Fourth person reported drowned in New Mexico wildfire area floods
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[August 08, 2022]
By Andrew Hay
TAOS, N.M. (Reuters) - A man drowned on
Sunday in northern New Mexico when a flash flood swept through a burn
area left by the state’s largest recorded wildfire, according to a local
rancher, marking the fourth such death reported in just over two weeks. |
View of a forest burned by the Hermits Peak Calf Canyon fire near
Holman, New Mexico, U.S., May 24, 2022. Picture taken May 24, 2022.
REUTERS/Andrew Hay/File Photo |
A
torrent of water carried the man's pickup truck off highway 434
at about 2 p.m. some nine miles northeast of the town of Mora,
according to Kenny Zamora, who said the man's vehicle was found
on his ranch.
"The water was so strong it pushed him into the arroyo," said
Zamora, using the term for an usually dry riverbed that runs
during heavy rain.
New Mexico State Police did not immediately respond to a request
for comment.
The reported incident follows the deaths of three people after
flash flooding on July 21 in part of the burn area near the town
of Las Vegas, New Mexico.
Zamora said it was the fifth flash flood to hit his ranch.
Intense heat from the so-called Hermit's Peak Calf Canyon
wildfire left soil unable to absorb water, turning hillsides
into life-threatening debris flows during summer monsoon rains.
The wildfire and subsequent flooding has left devastation up a
45-mile swathe of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains northeast of
Santa Fe where an area the size of Los Angeles has burned.
Over 430 homes have been destroyed since the climate-driven
blaze started in April when two federal prescribed fires went
out of control.
(Reporting By Andrew Hay; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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