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Chinchaga fire

The Chinchaga fire, also known as the Wisp fire, Chinchaga River fire and Fire 19,[1] was a forest fire that burned in northern British Columbia and Alberta in the summer and early fall of 1950. With a final size of between 1,400,000 hectares (3,500,000 acres) and 1,700,000 hectares (4,200,000 acres), it is the single largest recorded fire in North American history. The authorities allowed the fire to burn freely, following local forest management policy considering the lack of settlements in the region. The Chinchaga fire produced large amounts of smoke, creating the "1950 Great Smoke Pall", observed across eastern North America and Europe. As the existence of the massive fire was not well-publicized, and the smoke was mostly in the upper atmosphere and could not be smelled, there was much speculation about the atmospheric haze and its provenance. The Chinchaga firestorm's "historic smoke pall" caused "observations of blue suns and moons in the United States and Europe".[2][3][4] It was the biggest firestorm documented in North America, and created the world's largest smoke layer in the atmosphere.[4]

Chinchaga Fire
LocationBritish Columbia and Alberta, Canada
Statistics
Total area1,400,000–1,700,000 hectares (3,500,000–4,200,000 acres)
Date(s)June - October 1950
Map
Map

Background and cause Edit

 
Chinchaga River

The region has a mix of black spruce, lodgepole pine and deciduous forests, giving way to muskeg in lower areas. Few people lived in the area in 1950.[5]

Sources vary as to the origin of the fire but agree that it was caused by human activity. One version faults an Imperial Oil surveying crew with starting a small blaze to protect their horses from biting insects.[6] Another posits that slash burning from agricultural clearing could have been the initial spark.[5]

The blaze started on 1 June 1950 and continued to burn throughout the summer and early fall until the end of October. The ignition point was north of Fort St. John, British Columbia, and the fire burned north-eastwards nearly to Keg River, Alberta.[5]

The burn Edit

The path and extent of the burn was influenced by weather patterns. It burned in a fan-shaped pattern along a roughly SW/NE axis, starting in the Rose Prairie area.[7] The fire alternated between "runs" of rapid spread and high intensity, interspersed with periods of low activity. A series of high pressure systems over the summer allowed a buildup of heat and dry air, reducing the moisture levels in the forest fuels. The breakdowns of these systems produced the high northeasterly winds that drove the "runs".[5]

There were five "runs" in total, with the final expansion in September 1950 causing the most destruction and amounting to one-third of the total burned area.[5]

It finally was put out by cooler weather and rain in late October, as it approached Keg River in the Whispering River area (hence one of its names "Whisp Fire").[citation needed]

Most of the burned area was on the Alberta side of the inter-provincial border, with only 90,000 hectares (220,000 acres) burned on the British Columbia side.[8] Size estimates vary due to its remoteness from population centres and the imprecise measurement techniques of the time period. Estimates at the time ranged from 1,000,000 to 1,400,000 hectares (2,500,000 to 3,500,000 acres).[5] In 2008 and 2009, researchers with Natural Resources Canada and the University of Victoria conducted airborne surveys of several boreal forest fires, including the Chinchaga. Using polarimetric analysis, they arrived at a final estimate of that was considerably larger than previous estimates, placing the total burned area at 1,700,000 hectares (4,200,000 acres).[9] While most likely not the largest fire ever in North America, maybe not even in the North American boreal forest, the burnt area it produced is the largest ever known.[5]

No known deaths occurred as a result of the fire. In terms of damage, the dollar value of the Chinchaga fire is difficult to estimate. Although sparsely inhabited, the area was a productive trapping area for First Nations and Métis. The timber of the Chinchaga River watershed had not been surveyed and was undervalued by the Alberta provincial government, which placed the fire's cost at one million dollars. Cordy Tymstra, an Alberta forestry department fire historian, said it is a "value that reflects how little officials appreciated the wealth of the land."[6]

Fromm et al. (2005) argued that the Chinchaga firestorm[3] may have been an iteration of an explosive troposphere-to-stratosphere transport (TST), "a dynamic combination of extreme boreal forest fire and convection [...]"[2]

Response Edit

No fire suppression efforts were directed at the fire. Fire crews were spread thin because of numerous blazes in B.C., the Yukon Territory and Alberta. At the time, the Alberta forestry department's policy was to respond only to fires within 16 kilometres (10 miles)[10] of settlements and major roads.[11] A request by the fire ranger at Keg River to fight the fire with a ground crew was denied by provincial fire managers.[6] According to Tymstra, the Chinchaga fire changed the way Alberta responded to forest fires.[4][how?]

