Big wildfires continue in Arizona, Georgia and New Mexico
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Pastor Dale Morgan
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May 23, 2011, 1:00:50 PM5/23/11
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Perilous
Times and Climate Change
Big wildfires continue in Arizona, Georgia and New Mexico
Posted on May 23, 2011 by Bob Berwyn
Dry and hot conditions persist in the south-central states and the
Southeast
By Summit Voice
SUMMIT COUNTY — The Horseshoe 2 Fire continues to burn between
Portal, Arizona and Rodeo, New Mexico, but fire crews have
achieved 25 percent containment, according to the latest update
from the National Interagency Fire Center.
The human-started wildfire has burned across 37,500 acres since
May 8. Fire officials are still investigating the cause. Current
firefighting efforts are focused on burnouts along roads in the
area to secure the community of Paradise. Fire behavior is
moderate, as the flames make small runs in dry forest, brush and
grasses.
Though fire crews have made some progress, there is still high
potential for the fire to grow in extremely difficult and rugged
terrain, temperatures in upper 70s and relative humidities in the
low teens.
The fire is being monitored with some of the latest web-based
geo-mapping tools, including Google Earth, which enables users to
see the area where the fire is burning from the ground level up,
in 3-D perspective. Go to the Inciweb page on the Horseshoe Fire
to find all the links.
Fire-adapted longleaf pines withstand the flames as fire creeps
through the understory at Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge in
Georgia. PHOTO COURTESY INCIWEB.ORG. Click on the image to see
more photos from the fire.
The largest active wildfire in the country is the 147,000 acre
Honey Prairie Fire burning in the Okefenokee National Wildlife
Refuge in Georgia. The fire is 70 percent contained, but active
behavior is still being observed in the northwest corner of the
fire near Stephen C. Foster State Park, with 287 firefighters
working on the blaze.
Growth potential for the fire is still high, with temperatures
ranging in the upper 90s and relative humidity below 20 percent.
The hot weather is expected to continue for the next few days,
though there is a chance humidity will climb a little bit. No rain
is in the forecast until at least late next week.
The Miller Fire, burning 25 miles north of Silver City, New
Mexico, has spread across about 80,000 acres and is about 47
percent contained, with 471 firefighters on-scene working to
contain the fire to the south side of the Gila River’s West Fork.