NASA: USA - Colorado Springs - Peregrine - Oak Valley Ranch - Mountain Shadows - Building in Colorado’s Fire Zone - Part 1 - 11.08.13
Posted by Ricardo Marcenaro | Posted in NASA: USA - Colorado Springs - Peregrine - Oak Valley Ranch - Mountain Shadows - Building in Colorado’s Fire Zone - Part 1 - 11.08.13 | Posted on 10:07
acquired June 23, 1985
download large image (1 MB, JPEG, 2167x1445)
acquired June 22, 2013
download large image (4 MB, JPEG, 4334x2890)
The record for the most destructive wildfire in Colorado history has been broken repeatedly in recent years. In 2010, Boulder’s Fourmile Canyon fire destroyed 169 homes. In June 2012, the High Park fire near Fort Collins burned down 259 homes. Just a week later, the Waldo Canyon fire
struck Colorado Springs and wiped out 346 homes. For comparison, the
six most destructive fires in Colorado prior to 2000 destroyed an
average of 15 homes, according to the Colorado State Forest Service.
Why have Colorado’s wildfires become so destructive in recent years? Some wildfire experts say climate change and decades of aggressive wildfire suppression
have primed forests to produce large, destructive blazes. But they say
another factor is development. In recent decades, increasing numbers of
Coloradans have moved into the wildland-urban interface (WUI), the wildfire-prone zone where wilderness and civilization meet.
Colorado’s El Paso county, for instance, is booming. In 1980, there
were about 310,000 people living in the central Colorado county; by
2010, the population had doubled, making it the most populous county in
the state. Colorado Springs, the county’s largest city, has driven much
of the growth. While the fastest development has occurred in the plains
east of Interstate 25 and northeast of downtown, plenty of new
development has also occurred west of the city.
Communities northwest of Colorado Springs and adjacent to Pike
National Forest, in particular, have crept west and grown denser since
the 1980s, bringing more homes, roads, and people into an area that
faces the most severe wildfire threat. About a quarter of Colorado
Springs residents now live within the wildland-urban interface, explained Christina Randall, the city’s wildfire mitigation administrator. Most of the subdivisions within the WUI were built after the 1980s.
The expansion of communities into adjacent wildlands is visible to satellite sensors such as the Thematic Mapper and Operational Land Imager on the Landsat
series of satellites. The images above, acquired by Landsat 4 and
Landsat 8, show the Colorado Springs area in 1985 and 2013. Turn on the
image comparison tool to see changes in development patterns,
particularly the expanding networks of roads and housing around the
Peregrine, Oak Valley Ranch, Mountain Shadows, and Cedar Heights
neighborhoods. Click on the images to download larger versions that show
more detail.
In 2012, years of warnings about the risks of living along the edge
of the forest suddenly became very real as the Waldo Canyon fire
barreled toward residential neighborhoods. Flames lapped at many
neighborhoods along the western edge of the city, but it was Mountain
Shadows that took a direct hit. Every one of the 346 homes the Waldo
Canyon fire destroyed was in Mountain Shadows. Overall, the blaze forced
more than 30,000 people to evacuate, scorched 18,000 acres (7,000
hectares), killed two people, and took 18 days to control.
In the image above, the burn scar appears brown. (See a false-color view of the burn scar here.)
In some areas, the flames were so intense that almost no vegetation was
left on the surface. Interestingly, that was not the case for Mountain
Shadows. A map
of fire intensity shows the severity of the burning was light in
comparison to areas deep within Pike National Forest. Indeed, even in
parts of Mountain Shadows where whole blocks were destroyed, patches of
unburned lawns and trees are visible in aerial photographs.
“It’s not vast walls of fire from high-intensity crown fires that
destroy homes,” explained Tania Schoennagel, a wildfire expert at the
University of Colorado-Boulder. Roads usually slow fires as they reach
populated areas, so it is typically the accumulation of small,
innocuous-looking embers falling on flammable roofs and porches—as well
as blowing into vents—that makes homes ignite.
This helps explain why different neighborhoods or houses with similar
exposure levels can fare so differently in a fire. Simple fire-proofing
techniques—such as ensuring that roofs are non-flammable, keeping a
debris-free buffer zone around homes, and thinning forested areas around
populated areas—can go a long way toward saving homes, according to
Randall. For instance, forest-thinning efforts near Cedar Heights in
2010 are credited with keeping fire out of that neighborhood despite the fact that fire approached the area from three directions.
Return tomorrow to read more about development and wildfires in
Colorado, including the most destructive fire in Colorado history.
References and Further Reading
- City of Colorado Springs Neighborhood Map. Accessed November 4, 2013.
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- Colorado State University (2007, October 10) More Americans Building in Fire-Prone Natural Areas Across the Country, According to Colorado State Study. Accessed November 4, 2013.
- Colorado State University History of Significant Fires on State and Private Lands (acreage and/or homes lost and/or fatalities). Accessed November 4, 2013.
- Colorado Springs CSFD Wildfire Hazard Rating System. Accessed November 4, 2013.
- Denver Post (2013, July 13) Work to protect homes before Waldo Canyon fire yielded mixed results. Accessed November 4, 2013.
- Donovan, G. et al (2007, May 1) Wildfire Risk and Housing: A Case Study from Colorado Springs. Land Economics 83 (1), 217-233.
- The Gazette (2011, February 23) Census: Springs’ growth patterns create areas of boom, bust. Accessed November 4, 2013.
- Pikes Peak Area Council of Governments El Paso County Statistical Snapshot (pdf). Accessed November 4, 2013.
- State of Colorado (2013, September 30) Informational Website for the Task Force on Wildfire Insurance and Forest Health. Accessed November 4, 2013.
- Palmer Land Trust Open Space Proves an Asset in Fight Against Waldo Canyon Fire. Accessed November 4, 2013.
- Theobald, D. & Romme, W. (2007, December 7) Expansion of the US wildland-urban interface. Landscapes and Urban Planning, 83 (4), 340-354.
- University of Wisconsin SILVIS Lab The Wildland Urban Interface. Accessed November 4, 2013.
NASA Earth Observatory images by Jesse Allen and Robert Simmon, using Landsat 4 and Landsat 8 data from the USGS Earth Explorer. Caption by Adam Voiland.
- Instrument:
- Landsat 8 - OLI
NASA: USA - Colorado Springs - Peregrine - Oak Valley Ranch - Mountain Shadows - Building in Colorado’s Fire Zone - Part 1 - 11.08.13
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