U.S. Fires 2012
Your custom Outdoor Throw Pillow with Insert is printed on two sides and made from 100% spun polyester poplin fabric, a high quality product that will look great in your home. This custom cut and hand sewn pillow is available in square and rectangle proportions to best fit your image. The included pillow insert is not removable.
Outdoor Pillow with Insert. No UV Properties - Waterproof and Mildew Proof.
Your custom Throw Pillow with Insert is printed on two sides and made from 100% spun polyester poplin fabric, a high quality product that will look great in your home. This custom cut and hand sewn pillow is available in square and rectangle proportions to best fit your image. The pillow is finished with a concealed zipper for easy care.
This product includes a pillow insert. Spot Clean Only.
Your custom Throw Pillow Cover is printed on two sides and made from 100% spun polyester poplin fabric, a high quality product that will look great in your home. This custom cut and hand sewn pillow is available in square and rectangle proportions to best fit your image. The pillow is finished with a concealed zipper for easy care.
This product does not include a pillow insert. Spot Clean Only.
Records maintained by the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) and NASA both indicate that 2012 was an extraordinary year for wildfires in the United States.
NIFC statistics show that more than 9.1 million acres had burned as of November 30, 2012 the third highest total in a record that dates back to 1960. Also notable: despite the high number of acres burned in 2012, the total number of fire was low, the least on the NIFC record. Average fire size in 2012 was the highest on the record.
The visualization above depicts fires that burned between January 1 and October 31, 2012, as detected by the MODIS instruments. Yellow and orange indicates fires that were more intense and had a larger area of active burning. Most of these intense fires occurred in the western United States, where lightning and human activity often sparks blazes that firefighters cannot contain. Many of the lower intensity fires shown in red were prescribed fires, lit for either agricultural or ecosystem management purposes.