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"What's different about this (Arizona) fire is the severity, the intensity of the heat and the amount of trees that are killed," he said. It's at least partly because the lack of frequent surface fires allowed fuel like brush and leaves to accumulate over the years. Add high temperatures and windy conditions and the scene is set for a devastating fire. In the middle of the 1900s, "Smokey Bear and the government Park Service and Forest Service made it their mission to put all fires out," Swetnam said, and that "disrupted the natural fire regime." Surface fires were the natural way to remove the kind of growth that's been building up for a century, he said. Overgrazing, logging and fire prevention have created a lot more stuff to burn, added Pyne. Global warming has also been predicted to result in more wildfires by producing more hot, dry conditions. But "we don't even need to involve global warming," in this case, Pyne said. It's hot at this time of year, and "all you need is couple of weeks of really dry weather." In recent decades, the policy of attacking every fire changed and officials began trying to allow natural fires to flare up again, Pyne said. "That was the goal. We knew we could not continue to exclude fire; it was self-defeating." In remote areas especially, fires have been allowed more room, he said, but the problem comes when that policy is taken over by sloppy campers, arsonists and lightning. Changes in land use have also added to the problem, Pyne said. Cities and suburbs have expanded into fire-prone areas, and new wilderness areas provide plenty of places for fires to concentrate. Over a century ago, massive and deadly forest fires plagued America. The deadliest wildfire in American history killed an estimated 2,200 people and destroyed more than 2,400 square miles of forest around Peshtigo, Wis. But that blaze gets little attention because it occurred on the same day in 1871 as the "Great Chicago Fire," which killed 300 people a couple hundred miles to the south.
[Associated
Press;
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