Media Information

 
 
 
Collection:
NASA Earth Observatory Collection
Title:
Fires on Borneo and Sumatra
Description:
On Sumatra, a chain of steep mountains runs along the western coast and tapers down to a low-lying coastal plain in the east. There, the land is covered by a mixture of lowland rainforests, peat swamp forests, wetlands, and agricultural lands. People use slash-and-burn deforestation to clear land for agriculture, with negative outcomes for environmental quality not just at the site itself but surrounding ecosystems as well. Fires get out of control and creep into undisturbed forests, degrading them and setting them up for more intense fires later on. Regional air quality is compromised off and on for several months when the burning is severe, as it was in 1998, during an extreme El Niño-induced drought.

Open burning is banned, but regulation is difficult. This image of burning on the island was captured by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MO DIS) on NASA?s Aqu a satellite on October 14, 2004. Active fires are marked in red, and are most abundant in the area around the city Palembang, to the right of image center. Meanwhile, to the east, fires" title="http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/NaturalHazards/natural_hazards_v2.php3?img_id=12529">fires">http://earthobserva…in the Kalimantan, Indonesia, portion of the island of Borneo are contributing to the regional haze.

NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory, using data obtained from the MODIS Rapid Response team.
Satellite - Sensor:
Aqua- MODIS
facet_what:
Earth
facet_what:
Aqua
facet_where:
Indonesia
facet_where:
Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)
facet_when:
1998
facet_when:
October 14, 2004
facet_when_year:
1998
facet_when_year:
2004
UID:
SPD-ETOBS-12530
original url:

Fires on Borneo and Sumatra