The cast of Setting Fires for Science - 1958 includes: Geoffrey Hogwood as Narrator
Pyromania.
This is a crime called arson.
Pyromania is a rare impulse control disorder characterized by an obsession with setting fires to relieve tension or for gratification. Individuals with pyromania often feel a sense of pleasure, relief, or fascination when setting fires and may feel an intense urge to do so. It is not motivated by monetary gain, political ideology, revenge, anger, or delusions.
Arson is not one of the most common causes of fires in the home and workplace. More common causes include cooking accidents, electrical malfunctions, heating equipment issues, and smoking-related incidents. Arson is a deliberate act of setting a fire with the intent to cause damage, and while it can occur, it is not as common as these other accidental causes.
Forest fires can happen anywhere
NO.
Yes, power lines sparking can be a common cause of electrical fires.
Fire devils or firewhirls are most common in areas that get large, intense brush fires and forest fires.
The Nazis vandalized Jewish homes and businesses, breaking the windows, and setting fires.
The two most common sources of home fires are small heaters and fires that start in the kitchen during cooking. Another common cause is faulty electrical wiring. The fires that cause the most deaths start from carlessness with cigarettes.
A lightning strike is a common cause of wild fires, which can happen anywhere.