Since forests are for the most part non-existent in Greenland as of right now, the wildfires have been burning through various grasses, shrubs, willows, etc. Despite this being the case, the largest of the current wildfires has reportedly burned through at least around 3,000 acres and managed to send smoke at least a mile up into the sky — resulting in hiking and hunting closures in the area.
Most of the current wildfires are burning (somewhat) near the town of Kangerlussuaq — which functions as a base camp of sorts for researchers working in the area during the summer (providing access to the ice sheet, amongst other things).
Image by Pierre Markuse (some rights reserved)
Climate Central provides more: “Data for Greenland fires is hard to come by, but there is some context for fires in other parts of the northern tier of the world. The boreal forest sprawls across Canada, Russia, Alaska, and northern Europe, and provides a longer-term record for researchers to dig into. That record shows that the boreal forest is burning at a rate unprecedented in the past 10,000 years.
“Stef Lhermitte, a remote sensing expert at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, said there is evidence of fires burning in Greenland over the past 17 years of MODIS satellite records kept by NASA.”
With that in mind, this tweet of his is informative: