• MODIS Pic of the Day 01 December 2022

    From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Thu Dec 1 11:00:46 2022
    December 1, 2022 - Late Season Fires in Central South America

    Fires
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    On November 29, 2022, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer
    (MODIS) on board NASA’s Terra satellite captured a true-color image of
    smoky skies and fires across the landscape of central South America.
    The image is centered on Bolivia, where smoke hangs so heavily over the
    plains north of the Andes Mountains, that it obscures the land from
    view. Another thick patch of smoke sits near the border of Bolivia
    (north), Paraguay (east), and Argentina (south). Parts of Chile is also
    visible in the southwest. Fire, which appear as red “hot spots” also
    are located in Brazil and are partially hidden under cloud.

    The thickest smoke plumes amid the heavily forested (green) areas
    typically rise from deforestation fires. These are usually lit to
    dispose of piles of leftover wood, sometimes several months after
    forests have been bulldozed. Forest clearing for ranching and farming
    is common in much of central South America. Grassland fires lit by
    ranchers and farmers to manage cattle pastures or croplands tend to be
    smaller, emit smaller smoke plumes, and appear in brown-tinted
    agricultural areas. These human-caused fires sometimes slip control to
    become destructive wildfires that burn out of control.

    Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE) uses MODIS
    observations to monitor daily fire activity in the Amazon; INPE
    scientists also maintain a record of MODIS fire detections that spans
    decades. The agency reported 39,727 Aqua MODIS fire detections in
    Bolivia between January 1 and November 30, 2022. This is a 16 percent
    rise in fires from the same period in 2021. Brazil has seen a 7 percent
    increase in 2022, with 193,810 fires, while Argentina registered 42,413
    fire detections in this time period, a rise of 35 percent from 2021.
    Paraguay had a 32 percent decrease in fires detected, with 16,042 fires
    in 2022.

    The southern Amazon region was exceptionally dry during the 2022 dry
    season, leading to an intense fire season by September. Usually, the
    fire season winds down by October or November, yet MODIS fire
    detections show activity continues, although not as fiercely as in
    September. In mid-September 2022, NASA’s Earth Observatory published a
    story titled “Smoke Blankets the Amazon” that discussed the intensity
    of the September fires. That story can be found by clicking here.

    Image Facts
    Satellite: Terra
    Date Acquired: 11/29/2022
    Resolutions: 1km (1.3 MB), 500m (1.4 MB), 250m (4.5 MB)
    Bands Used: 1,4,3
    Image Credit: MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC



    https://modis.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/individual.php?db_date=2022-12-01

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