Zombie fires Sets Underground blazes fuel climate and health crisis
As the Arctic heats up, an invisible danger is quietly smouldering beneath the earth zombie fires. Unlike surface wildfires, these fires burn slowly under the soil, survive freezing winters, and reignite months later, releasing massive amounts of greenhouse gases and toxic pollutants.
Zombie fires have been increasingly spotted in northern regions like Canada, Alaska, and Siberia, often igniting in peat-rich soils where organic matter accumulates over time. Scientists now believe that these underground blazes could worsen as climate change dries Arctic soils and thaws ancient permafrost, unlocking centuries-old carbon.
According to researchers from The Ohio State University, zombie fires are hard to detect and even harder to extinguish. They produce little surface smoke but can smoul...









