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Fourmile Canyon

Fourmile Canyon or Four Mile Canyon is a mountainous canyon in western Boulder County, Colorado that channels a stream known as Fourmile Creek or Four Mile Creek (this is not Fourmile Canyon Creek which runs a few miles north of Fourmile Creek).[1]). The stream rises at 40°02′53″N 105°33′00″W / 40.048°N 105.550°W / 40.048; -105.550 on the southern slope of Niwot Mountain, before flowing east and south through the unincorporated communities of Sunset, Wallstreet, Salina and Crisman to the confluence with Boulder Creek at 40°00′54″N 105°19′26″W / 40.015°N 105.324°W / 40.015; -105.324 in Boulder Canyon, four miles west of the historic location of the Boulder Railroad Depot.

Fourmile Canyon fire
The Fourmile Canyon Fire continued to burn on September 7, 2010, visible from NASA's Aqua satellite.
Date(s)September 6, 2010 (2010-09-06) — September 16, 2010 (2010-09-16)
Coordinates40°02′53″N 105°23′24″W / 40.048°N 105.39°W / 40.048; -105.39
Map

The canyon and surrounding area were the site of an eponymous major wildfire in September 2010.

Early history edit

In 1859, gold was discovered in the Fourmile Canyon area, leading to early settlement. The 1872 discovery of tellurium reinvigorated local mining communities.[2]

Fourmile Canyon was the location of the first narrow-gauge railroad to connect Union Pacific's standard-gauge network to the mines and mountain communities near Ward, and was the entryway to the Switzerland Trail tourist route that wound through the mountains between Nederland and Ward. The Fourmile narrow gauge track was active from the 1880s until 1919.

2010 wildfire edit

 
Fourmile Canyon fire smoke plume as seen from Longmont, Colorado on Monday, September 6.

Timeline edit

Day One: Monday, September 6, 2010 edit

An improperly extinguished fire pit reignited at approx. 10:00 a.m. on the property of a volunteer firefighter, who had been burning brush in the pit a few days earlier.[3][4] Within minutes, a wildfire started consuming the canyon forest near Emerson Gulch. Winds of 15 mph with gusts to 41 mph, combined with very low humidity of 7 percent and decreasing, enabled 20 to 50 feet (15 m) high flames to spread quickly.[5]

Multiple Fire Protection Districts responded to the area, as well as units from the Colorado State Forest Service, U.S. Forest Service, Boulder County, and the City of Boulder.[6] Residents were evacuated and all roads into the fire zone were closed. At Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport in Broomfield, two aircraft tankers each with 2,000 gallons of fire retardant took off at 5:20 p.m., beginning a multi-day aerial firefighting campaign. Winds eased in the late afternoon, making it possible for the airplanes to drop the retardant on the periphery of the fire zone in an attempt to contain the flames. Smoke was visible across the entire Front Range northwest of Boulder.

By the end of September 6, the fire had burned approximately 5,733 acres — 93 percent of the total burn area.[7]

Day Two: Tuesday, September 7, 2010 edit

The fire increased by only 375 acres on September 7, bringing the total burn size to 6,108 acres.[8]

Colorado's governor, Bill Ritter, declared a state of emergency and dedicated $5 million to help the effort. 3,500 people had been evacuated and 200 firefighters from more than 35 agencies had responded.[citation needed] More than 92 homes had been reported destroyed by the end of the second night. Nine of the destroyed homes belonged to firefighters who were fighting the fire.[9]

An accident involving a propane tank was reported to have started the fire, but that was later determined to be hearsay.[10]

Day Three: Wednesday, September 8, 2010 edit

Higher relative humidity and cooler temperatures allowed firefighters to build additional fire control lines and strengthen existing ones. Fire size remained at 6,108 acres.[11]

Earlier in the day 20 people in the area were reported missing; by night fall the number had fallen to 5. The number of homes reported destroyed went up to 150, making it the second worst wildfire in Colorado history at the time.[12]

Day Four: Thursday, September 9, 2010 edit

The number of firefighters grew to 430.[citation needed] All persons reported missing had been accounted for. At 10 a.m. some residents of the affected area were allowed to return to their homes, but were forced to move back out at 2 p.m. due to high winds. Boulder County estimated the number of homes burned at 169.[13]

By 3 p.m., sustained winds of 40 miles per hour with gusts up to 64 mph were reported and relative humidity dropped below 30 percent. These conditions caused surface fuels and trees that had not previously burned within the interior of the fire to ignite. End-of-day infrared mapping calculated the fire size at 6,131 acres.[14]

Day Five: Friday, September 10, 2010 edit

Firefighters continued to fight the blaze.[15] In spite of low humidity and wind gusts in the mid to high 20s (mph), no significant fire growth occurred and infrared mapping recorded the final fire size at 6,181 acres burned.[16]

Days Six through Eleven: Saturday, September 11, to Friday, September 17, 2010 edit

Although dry air and strong winds continued, the fire did not increase in size after September 10. The fire was declared 100% contained on September 13, and crews shifted their attention to locating and extinguishing hot spots until September 17.[17]

"The Boulder County Sheriff's Office has lifted evacuation orders on all subdivisions within the fire perimeter. The fire area is open to residents only. Utilities and public works continue to repair damage to infrastructure. Residents are reminded to use caution within the fire area due to the heavy fire and utility traffic in the fire area."

A grand total of 6,181 acres (approximately 10 square miles) burned during the Fourmile Fire.[18] The final burned acreage was lower than what was reported during the fire as a result of better GPS mapping.

Aftermath and Long-Term Impact edit

Of the 474 homes inside or within 100 feet of the final wildfire perimeter, 168 (35%) were destroyed.[19] The number of homes destroyed was the most by any wildfire in Colorado history until that total was surpassed by the High Park fire in June 2012 and then by the Waldo Canyon fire later in June 2012.

Insurance claims for the fire totaled an estimated $217 million, making it the most expensive wildfire in Colorado history, as measured by insurance claims, to 2010.[20] Total fire management costs (suppression, emergency management, and post-fire rehabilitation) are estimated at $14.1 million.[21]

References edit

  1. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Creek". Boulder Area Sustainability Network. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
  2. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). US Dept. of Agriculture / Forest Service. p. 11. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  3. ^ "Boulder Fourmile Canyon fire cause: Was a resident's fire pit really to blame for blaze?". Westword. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  4. ^ "Fourmile Fire". CBS Denver. 15 September 2010. Retrieved 2018-06-29.
  5. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 35.
  6. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 33.
  7. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 42.
  8. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 42.
  9. ^ "Fourmile Fire: 92 structures lost, partial property list released". Boulder Daily Camera. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  10. ^ "Fast-moving wildfire near Boulder, CO burns a fire truck and thousands of acres (Sept 6, 2010)". Wildfire Today. 6 September 2010. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  11. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 42.
  12. ^ "Updated Fourmile Canyon wildfire information as of 4 p.m. on Wednesday". Boulder County. 8 September 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2010.
  13. ^ "Update and map of Fourmile fire near Boulder, Sept. 9". Wildfire Today. 9 September 2010. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  14. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 42.
  15. ^ "Fourmile Canyon wildfire information as of 7 p.m. on Friday". Boulder County. 10 September 2010. Retrieved 11 September 2010.
  16. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 42.
  17. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 52.
  18. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 42.
  19. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 60.
  20. ^ "Fourmile Canyon fire damage tops $217M; Ritter seeks SBA aid". Denver Business Journal. 20 September 2010. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  21. ^ "Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings" (PDF). p. 69.

