Pacific Palisades was largely destroyed by fires in 1938 and 1961. “The climate we now have” is no different from the climate of the past. https://t.co/w3AjmsYQAihttps://t.co/lhv8Hu3jNE https://t.co/I83DAv1DuY pic.twitter.com/jRtnvTxbuG
— Tony Heller (@TonyClimate) January 9, 2025
Around 1980 I was flying out of the Santa Barbara airport and saw an entire mountainside burn up in a matter of a few seconds. They had a very wet winter that year and a typically dry summer. https://t.co/jhfzo9ld9L
— Tony Heller (@TonyClimate) January 8, 2025
1840 account of a large fire in Southern California.
"the Mission and town of Santa Barbara ….the hills have no large trees upon them, they having been all burnt by a great fire which swept them off about a dozen years ago, and they had not yet grown again. The fire was… https://t.co/Ld1BKDFS32 pic.twitter.com/9TZlRiQRCj
— Tony Heller (@TonyClimate) January 8, 2025
The Santiago Canyon Fire of 1889 burned 300,000 acres of Southern California.https://t.co/96mw2MEf4T pic.twitter.com/k2lgO73Ib2
— Tony Heller (@TonyClimate) January 8, 2025
In 1936, fires were seen as the greatest threat to California future prosperity.
"Data compiled by state forestry department show county visited by flames almost yearly since big fire of 1868 which ran over forested summits from Watershed of the Pescadero to peaks of the… pic.twitter.com/ppVNyzjinU
— Tony Heller (@TonyClimate) January 8, 2025
"major conflagrations sweeping across many mountain ranges in California and the Southwest were a long a common feature, occurring at least twice a decade and apparently linked to oceanic currents much farther south, the so-called La Nina events that often result in droughts."… https://t.co/gBiCVRfg0T pic.twitter.com/DAXAGrrPml
— Tony Heller (@TonyClimate) January 8, 2025
Right on cue, the #ClimateScam legacy media is blaming the California fires on the burning of fossil fuels.https://t.co/w1zjeGWUQz pic.twitter.com/5gHFiCib2G
— Tony Heller (@TonyClimate) January 8, 2025