Solastalgia: Documenting disaster through interactive documentaryMain MenuHomeFire SeriesWater Series(Meta)reflectionsNavigation:A snapshot of the content of this project that can be used to navigate in a non-linear fashionBibliographyAbout the authorsThanksmonique tschofen TMUa6f08a24bf34f58cae1b84d81d2df391582b801fJolene Armstrong8d77d69c06e0564ab85f8d6d9cb65116c99ff272 Monique Tschofen and Jolene Armstrong
Swan Lake Fire, Alaska
12025-02-13T18:34:45+00:00Ann Ludbrookcf053db6c70bf302215612c46fa602f0fb467915151plain2025-02-13T18:34:45+00:00Swan Lake Fire, AlaskaJuly 2024Monique TschofenKenai Peninsula, AlaskaAnn Ludbrookcf053db6c70bf302215612c46fa602f0fb467915
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12025-02-13T18:34:45+00:00Swan Lake Fire, Alaska3google_maps2025-05-10T17:51:45+00:0060.535900, -150.561976The Swan Lake Fire in Alaska burned June through October of 2019, the year my sister moved to Alaska. The fire, caused by lightening, burned through 170,000 acres of black Spruce forest. Driving through the area five years later was horrifying. Some grasses by the side of the road have greened the area but the landscape is barren as far as the eye can see for what feels like forever. Non-scientific impressions: all that standing dead wood remains a fire hazard.