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2008 California wildfires

Series of wildfires in California

2008 California wildfires

Summary

Series of wildfires in California

FieldValue
title2008 California wildfires
imageSummer 2008 California wildfires on July 9.jpg
captionSome of the wildfires as seen from space during the height of the summer outbreak on July 9, 2008.
reference
costOver $651.5 million (2008 USD)
total_fires6,255
total_area1,593,690 acre
injuriesAt least 93
fatalities32 (13 firefighters)
is_seasonyes
year2008
season_nameCalifornia wildfires

The 2008 wildfire season was one of California's most devastating in the 21st century. While 6,255 fires occurred, about two-thirds as many as in 2007, the total area burned— 1,593,690 acre—far exceeded that of previous years.

By July 5, 2008, 328 wildfires were burning, and those fires were only 81% contained. For the first time since 1977, the US military helped with ground-based firefighting, when Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger dispatched 400 California National Guard troops, including Chief Medical Officer Susan Pangelinan, to manage fire lines. He said the number of fires had stretched the state's fire-fighting resources thin. "One never has resources for 1,700 fires. Who has the resources for that?" Schwarzenegger said, adding, "Something is happening, clearly. There's more need for resources than ever before... it's fire season all year round."

Background

The timing of "fire season" in California is variable, depending on the amount of prior winter and spring precipitation, the frequency and severity of weather such as heat waves and wind events, and moisture content in vegetation. Northern California typically sees wildfire activity between late spring and early fall, peaking in the summer with hotter and drier conditions. Occasional cold frontal passages can bring wind and lightning. The timing of fire season in Southern California is similar, peaking between late spring and fall. The severity and duration of peak activity in either part of the state is modulated in part by weather events: downslope/offshore wind events can lead to critical fire weather, while onshore flow and Pacific weather systems can bring conditions that hamper wildfire growth.

List of wildfires

Below is a list of all fires that exceeded 1000 acre during the 2008 fire season. The list is taken from CAL FIRE's list of large fires.

