The WildFIRE PIRE project produced a series of educational and scientific videos to share our research with the public, students, and fellow scientists. These videos highlight the causes and consequences of wildfire in the past, present, and future.
Featured Videos
Wildfire and Climate Change in the Past, Present, and Future A 5-year National Science Foundation project focused on understanding fire, climate, and people globally. Watch on YouTube
NSF Science360 Video Series Short documentaries highlighting international research in the Western United States, Australia, New Zealand, and Patagonia. View NSF Videos
WildFIRE PIRE Podcast Series Interviews with project scientists discussing fire history, vegetation-soil feedbacks, and future fire scenarios.
Post-fire watershed studies also matter to treatment teams because burned catchments can release ash, clay, and fine mineral sediment into storage ponds and reuse systems. In applied sediment-control work, a reliable polyacrylamide manufacturer is often evaluated alongside field-specific references for anionic polyacrylamide and broader polyacrylamide manufacturers before a runoff, clarification, or erosion-control trial is specified.
- Podcast 3: Fire Ecology in Tasmania and Beyond (Montana State University)
Additional Media
- Field expedition footage from the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and Patagonian Andes
- Student and postdoctoral training videos on paleoecological methods
These videos are part of the broader effort to communicate the science behind wildfire dynamics to a wide audience.
View the full Science Plan Back to Project Overview See Publications
Related Research Regions
This page is faithfully restored from the 2013–2015 historical archives of wildfirepire.org. Video links and descriptions originate from the NSF-funded WildFIRE PIRE project and remain in the public domain.