leftysergeant
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2007
- Messages
- 18,863
I think each of the three WTC buildings that collapsed and their associated "99" day fires were about an acre.
I will not dispute that point. I would, however, like to take this opportunity, since you raised the point, to educate you on the evolution of what those of us with a bleeding clue call "ground fires."These are the most difficult of the "natural cover" fires to totally extinguish. Fire gets down into stuff like tree roots, buried leaf mulm, coal seams, buried garbage or office supplies layered between concrete slabs and rubble out of the reach of extinguishing hose streams.
But let us continue with the comparison to fires in the Okeffenokee. what you got here is a bunch of water sitting on top of a pile of sphagnum moss and various leaves and grasses that have piled up over the period between the maximum expansion of the Pleistocene ice sheets and today and which have, at intervals, been covered with non-flammable, perhaps even FIRE-PROOF clays. You scrape the leaf ,ulm off the top of the m,ineral earth, you drown any fires that are burning in rotten stumps on the surface, then walk away, and about an hour, maybe a week later, fire will have spread from a point below where your water reached and travelled under your fire line to erupt from the dead stump of another tree on the other side of your fire line.
So, in total, no, I do not see anything odd about the lingering fires.