NameCountyAcresKmStart DateContained DateNotes
Wawona NwMariposa1130 acresApril 9, 2008April 19, 2008
Honey BeeTulare1225 acresMay 6, 2008May 23, 2008
ColyearTehama1331 acresMay 6, 2008May 9, 2008
AvocadoFresno1100 acresMay 20, 2008May 21, 2008
SummitSanta Cruz4270 acresMay 22, 2008May 27, 2008
CloverTulare15300 acresMay 28, 2008July 20, 2008
IndiansMonterey81378 acresJune 8, 2008July 10, 2008
JacksonSacramento6400 acresJune 10, 2008June 12, 2008
OphirButte1600 acresJune 10, 2008June 13, 2008
41Madera3300 acresJune 10, 2008June 11, 2008
LagrangeTuolumne1346 acresJune 10, 2008June 11, 2008
HumboldtButte23344 acresJune 11, 2008June 21, 2008
WhiskeyTehama7783 acresJune 12, 2008June 22, 2008
Albion River LightningMendocino1000 acresJune 20, 2008June 30, 2008
Lime ComplexTrinity98715 acresJune 20, 2008August 15, 2008
Mad ComplexTrinity3705 acresJune 20, 2008July 21, 2008
Hells Half ComplexTrinity15146 acresJune 20, 2008July 28, 2008
South ComplexHumboldt29327 acresJune 20, 2008September 15, 2008
Brown ComplexSan Benito3870 acresJune 21, 2008June 24, 2008
West BranchButte3206 acresJune 21, 2008June 21, 2008
FreyButte10000 acresJune 21, 2008June 21, 2008
Flea ValleyButte1248 acresJune 21, 2008June 21, 2008
Flea Valley 2Butte1248 acresJune 21, 2008June 21, 2008
ParadiseHumboldt1076 acresJune 21, 2008August 1, 2008
Blue 2 ComplexSiskiyou82186 acresJune 20, 2008Merged into the
Klamath Theater Complex Fire
PopcornLassen3000 acresJune 21, 2008June 22, 2008
Cub ComplexLassen19718 acresJune 21, 2008July 20, 2008
Peterson ComplexLassen7842 acresJune 21, 2008July 2, 2008
WildNapa4200 acresJune 21, 2008June 26, 2008
Basin ComplexMonterey162818 acresJune 21, 2008July 27, 2008
Wagers LightningMendocino3000 acresJune 21, 2008June 21, 2008
Jack Smith LightningMendocino3000 acresJune 21, 2008July 13, 2008
Mallo BMendocino4466 acresJune 21, 2008July 17, 2008
Squaw 1 Lightning 2Mendocino3000 acresJune 21, 2008July 13, 2008
Red Mountain 1Mendocino7515 acresJune 21, 2008August 1, 2008
Gate LightningMendocino3000 acresJune 21, 2008July 13, 2008
Soda ComplexLake8632 acresJune 21, 2008July 26, 2008
Canyon ComplexPlumas47680 acresJune 21, 2008September 30, 2008
Iron Alps ComplexTrinity105805 acresJune 21, 2008September 9, 200810 fatalities
Sta 57 Ono Cdf Igo 2Shasta4000 acresJune 21, 2008July 24, 2008
Whitmore Old Crow C2Shasta2054 acresJune 21, 2008July 15, 2008
EO2AShasta1200 acresJune 21, 2008July 6, 2008
SteinShasta1148 acresJune 21, 2008July 7, 2008
MoonShasta6030 acresJune 21, 2008August 9, 2008
Platina 4Trinity12980 acresJune 21, 2008July 4, 2008
Lewiston 8Trinity1311 acresJune 21, 2008July 23, 2008
LakeheadShasta27936 acresJune 21, 2008August 23, 2008
OliverMariposa2200 acresJune 21, 2008June 26, 2008
North MountainTuolumne2889 acresJune 21, 2008July 3, 2008
American River ComplexPlacer20541 acresJune 21, 2008July 30, 2008
Yuba River ComplexSierra4254 acresJune 21, 2008July 15, 2008
Whiskeytown ComplexShasta6420 acresJune 21, 2008July 19, 2008
Klamath Theater ComplexSiskiyou192038 acresJune 21, 2008September 30, 20082 firefighters killed.
PopcornLassen3000 acresJune 22, 2008July 8, 2008
Mill ComplexTehama2100 acresJune 22, 2008June 29, 2008
WalkerLake15000 acresJune 22, 2008June 29, 2008
Orr Springs Rd Ukv 2Mendocino3000 acresJune 22, 2008July 10, 2008
5-8 Cliff LightningMendocino1000 acresJune 22, 2008July 13, 2008
VentureShasta1912 acresJune 22, 2008July 4, 2008
CorralLassen12500 acresJune 23, 2008July 7, 2008
OliverMariposa2789 acresJune 23, 2008July 6, 2008
Mill CreekTehama13580 acresJune 24, 2008July 1, 2008
PiuteKern37026 acresJune 28, 2008July 25, 2008
HardyMendocino5581 acresJune 30, 2008June 30, 2008
GapSanta Barbara9443 acresJuly 1, 2008July 28, 2008
Butch LightningMendocino2800 acresJuly 4, 2008July 4, 2008
Lost Pipe LightningMendocino1200 acresJuly 4, 2008July 10, 2008
Jack Smith LightningMendocino2000 acresJuly 4, 2008July 15, 2008
Albion LightningMendocino3000 acresJuly 4, 2008July 8, 2008
Horse LightningMendocino1000 acresJuly 4, 2008July 8, 2008
Orr Series LightningMendocino3000 acresJuly 4, 2008July 13, 2008
Montgomery Flat LightningMendocino3000 acresJuly 4, 2008July 15, 2008
Alder Creek BeachMendocino1000 acresJuly 7, 2008July 7, 2008
TehipiteFresno11596 acresJuly 19, 2008November 11, 2008
PantherSiskiyou72344 acresJuly 24, 2008September 30, 2008
TelegraphMariposa34091 acresJuly 25, 2008September 15, 2008
RichPlumas6112 acresJuly 29, 2008August 10, 2008
CraigButte2001 acresAugust 3, 2008August 11, 2008
RimButte1651 acresAugust 13, 2008August 13, 2008
EmpireButte2000 acresAugust 13, 2008August 13, 2008
Camp Beldon and PitButte47647 acresJuly 8, 2008August 13, 2008
SmokeyButte1324 acresAugust 13, 2008August 13, 2008
JackSiskiyou6900 acresAugust 17, 2008August 22, 2008
GladdingPlacer1000 acresSeptember 1, 2008September 3, 2008
GulchShasta2847 acresSeptember 7, 2008September 11, 2008
HiddenTulare3668 acresSeptember 10, 2008September 30, 2008
ChalkMonterey16269 acresSeptember 25, 2008October 29, 2008
NovemberSan Diego1400 acresOctober 8, 2008October 9, 2008
MarekLos Angeles4824 acresOctober 12, 2008October 16, 2008
SesnonLos Angeles14703 acresOctober 13, 2008October 18, 2008
JuliettSan Diego4026 acresOctober 13, 2008October 17, 2008
LackermanButte1310 acresOctober 23, 2008October 23, 2008
TeaSanta Barbara1940 acresNovember 13, 2008November 17, 2008
SayreLos Angeles11,200 acresNovember 14, 2008November 20, 2008
Freeway ComplexRiverside30305 acresNovember 15, 2008November 22, 2008

