July 5, 2015 - Fires in eastern Siberia

Fires in eastern Siberia

Dozens of fires burned in eastern Russian’s Amur Oblast in late June, 2015. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) aboard NASA’s Terra satellite captured this true-color image on June 22.

The Siberian fire season began with a vengeance in April of this year – a time when snow typically covers the ground. The most damaging of the early wildfires ignited between April 12 and 16, in the Republic of Khakassia, where 29 people died. In the Republic of Buryatia, just west of this image a record number of acres have burned as of late May (77,000 hectares), despite the imposition of a state of emergency in mid-April.

This image shows fires clustered in Amur Oblast, surrounding the Zeya Reservoir. Each red hotspot is an area with the thermal bands of the MODIS instrument detected high temperatures. When accompanied by smoke, these hotspots are diagnostic for actively burning fires. Many of the fires are quite large, and one, north of the reservoir, has a donut-shaped appearance. This is likely a fire that has burned from the center outward, leaving a central burn scar barren of vegetation and an actively burning perimeter.

Image Facts
Satellite: Terra
Date Acquired: 6/22/2015
Resolutions: 1km (125 KB), 500m (480.2 KB), 250m (1.2 MB)
Bands Used: 1,4,3
Image Credit: Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC