This map feeds into a web app that allows a user to examine the known status of structures damaged by the wildfire. If a structure point does not appear on the map it may still have been impacted by the fire. Specific addresses can be searched for in the search bar. Use the imagery and topographic basemaps and photos to positively identify a structure. Photos may only be available for damaged and destroyed structures.For more information about the wildfire response efforts, visit the CAL FIRE incident page.
Use this app to examine the known status of structures damaged by the wildfire. If a structure point does not appear on the map it may still have been impacted by the fire. Specific addresses can be searched for in the search bar. Use the imagery and topographic basemaps and photos to positively identify a structure. Photos may only be available for damaged and destroyed structures.For more information about the wildfire response efforts, visit the CAL FIRE incident page.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
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As campfire and other fire restrictions are issued, the areas affected by each order will appear in red. The popup information will contain much of the official wording of the declaration. Users may click the link within the popup to view a PDF of the official order. New restrictions will be added to the map as they are issued. Existing restrictions will be removed as they are rescinded or expire.
The Camp Fire rapidly spread across a landscape in Butte County, California, toward the city of Paradise in the early morning hours of 8 November 2018. GEE acquires L8 data products from USGS that include Real-Time Tier 1 DN values, representing scaled, calibrated at-sensor radiance, and Level-1 Precision Terrain (L1TP) processing. We carried out additional processing on the pre- and post-fire images, including an illumination correction to account for effects of steep topography, and radiometric normalization to ensure homogeneity between images. We also identified and processed high-quality images for both the pre-fire condition(25 Oct 2013), and the post-fire burn scar (26 Dec 2018). Using the tools we provided in the paper, we estimate that, over the first hour, the Camp Fire was consuming ~200 ha/minute of vegetation with a linear spread rate of 14 km over the fire’s first 25 minutes, or ~33km/hr. We briefly discuss broader use of remote sensing and geospatial analysis for fire research and risk management. A visualization app (sliderApp) that includes pre-fire, active fire, and post-fire images: https://caralyngorman.users.earthengine.app/view/camp-fire-sliding-map-3-9-19
Wildland-urban interface (WUI) maps identify areas with wildfire risk, but they are often outdated due to the lack of building data. Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) can extract building locations from remote sensing data, but their accuracy in WUI areas is unknown. Additionally, CNNs are computationally intensive and technically complex making it challenging for end-users, such as those who use or create WUI maps, to apply. We identified buildings pre- and post-wildfire and estimated building destruction for three California wildfires: Camp, Tubbs, and Woolsey. We used a CNN model from Esri to detect buildings from high-resolution imagery. This dataset represents the state-of-the-art of what is readily available for potential WUI mapping.
This application is designed as an informational tool, available to the public, to help provide information and awareness on current wildland fire incidents in the state of California and Northwestern Nevada. Fire information depicted in this application may not represent actual firefighting efforts on the ground. No warranty is made by the involved federal and state agencies as to the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of these data. The BLM CA Wildfire Dashboard is designed to show real-time fire information and aggregate data. For information on complex incidents, visit the BLM California Public Saftey and Fire website and follow BLM CA on Twitter and Facebook. Due to the volume of daily wildfires, not all incidents appearing on this product will be featured on other fire information websites or on social media pages.Points indicating fire locations may vary from where fires initially originated. False alarms, abandoned campfires, and smoke reports are not represented on the map. Acres shown on individual fires may vary from official reports from incident command or public information messages. Please rely on the information received directly from the incident in that occurrence as the BLM CA Wildfire Dashboard is showcasing real-time information and aggregate data, as previously stated.
This dataset is intended to provide a statewide depiction of CALFIRE and contract facilities for fire suppression. It includes state and local funded fire stations, stations providing wildland firefighting services to the state under contract Schedule A agreements, air attack bases and helitack bases, conservation camps, youth conservation camps, lookouts, nurseries, operations centers, regional headquarters, unit headquarters, state forest visitor centers, fire centers, and communications infrastructure.This dataset is specific to state and local fire stations and other facilities used for wildland fire protection within California. It does not include all fire stations that could potentially be used for such purposes (e.g., federal).This service represents the latest release of the dataset, and is updated annually when a new version is released. As of May 2024 it represents facility24_1.Note: This dataset includes decommissioned facilities. Use the FACILITY_STATUS field to query appropriately.
DIV STYLE=text-align:Left;font-size:12ptDIVDIVPSPANThe BLM OR Fire History Points Map Service represents points of origins of BLM fires that occur naturally (e.g., lightning), accidentally by humans (e.g., escaped campfire) or maliciously by humans within Oregon and Washington. The dataset includes some, but not all, historic fires (fires declared ‘out’ in calendar years prior to the current year). There is no lower size limit for fires to be included. In addition, many non-BLM Federal and State agencies fire origins are present. For a complete description of the data, consult the Fire History Spatial Data Standard at: SPANA href=https:www.blm.govaboutdataoregon-data-management STYLE=text-decoration:underline;SPANhttps:www.blm.govaboutdataoregon-data-managementSPANASPAN. SPANPPSPAN PPSPANThe BLM OR Fire History Points Map Service is created from fire_history.gdbire_point. This map service has one scale dependency. Labels for the Fire History Point layer displays at a scale in beyond 1:100,001.SPANPDIVDIVDIV
IMPORTANT NOTES: * The official description of the territory targeted by preventive measures in connection with forest fires remains the one found in the order of the Ministry of Public Security (MSP) and published on the Québec.ca site. The link is provided in the Documentation section located at the bottom of the page. * The data disseminated on this page is a cartographic representation of the official territory identified in the ministerial order for ease of visualization and cannot be used for other purposes. * If no measures are in place, no polygon will be displayed on the interactive map or will be present in the downloaded data. ------------ Preventive measures may be ordered by the Minister of Public Safety (MSP) under the Article 150.9 of the Fire Safety Act (chapter S-3.4), resulting from the sanction of bill Law 50 (An Act to enact the Civil Safety Act to promote resilience to disasters and to amend various provisions relating in particular to emergency communications centers and forest fire protection) in May 2024. These measures are implemented when a forest fire or the risk of such a fire so requires. The ultimate objective is to ensure public safety. The measures in place must be respected from the date of their implementation until they are withdrawn or amended. The two most frequently applied measures are the ban on open fires in or near the forest (IFCO) and the ban on driving and accessing the forest (ICAF). Other measures could also be issued by the minister, depending on the extent of the situation. SOPFEU also issues a notice of restriction or cessation of forest work (RTF) to its members. The following paragraphs detail each of the measures. _Prohibition of open fires in or near forests (IFCO) _ This measure aims to reduce the incidence of the ignition of man-made fires by prohibiting open fires in a given territory. An open fire is defined as any outdoor fire that burns freely or that could spread into a forest area, such as a campfire or fireplace, a pyrotechnic element, a flame, or a spark produced by an object. The following activities are allowed: * a solid fuel fireplace, stove or barbecue fire, ignited in an installation provided for this purpose and equipped with a spark arrester whose openings have a maximum dimension of 1 cm; * a stove or barbecue running on gas, ethanol or other non-solid fuel. _Prohibition of movement and access in the forest (ICAF) _ This measure aims to ensure public safety by prohibiting the population from all forest travel in a territory determined by the minister. Only persons involved in firefighting, public safety or authorized by a representative of the Minister, and only as part of an ongoing operation, can access the forest. This measure may or may not be accompanied by an evacuation order. _Restriction of forest work (RTF) _ This measure is issued by SOPFEU to its members and constitutes a recommendation to completely suspend (24 hours a day), or to restrict to certain periods of the day (12 p.m. to 8 p.m. or 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.), forest work as well as forest management activities. It is being deployed in accordance with the implementation of a ban on open fires in forests (IFCO).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
The Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 consisted of three fires ignited in burn blocks of dimensions 100 meters (m) by 100 m on January 15, 2014. Fires were ignited on relatively flat areas of grass vegetation in moderate winds. Measurements around the three burn blocks began on January 14, 2014 and continued until shortly after completion of the three burns on January 15, 2014. The objective of the research burns was to create a dataset comprised of ground based and remote sensing measurements. This web map is used as a base for the "Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014: Elevation Profile" web mapping application. Full details on the Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 can be accessed through the "Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014: Integrated Data Quality Assessment" story map. The full set of published data is contained on the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Research Data Archive.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This database represents structures impacted by wildland fire that are inside or within 100 meters of the fire perimeter. Information such as structure type, construction features, and some defensible space attributes are determined as best as possible even when the structure is completely destroyed. Some attributes may have a null value when they could not be determined.
