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The Wallow Fire was a wildfire that started in the White Mountains near Alpine, Arizona on May 29, 2011. It was named for the Bear Wallow Wilderness area where the fire originated, The fire eventually spread across the stateline into western New Mexico, United States.
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The Wallow Fire started on May 29 and is now 10 percent contained, with a high potential for growth. A reported 4,734 firefighters are working to contain the fire. NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC.
By the end of the day on June 9, 2011, Arizona’s massive Wallow Fire had reached 386,690 acres (609 square miles or 157,701 hectares) and had burned 29 and threatened 5,242 homes. Most of the homes destroyed were in Greer.
In late May and early June 2011, the island of forest became fuel for one of the largest fires in Arizona history, the Wallow Fire. This image, taken by the Landsat-7 satellite on June 7, shows the northern edge of the fire. The image was made with infrared light.
This pair of images, both taken by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer on NASA’s Aqua satellite on June 6, 2011, provide complimentary information about the vast Wallow Fire in eastern Arizona. In the top true-color image, smoke billows from the rapidly growing fire.
By the end of the day on June 15, the Wallow Fire had burned 487,016 acres of forest in eastern Arizona and was 20 percent contained. Most of the fire activity was on the south side of the fire, away from the majority of the communities that had been evacuated.