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Moscow records highest ever temperature - Wildfires in Chernobyl radiation zone

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  • Moscow records highest ever temperature - Wildfires in Chernobyl radiation zone

    NASA EARTH OBSERVATORY

    This photo-like image from August 4, 2010, shows intense fires burning across central Russia and a thick plume of smoke stretching about 3,000 kilometers (1,860 miles).


    Smoke over Western Russia Fires and Smoke in Russia acquired August 4, 2010
    download large image (14 MB, JPEG) acquired August 4, 2010 <!-- AddThis Button BEGIN --> #at20mc {margin: 0; padding: 0; font: 11px/18px 'Lucida Sans', 'Lucida Grande', Verdana, sans-serif;} #at15s_head {display: none;} #at16pf {display: none;} #at15s {padding: 0px; border: 1px solid #808080!important;} #at_hover .at_item, #at_share .at_item {color: #333333!important;} #at_hover .at_item:hover,#at_hover .at_item.athov,#at_share .at_item:hover,#at_share .at_item.athov{text-decoration: none; color:#333333!important; border:1px solid #f0f4f7!important; background: #f0f4f7!important;} #at_msg, #at16p label, #at_share .at_item, #at16p, #at15s, #at16p form input, #at16p form textarea {font: 11px/18px 'Lucida Sans', 'Lucida Grande', Verdana, sans-serif!important;} #share {margin: 18px 0 -18px 18px; padding: 0 0 0 0;} .image-caption ul.highres {padding: 18px 0 0 0;} Share this image <!-- AddThis Button END --> <script type="text/javascript"> var addthis_options = 'email, digg, delicious, myspace, google, facebook, live, twitter, stumbleupon, more'; var addthis_exclude = 'print'; var addthis_offset_top = 3; var addthis_offset_left = -9; var addthis_hover_delay = 400; var addthis_localize = { share_caption: "Share this image" }; // var addthis_config = { data_use_flash: false }; </script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://s7.addthis.com/js/250/addthis_widget.js?pub=xa-4a5e804627659a64"></script> Intense fires continued to rage in western Russia on August 4, 2010. Burning in dry peat bogs and forests, the fires produced a dense plume of smoke that reached across hundreds of kilometers. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) captured this view of the fires and smoke in three consecutive overpasses on NASA?s Terra satellite. The smooth gray-brown smoke hangs over the Russian landscape, completely obscuring the ground in places. The top image provides a close view of the fires immediately southeast of Moscow, while the lower image shows the full extent of the smoke plume. The fires along the southern edge of the smoke plume near the city of Razan, top image, are among the most intense. Outlined in red, a line of intense fires is generating a wall of smoke. The easternmost fire in the image is extreme enough that it produced a pyrocumulus cloud, a dense towering cloud formed when intense heat from a fire pushes air high into the atmosphere. The lower image shows the full extent of the smoke plume, spanning about 3,000 kilometers (1,860 miles) from east to west. If the smoke were in the United States, it would extend approximately from San Francisco to Chicago. The MODIS sensor acquired the right section of the image starting at 5:55 UTC (10:55 a.m. local time, 8:55 a.m. in Moscow). The center section is from the overpass starting at 7:35 UTC (11:35 local time, 10:35 in Moscow), and the westernmost section was taken at 9:10 UTC (12:10 p.m. local time in Moscow). Early analyses of data from the Multi-angle Imaging Spectroradiometer (MISR), another instrument on the Terra satellite, indicates that smoke from previous days has at times reached 12 kilometers (six miles) above Earth?s surface into the stratosphere. At such heights, smoke is able to travel long distances to affect air quality far away. This may be one reason that the smoke covers such a large area. The pyrocumulus cloud and the detection of smoke in the stratosphere are good indicators that the fires are large and extremely intense. According to news reports, 520 fires were burning in western Russia on August 4. MODIS detected far fewer. It is likely that the remaining fires were hidden from the satellite?s view by the thick smoke and scattered clouds. High temperatures and severe drought dried vegetation throughout central Russia, creating hazardous fire conditions in July. As of August 4, 48 people had died in the fires and more than 2,000 had lost their homes throughout central Russia, said news reports. The dense smoke also created hazardous air quality over a broad region. Visibility in Moscow dropped to 20 meters (0.01 miles) on August 4, and health officials warned that everyone, including healthy people, needed to take preventative measures such as staying indoors or wearing a mask outdoors, reported the Wall Street Journal. In the image, Moscow is hidden under a pall of smoke. Close to the fires, smoke poses a health risk because it contains small particles (soot) and hazardous gases that can irritate the eyes and respiratory system. Smoke also contains chemicals that lead to ozone production farther away from the fires. The large image provides the full scene shown in the lower image at the sensor?s highest resolution (as shown in the top image). The MODIS Rapid Response Team provides the scene in additional resolutions. ReferencesBBC News. (2010, August 4). Medvedev cuts holiday as Russian wildfires kill 48. Accessed August 4, 2010.Iosebashvili, I. (2010, August 4). Death toll rises as Russian fires rage. Wall Street Journal. Accessed August 4, 2010. NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC. Caption by Holli Riebeek with information courtesy Mike Fromm, Naval Research Laboratory. Instrument: Terra - MODIS <noindex></noindex>Image Location


    Previous Image in this Event August 3, 2010

  • #2
    Re: Moscow records highest ever temperature

    Moscow deaths double amid smog to 700 people a day

    By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV (AP) ? 2 hours ago

    MOSCOW ? Deaths in Moscow have doubled to an average of 700 people a day as the Russian capital is engulfed by poisonous smog from wildfires and a sweltering heat wave, a top health official said Monday.

    Moscow health chief Andrei Seltsovky blamed weeks of unprecedented heat and suffocating smog for the rise in mortality compared to the same time last year, Russian news agencies reported. He said city morgues were nearly overflowing, filled with 1,300 bodies, close to their capacity.

    Acrid smog blanketed Moscow for a six straight day Monday, with concentrations of carbon monoxide and other poisonous substances two to three times higher than what is considered safe. Those airborne pollutants reached a record over the weekend ? exceeding the safe limit by nearly seven times.

    About 550 separate blazes were burning nationwide Monday, mainly across western Russia, including about 40 around Moscow, according to the Emergencies Ministry. Forest and peat bog fires have been triggered by the most intense heat wave in 130 years of record keeping.

    Alexander Frolov, head of Russia's weather service, said judging by historic documents, this heat wave could be the worst in up to 1,000 years.

    ...

    Full article:
    "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
    -Nelson Mandela

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    • #3
      Re: Moscow records highest ever temperature

      Smoke over Moscow


      http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/view.php?id=45089&src=nha



      <!-- / message --> <!-- edit note --> <hr style="color: rgb(204, 204, 204); background-color: rgb(204, 204, 204);" size="1">

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      • #4
        Re: Moscow records highest ever temperature

        Comparing the two NASA Observatory photographs of the smoke areas, it appears that Aug 7th's shows almost twice as many fire foci as that of Aug 4th.

        Visibility reports from last week went from 300m to 20m. Now, this one was 3.7m (~3.85 yards!!!!).

        Taken from The Weather Channel:

        Moscow, Moscow, Russia

        Current weather conditions for Moscow

        Partly Cloudy
        97?F
        Feels Like
        97?F
        Updated 8/9/10 3:30 PM Local Time
        Observation Station: OSTAFYEVO, RUSSIA

        Visibility: 3.7 m
        Humidity: 27%
        Dew Point: 57?F
        Pressure: 30.03 in. steady
        Wind: from SSE at 11 mph
        UV Index: 3 Moderate

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        • #5
          Re: Moscow records highest ever temperature

          <nyt_headline version="1.0" type=" ">Moscow Confirms Spike in Death Toll</nyt_headline>

          <nyt_byline> By ANDREW E. KRAMER

          Full text: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/10/wo.../10russia.html
          </nyt_byline> Published: August 9, 2010

