Bushfires (landscape fires) are a key Earth system process that affects humans and our societies and economies. In a recent article, we explored the coupling of humans to landscape fire through the lens of human health impacts of bushfire smoke. We noted that such an approach demands recognition of the indirect impacts and costs of bushfires that cannot be captured by simplistic proxies such as deaths directly attributable to a fire front. Evaluation of direct and indirect economic costs of bushfire disasters, and bushfire fire management remains a poorly developed research frontier that demands collaboration of expertise from a broad cross-section of fields that often have limited experience of collaborating together. The need for such synthetic thinking about fire's place on Earth has spawned the discipline of pyrogeography.
Funding
Australian Research Council
History
Publication title
Geographical Research
Volume
52
Pagination
340-343
ISSN
1745-5863
Department/School
School of Natural Sciences
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia
Place of publication
Australia
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Public health (excl. specific population health) not elsewhere classified