External links edit

  • The Fourmile Canyon Fire Official Boulder County site for fire information and recovery.
  • Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings - USDA / Forest Service In-depth analysis of fire.
  • Above the Ashes News documentary about the Fourmile Canyon Fire.

fourmile, canyon, four, mile, canyon, mountainous, canyon, western, boulder, county, colorado, that, channels, stream, known, fourmile, creek, four, mile, creek, this, creek, which, runs, miles, north, fourmile, creek, stream, rises, southern, slope, niwot, mo. Fourmile Canyon or Four Mile Canyon is a mountainous canyon in western Boulder County Colorado that channels a stream known as Fourmile Creek or Four Mile Creek this is not Fourmile Canyon Creek which runs a few miles north of Fourmile Creek 1 The stream rises at 40 02 53 N 105 33 00 W 40 048 N 105 550 W 40 048 105 550 on the southern slope of Niwot Mountain before flowing east and south through the unincorporated communities of Sunset Wallstreet Salina and Crisman to the confluence with Boulder Creek at 40 00 54 N 105 19 26 W 40 015 N 105 324 W 40 015 105 324 in Boulder Canyon four miles west of the historic location of the Boulder Railroad Depot Fourmile Canyon fireThe Fourmile Canyon Fire continued to burn on September 7 2010 visible from NASA s Aqua satellite Date s September 6 2010 2010 09 06 September 16 2010 2010 09 16 Coordinates40 02 53 N 105 23 24 W 40 048 N 105 39 W 40 048 105 39MapFor the canyon north of Canon City Colorado see Fourmile Canyon Fremont County Colorado This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Fourmile Canyon news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message The canyon and surrounding area were the site of an eponymous major wildfire in September 2010 Contents 1 Early history 2 2010 wildfire 2 1 Timeline 2 1 1 Day One Monday September 6 2010 2 1 2 Day Two Tuesday September 7 2010 2 1 3 Day Three Wednesday September 8 2010 2 1 4 Day Four Thursday September 9 2010 2 1 5 Day Five Friday September 10 2010 2 1 6 Days Six through Eleven Saturday September 11 to Friday September 17 2010 2 2 Aftermath and Long Term Impact 3 References 4 External linksEarly history editIn 1859 gold was discovered in the Fourmile Canyon area leading to early settlement The 1872 discovery of tellurium reinvigorated local mining communities 2 Fourmile Canyon was the location of the first narrow gauge railroad to connect Union Pacific s standard gauge network to the mines and mountain communities near Ward and was the entryway to the Switzerland Trail tourist route that wound through the mountains between Nederland and Ward The Fourmile narrow gauge track was active from the 1880s until 1919 2010 wildfire edit nbsp Fourmile Canyon fire smoke plume as seen from Longmont Colorado on Monday September 6 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2010 Fourmile Canyon Fire Timeline edit Day One Monday September 6 2010 edit An improperly extinguished fire pit reignited at approx 10 00 a m on the property of a volunteer firefighter who had been burning brush in the pit a few days earlier 3 4 Within minutes a wildfire started consuming the canyon forest near Emerson Gulch Winds of 15 mph with gusts to 41 mph combined with very low humidity of 7 percent and decreasing enabled 20 to 50 feet 15 m high flames to spread quickly 5 Multiple Fire Protection Districts responded to the area as well as units from the Colorado State Forest Service U S Forest Service Boulder County and the City of Boulder 6 Residents were evacuated and all roads into the fire zone were closed At Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport in Broomfield two aircraft tankers each with 2 000 gallons of fire retardant took off at 5 20 p m beginning a multi day aerial firefighting campaign Winds eased in the late afternoon making it possible for the airplanes to drop the retardant on the periphery of the fire zone in an attempt to contain the flames Smoke was visible across the entire Front Range northwest of Boulder By the end of September 6 the fire had burned approximately 5 733 acres 93 percent of the total burn area 7 Day Two Tuesday September 7 2010 edit The fire increased by only 375 acres on September 7 bringing the total burn size to 6 108 acres 8 Colorado s governor Bill Ritter declared a state of emergency and dedicated 5 million to help the effort 3 500 people had been evacuated and 200 firefighters from more than 35 agencies had responded citation needed More than 92 homes had been reported destroyed by the end of the second night Nine of the destroyed homes belonged to firefighters who were fighting the fire 9 An accident involving a propane tank was reported to have started the fire but that was later determined to be hearsay 10 Day Three Wednesday September 8 2010 edit Higher relative humidity and cooler temperatures allowed firefighters to build additional fire control lines and