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NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire, PMS 205

Overview

The NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire provides an extensive listing of approved terms and definitions used by the NWCG community. It contains terms commonly used by NWCG in the areas of wildland fire and incident management and is not intended to list all terms used by NWCG groups and member agencies. The NWCG has directed that all committee and subgroup product glossaries be contained within the NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire to maintain definition consistency and clarity among documents.

Comments, questions, and recommendations shall be submitted to the appropriate agency program manager assigned to the Data Standards and Terminology Board (DSTB). 

NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire, PMS 205  (Quick View)

EDG Explorer is a database platform used for managing NWCG Glossary terms.  The following table is a quick view of the terms found in EDG. More detailed information such as rules, documentation, and term relationships may be viewed in EDG Explorer.  

Note: If the NWCG Glossary of Wildland Fire is not displaying below please report it to NWCG Webmaster

Title Steward Status Definition
burn out FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

Setting fire inside a control line to consume fuel between the edge of the fire and the control line.

burn out time FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

The duration of flaming and smoldering combustion phases at a specified point within a burn or for the whole burn, expressed in convenient units of time.

burn patterns (configuration) FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

The characteristic configuration of char left by a fire. In wildland fires burn patterns are influenced by topography, wind direction, length of exposure, and type of fuel. Definitions are scale-dependent: (1) They can be used to trace a fire's origin; (2) They are influenced by severity and intensity within a stand; (3) They describe the landscape mosaic.

burn patterns (design) WFISC Wildland Fire Investigation Subcommittee Approved

Apparent and obvious design of burned material and the burning path from the area of origin.

burn severity FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

A qualitative assessment of the heat pulse directed toward the ground during a fire. Burn severity relates to soil heating, large fuel and duff consumption, consumption of the litter and organic layer beneath trees and isolated shrubs, and mortality of buried plant parts. 

Burned Area Emergency Response Team IBC Incident Business Committee Approved

BAER teams are formed to analyze post-fire conditions and to take immediate emergency stabilization action to prevent loss of life and property and critical and natural resources. It is the Agency Administrator’s responsibility to order or designate a BAER Team.

burned area rehabilitation FMB Fire Management Board Approved

The post-fire activities prescribed and implemented to rehabilitate and restore fire damaged lands.

burning WFISC Wildland Fire Investigation Subcommittee Approved

Decomposition of material by the application of heat and oxidation. Also applied to propellants and other pyrotechnic mixtures, though the proper term there is "reacting". Also often an element of the crime of arson.

burning ban FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

A declared ban on open air burning within a specified area, usually due to sustained high fire danger.

burning conditions FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

The state of the combined factors of the environment that affect fire behavior in a specified fuel type.

burning index (fire behavior) FDSC Fire Danger Subcommittee Approved

A relative number related to the contribution that fire behavior makes to the amount or effort needed to contain a fire in a specified fuel type. Doubling the burning index indicates that twice the effort will be required to contain a fire in that fuel type as was previously required, providing all other parameters are held constant. 

burning index (flame length) FDSC Fire Danger Subcommittee Approved

An estimate of the potential difficulty of fire containment as it relates to the flame length at the head of the fire.

burning index meter FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

A device used to determine the burning index for different combinations of burning index factors.

burning out IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Approved

Setting fire inside a control line to consume fuel located between the edge of the fire and the control line.

burning period FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

That part of each 24-hour period when fires spread most rapidly; typically from 10:00 AM to sundown.

burning priority rating FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

System of rating slash to indicate the treatment objective, whether or not burning is required to meet that objective, the fuel treatment necessary to achieve successful burning, and the time of year burning should occur.

burning rate WFISC Wildland Fire Investigation Subcommittee Approved

Rate at which a propellant and other combustibles burn.

burning rotation FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

The planned number of years between prescribed fires on a specified area.

burning torch ETC Equipment Technology Committee Approved

A flame generating device (e.g., a fount containing diesel oil or kerosene and a wick, or a backpack pump serving a flame-jet).

burnover RMC Risk Management Committee Approved

An event in which a fire moves through a location or overtakes personnel or equipment where there is no opportunity to utilize escape routes and safety zones, often resulting in personal injury or equipment damage.

Buying Team IBC Incident Business Committee Approved

A team that supports one or more incidents and is authorized to procure a wide range of services, supplies, and land and equipment rentals. In addition, the Buying Team Leader has the responsibility of coordinating property accountability with the Supply Unit Leader.

Buys Ballots Law FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

According to the American Meteorological Society, a law describing the relationship of the horizontal wind direction in the atmosphere to the pressure distribution; if one stands with the back to the wind, the pressure to the left is lower than to the right in the Northern Hemisphere.

cache ETC Equipment Technology Committee Approved

A pre-determined complement of tools, equipment and/or supplies stored in a designated location, available for incident use.

calculated acres FRSC Fire Reporting Subcommittee In Development

A measure of acres calculated (i.e., infrared) from a geospatial perimeter of a fire. More specifically, the number of acres within the current perimeter of a specific, individual incident, including unburned and unburnable islands.

calculation of probabilities FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

Evaluation of all factors pertinent to probable future behavior of a going fire and of the potential ability of available forces to perform fire suppression operations on a specified time schedule.

calibrated airspeed NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

Indicated airspeed of an aircraft, corrected for position and instrument error. Equal to true airspeed in standard atmosphere at sea level.