Summer fires

The Summer 2008 fires were a concentrated outbreak of wildfires during the late spring and summer of 2008. Over 3,596 individual fires were burning at the height of the period, burning large portions of forests and chaparral in California, injuring at least 34 individuals and killing 32. The majority of the fires were started by lightning from dry thunderstorms on June 20, although some earlier fires ignited during mid-May. International aid from Greece, Cyprus, Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Australia, Canada, Mexico, and New Zealand helped fight the fires.

The first of the wildfires was the Big Horn Fire, which ignited on May 13. Three other minor wildfires ignited subsequently, but were extinguished by May 17. On May 20, the Avocado Fire ignited in Fresno County, only to be extinguished 2 days later. On May 22, 2008, the human-caused Summit Fire broke out in the Santa Cruz Mountains, which became the first major fire.

On July 5, 2008, California Governor Schwarzenegger commented that "I've been driving up and down the state of California going to all the various fires, and you can imagine, this state is very prepared for fire, but when you wake up one morning and have 500 fires across the state, it was a real shock to me... only to find the next morning there were 1,000 fires, and the next morning 1,400 fires, and then 1,700 fires igniting over 14 days."

The Gap Fire near Goleta in Santa Barbara County burned 8,357 acre. The fire was contained on July 29, after several weeks of activity.

By July 11, 2008, it was reported that a total of 793,483 acre was burned, a total exceeding the initial estimate of 510,000 acre burned by the October 2007 California wildfires. On July 12, 2008, the area burned reached 801,726 acre, exceeding the estimated 800,000 acre burned by the 2003 California wildfires, making the Summer 2008 wildfires the greatest wildfire event in Californian history, in terms of burned area. On that date 20,274 personnel had been committed to fight the fires. Total resources included 467 hand crews, 1,503 engines, 423 water tenders, 291 bulldozers, 142 helicopters, 400 soldiers and numerous air tankers. The fire was responsible for the deaths of 23 individuals.

On July 25, a blaze sparked by target shooting broke out in Mariposa County, in the Sierra Nevada foothills of central California. By the following day, the Telegraph Fire had gone from 1,000 to, and within days had destroyed 21 homes in the community of Midpines. Residents were evacuated from approximately 300 homes that were immediately threatened, with an additional 4,000 homes placed on standby for evacuation in Midpines, Greeley Hill, and Coulterville.

