Wildfire-generated tornado over B.C.'s Gun Lake officially confirmed by academic team - Action News
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British Columbia

Wildfire-generated tornado over B.C.'s Gun Lake officially confirmed by academic team

Researchers at Western University say they've confirmed that a fire-generated tornado occurred during wildfires nearly 200 km north of Vancouver this summer.

Western University researchers say they've confirmed fire sparked a tornado in southwest B.C. in August

Photo of a 'fire tornado' near Gun Lake, B.C.
Footage of a 'fire tornado' was captured by firefighters near the area of Gun Lake, B.C., about 200 kilometres north of Vancouver. (B.C. Wildfire Service)

Researchers at Western University say they've confirmed that a fire-generated tornado occurred in British Columbia this summer.

The phenomenon came to light after a video of the "rarely observed'' event went viral back in August.

In a blog post, researchers from the university's Northern Tornadoes Project, which aims to improve detectionofthe storms in Canada, say they began an extensive investigation after the video was posted showing an "intense vortex'' over Gun Lake in southwest B.C. during a "raging nighttime wildfire.''

The lake is nearly 200 kilometres due north of Vancouver.

WATCH|The fire tornado

Fire tornado seen over Gun Lake in B.C.

1 year ago
Duration 0:34

They say the investigation was very careful because it's the first case of a fire-generated tornado recorded by the research team at the Northern Tornadoes Project.

The post says the investigation involved the help of witnesses, and they were able to pinpoint the time and location of the fire tornado on Gun Lake's north shore around 4:45 a.m. on Aug. 18.

Researchers say terminology around the phenomenon is "still developing."

But they clarified that the Gun Lake occurrence was an "actual tornado'' rather than a short-lived, so-called "fire whirl.''

The Northern Tornadoes Project says the "pyro-tornado'' is the first documented by the project, which was established in 2017, and may be the "most thoroughly documented'' example in Canada to date.