Fact Check

Satellite photo shows extent of bushfires in Australia? Fact Check

An image spreading on social media claims to show a satellite photo of Australia during the bushfires that have rapidly spread across the country in 2019 and 2020.

MISSING CONTEXT

To be clear, this image appears on social media in some instances under an accurate description, and in other instances it is shown with a misleading description.

The misleading descriptions claim the image is a satellite photo, or a photo taken from the International Space Station. This isn’t true, since the image isn’t a photo at all. It is a 3D visualisation that accumulates all of the areas in Australia that have been on fire over a period of a month (5th December 2019 – 5th January 2020) and inputs them onto a 3D graphic of Australia.

It doesn’t show a single moment in time, since the areas on the map were not necessarily on fire at the same time.


Sponsored Content. Continued below...




It is important to get these facts correct, but despite this, the 3D visualisation still shows the devastatingly large extent of the bushfires to have inflicted themselves on Australia, which cannot be downplayed.

According to the author of the graphic, Anthony Hearsey, the information used to compile the graphic was obtained from NASA’s FIRMS (Fire Information for Resource Management System.) He notes on Facebook

This is a 3D visualisation of the fires in Australia. NOT A PHOTO. Think of this as prettier looking graph.
This is made from data from NASA’s FIRMS (Satellite data regarding fires) between 05/12/19 – 05/01/20.
These are all the areas which have been affected by bushfires.
Scale is a little exaggerated due to the render’s glow, but generally true to the info from the NASA website. Also note that NOT all the areas are still burning, and this is a compilation.

Given that the information in the visualisation appears to be generally accurate, yet some social media users inaccurately label the visualisation as a photo, we rank it ‘missing context’.

Thanks for reading, we hope this article helped, but before you leave us for greener pastures, please help us out.


We're hoping to be totally ad-free by 2025 - after all, no one likes online adverts, and all they do is get in the way and slow everything down. But of course we still have fees and costs to pay, so please, please consider becoming a Facebook supporter! It costs only 0.99p (~$1.30) a month (you can stop at any time) and ensures we can still keep posting Cybersecurity themed content to help keep our communities safe and scam-free. You can subscribe here


Remember, we're active on social media - so follow us on Facebook, Bluesky, Instagram and X


Share
Published by
Craig Haley