Conflagration
{{Short description|Large and destructive fire}}{{For|the film|Conflagration (film){{!}}Conflagration (film)}}
File:Doe Fire looking south from forest highway 7 (2020-08-19).jpg in 2020, the largest fire in California's history]]
A conflagration is a large fire.Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., "Conflagration" Conflagrations often damage human life, animal life, health, and/or property. A conflagration can begin accidentally or be intentionally created (arson). A very large fire can produce a firestorm, in which the central column of rising heated air induces strong inward winds, which supply oxygen to the fire. Conflagrations can cause casualties including deaths or injuries from burns, collapse of structures and attempts to escape, and smoke inhalation.
Firefighting is the practice of extinguishing a conflagration, protecting life and property and minimizing damage and injury. One of the goals of fire prevention is to avoid conflagrations. When a conflagration is extinguished, there is often a fire investigation to determine the cause of the fire.
File:Alberi bruciati sopra ritagli di lecca.JPG, Peloritani mountains, Sicily]]
Causes and types
During a conflagration a significant movement of air and combustion products occurs.{{cite web|title=Conflagration|url=https://www.tititudorancea.com/z/conflagration.htm|website=tititudorancea.com}} Hot gaseous products of combustion move upward, causing the influx of more dense cold air to the combustion zone. Sometimes, the influx is so intense that the fire grows into a firestorm.{{cite news |title=California wildfires rage, north and south, killing at least nine and putting tens of thousands at risk |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/deadly-california-wildfires-rage-north-and-south-destroying-paradise-putting-tens-of-thousands-at-risk/2018/11/09/19b0e2e8-e45a-11e8-b759-3d88a5ce9e19_story.html?wpisrc=nl_rainbow&wpmm=1 |access-date=10 November 2018 |newspaper=Washington Post |language=en}}
Inside a building, the intensity of gas exchange depends on the size and location of openings in walls and floors, the ceiling height, and the amount and characteristics of the combustible materials.
- Industrial conflagrations include fires at oil refineries, such as the 2009 Cataño oil refinery fire.
- Wildfires are fires in forests or other undeveloped areas, and may grow into a conflagration.
- An urban conflagration is defined as a "large, destructive fire that spreads beyond natural or artificial barriers; it can be expected to result in large monetary loss and may or may not include fatalities. An urban conflagration moves beyond a block and destroys whole sections of a city."{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-lbqlnWXhLEC&q=%22urban+conflagration%22&pg=PA180|title=Disaster Planning and Control|isbn=9781593701895|last1=Kramer|first1=William Michael|year=2009|publisher=Fire Engineering Books }} Notable examples includes the Great Fire of London in 1666, the Great Fire of Tartu in 1775,{{cite book|last=Metz|first=M|title=Pile Foundations Baltic Piling Days 2012.|year=2013|publisher=CRC Pr I Llc|isbn=978-0415643344|page=38|url=https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0415643341|display-authors=etal}} the Great Fire of Turku in 1827,{{cite web|url=https://newsnowfinland.fi/arts-culture/new-museum-plans-for-turkus-great-fire-anniversary|title=New Museum Plans for Turku's Great Fire Anniversary|work=News Now Finland|date=September 4, 2017|access-date=January 8, 2021}} and the Great Fire of Hamburg in 1842,Karl Heinrich Schleiden: Versuch einer Geschichte des großen Brandes in Hamburg vom 5. bis 8. Mai 1842. Hamburg: Hoffmann und Campe, 1843. {{in lang|de}}. and the Camp Fire in Paradise, California in 2018, which burned 18,000 structures and killed 85 people.[https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2022/01/colorado-saw-the-return-of-the-urban-firestorm.html] The Return of the Urban Firestorm ... What happened in Colorado was something much scarier than a wildfire | By David Wallace-Wells | Intelligencer | Jan. 1, 2022
- On board ships, a large uncontained fire may quickly lead to a ship conflagration.{{cite web |url=https://www.doncio.navy.mil/chips/ArticleDetails.aspx?ID=2487 |title=CHIPS Articles: NRL RDT&E; Protecting Ships and Crew |access-date=2016-02-22 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305010450/http://www.doncio.navy.mil/chips/ArticleDetails.aspx?ID=2487 |archive-date=2016-03-05 }}
- The conflagration of a building is known as a structure fire.
