500 tourists evacuated from Grand Canyon wildfires
The canyon's North Rim was cleared of all visitors due to a blaze called the White Sage Fire.
LOS ANGELES - Fast-spreading wildfires have forced the evacuation of part of the Grand Canyon, with the US National Park Service saying at least 500 people had been guided out of the danger zone.
The canyon's North Rim, which is less popular with tourists than the South Rim, was cleared of all visitors due to a blaze called the White Sage Fire.
'Last night, Grand Canyon staff safely evacuated approximately 500 guests,' the Park Service said in an update on July 11.
'All visitors have left the area, and park employees and residents remain sheltering in place. Day use access to the North Rim is closed until further notice.'
Mr Jon Paxton, press officer for the Coconino County sheriff's office, told AFP that a hotel and some businesses had all been emptied.
'Most of the folks we evacuated were campers,' he said. 'This area is high desert and mostly open forest for camping.'
The fire is burning outside the Grand Canyon National Park but approaching Jacob Lake, Arizona, a small settlement known as the gateway to the North Rim.
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About 3,500ha have been scorched, and the blaze is zero per cent contained, according to authorities, who released images of large columns of smoke rising above the scrubby desert.
The fire was started by lightning during a thunderstorm on July 9.
'Crews encountered very extreme fire behaviour due to the dry conditions (and) gusty and erratic winds inhibiting the ability for firefighters to safely engage the fire,' the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) said.
One of the greatest wonders of the natural world, the Grand Canyon is the result of the Colorado River eating away at layers of red sandstone and other rock for millions of years, leaving a gash up to 30km wide and more than 1.6km deep.
The Park Service advised against any hiking into the canyon, due to extreme heat and wildfire smoke.
A 67-year-old man died on July 8 while attempting to reach the river in hot conditions.
In 2024, almost five million people visited the world-famous site.
Another popular site, Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park in Colorado, was also closed on July 11 because of a wildfire. AFP

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