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  • Dedy Sentoso, SPTN wilayah II Pulang Pisau, poses for a portrait at Sebangau National Park.
    UN_Peatland_-80.jpg
  • Dry peatland at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-148.jpg
  • A fisherman fixes his fishing tools at Sebangau National Park
    UN_Peatland_-65.jpg
  • _MG_7152.jpg
  • Ibu Itin (Pak Udeng's wife) of Tumbang Nusa village, poses for a photo in her home.
    UN_Peatland_-163.jpg
  • Pak Dio, Head of Nusa Tumbang village, poses for a portrait.
    UN_Peatland_-159.jpg
  • UN_Peatland_-156.jpg
  • Ibu Itin (Pak Udeng's wife) of Tumbang Nusa village and her son, Ahmad Saidi, pose for a photo  in her home.
    UN_Peatland_-152.jpg
  • Trevor Wilson poses for a portrait during a training course for volunteer firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api).
    UN_Peatland_-139.jpg
  • Pak Udeng, volunteer firefighter of MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) poses for a portrait during a training course.
    UN_Peatland_-138.jpg
  • A trainer for volunteer firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api, poses for a portrait.
    UN_Peatland_-129.jpg
  • Pak Juni Rabat But, a firefighter volunteer, poses for a portrait during a training course.
    UN_Peatland_-133.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-127.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-119.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-120.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-116.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-112.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-115.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-113.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-111.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-108.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-110.jpg
  • Tea coloured water reflects sunlight at Sebangau National Park
    UN_Peatland_-95.jpg
  • Staff at Sebangau National Park poses for a portrait.
    UN_Peatland_-88.jpg
  • Acil Bergincu and her husband pose for a portrait in front of their house.  She and her family lives in a small fishing village at Sebangau National Park for the last 20 years.
    UN_Peatland_-70.jpg
  • Acil Bergincu and her husband pose for a portrait.  She and her family lives in a small fishing village at Sebangau National Park for the last 20 years.
    UN_Peatland_-73.jpg
  • A fisherman feeds his fish farm inside the box.
    UN_Peatland_-68.jpg
  • A fishing village at Sebangau National Park.
    UN_Peatland_-64.jpg
  • Remains of burned peatland at Sebangau National Park
    UN_Peatland_-37.jpg
  • Peatland at Sebangau National Park.
    UN_Peatland_-26.jpg
  • _MG_7169.jpg
  • _MG_7125.jpg
  • _MG_7112.jpg
  • _MG_6859.jpg
  • _MG_6885.jpg
  • _MG_6775.jpg
  • _MG_6748.jpg
  • Bapak Akhmad Tamanuruddin (Pak Taman) poses for a portrait.  He is one of the few farmers in Nusa Tumbang that don't practice slash and burning practice.
    UN_Peatland_-179.jpg
  • Ibu Itin (Pak Udeng's wife) of Tumbang Nusa village and her son, Ahmad Saidi, pose for a photo outside of her home.
    UN_Peatland_-167.jpg
  • Ibu Itin (Pak Udeng's wife) of Tumbang Nusa village, poses for a photo in her home.
    UN_Peatland_-154.jpg
  • Kubu of WoF (Working on Fire) from South Africa poses for a portrait during a training course for volunteer firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api).
    UN_Peatland_-141.jpg
  • Pak Udeng, volunteer firefighter of MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) poses for a portrait during a training course.
    UN_Peatland_-137.jpg
  • A trainer for volunteer firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api, poses for a portrait.
    UN_Peatland_-128.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-122.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-114.jpg
  • Volunteer Firefighters or MPA (Masyarakat Peduli Api) take part in a training course at Nusa Tumbang Village.
    UN_Peatland_-100.jpg
  • Dedy Sentoso, SPTN wilayah II Pulang Pisau, poses for a portrait at Sebangau National Park.
    UN_Peatland_-87.jpg
  • Dedy Sentoso, SPTN wilayah II Pulang Pisau, poses for a portrait at Sebangau National Park.
    UN_Peatland_-79.jpg
  • Acil Bergincu and her family pose for a portrait in front of their house. She and her family lives in a small fishing village at Sebangau National Park for the last 20 years.