Notable examples
{{Main|List of historic fires}}
Image:Ostankino fire august 2000.jpg]]
Image:New Orleans Fire 2005-09-02.jpg after Hurricane Katrina]]
Image:CCTV new headquarters Fire 20090209.jpg]]
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!Place !Year !Conflagration !Notes | |
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|Alexandria, Egypt |48 BCE |Burning of the library of Alexandria | | |
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|64 |Large parts of ancient Rome destroyed | |
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|Bremen, Archbishopric of Bremen, Holy Roman Empire |1041 |Fire of Bremen |Most of the old city including the cathedral destroyed | |
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|Lübeck, County of Holstein, Holy Roman Empire |1157 |1157 Fire of Lübeck |Destruction of the city | |
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|Lübeck, County of Holstein, Holy Roman Empire |1251 |1251 Fire of Lübeck |Triggered use of stone as a fire-safe building material | |
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|Lübeck, County of Holstein, Holy Roman Empire |1276 |1276 Fire of Lübeck |Northern part of old city destroyed. Triggered system of fire protection. Last fire until the bombing of WW II | |
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|Munich, Duchy of Bavaria, Holy Roman Empire |1327 |Fire of Munich |Ca. 1/3 of the city destroyed | |
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|Bern, Switzerland |1405 |1405 Fire of Bern |600 houses destroyed, over 100 deaths | |
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|1547 |2,700 to 3,700 fatalities; 80,000 displaced | |
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|Moscow, Tsardom of Russia |1571 |10,000 to 80,000 casualties | |
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|London, England |1613 |Burning of the Globe Theatre{{cite web | work = Shakespeare's Globe Theatre | url = http://www.shakespeares-globe.org/abouttheglobe/background/thefirstglobe/ | title = The First Globe | publisher = The Shakespeare Globe Trust | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081204080103/http://www.shakespeares-globe.org/abouttheglobe/background/thefirstglobe/ | archive-date = 4 December 2008 | access-date = 15 March 2014}} |During performance, cannon misfire caught the thatched roof on fire and the Theatre burned down | |
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|1656 |Fire of Aachen |4,664 houses destroyed, 17 deaths | |
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|Edo, Japan |1657 |30,000 to 100,000 fatalities, 60-70% of the city was destroyed | |
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|London, England |1666 |13,200 houses and 87 churches were destroyed | |
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|1677 |1677 Fire of Rostock |ca. 700 houses destroyed. Accelerated the city's economic decline at the end of the Hanseatic period | |
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|Copenhagen, Denmark |1728 |1700 houses destroyed (28% of the city), 15,000 people made homeless | |
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|Tartu, Estonia |1775 |Up to 2/3 of the city was destroyed | |
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|Copenhagen, Denmark |1795 |900 houses destroyed, 6,000 people made homeless | |
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|Kyiv |1811 |Over 2,000 houses, 12 churches and 3 abbeys razed, 30 deaths | |
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|Moscow, Russian Empire |1812 |Estimated that 75% of the city was destroyed | |
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|Hamburg, German Confederation |1842 |25% of the inner city destroyed | |
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|1849 |430 homes and 23 ships destroyed, but only 3 dead | |
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|San Francisco, California, U.S. |1851 | Destroyed as much as three-quarters of San Francisco | |
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|Santiago, Chile |1863 |2,000 to 3,000 fatalities | |
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|Brisbane, Queensland, Australia |1864 |Over four city blocks burned with over 50 houses razed and dozens of businesses | |
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|1864 |Atlanta Campaign during American Civil War |About 11/12ths of the city burned: more than 4,000 houses, shops, stores, mills, and depots; only about 450 buildings escaped damage | |
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|1866 |1866 Great fire of Portland, Maine |1800 structures destroyed on peninsula/downtown area; 10,000 left displaced and homeless | |
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|1871 |Resulted in most deaths by a single fire event in U.S. history (1500-2500) | |
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|1871 |200 to 300 fatalities; 17,000 buildings were destroyed | |
