Wyoming wildfire forces evacuations,
closes highway south of Jackson
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[September 24, 2018]
By Laura Zuckerman
PINEDALE, Wyo. (Reuters) - A wind-blown wildfire that has forced the
evacuation of hundreds of homes south of the resort town of Jackson,
Wyoming, prompted officials on Sunday to close 50 miles of a key highway
traveled by tourists to reach Grand Teton and Yellowstone national
parks.
The Roosevelt fire has scorched nearly 40,000 acres of drought-parched
landscape and destroyed at least four structures, including two
dwellings, since erupting Sept. 15 in the Bridger-Teton National Forest
about 30 miles south of Jackson.
Hundreds of firefighters battled across steep, forested terrain and
bone-dry sagebrush flats to push back flames driven by winds gusting to
50 miles per hour. By Sunday, crews had managed to carve containment
lines around nearly a quarter of the fire's perimeter.
But worsening conditions later prompted the Sublette County sheriff to
expand evacuations in rural subdivisions in and around the town of
Bondurant, bringing the number of homes affected to about 300. Scores of
additional residences were placed on standby for evacuation at a moments
notice, according to sheriff's Sergeant Travis Bingham.
He said the blaze was stoked by thick vegetation left desiccated by
prolonged drought.
“We haven’t had moisture for weeks, and the winds today were going from
35 to 50 miles per hour. The fire picked it up and ran with it,” he said
Sunday.
The 50-mile segment of U.S. Highway 189/191 closed by state
transportation officials runs from just northwest of the oil-and-gas
town of Pinedale to the southern outskirts of Jackson.
The road is the main traffic route to Grand Teton and Yellowstone for
travelers approaching the two premier national parks from points south,
though neither Jackson nor the parks were expected to be threatened by
the blaze.
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Smoke rises from a wildfire as seen from Bondurant, Wyoming, United
States in this September 18, 2018 photo by Bryce Harvey. Bryce
Harvey/Social Media/via REUTERS
The cause of the Roosevelt fire was under investigation. It comes at
the height of the region's hunting season and is one of three that
have erupted since mid-September in the Bridger-Teton Forest in
western Wyoming.
Wildfires have charred more than 7 million acres across the Western
United States so far this year.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman in Pinedale, Wyo; Editing by Steve
Gorman and Michael Perry)
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