    UN_Peatland_-75.jpg
  • Acil Bergincu and her husband pose for a portrait.  She and her family lives in a small fishing village at Sebangau National Park for the last 20 years.
    UN_Peatland_-74.jpg
  • Acil Bergincu tend to her fish net.  She and her family lives in a small fishing village at Sebangau National Park for the last 20 years.
    UN_Peatland_-72.jpg
  • A family that lives in a small village at Sebangau National Park eats their breakfast.
    UN_Peatland_-66.jpg
  • A house built above water at Sebangau National Park.
    UN_Peatland_-47.jpg
  • Peatland at Sebangau National Park during sunset.
    UN_Peatland_-45.jpg
  • Trees with watermark at Sebangau National Park
    UN_Peatland_-35.jpg
  • Remains of burned peatland at Sebangau National Park
    UN_Peatland_-38.jpg
  • Villagers travel on a boat at Sebangau National Park
    UN_Peatland_-32.jpg
  • Peatland at Sebangau National Park.
    UN_Peatland_-1.jpg
  • _MG_7349.jpg
  • _MG_6967.jpg
  • _MG_6939.jpg
  • _MG_6853.jpg
  • _MG_6360.jpg
  • _MG_6327.jpg
  • How to Save a Forest by Burning It<br />
<br />
Prescribed burns, an age-old practice that rids forests of the small trees, brush and other matter than can fuel wildfires, are getting a 21st-century upgrade.<br />
<br />
With climate change parching the land and increasing wildfire hazards, scientists are beginning to use cutting-edge technology and computer modeling to make controlled, low-intensity burns safer, more effective and less disruptive to nearby communities.<br />
<br />
“Fire has made us civilized, but we still don’t understand it fully,” said Tirtha Banerjee of the University of California, Irvine, as he watched a tall heap of dead tree limbs go up in flames.<br />
<br />
<br />
As useful as prescribed burns can be for maintaining forests, they are tough to carry out — costly, labor-intensive, contingent on narrowing windows of favorable weather.<br />
<br />
Scientists think we can do better. Several teams recently converged at Blodgett Forest Research Station northeast of Sacramento, an area thick with towering Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and incense cedar. A planned burn at Blodgett was a precious opportunity to collect data in the field, and the researchers packed carloads of gear including GoPro cameras, drone-mounted sensors for mapping the terrain in minute detail, a sonic anemometer for measuring wind and an assortment of machines that collected airborne particles.<br />
<br />
Global warming has brought more of the extremely hot and dry conditions that can turn wildfires into deadly catastrophes. Blazes as ferocious as last year’s Dixie Fire, which burned through nearly a million acres of Northern California, weren’t part of the picture for scientists half a century ago, when the Forest Service and other agencies first developed their mathematical models for predicting how wildfires spread. (Raymond Zhong)<br />
<br />
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/climate/california-wildfire-prescribed-burn.html
    Prescribed Burn_NYT_4.png
  • How to Save a Forest by Burning It<br />
<br />
Prescribed burns, an age-old practice that rids forests of the small trees, brush and other matter than can fuel wildfires, are getting a 21st-century upgrade.<br />
<br />
With climate change parching the land and increasing wildfire hazards, scientists are beginning to use cutting-edge technology and computer modeling to make controlled, low-intensity burns safer, more effective and less disruptive to nearby communities.<br />
<br />
“Fire has made us civilized, but we still don’t understand it fully,” said Tirtha Banerjee of the University of California, Irvine, as he watched a tall heap of dead tree limbs go up in flames.<br />
<br />
<br />
As useful as prescribed burns can be for maintaining forests, they are tough to carry out — costly, labor-intensive, contingent on narrowing windows of favorable weather.<br />
<br />
Scientists think we can do better. Several teams recently converged at Blodgett Forest Research Station northeast of Sacramento, an area thick with towering Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and incense cedar. A planned burn at Blodgett was a precious opportunity to collect data in the field, and the researchers packed carloads of gear including GoPro cameras, drone-mounted sensors for mapping the terrain in minute detail, a sonic anemometer for measuring wind and an assortment of machines that collected airborne particles.<br />
<br />
Global warming has brought more of the extremely hot and dry conditions that can turn wildfires into deadly catastrophes. Blazes as ferocious as last year’s Dixie Fire, which burned through nearly a million acres of Northern California, weren’t part of the picture for scientists half a century ago, when the Forest Service and other agencies first developed their mathematical models for predicting how wildfires spread. (Raymond Zhong)<br />
