This study is of particular relevance not only to the geoscientific community but also to the broader public and media, as it touches on wildfire resilience, atmospheric health, and climate feedbacks—all central to contemporary environmental discourse. It presents a timely and highly relevant analysis of the stratospheric effects of the record-breaking 2023 Canadian wildfire season—an event of global environmental and public interest. Using a combination of satellite, airborne, and ground-based observations, alongside chemistry-transport model simulations, the study uncovers a surprising and counterintuitive result: despite the extreme scale and intensity of the fires, the vertical reach of smoke into the stratosphere was relatively shallow.
This study is of particular relevance not only to the geoscientific community but also to the...
In 2023, massive wildfires in Canada injected huge amounts of smoke into the atmosphere. Surprisingly, despite their intensity, the smoke did not rise very high but lingered at flight cruising altitudes, causing widespread pollution. This study shows how two different pathways lifted smoke into the lower stratosphere and reveals new insights into how wildfires affect air quality and climate, challenging what we thought we knew about fire and atmospheric impacts.
In 2023, massive wildfires in Canada injected huge amounts of smoke into the atmosphere....