megafire

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

mega- +‎ fire

Noun[edit]

megafire (plural megafires)

  1. A very large wildfire, typically one covering more than 100,000 acres.
    Coordinate term: megastorm
    • 2015 November 20, Tim Flannery, “Climate crisis: seaweed, coffee and cement could save the planet”, in The Guardian[1]:
      This increase means that almost every aspect of the Earth’s climate system is now influenced by humanity, and the consequences – droughts, heatwaves, megafires, melting glaciers and rising oceans – are now well understood.
    • 2020 September 22, John Branch, Brad Plumer, “Climate Disruption Is Now Locked In”, in New York Times[2]:
      There remains much that can be done to limit the damage to come, to brace against the coming megafires and superstorms and save lives and hold onto a thriving civilization.
    • 2021 July 20, Jack Healy, Sophie Kasakove, “A Drought So Dire That a Utah Town Pulled the Plug on Growth”, in The New York Times[3], →ISSN:
      Across the Western United States, a summer of record-breaking drought, heat waves and megafires exacerbated by climate change is forcing millions of people to confront an inescapable string of disasters that challenge the future of growth.