Albuquerque Journal

Embers studied in fight against spread of wildfires

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

CORVALLIS, Ore. — An Oregon State University professor is using federal funds to conduct research on how embers form and spread during devastatin­g wildfires.

Assistant professor David Blunck’s team is testing variables such as temperatur­e, wind speed, timber species and branch diameter to figure out how to predict when embers will form, the Statesman Journal reported Friday.

The project is being funded by the federal government’s Joint Fire Science Program and the team is sharing results with the U.S. Forest Service, the newspaper reported.

Wind-blown embers that jump far ahead of the fire line and start new spot fires have long been the bane of firefighte­rs in the American West. In extreme fire weather, the blaze can create its own winds and toss embers hundreds of feet — or even miles — ahead of the main blaze.

Last fall’s fire in the Columbia River Gorge jumped across the Columbia River to Washington when the wind carried an ember two miles across the water.

That blaze burned for three months and scorched 78 square miles before it was contained.

Researcher­s at OSU hope their results can be used to create a model that would calculate probabilit­ies for how many embers could form and how far away they might land.

In the lab, they’ve used a small-scale wind tunnel to study ember formation in dowels made of different types of timber.

“With a camera, we determine how long it takes for a large piece of dowel to break off,” Blunck said. “Ultimately, how long it takes to break off is indicative of how long it takes to generate embers.”

In the field, they’ve burned more than 120 trees that are 12 to 14 feet tall, counting and measuring the embers that are released.

 ?? GENNA MARTIN/SEATTLEPI.COM ?? The Eagle Creek wildfire burns on the Oregon side of the Columbia River Gorge near Cascade Locks, Ore., in 2017.
GENNA MARTIN/SEATTLEPI.COM The Eagle Creek wildfire burns on the Oregon side of the Columbia River Gorge near Cascade Locks, Ore., in 2017.

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