Local residents, such as Frank Jackson, the husband of legendary pioneer doctor Mary Percy Jackson, did what they could but the fire only stalled with the coming of autumn precipitation.[12]

Great Smoke Pall Edit

The Chinchaga fire produced large amounts of smoke, creating the "Great Smoke Pall", observed across eastern North America and Europe.[13] The giant smoke release from the conflagration in late September 1950 was first recorded at Ennadai Lake, in what is now Nunavut, on 24 September.[13] The smoke was on a northeastern path, but hit an atmospheric trough and headed southward towards Ontario and the American eastern seaboard.[13]

The province of Ontario experienced heavy smoke conditions that caused pitch darkness.[14] The towns of Sarnia and Guelph experienced three-hour midday periods of darkness, streetlights in Toronto turned on by themselves, and drivers resorted to using their automobile headlights during daytime hours. In Toronto, power consumption increased by 200,000 kWh during the smoke event, causing power failures that in turn set off bank alarms, prompting police responses across the city.[15] Aircraft were grounded, and an aerial search for a downed United States Air Force bomber was delayed by the smoke. Animals also felt the effects; cows required milking at different times, and birds were seen bedding down midday.[13] Beneficially, the smoke blanket held off a killing frost that was expected in southern Ontario, saving the orchards.[15]

Most of the smoke in eastern North America was borne aloft by climatic conditions to high altitudes. As many observers could not smell it, and the news of the massive Chinchaga fire was sparse, affected people drew other conclusions about its source. Explanations included nuclear armageddon, local fires, secret U.S. military experiments,[16] an American atomic bomb blast,[15] supernatural forces, a solar eclipse, and an alien invasion.[11][13]

The heavy haze moved on to the Atlantic seaboard of the United States. New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Washington D.C., Virginia and Florida all reported effects from the fire, especially on September 24, so called "Black Sunday".[17] As in Ontario, streetlights turned on during the daytime, and animals showed abnormal behaviour.[13]

American meteorologist Harry Wexler followed the smoke plume closely, collecting data from a wide area of the U.S. He noted that the plume split in two during the event, with one southern plume getting caught in a stagnant anticyclonic pattern that extended the hazy period. Wexler observed lower temperatures as result of sunlight absorption by the smoke; he estimated a 4 °C (6 °F) drop in the Washington, D.C., area.[13]

The northern smoke plume traveled over the Atlantic by way of Newfoundland and Greenland. On 27 September 1950, the plume was observed over Scotland, with reports over England following soon after. France, the Netherlands, Portugal, and Denmark also observed the plume.[5][6] Reports by pilots put the haze over Europe at 12 km (7.5 mi) or more in altitude, higher than observed in North America. In early October, a smoke observation was made on the Aleutian Islands, suggesting that the Chinchaga haze had possibly circled the entire globe.[13]

