US: Wildfires threatens the house, landing in 10 western countries – News2IN
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US: Wildfires threatens the house, landing in 10 western countries

US: Wildfires threatens the house, landing in 10 western countries
Written by news2in

LOS ANGELES: Wildfires who burned the house and forced thousands to be evacuated burning in 10 dry western states on Tuesday, and the largest, in Oregon, threatened the California power supply.
Nearly 60 forest fires tore dry wood and brushing from Alaska to Wyoming, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.
Arizona, Idaho and Montana contributed more than half of large active fires.
The fire erupted when the West was in the grip of a very high temperature in just a few weeks.
A climate-fueled meginsif also contributes to conditions that make fires even more dangerous, scientists said.
National weather services say hot waves seem to have peaked in many regions, and excessive heat warnings are mostly expected to end on Tuesday.
However, they continued until Tuesday night in several California deserts, and many areas were still expected to see high in the 80s and 90s.
In northern California, a pair of combinations of lightning light which is nicknamed the Beckwourth complex is less than 25% surrounded after the days of struggling against fire by wind, low weather and low humidity that resembles the moisture of vegetation.
Evacuation orders are available for more than 3,000 residents of the northern remote and neighbors Nevada.
There are reports of burning homes, but damage is still calculated.
Blaze has consumed 140 square miles (362 square kilometers) of land, including in Plumas National Forest.
The fire that began on Sunday at Sierra Nevada South Yosemite National Park exploded more than 14 square miles (36 square kilometers) and only 10% contained.
A highway that leads to the south entrance of Yosemite remains open.
The biggest fire in the United States is located on the California border in Southwest Oregon.
Fire Bootleg _ which doubled and doubled again during the weekend _ threatening around 2,000 houses, the state fire extinguisher said.
It has burned at least seven houses and more than 40 other buildings.
During the weekend, the Kechaty County Sheriff’s office warned that it would quote or even arrest the person who ignored the command to “ gone now ‘in certain areas immediately threatened by fire.
The McCarley team told KPTV-TV that he and his family were ordered to escape from their home on Friday with fire only a few minutes behind them.
“They told us to come out because if not, you were dead,” he said.
He described the fire as “ like Firenado, `with fire jumping dozens of feet into the air and jumping up and down, catching trees“ and then only explosions, booming, boom, booming, Fremont-Winema National Forest boom, near the city of Klamath Klamath County in Sprague.
It has damaged an area of ​​around 240 square miles (621 square kilometers), or almost twice the size of Portland.
The firefighters did not manage to surround one of them because they struggled to build a detention line.
The fire drastically disrupted the services on three transmission channels providing up to 5,500 megawatts of electricity to California, and the California Grid operator the country had repeatedly asked for conservation of voluntary power during curfew.
Elsewhere, forest fire began during a thunderstorm in Southeast Washington grow to 86 square miles (223 square kilometers).
That’s 20% containing Monday.
Another fire in Winthrop closes beautiful North Cascades highways, the northernmost route through the range of cascade.
The road provides access to the North Cascades National Park and Ross Lake National Recreation Area.
In Idaho, Governor Brad slightly mobilized the National Garda to help fight the fire twins – triggering the fire together for almost 24 square miles (62 square kilometers) dry wood in a remote and remote area.
Heat waves in July followed the unusual June siege of the roast temperature in the west, and came in the midst of deteriorating drought conditions throughout the region.
Scientists say climate change caused by humans and decades of firefighters that increase fuel expenses have worsened the condition of the fire throughout the region.

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