
Photos: Destructive wildfire threatens Grand Canyon's North Rim
The big picture: The Dragon Bravo Fire that destroyed the Grand Canyon Lodge and prompted parts of the park to close had grown to an estimated 8,570 acres and the White Sage Fire to nearly 52,000 acres by Tuesday evening.

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Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Yahoo
Grand Canyon Dragon wildfire burns down historic lodge and triggers toxic gas leak
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. A wildfire has ignited the North Rim of the Grand Canyon, burning down the Grand Canyon Lodge and other historic cabins. Firefighters were managing the Dragon Bravo Fire, started by a lightning strike, when an uncommonly strong gust of wind pushed the fire beyond multiple containment features on Friday (July 11), according to InciWeb, the U.S. government's incident information management system website. The fire then exhibited "extreme and volatile" behavior on Saturday (July 12), expanding by 500 acres (0.8 square miles) according to a statement released by the National Park Service (NPS). Conditions in the region are hot, dry and windy, making it more challenging for firefighters. A second wildfire, named the White Sage Fire, is burning around 35 miles (56 kilometers) north of the Dragon Bravo Fire in Kaibab National Forest. "Preliminary assessments indicate that between 50 to 80 structures have been lost, including NPS administrative buildings and visitor facilities," NPS representatives wrote in the statement. "No injuries or loss of life have been reported, and all staff and residents were successfully evacuated prior to the fire's escalation." Related: 'We are creating the fire equivalent of an ice age': Humans have plunged Earth into the 'Pyrocene' Most wildfires are started by humans, either accidentally or on purpose, but lightning is a common natural cause, responsible for around 10% of global forest fires. Lightning can be as hot as 54,000 degrees Fahrenheit (30,000 degrees Celsius) — five times hotter than the surface of the sun — and pack as much as 5 gigajoules of energy. These sparks of electricity are more than capable of igniting dry vegetation and can set multiple trees alight in an instant. The Dragon Bravo Fire began on July 4 and was initially managed as part of a confine and contain strategy. However, the fire has been growing at night, when visibility is reduced and firefighters can't use aerial resources to drop fire retardant and water on the fire, according to InciWeb. The fires also damaged a nearby water treatment facility, which released toxic chlorine gas. The gas leak meant firefighters had to evacuate from critical zones near the fire, according to the NPS statement. RELATED STORIES —Giant wildfires can create their own weather. Here's how. —Stark 'drought' maps reveal just why wildfires have blazed through Los Angeles —Plant leaves spark with electricity during thunderstorms — and that could be altering our air quality in unpredictable ways The Dragon Bravo Fire has currently burned around 5,000 acres (7.8 sq/m) of land, while the larger White Sage Fire currently covers around 50,000 acres (78 sq/m), according to the wildfire live tracking non-profit Watch Duty. Both were active at the time of writing, with strong winds, hot temperatures and low humidity driving them, NPS representatives wrote. "With continued active fire behavior and ongoing risks to personnel and infrastructure, the North Rim will remain closed to all visitor access for the remainder of the 2025 season," NPS representatives wrote.


USA Today
2 days ago
- USA Today
The Grand Canyon fire exploded in size, catching officials off guard. Why?
When a lightning strike ignited a wildfire on the Grand Canyon's North Rim, fire officials allowed it to burn for several days as they set up containment lines and urged the public that it was not a threat. But then a dangerous shift in the weather occurred, turning the seemingly low-risk fire into a fast-moving blaze that jumped containment lines and torched dozens of buildings in the park over the weekend, including a historic lodge. What fueled the explosive growth of the Dragon Bravo Fire was a mix of gusty winds, dry air and above-normal heat – weather conditions experts described as atypical for this time of year, when monsoonal moisture typically tamps down wildfire risk across Arizona. 'It was a break in the monsoon pattern,' Robert Rickey, a science and operations officer with the National Weather Service, told The Arizona Republic, part of the USA TODAY Network. 'Rather than having daily afternoon showers, we had a period of several days without that. Instead, we had extremely dry, warm conditions.' Since its rapid expansion over the weekend, the wildfire has torched over 14 square miles of land, making it one of the largest wildfires to break out in a national park since 2021. No one has been injured as the North Rim and nearby communities were evacuated late last week because of a separate fire. Officials also shut down the North Rim – which receives only 10% of all park visitors – for the rest of the year. In recent days, members of the state's congressional delegation and Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs criticized the National Park Service's decision to initially treat the fire as a controlled burn – a practice that's regularly employed to reduce wildfire risks and promote healthy plant growth. The park service has said the wildfire was "expertly handled," blaming "historic" winds for the blaze's explosive growth and highlighting the evacuation of hundreds of residents, tourists and park employees. More: The