Fire (Mar 2023)

Convective Density Current Circulations That Modulated Meso-γ Surface Winds near the Yarnell Hill Fire

  • Michael L. Kaplan,
  • S. M. Shajedul Karim,
  • Jackson T. Wiles,
  • Curtis N. James,
  • Yuh-Lang Lin,
  • Justin Riley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fire6040130
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 4
p. 130

Abstract

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On 30 June 2013, 19 Granite Mountain Hotshots firefighters were killed fighting a wildfire near Yarnell in the mountains of Central Arizona. They succumbed when the wildfire, driven by erratic winds, blocked their escape route and overran their location. A previous study is extended to simulate and analyze the downscale organization of convective circulations that redirected the wildfire, which started from the scale of the Rossby Wave Breaking over North America to a convective gust front that redirected the wildfire, trapping the firefighters. Five stages are found: Stage I, the initial deep prolonged gust front; Stage II, a front-to-rear jet and its ascending motions that organized high-based convection; Stage III, high-based dry microburst-induced downdrafts organized initially by ascending flow in Stage II that transported mass and entropy to the surface; Stage IV; multiple meso-γ-scale high centers and confluence zones formed that encompassed the firefighters’ location, which established a favorable environment leading to Stage V, canyon-scale circulations formed surrounding the fire. The atmosphere thus transitioned from supporting a deep and long-lived convective density current to elevated dry microbursts with mass and wind outflow into a canyon, redirecting the ongoing wildfire.

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