Geography, asked by suvashreebanerjee200, 4 days ago

what is fire in geography?​

Answers

Answered by shefalirangrez
2

Answer:

A wildfire is an uncontrolled fire that burns in the wildland vegetation, often in rural areas. ... Wildfires can burn in vegetation located both in and above the soil. Ground fires typically ignite in soil thick with organic matter that can feed the flames, like plant roots.

Answered by deepakagaskar
2

Answer:

A wildfire is an uncontrolled fire that burns in wildland vegetation, often in rural areas.

Wildfire in Malibu

Wildfires scorch the land in Malibu Creek State Park. As the wind picks up, the fire begins to spread faster.

ENCYCLOPEDIC ENTRY VOCABULARY

A wildfire is an uncontrolled fire that burns in the wildland vegetation, often in rural areas. Wildfires can burn in forests, grasslands, savannas, and other ecosystems, and have been doing so for hundreds of millions of years. They are not limited to a particular continent or environment.

Wildfires can burn in vegetation located both in and above the soil. Ground fires typically ignite in soil thick with organic matter that can feed the flames, like plant roots. Ground fires can smolder for a long time—even an entire season—until conditions are right for them to grow to a surface or crown fire. Surface fires, on the other hand, burn in dead or dry vegetation that is lying or growing just above the ground. Parched grass or fallen leaves often fuel surface fires. Crown fires burn in the leaves and canopies of trees and shrubs.

Wildfires can start with a natural occurrence—such as a lightning strike—or a human-made spark. However, it is often the weather conditions that determine how much a wildfire grows. Wind, high temperatures, and little rainfall can all leave trees, shrubs, fallen leaves, and limbs dried out and primed to fuel a fire. Topography plays a big part too: flames burn uphill faster than they burn downhill.

Explanation:

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