Las Vegas Review-Journal

Light winds help contain wildfire in north of state

Blaze half contained; no threats to populace

- By Scott Sonner The Associated Press

RENO — Lighter winds brought some relief Wednesday to crews working to contain a wildfire in Northern Nevada so big it can be seen from space.

The flames were nearly halfway contained and no populated areas were threatened, the National Interagenc­y Fire Center said.

Investigat­ors say they suspect Fourth of July campers started the blaze that has burned nearly 700 square miles in a remote area about 20 miles south of the Idaho border.

But the specific cause of the fire first reported on July 5 was still being investigat­ed.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion has ordered temporary flight restrictio­ns above the fire, which is visible from space, NASA said. No injuries or damaged buildings have been reported.

More than 600 firefighte­rs were battling dry conditions and rough terrain in the high-desert area where temperatur­es were forecast to approach triple digits. But gusty winds that hampered their efforts the past three days were forecast keep subsiding through the end of the week.

The fire was burning sagebrush and invasive cheatgrass, but firefighte­rs were making “tremendous progress increasing the containmen­t percentage,” the Fire Center said.

Crews have built a containmen­t line and stopped the fire from moving across the South Fork of the Owyhee River about 16 miles southwest of the Duck Valley tribal reservatio­n near the Idaho line.

The area is dotted with stretches of key habitat for the imperiled sage grouse.

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