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Introduction to Wildland Fire Behavior. S-190 Unit I. Course Objectives. Identify and discuss the three sides of the fire triangle Identify the environmental factors of wildland fire behavior that affect the start and spread of wildland fire
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Introduction to Wildland Fire Behavior S-190 Unit I
Course Objectives • Identify and discuss the three sides of the fire triangle • Identify the environmental factors of wildland fire behavior that affect the start and spread of wildland fire • Recognize situations that indicate problem or extreme wildland fire behavior • 00-01-S190
Unit 1 Objectives • Describe the fire triangle • Identify three methods of heat transfer • List the three principle environmental elements affecting wildland fire behavior • List three factors of fuel that affect the start and spread of wildland fire 01-01(1 of 2)-S190
Unit 1 Objectives (cont.) • Describe how slope affects wildland fire spread • List four factors of topography that affect wildland fire behavior • Describe the dangerous conditions that can develop in a box canyon and steep narrow canyons 01-01(2 of 2)-S190
Fire Triangle Heat Oxygen Fuel 01-02-S190
Heat Transfer • Radiation • Convection • Conduction 01-03-S190
Wildland Fire Behavior Triangle Topography Fuel Weather
Group 1 — Fuels • Fuel moisture • Size and shape • Light fuels vs. heavy fuels • Fuel loading • Horizontal continuity • Uniform and patchy • Vertical arrangement • Ground, surface, aerial 01-04-S190
Fuel Types • Grass • Shrub • Timber litter • Logging slash 01-05-S190
Fuel Characteristics • Size and shape • Fuel moisture • Fuel loading • Horizontal continuity • Vertical arrangement 01-06-S190
Fuel Size and Shape • Make a huge difference in how the fire will behave • Fuel moisture • How it will spread • How fast it ignites • How well will it transfer fire to other fuels • How long and intense will it burn
Categories of Fuel • Light fuels • Leaves, grass, shrubs • Light fuels catch easily and burn quickly • Because they don’t have much weight, they are consumed quickly • These are the primary carriers of fire 01-08-S190
Categories of Fuel • Heavy fuels • Limbs, logs, stumps • Heavy fuels are more difficult to ignite, and move slower than fires in light fuels • However, expect large amounts of heat and long burning times
Fuel Moisture • The amount of water in a fuel expressed as a percentage of the oven-dry weight of that fuel • Size of the fuel play directly into how much moisture it will hold and how fast it can gain or lose moisture • 1 hour • 10 hour • 100 hour • 1000 hour 01-07-S190
Fuel Loading • The quantity of fuels in an area 01-09-S190
Horizontal Continuity andVertical Arrangement • Horizontal continuity • Uniform • Patchy • Vertical arrangement • Ground • Surface • Aerial 01-10-S190
Uniform Fuels 01-11-S190
Patchy Fuels 01-12-S190
Vertical Arrangement of Fuels AERIAL FUELS: All green and dead materials located in the upper forest canopy including tree branches and crowns, snags, moss, and high shrubs. SURFACE FUELS: All materials lying on or immediately above the ground including needles or leaves, duff, grass, small dead wood, downed logs, stumps, large limbs,and low shrubs. GROUND FUELS: All combustible materials lying beneath the surface including deep duff, roots, rotten buried logs, and other organic material. 01-13-S190
Ladder Fuels Ladder fuels are areas where a surface fire can easily move into the aerial fuels
Group 3 — Topography • Aspect • Direction a slope faces • Slope • Steepness • Position of fire • Top, middle, or bottom of slope • Shape of country • Narrow canyons and box canyons • Elevation • Relates to curing of fuels, precipitation, length of fire season, etc. 01-15-S190
Aspect North Heavy fuels Shade Moisture South Light fuels Sunny Dry 01-16-S190
Fire and slopes • Due to convected heat, fires will move uphill 20 times faster than they will downhill. • Flame lengths are generally pointed in an uphill direction (where more fuel is) • Upward moving heat will preheat fuels farther up the slope • The steeper or longer the slope, the faster the fire will spread
Steep Slopes Cause Rapid Fire Spread Convection and radiant heat Flame is closer to fuel 01-17-S190
Position of Fire on Slope Fire near top of slope Slope Fire near bottom of slope has rapid spread upslope 01-18-S190
The hazards of narrow or box canyons • The enclosed space of the canyons have a tendency to channel wind • Keeps radiant heat in the area due to the shape of the country • Canyons expose more fuel to heat and brands • Fires can preheat several aspects inside the canyon all at once
Box Canyon and Chimney Effect 01-19-S190
Radiant Heat Across Narrow Canyon 01-20-S190
Spotting Across Narrow Canyon 01-21-S190
This fire is moving into an area of stronger wind and an enclosed area where radiant heat can collect Lateral Ridge to Canyon 01-22-S190
Mountains Cause Channeling of Wind 01-23-S190
Elevation As elevation increases, temperature will decrease Trees Shrubs Grass Sea level 01-24-S190
Unit 1 Objectives • Describe the fire triangle • Identify three methods of heat transfer • List the three principle environmental elements affecting wildland fire behavior • List three factors of fuel that affect the start and spread of wildland fire 01-25(1 of 2)-S190
Unit 1 Objectives (cont.) • Describe how slope affects wildland fire spread • List four factors of topography that affect wildland fire behavior • Describe the dangerous conditions that can develop in a box canyon and steep, narrow canyons 01-25(2 of 2)-S190