Wind-stoked wildfire in Colorado is largest in state history
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[October 16, 2020]
By Keith Coffman
DENVER (Reuters) - Stoked by high winds, a
wildfire burning for two months in northern Colorado exploded in size
this week to surpass 167,000 acres, making it the largest blaze in state
history, officials said on Thursday.
The so-called Cameron Peak Fire in the Arapaho and Roosevelt National
Forests has forced the evacuations of several mountain communities and
campgrounds and has destroyed an unknown number of homes and other
buildings, according to an interagency fire-tracking website.
The blaze erupted in mid-August and has raged through large stands of
desiccated lodgepole pine trees killed by beetle infestation in
mountainous terrain and through tinder-dry grasslands at lower
elevations, fire managers said.
“High winds combined with critically dry fuels have been driving fire
growth,” according to the InciWeb site.
No injuries or deaths have been reported, and the cause of the fire,
which is 56% contained, is under investigation.
Winds gusting to more 70 miles per hour on Wednesday spread flames
across 20,000 acres (8,100 hectares) in a single day. The city of Fort
Collins, east of the blaze, has been enveloped in smoke from the fire.
Cooler weather and lighter winds helped slow the fire's growth on
Thursday, but crews were bracing for a return of critical weather
conditions on Friday, with higher winds and lower humidity expected,
authorities said.
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Smoke is seen as a fire burns at night at Estes Park in Colorado,
U.S., in this still frame taken from social media video dated
October 14, 2020. ALAN SHADDUCK "WWW.IMAGESOFESTESPARK.COM" /via
REUTERS
The entire state of Colorado has been gripped by some level of
drought, according to figures released on Thursday by the U.S.
Drought Monitor.
The Cameron Peak Fire is, however, dwarfed by several monster-sized
conflagrations that have raged in California this year, including
the largest in that state's history, the August Complex, which has
scorched well over 1 million acres since mid-August.
The previous largest wildfire in Colorado, the Pine Gulch Fire,
blackened 139,000 acres (56,000 hectares) this summer.
(Reporting by Keith Coffman in Denver; Editing by Steve Gorman and
Edwina Gibbs)
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