NASA has released a series of videos illustrating the tens of millions of fires that have occurred worldwide over the last decade, from the seasonal burns that torch
stretches of African savanna each year to the rampant fires that devastated western Russia in 2010. The visualizations — which were created using satellite data, aircraft and ground resources, and NASA’s MODerate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) technology — provide a glimpse of the huge impact that fires have on the global environment each year. They also provide critical insights into where and how the distribution of fires is responding to climate change and population growth, says Chris Justice, a University of Maryland researcher who leads the project for NASA. One video takes viewers on a narrated virtual tour of major fires detected between July 2002 and July 2011, panning from wildfires in Australia’s grasslands, to massive agricultural fires in China, to the path of destructive flames that burned across Europe and western Russia.
NASA Videos Give Virtual Tour of Earth’s Fires from Space
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