
Earth on Fire
Earth's long history of flammability, intrinsically linked to the evolution of land plants, is now characterized by an alarming surge in "megafires" of unprecedented scale and intensity. These uncontrollable blazes, akin to "atomic bombs" in their destructive power, are drastically reshaping ecosystems globally. The American Southwest provides a stark illustration, where megafires like the Las Conchas fire have devoured vast Ponderosa Pine forests.
Historically, frequent, low-severity fires maintained these landscapes, a pattern evident in tree ring data and the fire-tolerant nature of the Ponderosa. However, a century of fire suppression has created a dangerous accumulation of fuels, turning forests into "verdant cancers" ripe for catastrophic crown fires. Prescribed burning, while a vital tool, faces challenges in public acceptance.
Australia is experiencing a similar crisis, with megafires devastating even fire-adapted Eucalypt forests. The Alpine Ash, an "obligate seeder," is particularly vulnerable as repeated, intense fires are eliminating its ability to regenerate. Beyond these known fire-prone regions, a concerning new trend is the burning of previously fire-resistant vegetation, including wet rainforests and even Arctic tundra.
An example in Tasmania showed a fire burning across a lake and igniting a wet Myrtle rainforest, where the peat soil itself became fuel. This phenomenon in places like Borneo, the Amazon, and Siberia releases enormous amounts of stored carbon, creating a dangerous "fire spiral" that further accelerates climate change. The warming climate, as evidenced by tree ring studies showing earlier snowmelt and longer fire seasons, is the primary driver behind the increased frequency and intensity of these fires.
Forests, crucial carbon sinks, are becoming less effective as they are damaged by fire and heat-induced drought stress, even leading to widespread tree mortality. The future of forests in the US Southwest, for instance, is uncertain, with predictions of the disappearance of conifers by 2050. In the face of these challenges, strategies like "assisted landscape adaptation" are being explored. Ultimately, the era of megafires compels humanity, the "ultimate fire dependent organism," to fundamentally re-evaluate its relationship with fire in a rapidly changing world.



Well worth watching.
I worry that the ecological balance is too complex and too delicate for us to understand how it might be restored. Are we looking at irreparable damage?
It could be nature's cycles... However, the four fold increase in fire frequency suggests there may be more to the story than "global warming".
No mention of the aluminum, barium, and strontium spewed out across the world on an almost daily basis, in full vigor since about 1989 and its supposed sun shielding impact of causing lower snow pack, warmer temperatures, and drying out and killing trees, among other things. Especially when the nano metals are heated up by HAARP.
Then there may be a process by which the nano aluminum, etc. becomes an accelerant to the fire. We know aluminum plus iron gets us thermite, which needs a bit of heat to get it going.
So when the "experts" in this video claim "there really is no other explanation," ..."there hasn't been a major fuels change," is that they could very well be wrong. That major fuel change is dry and millions of dead trees along with the nano aluminum, barium, and strontium.
When the watershed forests are all burned out, where will you get your water?
Maybe you ought to gather together to put a stop to the GeoEngineering/chemtrails while there is something left to protect. Unless of course you enjoy breathing it and getting Morgellans disease.
The Rockefeller brothers, who brought you Monsanto, desired to control the populous via controlling: the education system, the media, the energy supply, the food supply, and the water supply. Their genocide agenda seems to be in full swing.
In the meantime Monsanto has a patent for aluminum resistant seed. Why would they need such a thing if there are no such thing as chemtrails (for those who fail terribly to do their homework).