Severe Bush Fires Near Sydney, Australia

  • Credit

    Image courtesy Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC

A large number of wildfires continue to burn in southeastern Australia. News reports indicate that the danger to residents of Sydney has subsided somewhat.

Bush fires surrounding Sydney continue to burn feverishly, and vast smoke plumes ascend from the southeastern coastline of Australia and extend out over the Tasman Sea. This true-color image from NASA’s Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) was made from data collected on January 2, 2002. More than a dozen active fires are burning in the region, as indicated by the thick plumes of greyish smoke streaming southeastward.

The southern end of Sydney’s urban area is bounded by the third cluster of fires up from the bottom of the image, and the fires encircle the city, which stands out in tan against the surrounding green vegetation. Sydney is surrounded by several National Parks, many of which have been damaged by the fires.

Reports indicate that the fires, which have been aided by daytime temperatures hovering around 100°F and winds blowing at nearly 40 miles per hour, have burned approximately 1.24 million acres of bush land as of January 2. Firefighters have shifted their efforts from attempting to extinguish the fires to preventing them from reaching the western edges of Sydney. Many of the fires are believed to have been set by arsonists, and police have arrested 21 people in connection with the devastating blazes.

Metadata

  • Sensor

    Terra/MODIS
  • Start Date

    2002-01-01
  • Event Start Date

    2001-12-25
  • NH Image ID

    1112
  • NH Event ID

    1110
  • NH Posting Date

    2002-01-03