Fire damage and poor access are major limiting factors for damage inspectors. All inspections are conducted using a systematic inspection process, however not all structures impacted by the fire may be identified due to these factors. Therefore, a small margin of error is expected. Two address fields are included in the database. The street number, street name, and street type fields are “field determined.” The inspector inputs this information based on what they see in the field. The Address (parcel) and APN (parcel) fields are added through a spatial join after data collection is complete.
Additional fields such as Category and Structure Type are based off fields needed in the Incident Status Summary (ICS 209).
Please review the DINS database dictionary for additional information.
Damage Percentage | Description |
---|---|
1-10% | Affected Damage |
10-25% | Minor Damage |
25-50% | Major Damage |
50-100% | Destroyed |
No Damage | No Damage |
The Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 consisted of three fires ignited in burn blocks of dimensions 100 meters (m) by 100 m on January 15, 2014. Fires were ignited on relatively flat areas of grass vegetation in moderate winds. Measurements around the three burn blocks began on January 14, 2014 and continued until shortly after completion of the three burns on January 15, 2014. The objective of the research burns was to create a dataset comprised of ground based and remote sensing measurements. A continuous map of vegetation was created from georeferenced pre-fire aerial imagery acquired with a Canon T3i©, DSLR, crop sensor mounted on a MLB Company Super Bat III unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) MLB Company SuperBat III operated by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). Field vegetation sampling occurred at set plot locations outside the three burn blocks. This web mapping application facilitates integrated assessment and analysis of these two datasets.Full details on the Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 can be accessed through the "Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014: Integrated Data Quality Assessment" story map. The full set of published data is contained on the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Research Data Archive.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
License information was derived automatically
IMPORTANT NOTES: * The official description of the territory targeted by preventive measures in connection with forest fires remains the one found in the order of the Ministry of Public Security (MSP) and published on the Québec.ca site. The link is provided in the Documentation section located at the bottom of the page. * The data disseminated on this page is a cartographic representation of the official territory identified in the ministerial order for ease of visualization and cannot be used for other purposes. * If no measures are in place, no polygon will be displayed on the map browser or will be present in the downloaded data. ------------ Preventive measures may be ordered by the Minister of Public Safety (MSP) under of article 150.9 of the Fire Safety Act (chapter S-3.4), resulting from the sanction of bill Law 50 (An Act to enact the Civil Safety Act to promote resilience to disasters and to amend various provisions relating in particular to emergency communications centers and forest fire protection) in May 2024. These measures are implemented when a forest fire or the risk of such a fire so requires. The ultimate objective is to ensure public safety. The measures in place must be respected from the date they come into force, until they are withdrawn or amended. The two most frequently applied measures are the ban on open fires in or near the forest (IFCO) and the ban on driving and accessing the forest (ICAF). Other measures could also be issued by the minister, depending on the extent of the situation. SOPFEU also issues a notice of restriction or cessation of forest work (RTF) to its members. The following paragraphs detail each of the measures. _Prohibition of open fires in or near forests (IFCO) _ This measure aims to reduce the incidence of the ignition of man-made fires by prohibiting open fires in a given territory. An open fire is defined as any outdoor fire that burns freely or that could spread into a forest area, such as a campfire or fireplace, a pyrotechnic element, a flame, or a spark produced by an object. The following activities are allowed: * a solid fuel fireplace, stove or barbecue fire, ignited in an installation provided for this purpose and equipped with a spark arrester whose openings have a maximum size of 1 cm; * a stove or barbecue running on gas, ethanol or other non-solid fuel. _Prohibition of movement and access in the forest (ICAF) _ This measure aims to ensure public safety by prohibiting the population from all trips to the forest on a territory determined by the minister. Only persons involved in firefighting, public safety or authorized by a representative of the Minister, and only as part of an ongoing operation, can access the forest. This measure may or may not be accompanied by an evacuation order. _Restriction of forest work (RTF) _ This measure is issued by SOPFEU to its members and constitutes a recommendation to completely suspend (24 hours a day), or to restrict to certain periods of the day (12 p.m. to 8 p.m. or 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.), forest work as well as forest management activities. It is being deployed in accordance with the implementation of a ban on open fires in forests (IFCO).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