<br />
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/climate/california-wildfire-prescribed-burn.html
    Prescribed Burn_NYT_1.png
  • How to Save a Forest by Burning It<br />
<br />
Prescribed burns, an age-old practice that rids forests of the small trees, brush and other matter than can fuel wildfires, are getting a 21st-century upgrade.<br />
<br />
With climate change parching the land and increasing wildfire hazards, scientists are beginning to use cutting-edge technology and computer modeling to make controlled, low-intensity burns safer, more effective and less disruptive to nearby communities.<br />
<br />
“Fire has made us civilized, but we still don’t understand it fully,” said Tirtha Banerjee of the University of California, Irvine, as he watched a tall heap of dead tree limbs go up in flames.<br />
<br />
<br />
As useful as prescribed burns can be for maintaining forests, they are tough to carry out — costly, labor-intensive, contingent on narrowing windows of favorable weather.<br />
<br />
Scientists think we can do better. Several teams recently converged at Blodgett Forest Research Station northeast of Sacramento, an area thick with towering Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and incense cedar. A planned burn at Blodgett was a precious opportunity to collect data in the field, and the researchers packed carloads of gear including GoPro cameras, drone-mounted sensors for mapping the terrain in minute detail, a sonic anemometer for measuring wind and an assortment of machines that collected airborne particles.<br />
<br />
Global warming has brought more of the extremely hot and dry conditions that can turn wildfires into deadly catastrophes. Blazes as ferocious as last year’s Dixie Fire, which burned through nearly a million acres of Northern California, weren’t part of the picture for scientists half a century ago, when the Forest Service and other agencies first developed their mathematical models for predicting how wildfires spread. (Raymond Zhong)<br />
<br />
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/climate/california-wildfire-prescribed-burn.html
    Prescribed Burn_NYT_0.jpg
  • How to Save a Forest by Burning It<br />
<br />
Prescribed burns, an age-old practice that rids forests of the small trees, brush and other matter than can fuel wildfires, are getting a 21st-century upgrade.<br />
<br />
With climate change parching the land and increasing wildfire hazards, scientists are beginning to use cutting-edge technology and computer modeling to make controlled, low-intensity burns safer, more effective and less disruptive to nearby communities.<br />
<br />
“Fire has made us civilized, but we still don’t understand it fully,” said Tirtha Banerjee of the University of California, Irvine, as he watched a tall heap of dead tree limbs go up in flames.<br />
<br />
<br />
As useful as prescribed burns can be for maintaining forests, they are tough to carry out — costly, labor-intensive, contingent on narrowing windows of favorable weather.<br />
<br />
Scientists think we can do better. Several teams recently converged at Blodgett Forest Research Station northeast of Sacramento, an area thick with towering Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and incense cedar. A planned burn at Blodgett was a precious opportunity to collect data in the field, and the researchers packed carloads of gear including GoPro cameras, drone-mounted sensors for mapping the terrain in minute detail, a sonic anemometer for measuring wind and an assortment of machines that collected airborne particles.<br />
<br />
Global warming has brought more of the extremely hot and dry conditions that can turn wildfires into deadly catastrophes. Blazes as ferocious as last year’s Dixie Fire, which burned through nearly a million acres of Northern California, weren’t part of the picture for scientists half a century ago, when the Forest Service and other agencies first developed their mathematical models for predicting how wildfires spread. (Raymond Zhong)<br />
<br />
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/climate/california-wildfire-prescribed-burn.html
    Prescribed Burn_NYT_2.png
  • How to Save a Forest by Burning It<br />
<br />
Prescribed burns, an age-old practice that rids forests of the small trees, brush and other matter than can fuel wildfires, are getting a 21st-century upgrade.<br />
<br />
With climate change parching the land and increasing wildfire hazards, scientists are beginning to use cutting-edge technology and computer modeling to make controlled, low-intensity burns safer, more effective and less disruptive to nearby communities.<br />
<br />
