Illegal land fire illegal club fire has arrested an arrested guardian who was the most serious fire suspect in New York since the fire in the Triangle Shirtwaist company in 1911. In the Bronx early in the morning of March 25, 1990, devastating arson occurred at the happy land social club. A man named Julio Gonzalez entered a social club of happy land on South Avenue in 1959 in New York State Bronx. In the era of witches, Mr. Gonzalez was one of the estimated customers of this social club.
Pine's book "American Fire: Wild and Rural Fire Cultural History" (1982) provides a comprehensive overview of the changing ideas about landfire and the efforts to control it. Starting with the natural history of lightning, we talk about how indigenous people and European settlers use fire to clean the land and explore the expansion of the role of fire in the industrial society. In 1910, a huge wildfire burned Idaho State and Montana State, and after the death of 87 people fire fighting became a problem. However, as we have been doing firefighting activities in public land for decades, we have been able to sow seeds with plenty of bushes growing due to large wildfire fires.
Four quarters of forest fires can be started by people, but nature is usually very happy to help hurricanes. Dry weather and drought turn green vegetation into dry, flammable fuel; strong wind spreads rapidly on land; warm temperature promotes combustion. Combining these factors, you only need ultra fast lightning, arson, collapsing power lines, burning bonfires or cigarettes.
About a million years ago, humans changed the dynamics of thermal power in landscapes. They changed the number and time of the fire. Land use, land covering, quantity and quality of fuel available will also change. However, it is difficult to distinguish between human fire and natural fire. In New Zealand less than 1000 years since the arrival of humans, fire activity has increased significantly by human activities. Temperature rises due to climate change and the distribution of plants on the earth changes. According to modeling announced by Giglio and colleagues in 2008, due to the loss of vegetation, current dry and hot places such as Sahara Desert and Australia will reduce fire accidents. On the other hand, cold areas that are susceptible to fire are increasing like Greenland.