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While pockets of stability appear, chaos is integral in every facet of the natural and human environment, be it the weather (Lorenz, 1993; Palmer, 1993), ecology (Worster, 1994; Hastings et al, 1993; Rai and Schaffer, 2001) or human system (Loye and Eisler, 1987). The difficulty in predicting natural forces, including fire, is influenced by this inherent chaos. Although certain elements increase the probability of forest fires (drought conditions, densely forested areas, hot weather, and so on), predicting with exactitude where and when fires will appear is as uncertain as guessing where lightning will strike or human carelessness will next occur. People continue to be surprised by nature as it acts in ways that defy weather models or resist prediction. But in many ways, humans themselves are as unpredictable as the forces of nature, making the human influence on forest fires equally difficult to calculate. When citizens interact with each other the potential for chaotic behavior increases. The intersection of human and ecological chaos is exemplified during natural disasters. While predictive modeling may be able to forecast the outcome in a controlled environment, the impact on the ground depends upon a multitude of unpredictable factors occurring at the interface of the environment and people (daily conditions, preparedness, time of day, and so on). During disasters such as forest fires there are quantifiable ‘hard’ impacts—lost resources, burnt homes and associated financial costs—but there are also qualitative ‘soft’ impacts, psychological, social and familial amongst others, that can have a profound effect on the collective consciousness as well as long term livelihoods of those impacted. The ‘soft’ impacts are chaotic precisely because of their embedded complexity within the human psyche and the factors that influence our decision-making processes.