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Malibu Fires

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Term Paper TitleMalibu Fires
# of Words2456
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)9.82
Malibu Fires

Malibu Fires


     Human beings are able to adapt to almost any environment, unfortunately
sometimes we take advantage of our natural surroundings.  We find ourselves
amidst a struggle between our lifestyles and nature.  Although we affect nature
profoundly with our activities, we in turn are shaped by nature's potent forces.
Nature can be brutal to humans, but we must remember that it merely is following
its course.  As a result, we must learn to coexist with it.  Fire is a naturally
occurring phenomenon which humans have learned to deal with throughout history.
Yet when fire burns uncontrollably, there is great potential for monumental
damage to all surrounding biomass.  The Malibu wildfires are an example of one
such instance.
     Historically, wildfires had been left to burn uncontrolled for weeks.
Fires were caused by different sources such as lightning or human hunters who
wanted to chase animals out of the woods.  As prolonged as these fires were,
they had limited catastrophic effects on the nomadic humans.  This is due to the
low population density and the fact that the fires were not very intense.  As
people began to change from a hunting-gathering society to agriculturists,  they
settled in communities.  Homes built among the wild brush were perfect prey to
wildfires.  Initially, wildfires were put out immediately and people were barred
from setting fires in open spaces.  Due to the policy of  fire suppression, only
one percent of all wildfires escaped early control.  The land was safe from
fires temporarily, but this set the stage for catastrophe as the brush grew more
dense.
     There have been more than 20 catastrophic wildfires in Los Angeles
County since the beginning of organized fire protection.  The first "big one"
happened in December of 1927.  The fire started in the La Crescenta Valley,
climbed over the Verdugo Mountain range and destroyed more than 100 homes.
     In addition to the damage caused in 1927, fires have profoundly affected
the Southern California environment. Almost every square mile of chaparral land
in Los Angeles county has been burned at least once, since 1919.  There are
basically two large fire breeding grounds in Los Angeles county:  the San
Gabriel Mountain range and the Santa Monica Mountains. In 1993, the Kinneloa
Fire in Altadena caused a great amount of damage to the surrounding area and
destroyed 121 homes in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains.  It was the
most devastating fire in the area,  surpassi...

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