          <script type="text/javascript"> var articleToolsShareData = {"url":"http:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2010\/08\/10\/world\/europe\/10russia.html","headline":"Moscow Confirms Spike in Death Toll","description":"This city\u2019s normal daily death toll has nearly doubled in recent days, its chief health official said Monday, pointing to the lengthy heat wave rather than the choking cloud of wildfire smoke.","keywords":"Weather,Forest and Brush Fires,Moscow (Russia)","section":"world","sub_section":"europe" ,"section_display":"World","sub_section_display":" Europe","byline":"By <a href=\"http:\/\/topics.nytimes.com\/top\/reference\/timestopics\/people\/k\/andrew_kramer\/index.html?inline=nyt-per\" title=\"More Articles by Andrew E. Kramer\" class=\"meta-per\">ANDREW E. KRAMER<\/a>","pubdate":"August 9, 2010","passkey":null}; function getShareURL() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.url); } function getShareHeadline() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.headline) ; } function getShareDescription() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.descripti on); } function getShareKeywords() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.keywords) ; } function getShareSection() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.section); } function getShareSubSection() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.sub_secti on); } function getShareSectionDisplay() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.section_d isplay); } function getShareSubSectionDisplay() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.sub_secti on_display); } function getShareByline() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.byline); } function getSharePubdate() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.pubdate); } function getSharePasskey() { return encodeURIComponent(articleToolsShareData.passkey); } </script> <nyt_text> <nyt_correction_top> </nyt_correction_top> MOSCOW ? The daily mortality rate here has nearly doubled in recent days, its chief health official said Monday, singling out the heat as the primary factor and not the culprit most people here suspected: the choking cloud of wildfire smoke.
          </nyt_text>...
          ..Speaking at a city council meeting that was broadcast on national television, he said that the daily death toll had risen from an average of between 360 and 380 to ?around 700.? Ambulance calls were up by about a quarter, he said, because of increases in heart and lung ailments and strokes.
          ...
          The questions had been mounting in Moscow since Thursday, when the state Russian Information Agency reported a sharp rise in bodies arriving at city morgues. The Internet swirled with posts saying that the mortality rate had as much as quintupled.
          ...
          On Friday, Russia?s chief public health official, Gennady Onishchenko, reinforced this message by denying any increase in Moscow?s mortality rates. ?I am not going to confirm the alarmist data on the Internet,? he said.

          But on Monday, a posting by a Russian doctor on a social networking site said the refrigerator in the hospital?s morgue had run out of space, and that bodies were being laid out on the floor.
          ...
          And with the stultifying heat, conditions were reported to be deteriorating in hospitals. The Web site of the Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper reported that one maternity ward provided air conditioning in the doctors? offices but not the delivery rooms.

          Russia?s chief weather forecaster said there was no relief in sight from the hot weather, though an expected change in wind direction Wednesday might thin the smoke cloud.

          To the east of the capital, meanwhile, Russian officials were compelled to declare a state of emergency at a nuclear research center, Snezhinsk in the Ural Mountains, where the surrounding forests were dry and fire-prone.

          Earlier this month, they had cautioned that fires might stir up fallout from Chernobyl if they burned into contaminated areas, potentially lacing the smoke with radioactive particles.

          Russian health officials said early on that the fine particles and carbon monoxide in Moscow?s smoky atmosphere was comparable to smoking a pack of cigarettes a day. In other contexts, studies have shown that peat moss ? the source of much of the smoke ? concentrates heavy metals from the environment, which are released in its smoke, though it was unclear whether this was the case with the bogs burning outside Moscow.
          ...<nyt_correction_bottom></nyt_correction_bottom><nyt_update_bottom></nyt_update_bottom><script type="text/javascript"></script>

          <!-- ADXINFO classification="text_ad" campaign="nyt2010-circ-tr-us-footer-nonhp-36UYJ"-->

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          • #6
            Re: Moscow records highest ever temperature

            No nuclear health threat from Russian fires: experts<o:p></o:p>
            Aug 6 02:54 PM US/Eastern<o:p></o:p>

            http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=CNG.786261b4ad9e7016f20cc8334ff8f73 4.1e1&show_article=1<o:p></o:p>

            Amid several articles warning about the potential dangers of the release of radioactive materials as a result of the fires in Russia, this article from the AFP reporting on expert statements, clearly indicates that there is no nuclear health threat from Russian fires from the burning of trees where cesium 137 captured in the vegetation following the explosion of Chernobyl in 1986.<o:p></o:p>

            According to the article, the rise in radioactivity would be minimal, and not dangerous enough to pose a health problem. "If the forests burn, then local residents will be exposed to two times the normal radiation," but that "the toxic fumes from the fires pose a far greater problem." However, authorities are "working flat out to prevent the fires spreading to a region in western Russia where the soil is still contaminated by the Chernobyl disaster."

            What are the real threats from the presence of radioactive substances trapped in the biosphere and released by fire into the air, particularly in this case, since the fires are so extensive?
            <o:p></o:p>

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Moscow records highest ever temperature - Wildfires in Chernobyl radiation zone

              11 August 2010 Last updated at 15:39 ET

              Russia combats wildfires in Chernobyl radiation zone


              Excerpt:

              "Moscow enjoyed clear skies on Wednesday after rains helped cleanse the air after a week of heavy smog.

              But more than 600 fires are still burning in different parts of the country, including around the capital, and weather forecasters are warning the smoke could soon return.