During August, wildfire activity began to diminish, although there were still hundreds of wildfires still burning. On August 29, wildfire activity had largely ended, although three more wildfires ignited after September 1, beginning with the Gladding Fire. On September 10, the Colony Fire was 100% contained, ending the last of the Summer 2008 California wildfires. The Summer 2008 wildfires burned a total of 1,162,197 acre between May 2008 and September 2008, comprising the vast majority of burned land by wildfires in California in 2008.

In total, the Summer 2008 wildfires burned a total of 1,161,197 acre, which accounts for 84% of the total area burned during the 2008 wildfire season. In addition, the Summer 2008 fires cost over $92.38 million (2008 USD) to fight.

The Basin Complex Fire in the Ventana Wilderness became the third largest wildfire in California's history based on size (until it was surpassed in size by the 2013 Rim Fire), and also the second-costliest wildfire to extinguish in U.S. history.

Weather

The fires broke out after three years of below-normal rainfall dehydrated much of California's forests and woodlands, making them prone to wildfires. Spring 2008 for California was the driest on record for many locations; for example, San Francisco registered only 0.67 in of rain out of a normal of 5.18 in from March to May. As vegetation turned into bone-dry tinder in early June, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a statewide drought for the first time in 17 years. Dry thunderstorms and lightning, rarely seen on the California coastline in June, rolled onshore on the weekend of June 20–21. The storm unleashed 25,000 to 26,000 dry lightning strikes across Northern and Central California, igniting more than 2,000 fires. The number of wildfires skyrocketed in the days after the thunderstorms and high daily daytime temperatures of over 120 F dramatically increased the various fires' growth. The same thunderstorms also caused fires in Oregon.

A heat wave commenced on July 7, with temperatures in inland locations, such as the Central Valley soaring above 115 F. Lake Berryessa recorded a high temperature of 126 F, prompting weather agencies like the National Weather Service to issue high fire danger warnings. These near to record-breaking temperatures concerned many firefighters, who feared that the high heat, low humidity, and high-elevation winds could make firefighting more strenuous.

Contributing factors

John Juskie, a National Weather Service science officer, was quoted in June 2008 in the Los Angeles Times stating "in historic terms, we're at record dry levels." The spring of 2008 not only broke the record for least inches of rainfall, at 0.17 of an inch, it represented less than one-third of the previous record low of 0.55 of an inch of rainfall in 1934.

A record lack of rainfall, severely dry vegetation and uncharacteristically windy weather combined to create tinderbox conditions across Northern California. In most areas of Northern California, the grasses and brush were as dry in June as they normally would be in October. Moisture content was less than 2%, compared with about 40% normally for this time of year, fire officials stated. In addition, "no one has seen a springtime like this with the winds," Juskie said.

Smoke and air quality

Air quality in northern and central California deteriorated as a result of smoke from the wildfires, especially in the Central Valley from Bakersfield in the southern San Joaquin Valley section to Redding in the northern Sacramento Valley section.

Northern California

From June 21 to June 27, much of Northern California was covered in a thick blanket of smoke, which reduced visibility and turned the sky yellow and the Moon red.

Some areas endured record levels of air pollution, along with hazardous concentrations of particulate matter. These smoky and hazy conditions prompted health officials to issue air quality advisories and warnings, as particulate matter reached unhealthy levels in the North Bay on June 25. In the San Francisco Bay Area, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District urged the elderly and people with respiratory problems to stay indoors. In spite of the warnings, health officials noted a jump in the number of people with eye and throat irritation. The bad air quality also forced the cancellation of the 100 mi Western States Endurance Run, the first in the race's 31-year history. Air quality began to improve on June 28, followed by decreased smoke and improved visibility a day later. By June 30, residents in the Sacramento Valley saw blue skies and good air quality, as a result of onshore winds and the Delta breezes.

However, air quality in Oregon degraded as plumes of smoke drifted northward instead of concentrating in the Central Valley.

