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Multiple wildfires burn in U.S. Utah amid extreme drought

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LOS ANGELES, June 10 (Xinhua) -- Over half a dozen wildfires were burning in the U.S. state of Utah, local authority said Thursday, warning the state would face a dangerous fire season due to extreme drought.

On Thursday, officials once again closed some parts of US-6 freeway hours after it was briefly reopened, in Carbon County due to a wildfire, dubbed Bear Fire, which was believed to be started by a lightning strike.

The Bear Fire was estimated to be nearly 5,500 acres (22.3 square kilometers) with zero percent containment on Thursday, and fire weather conditions in the area of Bear Fire were expected to reach "extremely critical" status.

High temperatures, low humidity and heavy wind gusts also made fighting wildfire in the small community of Pack Creek more difficult on Thursday.

The San Juan County Sheriffs Office said winds had picked up considerably in the morning, with wind gusts anticipated to reach 40+ MPH (64.4 KMP) throughout the day.

"The #PackCreekFire has grown to 400 acres, 0% contained. Structures are threatened, all homes in the Pack Creek community have been evacuated. 1 structure destroyed." Utah Fire Info tweeted Thursday morning, adding the fire was human-caused, started by an unattended campfire.

Utah Governor Spencer Cox Wednesday issued a prohibition on fireworks for all state and unincorporated lands as the region was predicted by experts to move into what could be its worst fire season in history.

Basil Newmerzhycky, a meteorologist with the Bureau of Land Management's Great Basin Predictive Fire Weather Program, was quoted by the Salt Lake Tribune as saying that this year's drought could be one for the record books.

More than 80 percent of Utah was currently in an "exceptional drought," he said, over the past 30 years, exceptional droughts had only occurred once or twice a decade and only covered 5 to 10 percent of the state.

The drought was particularly worrisome since the driest conditions don't usually arrive until August or September, the report added.

The latest data updated Wednesday by the Utah Division of Forestry, Fire and and State Lands (Utah FFSL), the state had already tallied 326 wildfires this year, with 12,000 acres (48.6 square kilometers) burned and 90 percent of the ignitions being human-caused. Enditem

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