Camouflage

The disguising of sensitive sites by painting or covering them to make them blend in with their surroundings.

camp NIMSIC National Incident Management System Integration Committee Approved

A geographical site within the general incident area (separate from the Incident Base) that is equipped and staffed to provide sleeping, food, water, and sanitary services to incident personnel.

candling FBSC Fire Behavior Subcommittee Approved

The burning of the foliage of a single tree or a small group of trees, from the bottom up.

canopy FENC Fire Environment Committee Approved

The stratum containing the crowns of the tallest vegetation present (living or dead), usually above 20 feet.

capability NCSC National Coordination System Committee In Development
Carbon Dioxide RMC Risk Management Committee Approved

A colorless, odorless, nonpoisonous gas, which results from fuel combustion and is normally a part of the ambient air.

Carbon Monoxide RMC Risk Management Committee Approved

A colorless, odorless, poisonous gas produced by incomplete fuel combustion.

carcinogen RMC Risk Management Committee Approved

Any substance that can cause or contribute to the production of cancer.

cardinal altitudes NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

Odd or "even" thousand-foot (305 m) altitudes or flight levels. E.g., 5,000, 6,000, 7,000; FL 250, FL 260, and FL 270.

cardinal directions NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

North, south, east, west; used for giving directions and information from the ground or air in describing the fire (e.g., the west flank or east flank, not right flank or left flank).

cargo chute NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

A parachute designed and rigged for dropping equipment and supplies from an aircraft.

cargo compartment NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

An internal area of an aircraft specifically designed to carry baggage or cargo.

cargo drop NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

Dropping of equipment or supplies, with or without a parachute, from an aircraft in flight.

cargo hook NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

Mechanically and electrically operated hook attached to the bottom of a helicopter to which a sling load is attached.

cargo net NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

Net attached to the cargo hook of a helicopter, used to carry cargo.

cargo rack NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

Externally mounted rack for transporting supplies or cargo aboard a helicopter.

carousel hook NIAC National Interagency Aviation Committee Approved

A remote hook attached to the end of a longline. It has four or more individual hooks which can be independently released, allowing the pilot to fly cargo loads to different locations without landing.

carried wet IOSC Incident Operations Subcommittee Archived

Booster hose carried full of water during mild weather to speed discharge of water on fire without filling or priming from tank.

carrier fuels FUSC Fire Use Subcommittee Approved

The fuels that support the flaming front of the moving fire.

casual IBC Incident Business Committee Approved

A person hired and compensated under the Pay Plan for Emergency Workers.

category day SmoC Smoke Committee Approved

A numerical index related to the ability of the atmosphere to disperse smoke. Different agencies use different scales [e.g., in South Carolina, the current scale is based on ventilation factor and ranges from 1 (poor) to 5 (excellent)].

catface HTTFS Hazard Tree and Felling Subcommittee Approved

Defect on the surface of a tree resulting from a wound where healing has not re-established the normal cross-section.

ceiling FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

According to the American Meteorological Society, the height ascribed to the lowest layer of clouds or obscuring phenomena when it is reported as broken, overcast, or obscuration and not classified "thin" or "partial." The ceiling is termed unlimited when the foregoing conditions are not satisfied.

celsius FWS Fire Weather Subcommittee Approved

According to the American Meteorological Society, same as centigrade temperature scale, by convention. Centigrade temperature scale is a temperature scale with the ice point of water at 0 degrees and the boiling point at 100 degrees.

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NWCG Latest Announcements

Glossary Term for Review

Date: June 9, 2023
Contact: Data Standards and Terminology Board (DSTB)

The Data Standards and Terminology Board is requesting feedback on a glossary term. In this case, the proposal is for the addition of Business Rules. Historically we overloaded our definitions with definitions, descriptions, rules etc. We are now trying to separate the parts to make them distinct parts of a glossary term.

Please review, share with your subgroups, and provide feedback as appropriate. The comment period will close July 7, 2023.

Existing Term: Incident Complex
Incident Complex Proposed Business Rules
 –

  1. Child records must meet large fire criteria specific to incident size to be included in an incident relationship within an incident complex. Child records must be at least 100 acres in timber or 300 acres in grass brush to be added to an Incident Complex.
  2. Wildfire (WF) records that are Human Caused shall not be added to an Incident Complex.
  3. Child records may only be in one Incident Complex at a time

References:

Glossary Request Feedback

Guidance for Incident Finance Electronic File Management, Memo 23-08

Date: May 31, 2023
Contact: Incident Business Committee (IBC)

The NWCG Incident Business Committee (IBC) realized the file structure for COST and COMP unit folders needed additional refinement to the current standards. The same task group as previous was convened to address these types of files. The buying team group revised electronic document standards for buying team files now being housed on FireNet. The documents, have been approved by the IBC and are provided as national standards for incident finance electronic files and folders.

References:

Memo 23-08

Finance Working Files and Folder Matrix for FireNet

Finance Electronic Files Management Guidance

Structure for Finance Working Files Provided in FireNet

Buying Team Electronic Document Standard Operating Procedures

Structure for Final Finance eDoc Box Provided in FireNet

NWCG Celebrates National Emergency Medical Services Week

Date: May 24, 2023
Contact: Emergency Medical Committee (EMC)

This week, NWCG celebrates National Emergency Medical Services Week.  
The Emergency Medical Committee is proud to be affiliated with all the agencies and organizations who collaborate to provide and support EMS across our national wildfire response systems.  

Thank you to all the EMS individuals for the important work and mission you do every day!

Learn about the NWCG Emergency Medical Committee

References:

NWCG Standards for Water Scooping Operations, PMS 518

Date: May 22, 2023
Contact: Interagency Water Scooper Subcommittee (IWSS)

The 2023 update of NWCG Standards for Water Scooping Operations, PMS 518, establishes the standards for dispatching, utilizing, and coordinating water scooping aircraft on interagency wildland fires. These standards should be used in conjunction with the NWCG Standards for Aerial Supervision (SAS), PMS 505, and any local, state, or geographic/regional water scooping plans.

References: