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Northwest Wildfires Photographed From Space

From space, the West looks like it’s on fire.

In Washington state, brown smoke obscures the Cascades in these photos taken by a NASA satellite.

Most of the fires across the West have been triggered by lightning strikes, but years of drought have turned the forests bone dry.

Wildfire season here is also longer now than it was decades ago, likely because of climate change, according to a recent study in Nature. The study, led by U.S. Forest Service ecologist Matt Jolly, found that wildfire season is a month longer than it was 35 years ago. Researchers examined the years 1979-2013.

Jolly wrote that the fires have been spurred by a noxious cocktail of high temperatures, rain-free days and maximum wind speeds.

More than a dozen wildfires are blazing across Washington state, although much of the attention is centered around Lake Chelan. Fires in that area had burned nearly 114,000 acres as of 10 a.m. Wednesday, according to the Incident Information System. Dozens of homes and other buildings have been destroyed, and the smoke has caused unhealthy air conditions in a large region of eastern Washington.

Kurt Stich, a crew boss with Cowlitz 2 Fire & Rescue, said that the fire was burning away the grass and trees that have been holding large boulders in place for years.

“We’re seeing 100, 200, 300 pound rocks rolling down the hill,” he said.

In addition to the rattlesnakes that live in the hills, Stich said bees “are another big issue right now.”

“A number of our guys have been stung multiple times,” Stich said. “So those and the steepness of the terrain are the things that these guys are dealing with on an everyday basis.”

Related: Wildfires Now Attack Damp Land: Preview Ashley Ahearn’s Podcast On NPR

MAP: Check the current wildfire situation

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