IMPORTANT NOTES: * The official description of the territory targeted by preventive measures in connection with forest fires remains the one found in the order of the Ministry of Public Security (MSP) and published on the Québec.ca site. The link is provided in the Documentation section located at the bottom of the page. * The data disseminated on this page is a cartographic representation of the official territory identified in the ministerial order for ease of visualization and cannot be used for other purposes. * If no measures are in place, no polygon will be displayed on the map browser or will be present in the downloaded data. ------------ Preventive measures may be ordered by the Minister of Public Safety (MSP) under of article 150.9 of the Fire Safety Act (chapter S-3.4), resulting from the sanction of bill Law 50 (An Act to enact the Civil Safety Act to promote resilience to disasters and to amend various provisions relating in particular to emergency communications centers and forest fire protection) in May 2024. These measures are implemented when a forest fire or the risk of such a fire so requires. The ultimate objective is to ensure public safety. The measures in place must be respected from the date they come into force, until they are withdrawn or amended. The two most frequently applied measures are the ban on open fires in or near the forest (IFCO) and the ban on driving and accessing the forest (ICAF). Other measures could also be issued by the minister, depending on the extent of the situation. SOPFEU also issues a notice of restriction or cessation of forest work (RTF) to its members. The following paragraphs detail each of the measures. _Prohibition of open fires in or near forests (IFCO) _ This measure aims to reduce the incidence of the ignition of man-made fires by prohibiting open fires in a given territory. An open fire is defined as any outdoor fire that burns freely or that could spread into a forest area, such as a campfire or fireplace, a pyrotechnic element, a flame, or a spark produced by an object. The following activities are allowed: * a solid fuel fireplace, stove or barbecue fire, ignited in an installation provided for this purpose and equipped with a spark arrester whose openings have a maximum size of 1 cm; * a stove or barbecue running on gas, ethanol or other non-solid fuel. _Prohibition of movement and access in the forest (ICAF) _ This measure aims to ensure public safety by prohibiting the population from all trips to the forest on a territory determined by the minister. Only persons involved in firefighting, public safety or authorized by a representative of the Minister, and only as part of an ongoing operation, can access the forest. This measure may or may not be accompanied by an evacuation order. _Restriction of forest work (RTF) _ This measure is issued by SOPFEU to its members and constitutes a recommendation to completely suspend (24 hours a day), or to restrict to certain periods of the day (12 p.m. to 8 p.m. or 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.), forest work as well as forest management activities. It is being deployed in accordance with the implementation of a ban on open fires in forests (IFCO).**This third party metadata element was translated using an automated translation tool (Amazon Translate).**
This data publication contains fuel loading, fuel consumption, fuel moisture, and surface-area-volume ratios for vegetation samples collected as part of a prescribed fire research campaign conducted at the Camp Swift Military Base in Bastrop County, Texas on January 15, 2014. Consumption of fuel during wildland fire is the basic process that leads to heat generation and emissions, driving fire behavior and accounting for fire effects. This dataset provides measurements for the evaluation and development of fuel and fuel consumption models and other fire models that require fuel loading and fuel consumption as inputs. This dataset was not specifically collected to derive a continuous fuel map from remote sensing data and consequently there was limited integration of remote sensing and fuel sampling at Camp Swift. Nonetheless, the data contained in this data package might aid in prescribing fuel properties to fuel polygons of the three Camp Swift burn blocks.The Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 consisted of three fires ignited in burn blocks of dimensions 100 meters (m) by 100 m on January 15, 2014. Fires were ignited on relatively flat areas of grass vegetation in moderate winds. Fuel samples were collected using a combination of line intersect inventory, and clip plot methods. Fuel moisture samples were collected, weighed and oven dried to determine fuel moisture content by fuelbed component immediately prior to ignition. To avoid disturbing vegetation in the burn unit, samples were collected entirely outside the prescribed fire perimeters in areas determined to be most analogous to the interior of the burn units, prior to the burns. At least 15 destructive post-fire plots were established within each burn unit primarily in areas wherein an uninterrupted head fire was observed during the research burns. Post-burn plots were sampled to quantify consumption of fuels within each burn site. Sampled fuels required additional processing at a different location and were shipped for analysis. Fuel moisture sampling was conducted within 30 minutes of ignition for each burn unit. This collection time was based on the variability of the moisture content of the particular grass fuels along with required precision for these research goals.Access to full metadata and fire behavior pacakage measurements for the entire Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 and other information can be accessed here: https://doi.org/10.2737/RDS-2018-0042Full details on the Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 can be accessed through the "Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014: Integrated Data Quality Assessment" story map. The full set of published data is contained on the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Research Data Archive.