strengthen existing ones Fire size remained at 6 108 acres 11 Earlier in the day 20 people in the area were reported missing by night fall the number had fallen to 5 The number of homes reported destroyed went up to 150 making it the second worst wildfire in Colorado history at the time 12 Day Four Thursday September 9 2010 edit The number of firefighters grew to 430 citation needed All persons reported missing had been accounted for At 10 a m some residents of the affected area were allowed to return to their homes but were forced to move back out at 2 p m due to high winds Boulder County estimated the number of homes burned at 169 13 By 3 p m sustained winds of 40 miles per hour with gusts up to 64 mph were reported and relative humidity dropped below 30 percent These conditions caused surface fuels and trees that had not previously burned within the interior of the fire to ignite End of day infrared mapping calculated the fire size at 6 131 acres 14 Day Five Friday September 10 2010 edit Firefighters continued to fight the blaze 15 In spite of low humidity and wind gusts in the mid to high 20s mph no significant fire growth occurred and infrared mapping recorded the final fire size at 6 181 acres burned 16 Days Six through Eleven Saturday September 11 to Friday September 17 2010 edit Although dry air and strong winds continued the fire did not increase in size after September 10 The fire was declared 100 contained on September 13 and crews shifted their attention to locating and extinguishing hot spots until September 17 17 The Boulder County Sheriff s Office has lifted evacuation orders on all subdivisions within the fire perimeter The fire area is open to residents only Utilities and public works continue to repair damage to infrastructure Residents are reminded to use caution within the fire area due to the heavy fire and utility traffic in the fire area A grand total of 6 181 acres approximately 10 square miles burned during the Fourmile Fire 18 The final burned acreage was lower than what was reported during the fire as a result of better GPS mapping Aftermath and Long Term Impact edit Of the 474 homes inside or within 100 feet of the final wildfire perimeter 168 35 were destroyed 19 The number of homes destroyed was the most by any wildfire in Colorado history until that total was surpassed by the High Park fire in June 2012 and then by the Waldo Canyon fire later in June 2012 Insurance claims for the fire totaled an estimated 217 million making it the most expensive wildfire in Colorado history as measured by insurance claims to 2010 20 Total fire management costs suppression emergency management and post fire rehabilitation are estimated at 14 1 million 21 References edit Fourmile Canyon Creek Boulder Area Sustainability Network Retrieved 14 September 2013 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF US Dept of Agriculture Forest Service p 11 Retrieved 2018 06 29 Boulder Fourmile Canyon fire cause Was a resident s fire pit really to blame for blaze Westword Retrieved 29 June 2018 Fourmile Fire CBS Denver 15 September 2010 Retrieved 2018 06 29 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 35 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 33 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 42 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 42 Fourmile Fire 92 structures lost partial property list released Boulder Daily Camera Retrieved 29 June 2018 Fast moving wildfire near Boulder CO burns a fire truck and thousands of acres Sept 6 2010 Wildfire Today 6 September 2010 Retrieved 29 June 2018 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 42 Updated Fourmile Canyon wildfire information as of 4 p m on Wednesday Boulder County 8 September 2010 Retrieved 11 September 2010 Update and map of Fourmile fire near Boulder Sept 9 Wildfire Today 9 September 2010 Retrieved 29 June 2018 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 42 Fourmile Canyon wildfire information as of 7 p m on Friday Boulder County 10 September 2010 Retrieved 11 September 2010 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 42 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 52 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 42 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 60 Fourmile Canyon fire damage tops 217M Ritter seeks SBA aid Denver Business Journal 20 September 2010 Retrieved 23 November 2010 Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings PDF p 69 External links editThe Fourmile Canyon Fire Official Boulder County site for fire information and recovery Fourmile Canyon Fire Findings USDA Forest Service In depth analysis of fire Above the Ashes News documentary about the Fourmile Canyon Fire Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fourmile Canyon amp oldid 1169111381, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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