To Light a Fire
Subject:
General Science, Chemistry, and Physics
Theme:
Fires will not burn unless specific conditions
exist.
OBJECTIVE
Students will learn to recognize and identify
the conditions necessary for burning.
METHOD
In small groups, students will attempt to burn
a variety of fuel types.
BACKGROUND
Fires need heat, fuel, and oxygen to burn. Remove
any of these elements, and a fire will go out.
In the northern Rockies, lightning provides a
ready source of ignition. Fuels in the form of
dead and down trees accumulate at a steady rate
because the process of decay is slow in this region.
However, conditions in Yellowstone are usually
much too cold and wet to achieve large-scale,
sustained burning. The drought of 1988 (conditions
unprecedented in the park’s 112 year written record)
was the key event that turned the tide in favor
of burning. Severe drought accompanied by unusually
high winds fanned the fires to their humbling
proportions. In 1988, we witnessed a convergence
of conditions, which rarely occurs. Forest fires
burn in a mosaic pattern that is reflective of
varying fuel types. Wet meadows and stands of
young trees do not burn as readily as old forests
with large accumulations of litter.
MATERIALS
Matches (enough for five per group)
Five buckets or boxes containing varying fuel
types (keep the amount of fuel in each bucket
small)
Bucket #1: A good assortment of sizes of fuels,
some with needles, all green.
Bucket #2: Same as #1, but fuels should be dead
and dry.
Bucket #3: Same as #2, but fuels should be damp.
Bucket#4: A good assortment of fuels, all partially
burned.
Bucket#5: An assortment of fuels, all of large
diameter (small surface area to volume ratio –
i.e., no kindling.)
Plastic one-gallon containers filled with water,
one for each fire.
PROCEDURE
Begin with a discussion of how a fire gets started
and whether it is easy or difficult to start one.
Instruct the students that they will be trying
to start fires in small groups. It may not be
easy! The groups must plan their strategies carefully.
They will then try to get as much of their fuels
to burn as possible in the allotted time. Read
them the following rules:
- Each group must be under the supervision of
an adult.
- All fires must be built within a designated
area (an open playground or parking lot away
from buildings would be best.)
- No fuels may be used other than those assigned
to each group.
- Only five matches will be given to each group.
- A two-minute group planning session prior
to action is mandatory.
After all groups have had ample time (10 minutes
should be adequate), call it quits and assemble
groups for discussion. Which groups were successful?
Why or why not? Visit each fire site and examine
differences in fuel types and success of burning.
Do these differences in fuel type occur naturally?
Where and under what conditions can each be found?
Discuss the extreme fire conditions of 1988, and
ask kids to hypothesize as to whether or not it
could happen again. What other factors besides
fuel type come into play? Point out strategies
observed, such as blowing on fires. Introduce
a fire triangle model. Demonstrate that if any
part is removed, the triangle will collapse and
the fire will go out.
EXTENSIONS
Demonstrate burning in a bell jar:
- Seal the jar with a stopper to cut off the
supply of oxygen.
- Add oxygen to demonstrate ignition of a glowing
splint.
- Observe the fire extinguish itself when the
fuel is consumed.
- You may also remove heat by adding water to
extinguish.
SOURCE
Getting to Know Wildland Fire
A Teacher’s Guide to Fire Ecology in the Northern
Rocky Mountains
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