Status Report

NASA MODIS Image of the Day: January 14, 2007 – Fires in Victoria, Australia

By SpaceRef Editor
January 14, 2007
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NASA MODIS Image of the Day: January 14, 2007 – Fires in Victoria, Australia
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Images

The Image of the Day from January 12, 2007 showed the fires in Victoria, Australia on January 10, 2007. In this January 11, 2007 image, acquired by the MODIS on the Aqua satellite, the smoke plumes are even larger and more visible than on the day before. Rivers of smoke up to 50 kilometers (31 miles) wide poured from the burning areas in Victoria’s Great Dividing Range Mountains. Many fires were burning dangerously close to Lake Thomson, the principal source of water for the city of Melbourne.

Red dots mark the sites of the active fires. According to news reports on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation Website, a change in winds overnight between January 11 and 12 eased the fire threat somewhat, but both stock and pasture were lost to flames in previous days. The moderated conditions allowed firefighters to conduct backburns (controlled burns of areas in the path of the wildfires) and build containment lines. Still, the danger of these fires, some of which have been burning in the region since early December 2006, remains high.

Hundreds of thousands of hectares (1 hectare is about 2.5 acres) have been burned in Victoria since late 2006. Extremely dry, windy, and hot conditions in the region since spring have kept the fire danger extreme across much of the region for weeks at a time. According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, extreme fire conditions in the area are more common during years when El Niño events occur. During the fall and early winter (2006-2007), an El Niño likely influenced the area’s climate. However, according to the Bureau’s most recent (January 10, 2007) update, the ongoing El Niño appeared to be weakening, which they said “bodes well for a switch towards wetter conditions across Australia sometime in the late summer or autumn.”

SpaceRef staff editor.