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Fire caused by lightning on the Gila National Forest. [14] Fisher Socorro: 8,044 July 4 July 21 Fire caused by lightning on the Cibola National Forest and managed for ecological benefit. [15] [16] [17] Paramount Sierra: 1,328 July 12 August 19 Fire caused by lightning on the Gila National Forest. [18] Tanques Rio Arriba: 6,500 July 18 August 21
By early Monday afternoon, the fire had consumed 18 acres and was growing, according to the New Mexico Forestry Division, citing updates from the Mescalero Apache Fire Rescue department that was ...
A sunset seen through a wall of wildfire smoke from the Amtrak train station in Las Vegas, N.M., on Saturday, May 7, 2022. The Castañeda Hotel, right, hosted meals for residents and firefighters ...
By Monday the South Fork Fire had burned around 17,551 acres and was 37% contained, the New Mexico Forestry Division said. The Salt Fire has burned about 7,816 acres and was 7% contained.
A heavy gauge metal barrier protects Forest Road 263 and the canyon west of Montezuma, New Mexico, added as a method of flood and debris control following the fire. Workers from the city of Las Vegas, New Mexico dumping stone and earth to form a breaker to reinforce a bridge from potentially hazardous post-fire flooding of the Gallinas creek.
The South Fork Fire was a wildfire in New Mexico that burned 17,569 acres (7,110 ha) before being declared 99% contained as of July 15, 2024. [4] The fire began on June 17 near the town of Ruidoso and grew very rapidly, surpassing 15,000 acres burned by the following day and destroying at least 1400 houses and structures. Investigators have ...
Sep. 27—New Mexicans might have a smoke filled weekend — smoke that's coming from fires set by the U.S. Forest Service. Fire managers from the Santa Fe National Forest began the North Joaquin ...
The McBride Fire was a destructive wildfire that burned in the Lincoln National Forest near the community of Ruidoso in Lincoln County, New Mexico, in the United States as part of the 2022 New Mexico wildfire season. The fire was named after McBride Road, near where it ignited on April 12, 2022.