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Mesa Verde National ParkFirefighters from across the country helped fight the Bircher Fire in 2000
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Mesa Verde National Park
Fire Management

For approximately one hundred years, fire suppression in the southwest has increased fuel loadings and density of vegetation in many areas. The likelihood of large destructive wildfires in Mesa Verde National Park is increasing due to increased fuel loadings and recent drought conditions, posing threats to the park’s infrastructure, cultural and natural resources, and human safety. Because of the increased threat of large wildfires, Mesa Verde has implemented several strategies to help protect the park’s resources and human life. In addition to basic suppression, the park has initiated programs for prescribed fire and hazard fuel reduction. Although the threat of fire still exists, Mesa Verde National Park is becoming increasingly prepared to defend itself because of these fire protection and prevention programs.

(To get the Free Adobe Reader, which is required to read the following pdf filesclick here.)

 
Image of fire document

Archeology and Fire (8.5" x 14"- pdf, 244 kb) describes how past wildfires have affected archeology and the cultural resources within the park.

Prescribed Fire and Hazardous Fuels Reduction at Mesa Verde
(8.5" x 11" - pdf, 275 kb)

Mesa Verde Fire History (8.5" x 11" - pdf, 194 kb) provides an overview of some of the large wildfires in Mesa Verde's past.

 

 
Fire history map.

Mesa Verde National Park Fire History map:

Fire History, 1933 - 2007 (low res pdf, 361 kb)
Fire History, 1933 - 2007 (high res pdf, 1,575 kb)

 

Cliff Palace in the snow  

Did You Know?
Cliff Palace is the largest cliff dwelling at Mesa Verde National Park. It has 150 rooms, plus an additional 75 open areas. Twenty-one of the rooms are kivas, and 25 to 30 rooms have residential features. The number of Ancestral Puebloans living in Cliff Palace at any one time was 100 to 120.

Last Updated: March 19, 2009 at 14:39 EST