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Days of cooler weather have helped hundreds of firefighters battling the nearly 96,000-acre Cram Fire, where containment has reached 77% and more evacuation levels were lowered or lifted Wednesday.
Authorities have announced significant changes to evacuation zones as efforts to contain the Cram Fire continue.
The fire in Oregon ballooned to more than 95,000 acres amid shifting winds and dry air, but improved weather this weekend was ...
At least 850 personnel are fighting the Burdoin Fire and some national forest lands in the Columbia River Gorge are now closed.
Burdoin Fire has destroyed 14 homes, closed Highway 14 and put the community of Lyle on a level 3 "go now" evacuation order.
In more positive news, final updates have been issued for the Cram Fire that nearly became ... land remains at 30% containment, with limited growth since July 21. Per an update from CTWS Fire ...
The Cram Fire, which began on July 13, has burned 95,736 acres and is 87% contained. Fire officials say the Cram Fire has destroyed two homes. 13 other structures have also been destroyed.
If 100,000 acres or more are burned, the Cram fire, which was near 96,000 acres as of Thursday afternoon, could be classified as a “megafire.” Click here to get the latest.
Cram Fire in central Oregon becomes largest fire in 2025 Nearly 900 personnel have been deployed, and officials say it's 73% contained. The fire has burned more than 95,000 acres so far. Credit: AP ...
A megafire is generally defined as a fire that burns at least 100,000 acres, said Craig Clements, a climate scientist and director of the Wildfire Interdisciplinary Research Center at San Jose ...
Personnel have continued to mitigate the threat of the Cram Fire in Wasco and Jefferson counties, which threatened to become Oregon's first megafire of the season. The fire is at 73% containment.
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