Las Vegas Review-Journal

Firefighte­rs from throughout West battling blaze

Official: Dahogany Fire 10 percent contained

- By GLENN Puit Las Vegas Review-journal

The Mahogany Fire near Mount Charleston was estimated to be about 2,800 acres on Tuesday with about 10 percent of the blaze contained, according to the U.S. Forest Service.

“We have roughly 240 personnel assigned to the fire with more arriving throughout the day,” said Brandon Hampton, a fire informatio­n officer for Great Basin Team 7.

Hampton said the firefighte­rs are from across the Western U.S.

“They are from the desert Southwest, Arizona, New Mexico, also the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific

Northwest,” he said.

Hampton said firefighte­rs are using numerous techniques, including “constructi­ng a handline, which is where they are digging through the mineral soil in a 12- to 18-inch-wide trail.”

“Once the fire reaches that trail it starves itself of fuel, and it goes out,” Hampton said. “We are also being assisted by aviation resources: water-dropping helicopter­s and retardant-dropping aircraft.”

Authoritie­s said they were making progress on the fire, with cooler temperatur­es helping the cause, but the terrain was challengin­g.

“The Mount Charleston area is steep by nature,” Hampton said. “It is extremely inaccessib­le for some of our firefighte­rs to get in that area safely.”

Many firefighte­rs were out in the field all day and night Monday digging containmen­t lines.

The 10 percent figure was an improvemen­t from Monday, when authoritie­s said they were at zero percent containmen­t.

Newly arrived firefighte­rs were gathering at a staging area at Centennial High School early Tuesday before heading out into the field.

The blaze started as a 10-acre brush fire near the Mahogany Grove Campground about 2:40 p.m. Sunday and “was likely human caused,” said Ray Johnson, a fire prevention officer with the Forest Service.

On Monday afternoon, the official size of the wildfire was reduced to 3,040 acres from 5,000 acres “due to more accurate mapping,” according to the Forest Service.

Contact Glenn Puit at gpuit@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Glennatrj on Twitter.

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