List of forest fires

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This is a list of famous forest fires:

Contents

[edit] North America

Fire Area Year Size Notes
Miramichi Fire New Brunswick 1825 3,000,000 acres (12150 km²) Killed 160 people
Yachina Fire Oregon 1846 450,000 acres (1,800 km²)
Nestucca Fire Oregon 1853 320,000 acres (1,300 km²)
Silverton Fire Oregon 1865 1,000,000 acres (4,000 km²) Worst recorded fire in state's history
Coos Fire Oregon 1868 300,000 acres (1,200 km²)
Peshtigo Fire Wisconsin 1871 1,200,000 acres (4900 km²) Overshadowed by the Great Chicago Fire occurring the same day
Bighorn Fire Wyoming 1876 500,000 acres (2,000 km²)
Thumb Fire Michigan 1881 1,000,000 acres (4,000 km²) Killed 250+ people
Great Fire of 1889 California 1889 800,000 acres (3,200 km²) Largest fire in recorded California history
Hinckley Fire Minnesota 1894 160,000 acres (650 km²) Killed 418 people and destroyed 12 towns
Adirondack Fire New York 1903 450,000 acres (1,800 km²)
Great Fire of 1910 Idaho-Montana 1910 3,000,000 acres (12,000 km²) Killed 86 people
Cochrane Fire Ontario 1911 500,000 acres (2,000 km²) Killed 73 people
Cochrane-Matheson Fire Ontario 1916  ? Killed 228 (U.O. 400+) people and destroyed both towns, the former burnt again after just five years.
Cloquet Fire Minnesota-Wisconsin 1918 100,000 acres (400 km²) Killed between 400 and 500 people
Mississagi/Chapleau fire Ontario 1948 645,000 acres (2,580 km²)
Mann Gulch fire Montana 1949 4,500 acres (18 km²) Killed 13 firefighters
Capitan Gap fire New Mexico 1950 17,000 acres (69 km²)
Tillamook Burn Oregon 1933, 1939, 1945, 1951 355,000 acres total (1,400 km²) Swept through the same region of Oregon four times
Maine 1947 175,000 acres (710 km²) A series of fires that lasted ten days; 16 people killed
Laguna Fire California 1970 175,425 acres (710 km²) 382 homes destroyed and 8 people killed; the second largest fire in the state's history until the Cedar Fire
Yellowstone National Park fires Wyoming-Montana 1988 800,000 acres (3,200 km²)
Oakland Hills firestorm California 1991 1,520 acres Killed 25 and destroyed 3469 homes and apartments within the cities of Oakland and Berkeley
South Canyon fire Colorado 1994 Killed 14 firefighters
Florida 1998 300,000 acres (1,200 km²) 2200 fires, during drought season; burned 150 homes, $390 million timber lost, 80,000 evacuees, $133 million in fire suppression costs
Cerro Grande Fire New Mexico 2000 ca. 48,000 acres (190 km²) Burned about 420 dwellings in Los Alamos, New Mexico, damaged >100 buildings at Los Alamos National Laboratory; $1 billion damage, worst fire in state's recorded history
Mesa Verde National Park fire Colorado 2000
Rodeo-Chediski fire Arizona 2002 467,066 acres (1,890 km²) Threatened, but did not burn the town of Show Low, Arizona
Hayman Fire in Pike National Forest Colorado 2002 137,760 acres (557.5 km²) 9 firefighter deaths, 600 structures fires
Florence/Sour Biscuit Complex Fire Oregon 2002 499,570 acres (2,000 km²)
Aspen Fire Arizona 2003 84,750 acres (343 km²) Destroyed large portions of Summerhaven, Arizona
Okanagan Mountain Park Fire British Columbia 2003 500,000 acres (2,000 km²) Displaced more than 5,000 inhabitants, destroyed dozens of homes and threatened urbanized sections of Kelowna.
Old Fire California 2003 91,281 acres (369.4 km²) 993 homes destroyed, 6 deaths. Simultaneous with the Cedar Fire (below)
Cedar Fire California 2003 280,278 acres (1,134 km²) Second-largest fire in California history; burned 2,232 homes and killed 14 in San Diego County. Simultaneous with 15 other fires in Southern California (including the Old Fire, above) covering 721,791 acres (2,920 km²), killing 24, displacing 120,000 and destroying 3,640 homes. Damage from combined fires estimated at 2 billion USD (See NASA images: [1] [2])
Esperanza Fire California 2006 40,200 acres 10 buildings destroyed, 5 firefighters killed. The blaze started on October 26th and scorched 40,200 acres, or more than 60 square miles, of forest and brush before being fully contained October 30th. It destroyed 34 homes and 20 outbuildings.


