
The Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) teams have begun their burned area surveys to evaluate the damage done by the Sunrise Fire.
October 19, 2017
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October 19, 2017 11:51 a.m.
Experts assessing Sunrise Fire damage
A few green plants have already sprung up past the charred earth of the Sunrise Fire, which burned just 13 miles east of Superior. On a sunny autumn day, the black soil is littered with tiny rusty pine needles in areas where a few still cling to the half-burned trees. Other areas are just blackened sticks bearing a ghostly reminder of the wildfire that raged through the area last summer, consuming over 26,000 acres.