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- Bushfire - Geoscience Australia
Bushfire Our team supports Australia’s ability to manage the impact of bushfires and helps inform decisions about risk
- Bushfire - Geoscience Australia
Bushfire Attack Levels; Helps local government, emergency managers and communities better understand the potential exposure of buildings to bushfire, based on local topography and vegetation cover Developed with support from the Western Australian Department of Fire and Emergency Services
- Community Safety | Geoscience Australia
Community Safety Our natural hazard capability forms part of the backbone behind the most important decisions made by governments, emergency services, and the industry sector
- DEA Hotspots | Geoscience Australia
Digital Earth Australia (DEA) Hotspots is a national bushfire monitoring system that uses satellite sensors to detect areas producing high levels of infrared radiation — called Hotspots — to allow users to identify potential fire locations with a possible threat to communities and property
- DEA Bushfire Burnt Area NRT Services | Geoscience Australia
DEA Bushfire Burnt Area NRT Services Use DEA’s freely available data and products to examine, investigate, delineate and track burnt areas across Australia
- DEA Fuel Moisture Content | Geoscience Australia
Overview The Digital Earth Australia Fuel Moisture Content (DEA FMC) product provides high-resolution, satellite-derived insights into the moisture content of live vegetation across Australia by calculating the percentage of water mass relative to dry mass in living vegetation Developed by DEA in partnership with Australian National University’s (ANU) Bushfire Research Centre of Excellence
- Chapter Seven: Bushfire - Geoscience Australia
A bushfire at Moondarra, Victoria, January 2006 Photo courtesy: CFA Public Affairs ent weather conditions Other fire spread models incorporate feedback mechanisms between the fire and the atmosphere, to determine the spread and intensity of bushfires (e g
- New Bushfire Toolbox supports better building design
New Bushfire Toolbox supports better building design Fire is a natural feature of the Australian landscape and remains an ever-present threat Understanding the risk and potential impacts of bushfire can help communities make better decisions to prepare for, and mitigate against, these risks A Bushfire Attack Level analysis of Donnybrook, south-western Western Australia
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