zzdedu
Home
/
Educational Science
/
Planet Earth
/
Weather
/
In Photos: Devastating Look at Raging Wildfires in Australia
In Photos: Devastating Look at Raging Wildfires in Australia
In Photos: Devastating Look at Raging Wildfires in Australia

The wildfires in Australia are at epic proportions, seeming to crackle and billow across the entire continent. Since the fire season began in July, at least 24 people have died due to those blazes, while in New South Wales alone fires have decimated more than 1,300 houses, according to CNN. The island nation is home to more than people, as animals from koalas to wallabies to horses and birds call the brush their abode. And they are taking a hit, with some estimates suggesting 480 million animals in New South Wales have been affected since the fires started there in September, according to Chris Dickman, an expert on Australian mammals and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science. Here's a look at the havoc wreaked on Australia's ecosystems that are going up in flames.

Burnt paws

(Image credit: Wolter Peeters/The Sydney Morning Herald via Getty Images)Even animals that survive the fires are showing the effects. Here, a wallaby licks its burnt paws, after having escaped a bushfire on the Liberation Trail in New South Wales, seen on Nov. 12, 2019.

Treating Frizzle

(Image credit: Nathan Edwards/Getty Images)Doctors treat Frizzle, a koala from the town of Taree in New South Wales, for burns. Staff at the Port Macquarie Koala Hospital in Port Macquarie, Australia, have been working alongside crews from the National Parks and Wildlife Service to search for koalas following weeks of devastating bushfires across New South Wales and Queensland.

Lisa gets rescued

(Image credit: Nathan Edwards/Getty Images)Another koala, this one named Lisa and from the NSW town of Pappinbarra, recovers from burns on Nov. 29 at The Port Macquarie Koala Hospital.

Tinny Arse

(Image credit: Kate Geraghty/The SMH/Fairfax Media via Getty Images)Water-tank operator Damian Campbell-Davys rescued a koala named "Tinny Arse" from a bushfire zone in New South Wales. The little koala sits in Campbell-Davys’ water tanker on Oallen Road near Nerriga, NSW, on Jan. 5, 2020.

Kangaroo smoke

(Image credit: Wolter Peeters/The Sydney Morning Herald via Getty Images)With smoke veiling the landscape, a kangaroo jumps about in Snowy Valley on the outskirts of Cooma on Jan, 4, 2020. At the time, up to 3,000 military reservists were called up to tackle the relentless bushfires; and tens of thousands of residents fled from their homes.

Escaping the flames

(Image credit: SAEED KHAN/AFP via Getty Images)A horse tries to escape a nearby bushfire in a residential property near the town of Nowra in New South Wales, on Dec. 31, 2019. The fires are devastating both human and animal life; Two volunteer firefighters were killed while battling the flames in New South Wales on Dec. 19, according to CNN.

Fire tornado

(Image credit: David Gray/Getty Images)A fire tornado forms inside a bushfire near homes on the outskirts of Bilpin in Sydney, Australia, on Dec, 19. Fire tornadoes are formed when hot, dry air rises quickly from the ground to create vertical columns or chimney-like structures. That air keeps rising until it cools down, becoming less dense and dissipating. But as more hot air gets pulled into the chimney, it begins to swirl in a vortex.

Sunset surfers

(Image credit: Jenny Evans/Getty Images)The bushfires are creating vivid orange sunsets. Here, a hazy red sunset blankets Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia, on Dec. 19.

Black carbon

(Image credit: GEOS FP/NASA GSFC)This animation is a model of where the black smoke from the raging Australian wildfires is traveling. It's based off of the GEOS forward processing (GEOS FP) model, which combines information from satellite, aircraft and ground-based observation systems and uses data such as air temperature, moisture levels and wind information to project the plume's behavior.

Originally published on Live Science.

Want more science? Get a subscription of our sister publication "How It Works" magazine, for the latest amazing science news. (Image credit: Future plc)

Comments
Welcome to zzdedu comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.zzdedu.com All Rights Reserved