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|Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. |1872 |Over 700 buildings destroyed | |
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|Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. |1874 |18 believed fatalities | |
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|New York City, U.S. |1876 |273–300 fatalities | |
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|Hoboken, New Jersey, U.S. |1900 |4 ships burned, killing up to 400 people | |
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|Jacksonville, Florida, U.S. |1901 |8-hour fire destroyed over 2,300 buildings and displaced almost 10,000 people | |
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|Chicago |1903 |Deadliest single-building fire in U.S. history, with 602 victims | |
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|1904 |Burning of the steamship General Slocum |Over 1,000 fatalities | |
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|San Francisco, California, U.S. |1906 |Result of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake |Up to 3,000 victims; over 95% of city burned | |
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|Chelsea, Massachusetts, U.S. |1908 |1,500 buildings destroyed, 11,000 left homeless, when a fire at the Boston Blacking Company was fanned by {{convert|40|mph|kph|abbr=on}} winds and raced across the Chelsea Rag District, a several-block area of dilapidated wood-frame buildings housing textile and paper scrap. Half the city was destroyed. Same conditions and origin area of the Second Great Chelsea Fire (1973). | |
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|Idaho, U.S. |1910 |Massive forest fire known as the Big Burn |{{convert|3,000,000|acres|km2}} burned out, 75 dead. | |
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|New York City |1911 |Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire |Killed 146 garment factory workers; 4th deadliest industrial disaster in U.S. history | |
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|Tokyo, Japan |1923 |Fire broke out following the earthquake, half the city was razed and over 100,000 died | |
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|1930 |Ohio Penitentiary fire |322 fatalities, 150 seriously injured | |
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|Berlin, Germany |1933 |Destruction of the Reichstag, seat of the German Parliament | |
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|Coventry, England |1940 |Over 800 fatalities; most of the city was destroyed | |
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|1942 |Firestorm resulting from German air bombardment |955 fatalities (original Soviet estimate) | |
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|Boston |1942 |Nightclub fire killed 492 and injured hundreds more | |
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|1943 |Firestorm resulting from air bombardment |35,000 to 45,000 victims, {{convert|12|km2|mi2|abbr=on}} of the city destroyed | |
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|Hartford, Connecticut, U.S. |1944 |Hartford Circus Fire when tent burned |168 killed and over 700 injured | |
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|Dresden, Germany |1945 |Firestorm resulting from Allied bombing |Up to 25,000 fatalities during the three-day bombing; {{convert|39|km2|mi2|abbr=on}} of the city destroyed | |
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|Tokyo, Japan |1945 |Devastating conflagration resulting from B-29 raids during Operation Meetinghouse |Up to 100,000 fatalities and {{convert|41|km2|mi2|abbr=on}} of the city destroyed; similar fires hit the Japanese cities of Kobe and Osaka | |
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|Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan |1945 |Firestorm developed 30 minutes after the bombing of Hiroshima, but only a conflagration developed at Nagasaki{{Citation|editor-last=Glasstone |editor-first=Samuel |editor2-last=Dolan |editor2-first=Philip J. |year=1977 |chapter=Chapter VII — Thermal Radiation and Its Effects |title=The Effects of Nuclear Weapons |edition=Third |publisher=United States Department of Defense and the Energy Research and Development Administration |url=http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/www/effects/ |chapter-url=http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/www/effects/eonw_7.pdf#zoom=100 |pages=304 | quote = Nagasaki probably did not furnish sufficient fuel for the development of a fire storm as compared to the many buildings on the flat terrain at Hiroshima.}} |Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (see nuclear explosion) | |
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|Texas City, Texas, U.S. |1947 |Cargo ship Grandcamp caught fire and exploded, destroying most of the harbor and killing 600 people | |
