Tag: pyrocumulonimbus
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Wildfire Smoke Lofting Miles High Could Reshape Earth’s Climate
Introduction: When Wildfires Create Their Own Weather Wildfires go beyond burning forests and homes. In extreme cases, they can generate their own weather systems, including pyrocumulonimbus storms that lift smoke and fire gases high into the sky. These towering plumes can reach the upper troposphere and even the lower stratosphere, as high as 10 miles…
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Wildfire Smoke and Climate: Pyrocumulonimbus Impacts
Introduction: Wildfire smoke and a climate connection Wildfires do more than scorch forests and darken skies. In the most extreme cases, the burning fuels power their own weather systems, forming pyrocumulonimbus thunderstorms that shoot smoke and ash thousands of meters into the atmosphere. This surprising dynamic—where wildfires influence atmospheric processes on a global scale—adds a…
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Wildfire Smoke in the Upper Skies: An Unexpected Climate Player
Introduction: A new twist in wildfire effects Wildfires are notorious for their immediate destruction, but they can also reshuffle the climate dice from high above. When fires burn intensely, they can generate their own weather in the form of pyrocumulonimbus clouds—thunderstorms produced by heat and smoke. These towering columns can loft smoke and soot as…
