Most of the american west could be burnt out with wild fire. This is true for anything fro. The rockies west.
The fire does not seem to damage the potential lumber in trees.
The FEMA crews have been pulling lumber out on logging trucks as part of the clean up of the fires in Ca and Oregon
If they did not bother to evacuate those towns 100s would have died in moments. The one I. My town started that morning and had grown to ,100s of acres in one day and to I 140,000 by 48 hours. There was no warning except a knock at the door saying you have 1 hour to evacuate. The temps reach over 4000 degrees, dried old for trees full of pitch explode, winfld from the extreme heat throws burning wood and debris so you can't even his in an area where there is no fuel. Even being in the middle of a decent size lake the air would cook you alive. The two people who stayed behind died.
I'm not sure what you're asking, but I live in Nor Cal near Oregon. There are fires here pretty much annually but last year's burnt half of my town and spread over the hill to Cave Junction Oregon area. There were others in Oregon, like the one in between Medford and Ashland that took out towns with populations in the 1,000s I've driven the stretch a few times and it looks like there was a blitzkrieg for miles. I would say it looks nuked but some things are still standing.
Most of the american west could be burnt out with wild fire. This is true for anything fro. The rockies west.
The fire does not seem to damage the potential lumber in trees.
The FEMA crews have been pulling lumber out on logging trucks as part of the clean up of the fires in Ca and Oregon
If they did not bother to evacuate those towns 100s would have died in moments. The one I. My town started that morning and had grown to ,100s of acres in one day and to I 140,000 by 48 hours. There was no warning except a knock at the door saying you have 1 hour to evacuate. The temps reach over 4000 degrees, dried old for trees full of pitch explode, winfld from the extreme heat throws burning wood and debris so you can't even his in an area where there is no fuel. Even being in the middle of a decent size lake the air would cook you alive. The two people who stayed behind died.
I'm not sure what you're asking, but I live in Nor Cal near Oregon. There are fires here pretty much annually but last year's burnt half of my town and spread over the hill to Cave Junction Oregon area. There were others in Oregon, like the one in between Medford and Ashland that took out towns with populations in the 1,000s I've driven the stretch a few times and it looks like there was a blitzkrieg for miles. I would say it looks nuked but some things are still standing.