Two firefighters were killed Saturday in Arizona as wildfires raged through the West, threatening California's overburdened power grid during an oppressive heat wave and ongoing drought.
The firefighters were killed in a plane crash while conducting aerial reconnaissance over the Cedar Basin Fire near the Prescott National Forest, the Bureau of Land Management said in a statement.
"Our hearts are heavy tonight with sincere condolences to families, loved ones and firefighters affected by this tragic aviation accident that occurred today in Arizona on the #CedarBasinFire," the agency tweeted.
The Western heat wave has also triggered fires throughout California and much of the West. California’s largest current fire, the Beckwourth Complex Fire 45 miles north of Lake Tahoe, showed no signs of slowing down after doubling in size between Friday and Saturday and jumping the state border into Nevada.
As of Saturday evening, the Beckwourth Complex Fire, which was sparked by lightning on June 30, spanned more than 60,000 acres across two states and was 9 percent contained. Nearly 1,800 personnel were assigned to the fire while an excessive heat advisory remains in effect for the area through Tuesday.
"We're looking at unprecedented early fire season [and] extreme fire behavior," said incident commander Rocky Opliger during a community meeting Saturday.
The fire prompted mandatory evacuations, a closure of part of a national forest and presented serious danger for area campgrounds, National Forest Service officials said. It is one of several brush firesburning in California.
Temperatures in parts of California have reached near-record highs with Death Valley hitting 130 degrees Friday, just four degrees shy of a world record set in 1913.
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