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This data publication contains a vegetation map derived as part of a prescribed fire research campaign conducted at the Camp Swift Military Base in Bastrop County, Texas on January 15, 2014. The Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 consisted of three fires ignited in burn blocks of dimensions 100 meters (m) by 100 m on January 15, 2014. Fires were ignited on relatively flat areas of grass vegetation in moderate winds. This dataset contains a continuous vegetation map across the three Camp Swift burn blocks and the surrounding mowed areas. The vegetation map is provided as an environmental systems research institute (ESRI) file geodatabase.The objective of the research burns was to create a dataset comprised of ground based and remote sensing measurements. This dataset represents continuous maps of fuels across the three burn blocks, including the surrounding fuel breaks. This dataset is used to delineate the vegetation types found across the study area for inputs to fire behavior models. Properties of vegetation such as fuel loading, surface-to-area-volume ratio and fuel moisture contents are not explicitly associated with this dataset. These properties from the ground field samples might be allocated to the respective vegetation polygons found in this dataset for future modeling use. The dataset also provides descriptive information about burn blocks related to the extent and type of vegetation found within the three burn blocks. The purpose of this dataset was not to develop a new means to map grass, forb and herbaceous vegetation species but rather to map vegetation in the study site using all available information and established techniques.A summary of the Camp Swift project can be found in the full data download (\Supplements\ CampSwiftFireExperiment2014_Project_Overview.pdf). A United States Forest Service ArcGIS Online interactive website is also developed to describe the study and examine the integrated data quality for the Camp Swift effort (see cross reference below). Finally, a document detailing the procedures used to set up the burn blocks can be found in the full data download (\Supplements\CampSwiftFireExperiment2014_BurnBlockDesign.pdf).
These data were published on 09/26/2018. Minor metadata updates were made on 10/27/2022.
The dataset referenced here represents post-fire aerial imagery of the burn block area and surrounding fuel breaks and was acquired with an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). The Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 consisted of three fires ignited in burn blocks of dimensions 100 meters (m) by 100 m on January 15, 2014. Fires were ignited on relatively flat areas of grass vegetation in moderate winds. Post-fire aerial imagery was collected from a Canon©T3i mounted on a MLB Company SuperBat III unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) after completion of the three burns. This data package contains five distinct georeferenced post-fire images and one mosaiced image of these five distinct images covering the three burn blocks. This imagery was collected to portray post-fire conditions within the three Camp Swift burn blocks. Select images of the burn blocks were georeferenced to allow for delineation of fuels or lack thereof, present on the study site. Full metadata for this dataset can be accessed here: https://doi.org/10.2737/RDS-2018-0048Full details on the Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 can be accessed through the "Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014: Integrated Data Quality Assessment" story map. The full set of published data is contained on the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Research Data Archive.
The Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 consisted of three fires ignited in burn blocks of dimensions 100 meters (m) by 100 m on January 15, 2014. Fires were ignited on relatively flat areas of grass vegetation in moderate winds. Measurements around the three burn blocks began on January 14, 2014 and continued until shortly after completion of the three burns on January 15, 2014. The objective of the research burns was to create a dataset comprised of ground based and remote sensing measurements. This map contains various EO and IR georeferenced images to compare the different imagery at different times during the Camp Swift Fire Experiment.Full details on the Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 can be accessed through the "Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014: Integrated Data Quality Assessment" story map. The full set of published data is contained on the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Research Data Archive.
The Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 consisted of three fires ignited in burn blocks of dimensions 100 meters (m) by 100 m on January 15, 2014. Fires were ignited on relatively flat areas of grass vegetation in moderate winds. Measurements around the three burn blocks began on January 14, 2014 and continued until shortly after completion of the three burns on January 15, 2014. The objective of the research burns was to create a dataset comprised of ground based and remote sensing measurements. IR active-fire imagery was collected with a Cloud Cap Goodrich TASE200 Electro-Optical(EO)/IR unit mounted on a MLB Company SuperBat III unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). Screen shots from the EO video where georeferenced using a series of ground control points established in the study area.Full details on the Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014 can be accessed through the "Camp Swift Fire Experiment 2014: Integrated Data Quality Assessment" story map. The full set of published data is contained on the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Research Data Archive.
This map feeds into a web app that allows a user to examine the known status of structures damaged by the wildfire. If a structure point does not appear on the map it may still have been impacted by the fire. Specific addresses can be searched for in the search bar. Use the imagery and topographic basemaps and photos to positively identify a structure. Photos may only be available for damaged and destroyed structures.For more information about the wildfire response efforts, visit the CAL FIRE incident page.