#CopernicusAtmosphere day-to-day distribution & intensity of global #wildfires #biomassburning + corresponding smoke aerosol optical depth from 1 January to 30 November 2025.
Read our analysis of the fire emissions monitored around the world this year: atmosphere.copernicus.eu/2025-sees-in...
Posts by Mica Jorgenson
Incredible 2025 statistics on fire, smoke, and air. internationalfireandsafetyjournal.com/cams-wildfir...
It was great fun to make this animation for NiCHE! They were my first environmental history community back in my U of T days and it was a delight and privilege to return their kindness with a nifty map. #envhist #envhum #gischat #cdnhist #histgeog
Joe Gilchrist imagines a future with fire in BC that I want to live in. indiginews.com/features/lon...
Today our editor, @micaamy.bsky.social, unveils a map made by Geoffrey Wallace that visualizes the geography of NiCHE blog posts going back to 2004.
"Animating the Archive: The Geography of NiCHE Posts since 2004"
niche-canada.org/2025/11/27/a...
#envhist #envhum #cdnhist #histgeog
The EU bringing us more tools for watching fire and smoke from space. First images from Copernicus Sentinel-5A, including formaldehyde linked to emissions from wildfires on the northwestern coast of Angola. #wildfire www.copernicus.eu/en/media/ima...
I may have shared this article before, but I was thinking about it again over the weekend so here it is again. Open access (👏) science showing 16.3% variance in water quality in the Fraser River basin due to fire. #wildfire firewww.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S004...
TNG and the Williams Lake tribune with some rare and refreshingly sane coverage & commentary on BC's most recent title case. wltribune.com/2025/11/07/c...
I learned so much this summer from so many people, and now it's time to take a rest. Looking forward to a winter of learning and working hard to make things better in the small ways I can.
Its always a pleasure to give back to an organization that contributes so much to our field. Support NiCHE! @nichecanada.bsky.social fundrazr.com/niche2025?re...
you know academia is truly a dumpster fire when a policy paper is behind such a pricy paywall that the policy professionals its allegedly aimed at at don't have enough budget to access it. Good job everyone keep up the good work.
Here's the message I'm getting.
This morning when I opened up NASA FIRMS to check for heat signatures, I recieved an error message that stated that information was no longer being regularly updated due to federal funding constraints. Has anyone else sees this? Any additional info? #wildfire
The Gaurdian is really on a wildfire smoke kick, and I'm here for it. www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025...
Delighted that this work continues to find new audiences, and (although purely coincidental) feels very appropriate coming out on the last day of my last fire season deployment. Thank you for hosting me, and for the work of your wonderful editorial team @envhistnow.bsky.social !
Sentinel 2 images from the confluence of the Mackenzie and the Liard. Left: Some serious fire behaviour from sept 9. Right: Autumn colours on the boreal from Sept 10 -- and an orange retardant line from a small lake (centre of the image).
Pine...uh....finds a way
The impacts of wildfire smoke (and climate change generally) can be amorphous and hard to trace, but here the Guardian has accomplished a story that pins them to the page. www.theguardian.com/environment/...
I can't take my eyes off these fires in the west of the Cariboo region. Its the summer that won't end out there, despite COLD overnight temperatures and shortening days. Look at this one chugging through a cutblock -- open flame visible from satellite (sept 7).
I haven't had much cause to bust out my corsi-rosenthal box yet this summer, but today its making short work of the 160 AQI outside (currently 15 in my office).
definitely not, since its in northern BC, Canada.
The thing that always blows my mind with the satellite imagery is that we can't even see the head of the fire, since its usually concealed by smoke. Copernicus' false colour (urban) shows that, as impressive as the previous image may be, the head of the fire is burning even hotter and faster.
Sentinel 2 captured some truly unhinged fire behaviour yesterday. When you can see an organized flame front from space, its safe to say that our fire behaviour is "aggressive."
Also from August 30 -- Sentinel captured the plume coming up from SS104 burning near Fort Provenance, NWT, as it punched up into the atmosphere.
Watching smoke from space is one thing -- watching fire is another. This is a capture from Aug 30, and is of the fire burning north of Tsacha Lake in BC. Flames are visible from Sentinel's passover -- you can see them burning in the patch of green in the top left.
A recovering academic moment of realization today: I'm developing a new course for my organization and not only am I getting paid to write the content but I have access to a team of 3 subject matter experts and am working directly with an adult learning professional. Academia, take notes.
Yes, I did post this same picture a few minutes ago with the wrong ID 🫠
ditnikkwun / ᑔᐪᘆᐟᐠᗒᐣ / Castilleja miniata