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Tymstra. Chinchaga Firestorm, p. 8
  2. ^ a b Fromm 2005.
  3. ^ a b Murphy & Tymstra 1986.
  4. ^ a b c Tymstra 2014.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Pyne, Stephen J. (2007). Awful Splendour: A Fire History of Canada. Vancouver, BC: UBC Press. pp. 61–63. ISBN 9780774813914.
  6. ^ a b c d Sinnema, Jodie (Jul 3, 2001). "Smoke in the Sky and Darkness at Noon: Chinchaga River Fire Spread Haze as Far Away as Europe". Edmonton Journal.
  7. ^ Tymstra, Chinchage Firestorm, p. 139
  8. ^ "Major Historical Wildfires". Wildfire Statistics. British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Lands, and Natural Resource Operations. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
  9. ^ Goodenough, David G.; Hao, Chen; Hobart, Geordie; Richardson, Ashlin (2009). "Investigating Historical Fire Scars using Polarimetric SAR" (PDF). Victoria, British Columbia: " Natural Resources Canada/University of Victoria. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ Tymstra, Chinchaga Firestorm, p. 9
  11. ^ a b Struzik, Ed (May 22, 2011). "1950 monster fire burned its way into history". Edmonton Journal. Archived from the original on January 19, 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  12. ^ Tymstra, Chinchaga Firestorm, pp. 34–38
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Field, Robert (Fall 2008). (PDF). Canadian Smoke Newsletter: 13–16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-04-04. Retrieved 19 December 2012.
  14. ^ Tymstra, Chinchaga Firestorm, pp. 47–48
  15. ^ a b c Tymstra, Chinchaga Firestorm, p. 47
  16. ^ Tymstra, Chinchaga Firestorm, pp. 44, 46
  17. ^ Tymstra, Chinchaga Firestorm, pp. 44, 48

References Edit

  • Fromm, Michael; Bevilacqua, Richard; Servranckx, René; Rosen, James; Thayer, Jeffrey P.; Jay, Herman; Larko, David (27 April 2005), "Pyro-cumulonimbus injection of smoke to the stratosphere: Observations and impact of a super blowup in northwestern Canada on 3–4 August 1998", Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 110 (D8): D08205, Bibcode:2005JGRD..110.8205F, doi:10.1029/2004JD005350
  • Murphy, P.; Tymstra, C. (1986), Third Western Region Fire Weather Committee Scientific and Technical Seminar (ed.), The 1950 Chinchaga River fire in the Peace River region of British Columbia/Alberta: Preliminary results of simulating forward spread distances, Edmonton, Alberta: Canadian Forestry Services
  • Tymstra, Cordy (1 November 2014), The Chinchaga Firestorm: When the Moon and Sun Turned Blue, Edmonton, Alberta: University of Alberta Press, p. 248, ISBN 978-1772120035

