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Smoke From Canadian Forest Fires Casts Haze Over Chicago Area

CHICAGO (STMW) -- Those clouds marring your morning commute weren't actually clouds — they're actually a thin layer of smoke blowing in from large forest fires in Canada.

Winds from the northwest have carried smoke from forest fires in the Saskatchewan province in Canada down to the Chicago area, resulting in a layer of smoke about 9,000 feet above ground level, according to Andrew Krein, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Romeoville.

"This is not uncommon. The wind flow happens to be from the exact right direction," Krein said.

"It kind of looks like a very thin cirrus layer that normally would be much higher, only in this case it's lower in the atmosphere," he added.

The effect from the smoke is the same as after a volcanic eruption, when the ash carries from thousands of miles, Krein said.

And the bright red sun? That's the effect of diffraction. The smoke is causing certain wavelengths of light to be scattered and others to be passed through, which results in the reddish-looking sun.

Krein said residents of southern Wisconsin, northern Illinois and northwest Indiana are all seeing the same smoky skies.

"We've gotten calls from all over the area. You'll see the same kind of thing out in Rockford as you will in the Chicago area," Krein said.

The smoke should have very little effect on flights in the Chicago area, Krein said. Few cancellations and delays have been reported at O'Hare and Midway, according to the city's Department of Aviation.

(Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2015. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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