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|Seaside Heights & Seaside Park, New Jersey, United States |1955 |At least 30 businesses lost, 50 residents evacuated, no major injuries{{cite web | url = http://talesofthejerseyshore.blogspot.com/2009/06/freeman-pier-fire-1955-seaside.html | title = The Freeman Pier Fire- 1955- Seaside | date = June 30, 2009 | publisher = Tales of the New Jersey Shore and its Environs | first = Emil R. | last = Salvini}}{{cite news | url = http://seasideheightsfiredept.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/1955_108.jpg | title = Seaside begins rebuilding as fire ashes cool | newspaper = The Star-Ledger | location = Seaside Heights | date = 1955}}{{cite news | url = http://seasideheightsfiredept.files.wordpress.com/2011/11/1955_103.jpg | title = Fire Loss High, Insurance Low; Concessions Listed | location = Seaside Heights | date = 1955}} | |
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|Chicago |1958 |Our Lady of the Angels School Fire |95 fatalities, 100 wounded | |
Singapore
|1961 |4 fatalities, over 2,800 homes destroyed, 15,694 people left homeless | |
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|Brussels, Belgium |1967 |L'Innovation Department Store fire |322 victims, 150 wounded | |
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|1967 |Fire aboard aircraft carrier during Vietnam War, killed 134 sailors and injured 161 | |
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|Tasmania, Australia |1967 |Severe wildfires that claimed 62 lives, 900 injured, displaced 7,000, and destroyed {{convert|264000|hectare|km2|abbr=on}} of land including 1,293 homes | |
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|Chelsea, Massachusetts, U.S. |1973 |18 city blocks destroyed when a firestorm raced across the Chelsea Rag District, a several-block area of dilapidated wood-frame buildings housing textile and paper scrap. The same conditions and origin area of the First Great Chelsea Fire (1908). | |
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|1977 |Beverly Hills Supper Club fire |165 fatalities | |
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|1982 |Minneapolis Thanksgiving Day Fire |Two people convicted of arson in setting fire to a Donaldson's department store, which in turn destroyed a full city block of downtown Minneapolis | |
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|1984 |Fire and explosions at a liquid petroleum gas tank farm killed 500-600 people and 5,000-7,000 others suffered severe burns; local town of San Juan Ixhuatepec devastated | |
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|Bradford, England |1985 |52 victims | |
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|London |1987 |Conflagration in London Underground station killed 31 people | |
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|1993 |Mount Carmel Center, the compound of the Branch Davidians cult |Occurring on the final day of the Waco siege, resulting in deaths of 76 cult members; question of who actually started the fires remains unanswered{{cite episode |title=The Siege at Waco |series=Crimes of the Century |network=CNN |date=August 25, 2013 |season=1 |number=7}} | |
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|Dabwali, India |1995 | |
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|New York City and Washington, D.C., U.S. |2001 |2,606 victims killed in New York City as fires caused both twin towers of the World Trade Center to collapse, following impacts by two hijacked airliners. In Washington, D.C., 125 victims at the Pentagon were killed by the hijacked plane crash and subsequent fire. | |
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|West Warwick, Rhode Island, U.S. |2003 |100 killed and over 200 injured in fire at rock concert | |
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|Asunción, Paraguay |2004 | Ycuá Bolaños supermarket fire
|Almost 400 fatalities |
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|Hemel Hempstead, England |2005 |Hertfordshire oil storage terminal fire |The largest fire in peacetime Britain | |
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|2007 |84 victims in over 3,000 wildfires destroying {{convert|670,000|acre|km2}} of land | |
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|Victoria, Australia |2009 |173 victims in over 400 separate bushfires which burned {{convert|450,000|hectare|km2|abbr=on}} | |
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|Near Haifa, Israel |2010 |2010 Mount Carmel forest fire |44 victims, {{convert|12,000|acre|km2}} of bush/forest destroyed | |
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|Comayagua, Honduras |2012 |382 fatalities | |
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|Karachi and |2012 |2012 Pakistan garment factory fires |About 315 fatalities, over 250 injured in 2 fires on a single day | |
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|Santa Maria, Brazil |2013 |At least 232 fatalities and 117 hospitalized{{cite news | url = http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/27/brazil-nightclub-fire-santa-maria-kiss_n_2560839.html?icid=maing-grid10%7Chtmlws-main-bb%7Cdl1%7Csec1_lnk2%26pLid%3D262218 | title = Brazil Nightclub Fire Kills At Least 232 People | newspaper = The Huffington Post | first1 = Juliana | last1 = Barbassa | first2 = Marco | last2 = Sigaja | date = January 27, 2013}} | |
