Wildland State Test
Ladder fuels
Are those that will allow a surface fire to climb, or move into the crowns of the trees.
Thermal belt
Area of the mountain slope were a nighttime inversion layer is within warmer and drier air
Five Communication responsibilities are
Brief others as needed, debrief your actions, communicate hazards, acknowledge messages, ask if you don't know
Mid flame winds are used to
Calculate the rate of fire spread
How can a canyon impact your fire?
Canyons have a tendency to funnel and accelerate winds. During the heat of the day, winds are drawn up canyons. As heated air moves up and out of the canyon, It draws in more air through the mouth of the canyon, increasing the intensity of the fire.
Stable air indicators
Clouds in layers, no vertical motion, smoke column, drifts apart, steady winds, cooler, air at lower elevations
Unstable air indicators
Clouds, grow vertically, upward and downward currents, good visibility, dust, devils, warmer at lower elevations
Water vapor causes
Clouds, rain, and humidity
Four wind conditions that are dangerous to firefighters
Cold front, foehn or gravity, thunderstorms and whirlwinds (dust devils or fire whirls)
What is oxygen essential for?
Combustion
Ariel fuels
Fields that are 6 feet or more in height. Limbs, leaves, trunks, and crowns of heavy brush and timber. Hold down the fire intensity because the surface feels or not dried buy solar, radiation, and fuel moisture tends to be higher
Northern aspect fuel fire spread
Find heavier fuels with high moisture content, lowest average temperatures, lowest rate of spread, areas of snowmelt.
Fire orders number 1-3 are related to?
Fire behavior
Fire order number 10 is related to?
Fire fighting
Common denominators are
Fires that involve a fire fighter, fatality or a near miss
Slope winds
Flow up during the day due to surface heating, flow down during the night due to surface cooling
cumulus stage of thunderstorm
Formation of cloud on the top of a rising air mass. Head of the cloud looks like a cauliflower. Strong in draft winds moving into the base of the cloud. As of drafts increase, when may begin to change and blow in the direction of the developing thunderstorm
Rule of thumb on the size of a safety zone
Four times the expected flame length +1 foot for every vehicle to be included
How much convective heat is absorbed from the fire shelter?
From flames and hot gases, 100% is absorbed
Barriers
Is a brake in the fuel, changing the fuel type or condition, if you're moisture or density, that can slow or stop the spread of a wildland fire
What is a widow maker?
Is a dead limb hanging in a tree that may fall when the trees cut, or one dislodged by wind or a drop from an aircraft
Convergence lifting
Is always associated with the low pressure system. Air moves from high pressure zones towards low pressure zones.
Safety zone
Is an area that can be used by firefighters seeking refuge from an unexpected change in fire behavior or burning conditions
Slope reversal
Is one a fire Burns to a point where the slope changes such as the top of the ridge or the bottom of the canyon
Fuel loading
Is the amount of fuel available for a fire to burn
Convective heat transfer
Is the heat you can feel above a campfire, heat moves as a heated air mass
Escape route
Is the way you get personnel from where you are working to a safety zone. Have two routes selected.
What does the nearness of the canyon increase?
It increases the potential for preheating, spotting, and ignition on the opposite slope
When were the 10 standard fire fighting orders issued to USDS forest service employees?
June 28, 1957
Stages of a thunderstorm
Cumulus/forming stage, mature stage, and the decaying or dissipating stage
Ground fuels
Deep, duff, roots, and rotten buried logs, do not play a major role in fire behavior, because most burn with low intensity
Three mechanical or diverting affects that topography has on wind
Directional channeling, Venturi effect, wave action
Altocumulus lenticularus clouds
Lens shaped clouds are formed as strong, mid-level winds cross over the top of north, south oriented mountain ranges. High wind speeds may occur.
Heavier or slower burning fuels are
Logs, stumps, Branchwood, logging/or debris, and deep stuff. Burn readily and produce large volumes of heat when dry. Harder to suppress. Accumulate of dead, and down fuels that can burn very intensely.
What does LCES stand for?
Lookouts, Communication, Escape Routes, Safety Zones
Strato clouds
Low level clouds with bases at or below 6500 feet
Altocumulus castellanus clouds
Mid level clouds that form little towers usually indicates instability and increased moisture. Thunderstorms are possible later that day.
Alto clouds
Mid level clouds with bass is between 6500 to 20,000 feet
Fuel loading for stems and branches
More than 3 inches in diameter
Mature stage of thunderstorm
Most active and dynamic. Rain or Verga begins to fall from its base. Beginning of the cloud downdraft. Updraft is warmer than the surrounding air, the downdraft cooler. Lightning begins. Cumulonimbus clouds have developed.
Examples of safety zones
Must be void of fuels, such as in the black, rocks, roads, outcroppings, meadows, and wet areas
Can you wear synthetic materials under your PPE, why?
No, they will melt when heated and increase the likelihood of major injury
Frontal lifting
Occurs when a cold front moves under a warmer air mass and force is it upward
Thermal lifting
Occurs when air is heated. most prevailant during the summer and occurs in areas of flat terrain being heated by solar radiation
Orographic lifting
Occurs when an air mass that is moving horizontally, encounters, a mountain range and is forced upward
Fire order numbers 7-9 are related to?
