Description
In this collection of essays, fire historian Stephen J. Pyne explains the relevance of the Interior West to the national fire scene. This region offered the first scientific inquiry into landscape fire in the US, including a map of Utah burns published in 1878 as a part of John Wesley Powell’s Arid Lands report. Then its significance faded, and for some of the 20th century, the Interior West was once the hole in the national donut of fire management. Recently the region has returned to prominence because of fires along its front ranges; invasive species, both exotics like cheatgrass and unleashed natives like mountain pine beetle; and fatality fires, notably at South Canyon in 1994.
The Interior West has long been passed over in national fire narratives. Here it reclaims its rightful place.
Included in this volume:
- A summary of 19th- and 20th-century fire history in the Interior West
- How this important region inspired U.S. studies of landscape fire
- Why the region disappeared from national fire management discussions
- How the expansion of invasive species and loss of native species has affected the region’s fire ecology
- The national significance of fire in the Interior West