Dragon Bravo Fire was unremarkable as it burned slowly over days — then the winds came How the weather fueled the Grand Canyon wildfire After the fire started on July 4, the National Park Service decided to manage the blaze as a controlled burn to benefit the land. But by July 10, the threat of expansion set in as a dry trough of low pressure passed over northern Arizona, pushing out monsoon moisture and bringing in drier air and gusty winds. Relative humidity dropped into the single digits. The winds shifted, blowing 20 mph from the west and northwest, fanning the flames and driving them across the North Rim. Temperatures climbed to the upper 80s and low 90s, about 10 degrees above average for this time of year. On Friday, July 11, the fire expanded by more than eight times its size. The rapid growth continued Saturday night as peak winds around 40 mph pushed the flames to buildings and a row of cabins that firefighters had sought to protect. The combination of weather conditions is unusual during the region's monsoon season, which officially runs from June 15 to Sept. 30, as heavy moisture and thunderstorms drive up humidity levels and limit the risk of wildfires. "During the monsoon season, we usually have high pressure sitting in place so we're not often dealing with strong west or northwest wind events," Rickey said. "This pattern just happened to line up in a way that really fueled the fire.' Should fire officials have attacked the blaze sooner? The "contain/confine" strategy that the National Park Service employed in the initial days of the wildfire is not uncommon, especially in national forests, said Susan Prichard, a research scientist specializing in wildfire ecology and management at the University of Washington. Prichard said such a decision is reached through extensive calculation, with authorities employing risk models and simulations to analyze the potential fire spread. If it's considered low-risk, fire managers will let a wildfire burn so it can chip away at fire fuels and limit the danger of future blazes. On the Grand Canyon's North Rim, the method worked for several days until gusty winds combined with low humidity and high temperatures to set the stage for extreme fire growth. "I feel bad for the managers here, because unfortunately the winds were not as predictable as we wish and they got an outlier event," Prichard said. She added that research supports the use of "let-it-burn" practices but said the damaging wildfire and its handling should be investigated. "Fire is a blunt tool so everything is risky," she said. "But when there's an outcome that's so far from what was expected, we need to learn from it." As fire rages on, pressure mounts over federal wildfire response The Dragon Bravo Fire has continued to grow in recent days but fire officials are hopeful that thunderstorms this week will help tamp down the flames. Officials said over 350 emergency responders were working in shifts with hand crews and bulldozers, setting up containment lines as they seek to "hold the fire to as small a perimeter as possible" and protect other buildings on the North Rim. As of Wednesday, July 16, the fire remained at 0% containment. Meanwhile, both sides of the political aisle have demanded an investigation into the National Park Service's response to the fire. Democratic Sens. Mark Kelly and Ruben Gallego in a joint letter to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum requested a probe of why the blaze was initially treated as a controlled burn. And Republican Reps. Eli Crane and Paul Gosar pledged support for an investigation into the agency's wildfire response. Their demands came after the state governor called on the federal government to look into the matter. "The destruction of the Grand Canyon Lodge was a tragedy and Arizonans deserve answers," Hobbs said. Contributing: Perry Vandell and Caitlin McGlade, Arizona Republic
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Time-lapse video of Dragon Bravo Fire shows Grand Canyon's North Rim in flames
A time-lapse video captured the wildfire burning on the Grand Canyon's North Rim, which destroyed the historic Grand Canyon Lodge and forced the shutdown of the Canyon's north side. Fire crews tried to contain the Dragon Bravo Fire, which sparked July 4 after a lightning strike. National Park Service officials initially managed the fire as a controlled burn, but hot and windy weather conditions fueled the fire and caused it to spread rapidly. Republic photographer Michael Chow captured the wildfire in a time-lapse video taken July 14 from the Canyon's South Rim. Chow set up his camera on a tripod, pointed it at the smoke, hoping it cleared at some point and and shot a photo every four seconds for 4 1/2 hours. Chow asked multiple people where exactly the fire was burning so he could point his camera in the right direction, because once he started the time-lapse, he couldn't change the orientation. Chow finished with just under 4,000 photos that were sequenced together for the time-lapse video. By July 14, the fire had scorched 5,716 acres and was still 0% contained, according to InciWeb, a federal wildfire tracking website. An estimated 70 structures were gone, park officials said. No injuries were reported. Gov. Katie Hobbs and Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., have since called for an investigation into the agency's early response to the wildfire. A National Park Service official said the fire was "expertly handled." Republic reporters Perry Vandell and Rey Covarrubias contributed to this article. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Fire in Grand Canyon: Time-lapse video shows North Rim in flames in AZ