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|Seaside Heights & Seaside Park, New Jersey, U.S. |2013 |At least 19 buildings destroyed, 30 businesses lost, no major injuries{{cite news | url = http://nj1015.com/seaide-boardwalk-fire-seaside-businesses-impacted/ | title = Seaside Businesses Impacted by the Boardwalk Fire | author = Double Down | date = September 12, 2013 | publisher = WKXW, New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio}} | |
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|Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo, Alberta, Canada |2016 |Destroyed 2400 buildings and burned {{convert|589,552|ha|acre}} forcing the evacuation of 80,000 residents. | |
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|2017 |On 14 June 2017, a fire broke out in Grenfell Tower, causing the deaths of 72 people and injured 74. | |
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|Sonoma County, California, U.S. |2017 |36,807 acres burned, 5,400 structures destroyed, 22 fatalities{{cite news |url=http://www.fire.ca.gov/communications/downloads/fact_sheets/Top20_Destruction.pdf |title=Top 20 Most Destructive California Wildfires |author=Cal Fire |date=October 23, 2017 |publisher=State of California - Cal Fire |access-date=27 October 2017 |archive-date=26 June 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190626025601/http://www.fire.ca.gov/communications/downloads/fact_sheets/Top20_Destruction.pdf |url-status=dead}} | |
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|Paço de São Cristóvão, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |2018 |National Museum of Brazil fire |On 2 September 2018, a fire broke out at Paço de São Cristóvão in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, which housed the 200-year-old National Museum of Brazil. The museum held more than 20 million items, of which almost 90 percent were lost. | |
Notre-Dame de Paris
|2019 |The fire of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris was a violent fire that erupted in the Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris. It began at the end of the afternoon of April 15, 2019, on the roof of the building, causing considerable damage. The cathedral's needle and roof collapsed, and the interior and artefacts it housed were severely damaged. | |
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|Los Angeles County, California |2025 |January 2025 Southern California wildfires |Between January 7th and 31st, 2025, 14 destructive wildfires burned in throughout Los Angeles County in California, United States. Due to environmental conditions, the wildfires grew into an urban conflagration.{{Cite web |last=apistemplate |date=2025-01-20 |title=From wildfire to conflagration: What sets the LA blazes apart? |url=https://coregroupusa.com/from-wildfire-to-conflagration-what-sets-the-la-blazes-apart/ |access-date=2025-02-26 |website=The C.O.R.E. Group {{!}} Centered On Relationship Enhancement |language=en-US}} Leading to the death of more than 28 people,{{Cite news |last=Moses |first=Claire |last2=Otterman |first2=Sharon |last3=Cochrane |first3=Emily |date=2025-01-16 |title=Slower Winds Help L.A. Firefighters, but Anxiety Mounts Among Evacuees |url=https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/01/16/us/la-wildfires-california?smid=url-share#0db84d21-742c-57ed-9d13-eeecf128cdf7 |access-date=2025-02-26 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}} with more than 31 missing. More than 17,000 structures were destroyed.{{Cite web |last=Evans |first=Steve |date=2025-01-20 |title=LA wildfires: 17,027 structures damaged or destroyed. Insured loss estimates avg $32.5bn - Artemis.bm |url=https://www.artemis.bm/news/la-wildfires-17027-structures-damaged-or-destroyed-insured-loss-estimates-avg-32-5bn/ |access-date=2025-02-26 |website=Artemis.bm - The Catastrophe Bond, Insurance Linked Securities & Investment, Reinsurance Capital, Alternative Risk Transfer and Weather Risk Management site |language=en}} These were some of the most destructive fires in California's history.{{Cite web |last=Radford |first=Jessie Yeung, Chris Boyette, Lauren Mascarenhas, Dakin Andone, Maureen Chowdhury, Zoe Sottile, Karina Tsui, Hanna Park, Antoinette |date=2025-01-12 |title=Los Angeles wildfires: Crews scramble to contain blazes ahead of high winds |url=https://www.cnn.com/weather/live-news/los-angeles-wildfires-palisades-eaton-california-01-12-25/index.html |access-date=2025-02-26 |website=CNN |language=en}} |
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{commonscat-inline}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20110908003600/http://accidentmap.com/en/category/Fire/ Conflagration on map] (AccidentMap.com Accident on map)
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