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  2. 2023 Canadian wildfires - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Canadian_wildfires

    [31] [32] Lightning-caused fires often happen in clusters in remote locations. [33] The other half of wildfires in Canada are human-caused, often unintentionally sparked [34] [35] by things such as discarded cigarette butts, [31] abandoned smouldering campfires, [36] sparks from braking trains, off road vehicles, and land clearing activities. [35]

  3. 2024 Canadian wildfires - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_Canadian_wildfires

    The 2024 wildfires in Canada began as an extension of the record-setting 2023 wildfires. The country experienced an unusually long fire season in 2023 that lasted into the autumn; these fires smouldered through the winter and about 150 re-ignited as early as February 2024.

  4. List of fires in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fires_in_Canada

    A series of wildfires. [1] Fire in Quebec City: Quebec City: Province of Canada : May 1845: 20: $1 million: 100+ [2] Fire in Quebec City: Quebec City: Province of Canada : Jun 1845: 40: $1.5 million: 1,200 [2] Great Fire of 1846: St. John's: Colony of Newfoundland: Jun 1846: 3: £888,356: 600 hectares (1,500 acres) Fire in Toronto: Toronto ...

  5. Satellite imagery shows just how many wildfires are currently ...

    www.aol.com/satellite-imagery-shows-just-many...

    So far, there have been 4,024 wildfires across Canada, scorching more than 23.5 million acres, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. That already exceeds the record of 18.7 ...

  6. List of fires in British Columbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fires_in_British...

    Fire name Hectares burned Fire Centre Date discovered Comments Link Bloedel fire 75,000 Sayward July 5 1938 0 deaths, the fire burned for 30 days on the north of Vancouver Island directly outside the village of Sayward. The effort to extinguish the fire was the largest in British Columbia's history up to that point.

  7. Lytton wildfire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lytton_wildfire

    The village's watershed may have been contaminated by chemicals used to fight the fire, and the ruins may pose the risk of toxic chemical exposure. [10] The fire largely leveled Lytton's Main Street, burning the post office, ambulance station, health centre, RCMP detachment, Lytton Elementary School, Lytton Hotel, [18] and the Lytton Village ...

  8. Canada looks to centuries-old indigenous use of fire to ...

    www.aol.com/canada-looks-centuries-old...

    New growth is seen in a forest as it starts to come back to life following a prescribed burn which helps burn off fuel like twigs, logs and dried pine needles to help prevent wildfires in ...

  9. Richardson Fire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richardson_Fire

    The fire eventually caused damage to the facility and lost revenues totaling $350 to $450 million Canadian dollars. [4] At a final size of approximately 700,000 hectares the Richardson fire would become the largest fire in Alberta's modern history, and the second largest recorded fire after the 1.5 million-hectare Chinchaga Fire of 1950. [1]