Assessment Technology, Inc Social Studies Content Writer General CORT WAREHOUSE/DRIVER Construction Komatsu Equipment Co Mechanic General CORT Warehouse Supervisor Health Care Rio Salado College PA's/Online Instructors Tucson RegionUpdate: Fires on Mount Graham expected to mergeArizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 07.04.2004
The Nuttall and Gibson Fires atop Mount Graham have spread to 9,344 acres and are expected
to eventually merge, the incident's commander said Sunday.
Flames are still about three-quarters of a mile from the telescope complex atop Mount Graham
— the same distance officials reported Saturday night.
"An immediate threat is there right now," incident commander Dan Oltrogge said in a noon
telephone interview. "Whether or not we'll be successful is still definitely in
question."
The current suppression strategy calls for keeping the two fires on the north side of the
Pinaleno Mountains and allowing them to burn downhill into sparse desert vegetation. That
could result in a fire that reaches 54,000 acres, Oltrogge said.
"The only thing that will put this fire out is the weather and the lack of fuel as it moves
down into the desert," Oltrogge said.
"It is the safest way we know to approach this fire," added Pruitt Small, the fire's
operations section chief.
Firefighters hope to use ridgelines and existing dirt roads to stop the fire from moving
south, up and over the spine of the Pinaleno Mountains, 75 miles northeast of Tucson. A
bulldozer has also blazed a fuel break in the vicinity of the telescopes.
Most of the growth in the past day has been on the Gibson Fire, which has now charred 4,090
acres. The Nuttall Fire has burned 5,254 acres. Lightning strikes ignited both fires.
Federal officials this morning listed 25 homes, 10 commercial buildings and 2 outbuildings
as threatened. Many of the at-risk structures are near the Columbine Work Center, where
firefighters have been camping. Oltrogge said Columbine "will be in dire straits in the
near future," but the Turkey Flat area, site of many private cabins, isn't immediately
threatened.
Fire crews, including 19 "hotshots," returned to the field to battle the blazes Sunday
morning after being pulled off Saturday due to extreme fire behavior.
Firefighters are trying to thin along Arizona 366, also known as the Swift Trail, so that
it can be used as a fuel break, just as Mount Lemmon Highway was employed in 2002 and 2003
during wildfires in the Santa Catalinas. In places where the road curves, bulldozers are
being used to cut corners and clear fuel, Oltrogge said.
Crews were also planning to burn fuel along Forest Road 507, which runs south from Mount
Graham to the Swift Trail.
Sprinklers have been turned on at the 8.6-acre observatory site, which includes the
University of Arizona's $110 million Large Binocular Telescope and two smaller, already-
completed instruments. The LBT is expected to become the world's most powerful observatory
when it is completed, perhaps in 2007.
There are nearly 900 people assigned to the blaze, which is being overseen by one of the
Southwest region's two type I management teams.
Among the resources fighting the fires, known collectively as the Nuttall Complex:
Contact Mitch Tobin at 573-4185 or mtobin@azstarnet.com
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