Fires around the world

Not faring much better here. In Melbourne it was 43 deg C (110 F) with gusts of 90 km winds (55 mph). It must be our turn to 'feel the burn' :cry:. Thank God it's cooled down now. Hoping for rain - which is always likely in Melbourne. I'm hoping other parts get some rain too.

What makes it so dangerous is the wind, the dry heat, and previous heavy rains a few months ago.

 

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Chubut-Patagonia- Argentina

An uncontrolled forest fire in the mountainous region of Chubut between Epuyén and El Hoyo, with the flames advancing intensely and erratically due to adverse weather conditions and the extreme dryness of the terrain. Authorities have ordered a preventive evacuation of residents and tourists, and firefighters from Chubut, Río Negro, and Neuquén have been deployed, along with aerial resources such as a Boeing 737 FireLiner, the largest water bomber in Latin America, to combat the fire.

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Wild theory about these Patagonia fires: one or more of them may have been started by 'Israeli tourists', and done with a view to 'Plan Andinia', a scheme that would supposedly see Argentina partitioned for the creation of 'another Jewish state':

Unmasking the Flames: Israel's Shadow Over Patagonia and Milei's Betrayal of Argentina


Argentine media is reporting the discovery of 'grenades' of some type being found 'around a lake' somewhere in Patagonia:

 
Wild theory about these Patagonia fires: one or more of them may have been started by 'Israeli tourists', and done with a view to 'Plan Andinia', a scheme that would supposedly see Argentina partitioned for the creation of 'another Jewish state':
This is the person from the previous video posted by @Niall , who testifies to what happened with the Israelis were “allegedly” the ones who started the fires. He gives details and shows the beautiful place in El Blosón mountain.
A fragment of the part that was not translated can be summarized as follows:
He says he did not approach them because he realized they were people with bad intentions. “I saw them making a fire in the park (he saw the smoke) with a fire on the other side.” He was referring to the mountain that was burning.
Then, he saw one of them coming out of his tent with his hand behind his back, suggesting that the individual was carrying a weapon and he had nothing to defend himself with, so he did not approach them.
Then they ran away, and he went down to the campsite and looked for the park ranger, with whom he went out to put out the fire that had started. They returned and called by radio to give the information in the video to the authorities.

To conclude, invite anyone who wants to stroll through these mountainous landscapes and become aware of the importance of caring for what is there.


The witness and the location are 100% real. I think he did what he had to do intuitively and methodically at the same time. In my opinion, this person prevented what could have been a huge disaster.

 
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By Sascha Pare, published 1 hour ago

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Alaska's North Slope has experienced more frequent and severe wildfires since 1950 than it has over the past 3,000 years. Here, we see a scorched rectangle of land from fires in July 2007. (Image credit: NASA Earth Observatory)

Wildfires on Alaska's North Slope are more frequent and more severe now than they have been at any point over the past 3,000 years, research suggests.

The findings are based on satellite data, as well as on soil pulled from peatlands that contain ancient chunks of charcoal and other signs of wildfires. The research team says the increase in blazes, driven by permafrost thaw and tundra "shrubification," constitutes a new wildfire regime that will likely intensify as global temperatures continue to rise.

Fires in northern Alaska "burn in summer, when the vegetation is snow-free and dry enough to ignite," study lead author Angelica Feurdean, a paleoecologist at Goethe University Frankfurt in Germany, told Live Science. In the past, this region was dominated by sedges and mosses, which provided little fuel for fires. But recently, there has been a shift toward woody shrubs, which are far more flammable and supply much more fodder for blazes, Feurdean said.

Researchers previously documented an increase in wildfires over recent decades on Alaska's North Slope and elsewhere in the Arctic, but the new study contextualizes these reports by examining wildfires over past millennia.

The research, published Nov. 10, 2025, in the journal Biogeosciences, reveals that the current peak in northern Alaskan fires started in the mid-20th century and hugely exceeds wildfire activity recorded as charcoal in local peatlands since about 1000 B.C. Global warming is behind the increase, the authors say, because rising temperatures create dry conditions on land as well as moisture in the atmosphere that boosts the risk of lightning, the main source of ignition in Alaska.

The soil samples in the study came from nine peatlands located between the Brooks Range and the Arctic Ocean. Many of these peatlands are covered in small shrubs and sphagnum moss (also known as peat moss), which only recently became widespread on Alaska's North Slope, where it replaced tussock-forming sedges such as Eriophorum vaginatum. Sphagnum moss can absorb moisture from the air, which is how it thrives despite drying conditions, Feurdean said. Sedges, on the other hand, need access to water in the soil to survive.

The samples were cores that measured about 1.6 feet (0.5 meters) long and encapsulated the past 3,000 years. The researchers analyzed the samples to reconstruct changes in vegetation, soil moisture and wildfire activity over time. Specifically, they inspected pollen and other plant remains; charcoal fragments; and tiny, single-celled organisms called testate amoebae, which are good indicators of water-table levels.

A map showing Alaska's North Slope inside a dotted red line.

Alaska's North Slope is situated between the Brooks Range and the Arctic Ocean in northern Alaska. (Image credit: Imagery ©2026 IBCAO, Landsat / Copnerinus, Data SIO, NOAA, U.S. Navy, NGA, GEBCO, U.S. Geological Survey, Imagery ©2026 NASA, Map sata ©2026 Google)

The researchers also analyzed satellite images of wildfires north of the Brooks Range between 1969 and 2023. When they combined these images with charcoal data to reconstruct the frequency and severity of fires, they found large discrepancies in the 2000s, when satellites captured huge fires but there was minimal charcoal evidence.

One explanation is that these fires were hotter than 930 degrees Fahrenheit (500 degrees Celsius) — the threshold above which charcoal turns to ash, Feurdean said. If that's the case, then the mismatch in the data over the past two decades suggests there has been an increase in extremely intense fires, she said.

Overall, the results showed a dramatic decline in soil moisture since about 1950 due to accelerating permafrost thaw, which causes surface water to sink into the ground. Plants that depend on shallow soil moisture, such as sedges and certain mosses, were replaced by shrubs — particularly shrubs in the heath family (Ericaceae) — and sphagnum moss, leading to an explosion in plant fuel for wildfires.

Combined with a rise in temperature and lightning strikes, these effects have culminated in the most severe wildfire activity in 3,000 years, Feurdean said.

Alaska's North Slope is likely a model for what is taking place across Arctic tundra ecosystems, and we can expect wildfires to worsen if warming continues, Feurdean added.

"If you have higher temperatures, you have higher shrub cover, more flammable biomass, and then more fires," she said. "The fires will continue to be more frequent and severe."
 
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