASA’s Rapid
Response Team posted the shot, but they provide no details as to the
cause of these wildfires. Winter fires are typically rare, but last
year saw dry winds setting off blazes in Scandinavia, so this year
may be showing an anomalous repeat.
This
story will be monitored for further clarification as winter wildfires
are an anomalous event that can often be linked to human-caused
climate change.
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