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Not So Good
The spin doctors are at it already, claiming that the wildfires of last
summer weren't so bad after all, since some areas were left unburned. They particularly point to the Biscuit Fire, the nation's largest of the summer at 500,000 acres. The feel it is a triumph of the environment that large acreages escaped completely unburned, and other areas experienced a smoldering fire that left many trees unburned. So let's look at the damage. A total of 191,000 acres burned at medium to high intensity. Medium intensity kills most of the trees, and high intensity leaves nothing but smoldering stumps. Of these 191,000 acres, most were on steep slopes where the fire updraft and slope of the ground assisted the movement of the fire into the crown. The erosion off these steep slopes will choke rivers and streams with sediment, and seriously harm fish runs for years. Many of the areas spared by the fire are so rocky and infertile that not many trees grow there anyway. The fire dropped to low intensity in those areas because there wasn't much to burn. It's quite a stretch to claim that the Biscuit Fire was beneficial in any way. It did reduce the fuel load in the area, but that's about it. -- "The American Republic will endure, until politicians realize they can bribe the people with their own money." -- Alexis de Tocquevile |
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