Track Wildfires in the U.S.
Daily Summary
Updated
As of Saturday, there are no new large or notable fires currently burning near heavily populated areas or major landmarks across the Western United States.
Fewer fires recently have dominated headlines compared with past fire seasons. But some early outbreaks in Texas and elsewhere have begun to raise worries about this year’s fire season.
Notable Fires
Hughes Creek RX
- 5,600 acres
- +2 acres/past day
- Containment unavailable
2024 Loup River Trex RX
- 3,200 acres
- +1 acres/past day
- Containment unavailable
Durfee-bolander RX
- 1,500 acres
- No change in past day
- Containment unavailable
RX Hudson
- 2,400 acres
- No change in past day
- Containment unavailable
Signal Peak RX
- 1,500 acres
- +3 acres/past day
- Containment unavailable
Range 127
- 1,500 acres
- No change in past day
- 95% contained
Twisted Arrow
- 1,400 acres
- No change in past day
- 100% contained
Barnes
- 320 acres
- No change in past day
- 95% contained
Related
Methodology
The map includes active and recent fires reported by the Wildland Fire Interagency Geospatial Services Group. The locations of the fires on the map are approximate, derived from data reported by the NASA FIRMS satellite-based fire detection system, which makes observations several times a day. Areas marked in red indicate where active burning was detected within 24 hours of the most recent fires reflected on the map. The exact boundary of a fire may differ from the extent shown on the map by 500 meters or more.
Air quality data is derived from PurpleAir sensors. Colored squares show levels of particulate matter in the air that average 2.5 microns or smaller in diameter where sensor data is available within a 10-mile radius of each square’s position. Readings have been adjusted to account for the properties of wood smoke. The quality levels are based on the Air Quality Index developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Population counts are rounded estimates. Totals are calculated using 2020 nighttime estimates from the Landscan, a population database generated by Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Credits
By Matthew Bloch, Josh Williams, Rumsey Taylor, Tim Wallace, John-Michael Murphy and Tiff Fehr. Additional production by Jon Huang.
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