Wildland firefighting S-190

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Thermal belt

Top of an inversion layer

Convection

Transfer of heat by fluid or gases. Usually upward direction.

Night inversions

Trap smoke and make for poor visibility. Dissipate when the sun rises.

Pocket

Unaffected area between the main fire and finger.

The green

Unburned area close to the fire where live or dead fuels are. NOT SAFE

Islands

Unburned areas inside the perimeter.

Wildland fires

Unplanned or unwanted fires.

Topography

Land surface configuration; terrain

Land breeze at night

Land surface cools faster than water surface. Land to water directions

Subsidence

Large scale sinking of air associated with high pressure.

West facing slope

Later heating and cooling within the day. Sunrise and sunset

Live fuels

Living plants, high moisture vegetation, low moisture content

Heavy fuels

Logs, large limbs, not easy to ignite. Burn hot, long and slow

Fingers

Long narrow strips of fire that break off of the main fire. Caused by mixed fuels, natural features dividing the fire.

Creeping fires

Low flame. Burns slowly

Remove fuel

Make a fireline.

Cold front

Makes controlling a fire very difficult.

Mop up

Making the fire safe after it's controlled.

Fire behavior

Manner in which the fire reacts to various fuels, weather and topography.

Slopover/ Breakover

When fire crosses a control line

Fire crowning

When the fire spreads across the tree tops faster than the surface Fire.

Wind and fuel moisture

2 most important weather replayed elements affecting wildland fires.

Fireline

A section where flammable material has been removed or scraped by digging down to soil.

Flare up

Short time and doesn't change existing control plans.

Flanks

Sides of a wildland fire. May change to the head or fingers might form because of fuel.

Convective winds

Slope and valley winds, land and sea breezes, thunderstorm winds, whirlwinds, firewhirls

When can blow and flare ups occur?

Smaller fires, isolated portions of big fires. When the fire is calm and innocent.

Spot fires

Smalls fires burning beyond main fire boundary.

Removing oxygen

Smothering the fire with dirt.

What cause flare ups?

Air blasts from helicopters and air tankers.

Loading

Amount of live and dead fuel in a specific area.

Foehn wind

Santa Ana winds. Air being forced over ridges from convection or high barometric pressure.

Combustion

Self sustaining process of a fuel that produces heat and light.

Conduction

Tranfer of heat by direct contact. Ex: hot exhaust touching brush

Direct effect of wind

Intensifies the fire by feeding it more oxygen. Bends flames. Carries embers.

Reburns

Wind shift or a fire moves fast and doesn't burn everything.

The Black

Area where fire has already moved through.

Slope

Bad: uphill. Pre heats fuel and burns faster. Good: uphill moving down. Doesn't preheat fuel and moves slower.

Firebrand sources

Blurring materials carried by the wind. Ex: maple and oak leaves

Firewhirls

Burn intensely, can create spot fires, occur on protected side of elevated terrain features, more dangerous than dust devils.

Smoldering

Burning without flame. Moves slowly.

Box canyons

Chimney effect on a canyon

Uniform fuels

Close together and spread evenly over an area.

Control a fire

Complete control line around fire, burn out Unburned areas on the opposite side of the line, cool down hot spots.

Control line

Constructed or natural fire barriers. Also describes treated fire edges.

Indications when observing fuels around the fire

Continuous fine fuels, heavy loading of dead and down fuels, ladder fuels, tight crown spacing.

Numerous snags

Dead/ partially dead trees

Solid fuels

Dust, coal, wood, paper, plastic,hay, cork,sugar,grain.

East facing slope

Early heating in the morning. Early cooling in evening.

Unstable atmosphere

Encourages upward motion pushing cold air over warm air. Increased fire activity. See cumulus clouds. Dust devils

Light fuels

Fast drying. Usually in a shallow flame front. High surface area to volume ratio. Less than 1/4 in diameter easily ignite and burn rapidly

Slope winds

Flow up during the day due to surface heating, flow down during the night due to surface cooling.

7 fire environment factors

Fuel characteristics, fuel moisture, fuel temp, topography, wind, atmosphere stability, fire behavior

Aerial fuels

Fuel suspended from the ground. Ex: branches, twigs, bark and vines.

Surface/ Ground Fuel

Fuel that contacts the ground. Ex: leafs, dead branches, bark, tree cones.

Fire Triangle

Fuel, oxygen and heat

Liquid fuels

Gasoline, kerosene, alcohol, paint,

Frontal winds

Goes across the earths surface. Cold warm fronts.

Atmospheric instability

Good visibility, strong winds/ dust devils, cumulus clouds, castellatus clouds in the morning, smoke rising straight up, inversion begins to lift, thermal belt

Head

Greatest rate of spread. Moves intensely. May have more than one head.

Fuel size

Help predict how specific weather conditions will affect rate of heat transfer

Fuel moisture

Helps firefighters predict how the fire will behave

Fuel position

Helps firefighters predict how the fire will behave

Size and shape

Helps predict the rate of spread

Dust devils

Hot days, flat dry surfaces, skies are clear and winds are light. Cause spotting.

Rate of Spread ROS

How fast the fire is moving. Measured in chains or acres per hour.

Chain

How the fire is measured. 60ft in a chain. Ex: 1ft/min= 1 chain per hour 10ft/min= 10 chains per hour

North facing slopes

More shade. Heavier fuels, low temp, high humidity, high fuel moisture. Less fire activity than south.

South facing slope

Most hot slope. Results in high temp, low humidity, loss of fuel and soil moisture, dry fuel like grass. More susceptible to fires than north slopes.

Fire spread

Movement of the fire.

Slope aspect

NESW

Gas fuels

Natural gas, propane, butane, hydrogen,acetylene, carbon monoxide.

Torching fire

Not as serious as a crown fire. Ignites tree tops for a bit then goes back to surface fire

Wide canyons

Not common for spotting but will occur on N S facing aspects

Rear/ heel

Opposite to the head of the fire. Close to the point of origin.

Perimeter

Outer boundary of burning or burnt area.

Fireline

Part of the control line. Dug to mineral soil. Where firefighting activities take place.

Frost and bug kill

Provide fuel for a fire

Inversion

Reduce fire activity

Convection column

Rise of heated air or gases above a continuing heat or fire.

Convection column

Rising hot air/ gas above the fire source.

Natural barriers

Rivers lakes rocks burned area swamps

Man made barriers

Roads highways reservoirs firelines

Subsurface fuels

Roots

Firewhirl

Spinning columns of rising air and fire gases. Carry smoke, debris and flames. Can cause spotting. 1-500ft in diameter.

Narrow canyons

Spread to the other side by radiation and spotting.

Running fire

Spreads rapidly. Well defined head.

Landward sea breeze

Start in the Morning, strengthen in the afternoon, die down in the evening.

5 indicators when assessing terrain

Steep slopes, chutes, saddles, box canyons, narrow canyons

Black unsafe

Steep terrain, hot spots, falling snags, exposure from adjacent Unburned fuels.

Chute

Steep v shape drainage

Indirect effects of wind

Strong, dry winds absorb moisture from fuel. Cool winds can retain moisture. Wind changing, making the fire change rapidly.

Blowup

Sudden increase in ROS. Can behave like fire storms.

7 indicators of wind

Surface winds above 10mph, shifting wins, lenticular clouds, high fast moving clouds, cold fronts, cumulonimbus clouds, sudden calm

Removing heat

Water or class A foam

Flaming front/ Fire front

Where continuous combustion is taking place within a fire. Leading edge of fire perimeter. Surfaces fires= smoldering combustion.

Dead fuels

Where moisture is only governed by only atmospheric moisture. Ie: relative humidity and precipitation.

Origin

Where the fire started and or where it's going.

Anchor points

Where you should start your fireline. Minimizes the chance of being outflanked by the fire when the line is being built.

Fire Suppression

Work connections with putting out the fire.


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