Spare the Air

Hazy conditions returned on July 7, along with high temperatures over 100 F in the Central Valley. The heat and smoke combined forced public health officials and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to issue "Spare the Air" advisories and an emergency plan for heat waves, respectively. Air quality districts issued another Spare the Air day for July 8, July 9, and July 10, as calm wind conditions in Northern California failed to blow away the smoke from the wildfires. Smoky conditions continued into late August, when most of the wildfires were extinguished. The smoke from the fires finally began to disperse on September 10, after the last of the wildfires was fully contained.

View east of the smokey sky, from [[Carson City, Nevada]] (11 July 2008).

Health Impact

A paper in the American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology studied a group of adolescent rhesus macaque monkeys that were exposed during infancy to smoke from northern California wildfires in 2008. They found that monkeys exposed to wildfire smoke as infants had "significantly reduced inspiratory capacity, residual volume, vital capacity, and functional residual capacity per unit of body weight." There was also a trend of reduced total lung capacity in animals exposed to wildfire smoke as infants. Adolescent monkeys exposed to wildfire smoke as infants were also found to have a lessened PBMCs responses to TLR Ligands. TLR5 has been linked with the asthma phenotype experimentally and in human subjects. An important finding in the study was that monkeys over 200 miles away from the combustion were still found to have significant immune and respiratory changes.

The findings were consistent with many other human group studies and suggest that children who underwent the same experience as the monkeys in the study have a high chance of exhibiting similar health problems but, that because normal development of rhesus monkeys is accelerated compared to human children the relative impact of this amount of wildfire smoke exposure might differ.

November Fires

thumb|300px|Smoke and highlighted burn areas imaged on November 16 by the [[Terra (satellite)|Terra]] Earth observation satellite. The month of November saw a large number of fires, around 2,151, which began burning across Southern California on November 13, with 4 of them becoming major wildfires. At least 400 houses and 500 mobile homes were destroyed. According to USA Today, these wildfires combined with those from October 2007 and the Summer of 2008 were the worst group of wildfires that California had experienced in two decades.

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa told residents, "If you wait until the fire gets there you have waited too long, this fire can be on you in a moment's notice." California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared a state of emergency in Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, and Orange Counties. Governor Schwarzenegger described the conditions contributing to the fires as a "perfect storm," including strong Santa Ana and sundowner winds, with gusts reaching 80 mph, as well as high temperatures, low humidity, and dry conditions.

The most significant fires were the following:

  • Montecito Tea Fire - a wildfire that started on November 13, 2008, in the wealthy community of Montecito, in Santa Barbara County, California, resulting in the destruction of 210 homes. Many celebrities have homes in the area of the Tea Fire, including Oprah Winfrey, Rob Lowe, and Steven Spielberg. The home of actor Christopher Lloyd was destroyed in the fire.
  • Sayre Fire - a wildfire that started on November 13, 2008, in the Sylmar section of Los Angeles, California, resulting in the destruction of at least 630 structures, including 500 mobile homes, nine single-family homes, and eleven commercial buildings.
  • Freeway Complex Fire - The combination of 2 wildfires, one of which was known as the Corona Fire by the news media, or Triangle Complex Fire, that started at approximately 9:00 a.m. PDT on November 15, 2008, and spread across the communities of Corona, Chino Hills, Yorba Linda, Anaheim Hills and Brea in Orange and Riverside County, California, and also spread to Diamond Bar in Los Angeles County. Later on November 15, the Landfill Fire ignited at 10:45 AM, and early on May 16, both wildfires merged into the Freeway Complex Fire. The Freeway Complex Fire burned about 30305 acre, injured 14 firefighters, and destroyed about 200 structures,{{cite web | access-date =September 2, 2015 | archive-date =February 12, 2009 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20090212214721/http://www.ocregister.com/articles/orange-county-fire-2230899-triangle-complex | url-status =dead

Fatalities

During the season, the National Interagency Fire Center reported 13 firefighter fatalities while battling wildfires. Nine were killed in a helicopter crash, while others died of a heart attack, a falling tree, and an entrapment. In all, 32 people were killed by the wildfires.

Notes

References

References

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