No Evidence That Extreme Weather on the Rise: A Look at the Past - (6) Wildfires
/This post on wildfires completes the present series on the history of weather extremes. The mistaken belief that weather extremes are intensifying because of climate change has only been magnified by the smoke recently wafting over the U.S. from Canadian wildfires, if you believe the apocalyptic proclamations of Prime Minister Trudeau, President Biden and the Mayor of New York.
But, just as with all the other examples of extreme weather presented in this series, there’s no scientific evidence that wildfires today are any more frequent or severe than anything experienced in the past. Although wildfires can be exacerbated by other weather extremes such as heat waves and drought, we’ve already seen that those extremes are not on the rise either.
Together with tornadoes, wildfires are probably the most fearsome of the weather extremes commonly blamed on global warming. Both can arrive with little or no warning, making it difficult or impossible to flee, are often deadly, and typically destroy hundreds of homes and other structures.
The worst wildfires occur in naturally dry climates such as those in Australia, California or Spain. One of the most devastating fire seasons in Australia was the summer of 1938-39, which saw bushfires (as they’re called down under) burning all summer, with ash from the fires falling as far away as New Zealand. The Black Friday bushfires of January 13, 1939 engulfed approximately 75% of the southeast state of Victoria, killing over 60 people as described in the article from the Telegraph-Herald on the left below, and destroying 1,300 buildings; as reported:
In the town of Woodspoint alone, 21 men and two women were burned to death and 500 made destitute.
Just a few days later, equally ferocious bushfires swept through the neighboring state of South Australia. The inferno reached the outskirts of the state capital, Adelaide, as documented in the excerpt from the Adelaide Chronicle newspaper on the right above.
Nationally, Australia’s most extensive bushfire season was the catastrophic series of fires in 1974-75 that consumed 117 million hectares (290 million acres), which is 15% of the land area of the whole continent. Fortunately, because nearly two thirds of the burned area was in remote parts of the Northern Territory and Western Australia, relatively little human loss was incurred – only six people died – though livestock and native animals such as lizards and red kangaroos suffered. An estimated 57,000 farm animals were killed.
The 1974-75 fires were fueled by abnormally heavy growth of lush grasses, following unprecedented rainfall in 1974. The fires began in the Barkly Tablelands region of Queensland, a scene from which is shown below. One of the other bushfires in New South Wales had a perimeter of more than 1,000 km (620 miles).
In the U.S., while the number of acres burned annually has gone up over the last 20 years or so, the present area consumed by wildfires is still only a small fraction of what it was back in the 1930s – just like the frequency and duration of heat waves, discussed in the preceding post. The western states, especially California, have a long history of disastrous wildfires dating back many centuries.
Typical of California conflagrations in the 1930s are the late-season fires around Los Angeles in November 1938, described in the following article from the New York Times. In one burned area 4,100 hectares (10,000 acres) in extent, hundreds of mountain and beach cabins were wiped out. Another wildfire burned on a 320-km (200-mile) front in the mountains. As chronicled in the piece, the captain of the local mountain fire patrol lamented that:
This is a major disaster, the worst forest fire in the history of Los Angeles County. Damage to watersheds is incalculable.
Northern California was incinerated too. The newspaper excerpts below from the Middlesboro Daily News and the New York Times report on wildfires that broke out on a 640-km (400-mile) front in the north of the state in 1936, and near San Francisco in 1945, respectively. The 1945 article documents no less than 6,500 separate blazes in California that year.
Pacific coast states further north were not spared either. Recorded in the following two newspaper excerpts are calamitous wildfires in Oregon in 1936 and Canada’s British Columbia in 1938; the articles are both from the New York Times. The 1936 Oregon fires, which covered an area of 160,000 hectares (400,000 acres), obliterated the village of Bandon in southwestern Oregon, while the 1938 fire near Vancouver torched an estimated 40,000 hectares (100,000 acres). Said a policeman in the aftermath of the Bandon inferno, in which as many as 15 villagers died:
If the wind changes, God help Coquille and Myrtle Point. They’ll go like Bandon did.
In 1937, a wildfire wreaked similar havoc in the neighboring U.S. state of Wyoming. At least 12 people died when the fire raged in a national forest close to Yellowstone National Park. As reported in the Newburgh News article on the left below:
The 12th body … was burned until even the bones were black beneath the skin.
and A few bodies were nearly consumed.
The article on the right from the Adelaide Advertiser reports on yet more wildfires on the west coast, including northern California, in 1938.
As further evidence that modern-day wildfires are no worse than those of the past, the two figures below show the annual area burned by wildfires in Australia since 1905 (as a percentage of total land area, top), and in the U.S. since 1926 (bottom). Clearly, the area burned annually is in fact declining, despite hysterical claims to the contrary by the mainstream media. The same is true of other countries around the world.
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