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9 pages, Audible Audio
First published May 1, 2006
Mass fires...generate enormous winds, often of hurricane velocity. Sometimes these winds begin to rotate and become cyclonic, creating fire vortices – tornadoes of fire that may advance well ahead of the main flaming front. Because of the tremendous updraft in their convection columns, mass fires typically pick up thousands of flaming or glowing firebrands...They may carry these as much as 18,000 feet into the air before throwing them miles ahead of their fronts, spawning spot fires wherever the firebrands land in fuel. And because mass fires consume their fuel so rapidly, they often exhaust all the available oxygen in the air before they have finished burning all the carbon and volatile gases that they have released from their fuels.
[T]here was fire on all sides of them now, and the heat was withering, searing their faces, forcing their eyes shut. With every minute that passed, the heat was becoming more unbearable. Instinctively, people got down on their hands and knees and pressed their mouths close to the ground, sucking in the cooler air. People prayed and cried and wailed. They gagged and retched on the smoke. Some simply sat in the grass, staring at the approaching flames as if they could see something through them. Soon flames dropped down from the trees and danced along the edges of the clearing all around them, rippling through grass that had looked so cool and green…