“Fire has made us civilized, but we still don’t understand it fully,” said Tirtha Banerjee of the University of California, Irvine, as he watched a tall heap of dead tree limbs go up in flames.<br />
<br />
<br />
As useful as prescribed burns can be for maintaining forests, they are tough to carry out — costly, labor-intensive, contingent on narrowing windows of favorable weather.<br />
<br />
Scientists think we can do better. Several teams recently converged at Blodgett Forest Research Station northeast of Sacramento, an area thick with towering Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and incense cedar. A planned burn at Blodgett was a precious opportunity to collect data in the field, and the researchers packed carloads of gear including GoPro cameras, drone-mounted sensors for mapping the terrain in minute detail, a sonic anemometer for measuring wind and an assortment of machines that collected airborne particles.<br />
<br />
Global warming has brought more of the extremely hot and dry conditions that can turn wildfires into deadly catastrophes. Blazes as ferocious as last year’s Dixie Fire, which burned through nearly a million acres of Northern California, weren’t part of the picture for scientists half a century ago, when the Forest Service and other agencies first developed their mathematical models for predicting how wildfires spread. (Raymond Zhong)<br />
<br />
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/climate/california-wildfire-prescribed-burn.html
    Prescribed Burn_NYT_5.png
  • How to Save a Forest by Burning It<br />
<br />
Prescribed burns, an age-old practice that rids forests of the small trees, brush and other matter than can fuel wildfires, are getting a 21st-century upgrade.<br />
<br />
With climate change parching the land and increasing wildfire hazards, scientists are beginning to use cutting-edge technology and computer modeling to make controlled, low-intensity burns safer, more effective and less disruptive to nearby communities.<br />
<br />
“Fire has made us civilized, but we still don’t understand it fully,” said Tirtha Banerjee of the University of California, Irvine, as he watched a tall heap of dead tree limbs go up in flames.<br />
<br />
<br />
As useful as prescribed burns can be for maintaining forests, they are tough to carry out — costly, labor-intensive, contingent on narrowing windows of favorable weather.<br />
<br />
Scientists think we can do better. Several teams recently converged at Blodgett Forest Research Station northeast of Sacramento, an area thick with towering Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and incense cedar. A planned burn at Blodgett was a precious opportunity to collect data in the field, and the researchers packed carloads of gear including GoPro cameras, drone-mounted sensors for mapping the terrain in minute detail, a sonic anemometer for measuring wind and an assortment of machines that collected airborne particles.<br />
<br />
Global warming has brought more of the extremely hot and dry conditions that can turn wildfires into deadly catastrophes. Blazes as ferocious as last year’s Dixie Fire, which burned through nearly a million acres of Northern California, weren’t part of the picture for scientists half a century ago, when the Forest Service and other agencies first developed their mathematical models for predicting how wildfires spread. (Raymond Zhong)<br />
<br />
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/climate/california-wildfire-prescribed-burn.html
    Prescribed Burn_NYT_7.png
  • How to Save a Forest by Burning It<br />
<br />
Prescribed burns, an age-old practice that rids forests of the small trees, brush and other matter than can fuel wildfires, are getting a 21st-century upgrade.<br />
<br />
With climate change parching the land and increasing wildfire hazards, scientists are beginning to use cutting-edge technology and computer modeling to make controlled, low-intensity burns safer, more effective and less disruptive to nearby communities.<br />
<br />
“Fire has made us civilized, but we still don’t understand it fully,” said Tirtha Banerjee of the University of California, Irvine, as he watched a tall heap of dead tree limbs go up in flames.<br />
<br />
<br />
As useful as prescribed burns can be for maintaining forests, they are tough to carry out — costly, labor-intensive, contingent on narrowing windows of favorable weather.<br />
<br />
Scientists think we can do better. Several teams recently converged at Blodgett Forest Research Station northeast of Sacramento, an area thick with towering Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and incense cedar. A planned burn at Blodgett was a precious opportunity to collect data in the field, and the researchers packed carloads of gear including GoPro cameras, drone-mounted sensors for mapping the terrain in minute detail, a sonic anemometer for measuring wind and an assortment of machines that collected airborne particles.<br />