chinchaga, fire, also, known, wisp, fire, chinchaga, river, fire, fire, forest, fire, that, burned, northern, british, columbia, alberta, summer, early, fall, 1950, with, final, size, between, hectares, acres, hectares, acres, single, largest, recorded, fire, . The Chinchaga fire also known as the Wisp fire Chinchaga River fire and Fire 19 1 was a forest fire that burned in northern British Columbia and Alberta in the summer and early fall of 1950 With a final size of between 1 400 000 hectares 3 500 000 acres and 1 700 000 hectares 4 200 000 acres it is the single largest recorded fire in North American history The authorities allowed the fire to burn freely following local forest management policy considering the lack of settlements in the region The Chinchaga fire produced large amounts of smoke creating the 1950 Great Smoke Pall observed across eastern North America and Europe As the existence of the massive fire was not well publicized and the smoke was mostly in the upper atmosphere and could not be smelled there was much speculation about the atmospheric haze and its provenance The Chinchaga firestorm s historic smoke pall caused observations of blue suns and moons in the United States and Europe 2 3 4 It was the biggest firestorm documented in North America and created the world s largest smoke layer in the atmosphere 4 Chinchaga FireLocationBritish Columbia and Alberta CanadaStatisticsTotal area1 400 000 1 700 000 hectares 3 500 000 4 200 000 acres Date s June October 1950MapMap Contents 1 Background and cause 2 The burn 2 1 Response 3 Great Smoke Pall 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 ReferencesBackground and cause Edit Chinchaga RiverThe region has a mix of black spruce lodgepole pine and deciduous forests giving way to muskeg in lower areas Few people lived in the area in 1950 5 Sources vary as to the origin of the fire but agree that it was caused by human activity One version faults an Imperial Oil surveying crew with starting a small blaze to protect their horses from biting insects 6 Another posits that slash burning from agricultural clearing could have been the initial spark 5 The blaze started on 1 June 1950 and continued to burn throughout the summer and early fall until the end of October The ignition point was north of Fort St John British Columbia and the fire burned north eastwards nearly to Keg River Alberta 5 The burn EditThe path and extent of the burn was influenced by weather patterns It burned in a fan shaped pattern along a roughly SW NE axis starting in the Rose Prairie area 7 The fire alternated between runs of rapid spread and high intensity interspersed with periods of low activity A series of high pressure systems over the summer allowed a buildup of heat and dry air reducing the moisture levels in the forest fuels The breakdowns of these systems produced the high northeasterly winds that drove the runs 5 There were five runs in total with the final expansion in September 1950 causing the most destruction and amounting to one third of the total burned area 5 It finally was put out by cooler weather and rain in late October as it approached Keg River in the Whispering River area hence one of its names Whisp Fire citation needed Most of the burned area was on the Alberta side of the inter provincial border with only 90 000 hectares 220 000 acres burned on the British Columbia side 8 Size estimates vary due to its remoteness from population centres and the imprecise measurement techniques of the time period Estimates at the time ranged from 1 000 000 to 1 400 000 hectares 2 500 000 to 3 500 000 acres 5 In 2008 and 2009 researchers with Natural Resources Canada and the University of Victoria conducted airborne surveys of several boreal forest fires including the Chinchaga Using polarimetric analysis they arrived at a final estimate of that was considerably larger than previous estimates placing the total burned area at 1 700 000 hectares 4 200 000 acres 9 While most likely not the largest fire ever in North America maybe not even in the North American boreal forest the burnt area it produced is the largest ever known 5 No known deaths occurred as a result of the fire In terms of damage the dollar value of the Chinchaga fire is difficult to estimate Although sparsely inhabited the area was a productive trapping area for First Nations and Metis The timber of the Chinchaga River watershed had not been surveyed and was undervalued by the Alberta provincial government which placed the fire s cost at one million dollars Cordy Tymstra an Alberta forestry department fire historian said it is a value that reflects how little officials appreciated the wealth of the land 6 Fromm et al 2005 argued that the Chinchaga firestorm 3 may have been an iteration of an explosive troposphere to stratosphere transport TST a dynamic combination of extreme boreal forest fire and convection 2 Response Edit No fire suppression efforts were directed at the fire Fire crews were spread thin because of numerous blazes in B C the Yukon Territory and Alberta At the time the Alberta forestry department s policy was to respond only to fires within 16 kilometres 10 miles 10 of settlements and major roads 11 A request by the fire ranger at Keg River to fight the fire with a ground crew was denied by provincial fire managers 6 According to Tymstra the Chinchaga fire changed the way Alberta responded to forest fires 4 how Local residents such as Frank Jackson the husband of legendary pioneer doctor Mary Percy Jackson