[edit] In Australia


[edit] In Europe

[edit] Poland

  • Kuźnia Raciborska Fire in Poland, burned 90.62 km² of forest and killed three people (including two firefighers) on August 26, 1992.

[edit] Greece

  • Penteli Fire in Greece affected in June and July, 1995 in the Penteli mountains and lasted for almost the weekend from Friday.
  • 1998 forest fires in Greece, a series of forest fores affected the Athens area, Avlona, Taygetus and Olympus mountains and other places. The fire began in the beginning of the summer season.
  • 2000 forest fires in Greece, a series of forest fires affected Greece including Agioi Theodoroi and eastern Corinthia at the beginning of July 2000
  • 2005 East Attica Fire in Greece - Forest fires ravaged East Attica on July 28, 2005 from Agia Triada Rafinas to west of Rafina. The fires began at around 11:00 (EET) (8:00 AM GMT) consuming 70 km² of forests, properties and farmlands. The fire spread quickly after a few hours with winds of up to 55 to 70 km/h and spread near the suburban housings of Athens near Rafina causing dense smoke. The fire reached Kallitechnio and the settlements by around 3:30 (EET) and devastated homes leaving some people homeless and evacuated people in areas around Agia Triada Rafinas, Agia Kyriaki Rafinas, Kallitechnio, Loutsa, Neos Vourtzas and the Rafina area mostly on the hillside areas. Pine trees were devastated. Firefighters didn't put out the blaze until the winds calmed down around 5:00 (EET). It took hundreds of fire trucks, firefighters, planes, 65 firefighting helicopters from all over the surrounding areas and most of Greece to put out the blaze. A stretch of Marathonos Avenue became closed.
  • July 29, 2005 - a day after the enormous Attica fire, another series of fires occurred throughout Greece, entirely in Preveza including Monolithi consuming properties and a campground, Ioannina and Xiromeni of Aitoloakarnania.

[edit] Italy and France

  • 2000 fires in Southern Europe in July 2000 consumed forests and buildings in southern France, parts of Iberia, Corsica, and most of Italy including the southern part during the heatwave dominating southern Europe with 40 to 45°C temperatures caused the phenomena.

[edit] Spain

  • July 17, 2005 - Guadalajara province, Spain, a 130 km² forest fire and 11 dead firefighters. Regional responsible of Department of the Environment out of post because of this deadly toll. A barbecue sparked deadly blazes.

[edit] In South America

[edit] In Asia

[edit] Indonesia

Forest fires in Indonesia occurred annually. When there is a weather pattern disturbance because of strong El Niño, the number and the distribution of forest fires in Indonesia increased significantly. When there is a weather pattern disturbance because of strong La Niña, the number and the distribution of forest fire in Indonesia decreased. An El Nino is usually followed by La Nina on the following year. The strength of disturbance is determined by Southern oscillation index. Large forest fire in Indonesia because of strong El Nino:

  • 1982 and 1983 - Massive forest fires in Kalimantan and East Sumatra. 36 thousands km² (8.9 million acres) of forest burned down. There are other forest fires in Java and Sulawesi on the same year.
  • In 1987, 1991 and 1994, there were large scale forest fires in Kalimantan and East Sumatra, Java, Sulawesi in Indonesia. More than 3,300 km² (815,453 acres) of forest were destroyed by forest fire.
  • 1997 and 1998 - Colossal, unprecedented forest fires in Kalimantan and East Sumatra. 97 thousands km² (24.1 millions acres) of forest were destroyed, more than 2.6 Gigatonnes of Carbon Dioxide was released to the atmosphere. The underground smouldering fire on the peat bogs continue to burn and ignite new forest fire each year during dry season. There are other forest fires in Java and Sulawesi on the same year.
  • From 1999 to 2005: there was annual forest fires in Kalimantan, Sumatra, Java and Sulawesi. Every year, forest are burned by farmers, plantation owners and continuous underground fire (since 1997). 1,345 km² (332,357 acres) of forest were destroyed by forest fire.