              'Controlling the situation'

              The chief of the forest protection service said his agency had increased patrols around the forests in Bryansk, the part of Russia that suffered the most from the Chernobyl disaster in what was then Soviet Ukraine.

              "There is a danger, but we are controlling the situation," Vladimir Rozinkevich told the Associated Press.

              Environmental groups, including Greenpeace, have warned that radioactive particles which settled into the soil after the 1986 disaster could be thrown up into the air once again by wildfires and blown into other areas by the wind.

              A new wildfire was reported on Wednesday near an important nuclear research centre, at Sarov in the Nizhny Novgorod region."

              /.../

              Full text:
              Russia tackles wildfires it says have reached a region contaminated by Chernobyl nuclear fallout, amid concern they could spread radiation.
              "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
              -Nelson Mandela

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Moscow records highest ever temperature - Wildfires in Chernobyl radiation zone

                Russia Fires: Nuclear concerns

                "... environmentalist and regional legislator Lyudmila Kolmogortseva warned that radioactive material near Bryansk still posed a threat.

                "Almost a million cubic meters of dead radioactive wood pose serious danger if the fires spread," she told the Associated Press.

                "The forest is practically impenetrable, and we practically have no aviation so we'll have nothing to fight the fires if they spread."

                Officials said any fires that had reached the area so far have been extinguished."

                Russia's record-breaking heatwave looks set to come to a dramatic end, with a severe storm now heading for Moscow after battering St Petersburg.


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                • #9
                  Re: Moscow records highest ever temperature - Wildfires in Chernobyl radiation zone




                  Heat probably killed thousands in Moscow
                  Today at 15:46 | Reuters Solovyov MOSCOW, Aug 17 (Reuters) - Several thousand Muscovites are thought to have died in July alone from this year's unprecedented heatwave and August could add more fatalities to the grim statistics, a Russian scientist said on Tuesday.

                  Moscow, a metropolis of over 10 million people, suffered from intense heat since late June, with day temperatures sometimes nearing 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).

                  The crisis shrivelled a third of Russia's grain crop, shaved billions off this year's economic growth and killed at least 54 people in wildfires. The heat subsided on Tuesday.

                  Citing a report by the Moscow Registry Office, Boris Revich, a senior demography and ecology researcher at Russia's Academy of Sciences, said 5,840 more Muscovites had died in July than in the same month last year.

                  Revich said he believed the overwhelming majority of these additional deaths had been caused by the fierce heatwave.

                  "This situation was absolutely easy to forecast," he told a news conference. "The only thing I blame myself for ... is that my estimate (of deaths) was too low at the start of the heat."

                  "But we have never had experience estimating such monstrous heat, merely because we had never had such heat before."

                  The State Statistics Committee (Goskomstat) is due to publish its data on the deaths around Aug. 20, Revich said. Death rate figures for August will be available in September.

                  Breaking official silence over the adverse affects of the heat and smoke from forest fires which blanketed Moscow since late July, the head of Moscow's health department, Andrei Seltsovsky, said on Aug. 9 that deaths had almost doubled to 700 a day, with heat being the main killer.


                  "NATURE'S GRIM EXPERIMENT"

                  Revich called the data provided by the Moscow Registry Office as "absolutely reliable", adding he believed most of those who had died from heat were elderly people suffering from cardio-vascular and respiratory diseases.

                  He said that globally, Russia's heat crisis was not a unique phenomenon, highlighting that in 2003 an estimated 45,000-50,000 people had died in a severe heatwave in the European Union.


                  "But what makes the situation in Moscow and other big cities of central Russia different, is this abnormal heat being coupled with a high level of air pollution as a result of forest fires," Revich said. "Nature set up such a grim experiment on us."

                  A total of 27,724 fires, including 1,133 at burning peat bogs, have been detected in Russia since July, Emergencies Ministry department chief Yuri Brazhnikov told reporters.

                  He said the fires had affected a total of 134 villages and towns and destroyed some 2,000 homes. Around 1,100 people have been moved to temporary shelters.

                  The weather is set to get colder by the weekend and Moscow's air will get cleaner, but it remains unclear how fast the authorities will take steps to be prepared to fight a similar heatwave in the future.

                  Moscow ambulances, maternity houses and hospitals are not air-conditioned, as well as so-called social centres opened to provide proper shelter from heat to the sick and elderly. Masks and oxygen are in short supply in pharmacies.
                  "European countries have accumulated vast experience how to act during heat," Revich said. "Regrettably, we are now just on our way to having such a national plan."

                  Read more: http://www.kyivpost.com/news/russia/...#ixzz0ws8gLMur

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