<br />
Global warming has brought more of the extremely hot and dry conditions that can turn wildfires into deadly catastrophes. Blazes as ferocious as last year’s Dixie Fire, which burned through nearly a million acres of Northern California, weren’t part of the picture for scientists half a century ago, when the Forest Service and other agencies first developed their mathematical models for predicting how wildfires spread. (Raymond Zhong)<br />
<br />
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/climate/california-wildfire-prescribed-burn.html
    Prescribed Burn_NYT_8.png
  • How to Save a Forest by Burning It<br />
<br />
Prescribed burns, an age-old practice that rids forests of the small trees, brush and other matter than can fuel wildfires, are getting a 21st-century upgrade.<br />
<br />
With climate change parching the land and increasing wildfire hazards, scientists are beginning to use cutting-edge technology and computer modeling to make controlled, low-intensity burns safer, more effective and less disruptive to nearby communities.<br />
<br />
“Fire has made us civilized, but we still don’t understand it fully,” said Tirtha Banerjee of the University of California, Irvine, as he watched a tall heap of dead tree limbs go up in flames.<br />
<br />
<br />
As useful as prescribed burns can be for maintaining forests, they are tough to carry out — costly, labor-intensive, contingent on narrowing windows of favorable weather.<br />
<br />
Scientists think we can do better. Several teams recently converged at Blodgett Forest Research Station northeast of Sacramento, an area thick with towering Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and incense cedar. A planned burn at Blodgett was a precious opportunity to collect data in the field, and the researchers packed carloads of gear including GoPro cameras, drone-mounted sensors for mapping the terrain in minute detail, a sonic anemometer for measuring wind and an assortment of machines that collected airborne particles.<br />
<br />
Global warming has brought more of the extremely hot and dry conditions that can turn wildfires into deadly catastrophes. Blazes as ferocious as last year’s Dixie Fire, which burned through nearly a million acres of Northern California, weren’t part of the picture for scientists half a century ago, when the Forest Service and other agencies first developed their mathematical models for predicting how wildfires spread. (Raymond Zhong)<br />
<br />
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/climate/california-wildfire-prescribed-burn.html
    Prescribed Burn_NYT_6.png
  • How to Save a Forest by Burning It<br />
<br />
Prescribed burns, an age-old practice that rids forests of the small trees, brush and other matter than can fuel wildfires, are getting a 21st-century upgrade.<br />
<br />
With climate change parching the land and increasing wildfire hazards, scientists are beginning to use cutting-edge technology and computer modeling to make controlled, low-intensity burns safer, more effective and less disruptive to nearby communities.<br />
<br />
“Fire has made us civilized, but we still don’t understand it fully,” said Tirtha Banerjee of the University of California, Irvine, as he watched a tall heap of dead tree limbs go up in flames.<br />
<br />
<br />
As useful as prescribed burns can be for maintaining forests, they are tough to carry out — costly, labor-intensive, contingent on narrowing windows of favorable weather.<br />
<br />
Scientists think we can do better. Several teams recently converged at Blodgett Forest Research Station northeast of Sacramento, an area thick with towering Ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and incense cedar. A planned burn at Blodgett was a precious opportunity to collect data in the field, and the researchers packed carloads of gear including GoPro cameras, drone-mounted sensors for mapping the terrain in minute detail, a sonic anemometer for measuring wind and an assortment of machines that collected airborne particles.<br />
<br />
Global warming has brought more of the extremely hot and dry conditions that can turn wildfires into deadly catastrophes. Blazes as ferocious as last year’s Dixie Fire, which burned through nearly a million acres of Northern California, weren’t part of the picture for scientists half a century ago, when the Forest Service and other agencies first developed their mathematical models for predicting how wildfires spread. (Raymond Zhong)<br />
<br />
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/07/climate/california-wildfire-prescribed-burn.html
    Prescribed Burn_NYT_3.png
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Andri Tambunan

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