Kataja Wildfire, Perry, Mississippi
5 Miles SW from New Augusta, MS
AegisWatch Crisis Intelligence Summary
The Kataja Wildfire in Perry, Mississippi presents a significant risk to both life and property due to its rapid spread and proximity to residential areas.
Trajectory: Current weather conditions and terrain suggest that the wildfire may continue to expand, driven by strong winds and dry vegetation, necessitating immediate firefighting efforts and monitoring.
Infrastructure Impact: The wildfire poses a threat to nearby infrastructure including homes, power lines, and transportation routes, with potential for widespread evacuation orders.
Event Intelligence Data
- Event
- Kataja Wildfire, Perry, Mississippi
- Hazard Type
- Wildfire
- Location
- Perry County, Mississippi, United States
- Coordinates
- 31.124167, -89.078600
- Risk Score
- 80/100
- Severity
- 3/5
- Status
- active
- Trajectory Prediction
- Current weather conditions and terrain suggest that the wildfire may continue to expand, driven by strong winds and dry vegetation, necessitating immediate firefighting efforts and monitoring.
- Infrastructure Impact
- The wildfire poses a threat to nearby infrastructure including homes, power lines, and transportation routes, with potential for widespread evacuation orders.
- Source
- NASA EONET
- Detected
- 2026-02-25T19:37:00.000Z
- Last Updated
- 2026-02-25T19:37:00.000Z
- Intelligence Provider
- AegisWatch Crisis Intelligence Platform
Geospatial Hazard Visualization
Visual Field IntelGround Truth
No field intel transmitted for this sector yet.
Ground observation sync in progress...
Tactical Warning
This data is provided for situational awareness ONLY.DO NOT USE FOR EMERGENCY EVACUATION OR TACTICAL DECISIONS.
Tactical Escalation Risk
Aegis Intelligence Tool
The atmospheric conditions and proximity to critical transmission lines suggest a 45% increase in operational risk within the next 24 hours.
Intelligence Briefing Locked
Upgrade to PRO to access trajectory modeling and critical infrastructure predictions.