Operational control
Two most important components of the atmosphere are
Oxygen and water vapor
Wind speed is determined by?
Pressure gradient
The 18 watch out situation represent
Specific hazards to be mitigated. Somebody died for each of these situations to be placed on the list. Should raise a warning flag when you detect it.
dissipating stage of thunderstorm
Starts won the thermal lifting, weekends, of drafting slows, and the source of moisture and energy ends. Rain slows, and eventually stops. Temperature differences between the cloud and the surrounding air equalizes and the cloud dissipates.
Dangerous conditions in a box or narrow Canyon
Steep slopes increasing the possibility for spotting or fire spreading. Chutes, saddles and box canyons provide chimney affect, accelerated up slope drafts causing intense burning
Eastern aspect fuel fire spread
Surface heating occurs earlier in the day because the slopes are the first to receive solar radiation, first to cool in the afternoon, slopes are normally on the Lee, facing away from the general wind direction
What are the three primary weather factors that impact the fire?
Temperature, relative, humidity, and wind
Situational awareness
The gathering of information by observation, or having it reported to you, a constant and continuous cycle
Conductive heat transfer
The heat you feel on your end of a wire when the other end is in a fire, travels by contact through one object to another
Troposphere
The layer of the atmosphere closest to the ground
The higher the elevation
The lower the atmospheric pressure
Slope rate of fire spread at 30%
The rate of spread is increased by 2x
Slope rate of fire spread at 55%
The rate of spreadable again double, 4x
Relative Humidity (RH)
The ratio of the amount of water vapor actually present in the air compared to the greatest amount possible at the same temperature
Cumulonimbus clouds
Thunderstorm clouds associated with the cold front
What three things are always constantly changing?
Time of day, weather, location of the fire
How many layers of protective clothing should you wear?
Two, should be made of cotton or lightweight merino wool
Will fire burn faster going uphill, or downhill?
Uphill
How to break oxygen from the fire triangle
Use retardant, foam or dirt to smother and eliminate the oxygen supply
How to break heat from the fire triangle
Use water, foam, retardant or dirt to cool
Three principle environmental elements affecting Wildland fires are
Weather, topography and fuels
Cold front
When cold air is displacing, warm air
What are factors that can affect the store and spread of wildland fire is are
When, relative humidity, temperature, and precipitation
Altocumulus floccus clouds
White or gray colored scattered tufts with rounded and slightly bulging upper parts
Three different methods of heat transfer
conduction, convection, radiation
What is a snag?
dead standing tree waiting for it's time to fall
Solar radiation
energy from the sun
Cirro clouds
high clouds above 20,000 feet
Wind direction is determined by?
the relationship (locations) of the highs and lows
How much radiant heat is reflected from the fire shelter?
95%
Topography
A description of surface features of land
Inversion layer
A layer of air that is warmer than the air below. Acts as a lid or blanket over cooler air.
Fuel loading for grasses and litter
0 to 1/4 inch in diameter
Fuel loading for branches
1 to 3 inches in diameter
Fuel loading for twigs and small stems
1/4 to 1 inch in diameter
Light or fast burning fuels are
Grass, dead leaves, tree, needles, brush, and small trees. Can cause rapid spread a fire, and serve as a kindling for heavier fuels.
Surface feels
Grass, forest litter, and brush up to 6 feet in height. Responsible for most fire spread and for caring fire to the aerial fuels.
Fuels can be divided into three groups, they are
Ground fuels, surface fuels, and Ariel feels
How to break fuel from the fire triangle
Handtools or a bulldozer can be used to cut fire line down to mineral soil sauce, removing the fuel
Southern aspect fuel fire spread
Have the lighter and flash your fuels with the lowest moisture content, receive the highest levels of solar radiation, highest average temperatures, fastest rate of fire spread
What part of the fire is usually the hottest?
Head of the fire
Western aspect fuel fire spread
Heating occurs in the afternoon, and cooling, begins later in the day, most vulnerable to fire, fuels are lighter & easier to ignite, flashy, which contribute to faster burn rate, and warmer/easier to ignite
Cirrostratus clouds
High wispy clouds that frequently precede a warm front
What is the most common injury on Wildland fires?
Hyperthermia
What are the three reasons we routinely violate rules?
Ignorance, machismo, apathy
Radiation heat transfer
Radiates from a heat source, the air is not heated, but solid objects close by will increase in temperature. Can preheat fuels or ignite on burn fuels across a fire line.
Slope on rate of fire spread 0-5%
Rate of speed is not increased
Fire shelters protect FF by
Reflecting, radiant, heat, and trapping cooler, breathable air
Fire order numbers 4-6 are related to?
Safety
Factors of topography that affect wildland fire behaviors are?
Slope, aspect, shape of the country, elevation, barriers, and the position of a fire
What has the greatest impact on fire behavior?
Winds
Will fire burn slower going downhill?
Yes, because the fuels on the declining slow bar position below the flame front
Deployment site
a last-resort location where a fire shelter must be deployed
Barometer
an instrument used to measure atmospheric pressure