did what they could but the fire only stalled with the coming of autumn precipitation 12 Great Smoke Pall EditThe Chinchaga fire produced large amounts of smoke creating the Great Smoke Pall observed across eastern North America and Europe 13 The giant smoke release from the conflagration in late September 1950 was first recorded at Ennadai Lake in what is now Nunavut on 24 September 13 The smoke was on a northeastern path but hit an atmospheric trough and headed southward towards Ontario and the American eastern seaboard 13 The province of Ontario experienced heavy smoke conditions that caused pitch darkness 14 The towns of Sarnia and Guelph experienced three hour midday periods of darkness streetlights in Toronto turned on by themselves and drivers resorted to using their automobile headlights during daytime hours In Toronto power consumption increased by 200 000 kWh during the smoke event causing power failures that in turn set off bank alarms prompting police responses across the city 15 Aircraft were grounded and an aerial search for a downed United States Air Force bomber was delayed by the smoke Animals also felt the effects cows required milking at different times and birds were seen bedding down midday 13 Beneficially the smoke blanket held off a killing frost that was expected in southern Ontario saving the orchards 15 Most of the smoke in eastern North America was borne aloft by climatic conditions to high altitudes As many observers could not smell it and the news of the massive Chinchaga fire was sparse affected people drew other conclusions about its source Explanations included nuclear armageddon local fires secret U S military experiments 16 an American atomic bomb blast 15 supernatural forces a solar eclipse and an alien invasion 11 13 The heavy haze moved on to the Atlantic seaboard of the United States New York Pennsylvania Ohio Washington D C Virginia and Florida all reported effects from the fire especially on September 24 so called Black Sunday 17 As in Ontario streetlights turned on during the daytime and animals showed abnormal behaviour 13 American meteorologist Harry Wexler followed the smoke plume closely collecting data from a wide area of the U S He noted that the plume split in two during the event with one southern plume getting caught in a stagnant anticyclonic pattern that extended the hazy period Wexler observed lower temperatures as result of sunlight absorption by the smoke he estimated a 4 C 6 F drop in the Washington D C area 13 The northern smoke plume traveled over the Atlantic by way of Newfoundland and Greenland On 27 September 1950 the plume was observed over Scotland with reports over England following soon after France the Netherlands Portugal and Denmark also observed the plume 5 6 Reports by pilots put the haze over Europe at 12 km 7 5 mi or more in altitude higher than observed in North America In early October a smoke observation was made on the Aleutian Islands suggesting that the Chinchaga haze had possibly circled the entire globe 13 See also EditList of fires in Canada List of wildfiresFootnotes Edit Tymstra Chinchaga Firestorm p 8 a b Fromm 2005 a b Murphy amp Tymstra 1986 a b c Tymstra 2014 a b c d e f g h Pyne Stephen J 2007 Awful Splendour A Fire History of Canada Vancouver BC UBC Press pp 61 63 ISBN 9780774813914 a b c d Sinnema Jodie Jul 3 2001 Smoke in the Sky and Darkness at Noon Chinchaga River Fire Spread Haze as Far Away as Europe Edmonton Journal Tymstra Chinchage Firestorm p 139 Major Historical Wildfires Wildfire Statistics British Columbia Ministry of Forests Lands and Natural Resource Operations Retrieved 3 September 2017 Goodenough David G Hao Chen Hobart Geordie Richardson Ashlin 2009 Investigating Historical Fire Scars using Polarimetric SAR PDF Victoria British Columbia Natural Resources Canada University of Victoria a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Tymstra Chinchaga Firestorm p 9 a b Struzik Ed May 22 2011 1950 monster fire burned its way into history Edmonton Journal Archived from the original on January 19 2013 Retrieved 19 December 2012 Tymstra Chinchaga Firestorm pp 34 38 a b c d e f g h Field Robert Fall 2008 Revisiting the 1950 Great Smoke Pall PDF Canadian Smoke Newsletter 13 16 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 04 04 Retrieved 19 December 2012 Tymstra Chinchaga Firestorm pp 47 48 a b c Tymstra Chinchaga Firestorm p 47 Tymstra Chinchaga Firestorm pp 44 46 Tymstra Chinchaga Firestorm pp 44 48References EditFromm Michael Bevilacqua Richard Servranckx Rene Rosen James Thayer Jeffrey P Jay Herman Larko David 27 April 2005 Pyro cumulonimbus injection of smoke to the stratosphere Observations and impact of a super blowup in northwestern Canada on 3 4 August 1998 Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres 110 D8 D08205 Bibcode 2005JGRD 110 8205F doi 10 1029 2004JD005350 Murphy P Tymstra C 1986 Third Western Region Fire Weather Committee Scientific and Technical Seminar ed The 1950 Chinchaga River fire in the Peace River region of British Columbia Alberta Preliminary results of simulating forward spread distances Edmonton Alberta Canadian Forestry Services Tymstra Cordy 1 November 2014 The Chinchaga Firestorm When the Moon and Sun Turned Blue Edmonton Alberta University of Alberta Press p 248 ISBN 978 1772120035 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinchaga fire amp oldid 1169943252, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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