Friday, July 21, 2017

DESCRIPTIVE TEXT NARRATIVE FOR SMOKE/DUST OBSERVED IN SATELLITE IMAGERY
THROUGH 0400Z July 22, 2017

SMOKE:
Canada and northern US...
A very large area of smoke continues to affect much of Canada and the
northern tier of the US. While the long burning fires in British Columbia
are mainly not detectable today due to cloud cover, the remnant smoke
from these massive fires extends from British Columbia eastward across
much of Alberta and Saskatchewan into southern Manitoba and southern
Ontario. Another patch of the smoke lies along the British Columbia/Yukon
border. The smoke also crosses much of the northern US from northern
Montana across North Dakota into Minnesota and across the Great Lakes
into New York and southern New England to western Nova Scotia.

Additional fires spread across much of the Northwest Territories
from north of Lake Athabasca to Great Slave Lake and north of Great
Bear Lake. Smoke from these fires covers much of central and eastern
Northwest Territories and western Nunavut with a thin ribbon extending
to the southeast across northeast Saskatchewan, central Manitoba and
northern Ontario.

California/Inter-mountain West and northern Rockies...
The Detwiler Fire in east central California continues to produce a
significant amount of smoke, some of it moderate to dense, which is
covering much of the eastern portion of the Central Valley. Thin smoke
also extends to the northeast across northern Nevada and southern Idaho
into western Wyoming.

Numerous fires over northern Idaho and western Montana and a particularly
large cluster of fires in eastern Montana were producing additional smoke
which is blending with smoke from the Canadian fires and the Detwiler
fire to cover much of northern Idaho and nearly all of Montana.

Alaska....
Remnant smoke was seen drifting to the southwest and extended from just
south of the Kenai peninsula to Kodiak Island and the upper Aleutians.

New Jersey....
A wildfire in south central New Jersey has produced a smoke plume that
extends eastward off the coast into the Atlantic.

DUST:
Caribbean Sea/Western Atlantic....
The area of Saharan dust that has been tracking slowly to the west now
covers much of the western Caribbean, Cuba, the Florida Straights and
extends northeast across the Bahamas to Bermuda.

Ruminski


THIS TEXT PRODUCT IS PRIMARILY INTENDED TO DESCRIBE SIGNIFICANT AREAS
OF SMOKE ASSOCIATED WITH ACTIVE FIRES AND SMOKE WHICH HAS BECOME
DETACHED FROM THE FIRES AND DRIFTED SOME DISTANCE AWAY FROM THE SOURCE
FIRE. TYPICALLY OVER THE COURSE OF ONE OR MORE DAYS. AREAS OF BLOWING DUST
ARE ALSO DESCRIBED. USERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO VIEW A GRAPHIC DEPICTION OF
THESE AND OTHER PLUMES WHICH ARE LESS EXTENSIVE AND STILL ATTACHED TO
THE SOURCE FIRE IN VARIOUS GRAPHIC FORMATS ON OUR WEB SITE:

JPEG:   http://www.ospo.noaa.gov/Products/land/hms.html
GIS:    http://www.firedetect.noaa.gov/viewer.htm
KML:    http://www.ssd.noaa.gov/PS/FIRE/kml.html
ANY QUESTIONS OR COMMENTS REGARDING THIS PRODUCT SHOULD BE SENT TO
SSDFireTeam@noaa.gov

 


Unless otherwise indicated:
  • Areas of smoke are analyzed using GOES-EAST and GOES-WEST Visible satellite imagery.
  • Only a general description of areas of smoke or significant smoke plumes will be analyzed.
  • A quantitative assessment of the density/amount of particulate or the vertical distribution is not included.
  • Widespread cloudiness may prevent the detection of smoke even from significant fires.