Fuente: SMU News Feed
  Expuesto el: miércoles, 15 de agosto de 2012 13:15
  Autor: SMU News Feed
  Asunto: Hotter summers and forest fires
| The research of SMU fire    anthropologist Christopher I. Roos was covered by the United Kingdom’s    widely read newspaper The    Guardian. In his August 10    “Weatherwatch” column, “Hotter, drier summers may mean more forest fires,”    science journalist David Hambling discussed the record-breaking megafires    burning now in New Mexico and referenced new ancient fire research by Roos. The study by Roos found    that U.S. megafires in the U.S. Southwest region are unique and exceptional    for the past 1,500 years. Roos and co-author Thomas W. Swetnam, the University of Arizona,    constructed and analyzed a statistical model that encompassed 1,500 years of    climate and fire patterns to test, in part, whether today’s dry, hot climate    alone is causing the megafires that routinely destroy millions of acres of    forest. The researchers found    that even when ancient climates varied from each other — one hotter and drier    and the other cooler and wetter — the frequencies of year-to-year weather    patterns that drive fire activity were similar. The findings suggest that    today’s megafires, at least in the southwestern U.S., are atypical, say Roos    and Swetnam. Furthermore, the findings implicate as the cause not only modern    climate change, but also human activity over the last century, the    researchers said. EXCERPT: 
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