Triple-digit heat hampers fight against western US wildfires
RENO, Nev. — Triple-digit heat across much of the U.S. West hampered crews battling scores of wildfires Thursday, including one threatening dozens of structures in Montana and another that temporarily shut down the main travel route to the Burning Man counterculture festival in the Nevada desert.
Thousands of people have been driven from their homes amid hot weather in Oregon, Montana and California, where a blaze burned 10 homes and threatened 500 more near a hard-hit community and another kept a popular road to Yosemite National Park closed.
A wind-driven wildfire ripped through parched forest and grasslands in southeastern Montana on Thursday, threatening 35 homes and structures and forcing the evacuation of an undetermined number of residents scattered in the area.
The fire that started in Custer National Forest about 35 miles (56 kilometres) northwest of Broadus on Wednesday burned at least 47 square miles (121 square kilometres) in a single day. Another fire about 60 miles (96 kilometres) south of the Canadian border destroyed five cabins and five other structures and threatened 130 more buildings Thursday in the mountains south of Havre.


