Yosemite

Yosemite’s Pika Fire spreads, with air quality rated unhealthy for sensitive groups

The Pika Fire in Yosemite National Park was sparked by a lightning strike and is expected to burn through July 30.
The Pika Fire in Yosemite National Park was sparked by a lightning strike and is expected to burn through July 30. inciweb.nwcg.gov

The Pika Fire burning in Yosemite National Park consumed more than 500 acres of brush and timber by Sunday morning with no containment, officials in the park reported.

The lightning-sparked blaze erupted June 29 northwest of North Dome in the park and officials do not anticipate it will be fully controlled before July 30. It has sent a towering plume over the park, making air quality unhealthy for sensitive groups., pushing the PM 2.5 particulate level to the hazardous 150 level.

The fire is burning timber and brush, with firefighters reporting moderate growth of the blaze as they work to expand containment lines.

Air quality in Yosemite National Park continued to suffer Sunday due to the lightning-sparked Pika Fire.
Air quality in Yosemite National Park continued to suffer Sunday due to the lightning-sparked Pika Fire. IQAir.com

This story was originally published July 16, 2023 at 10:43 AM.

JG
Jim Guy
The Fresno Bee
A native of Colorado, Jim Guy studied political science, Latin American politics and Spanish literature at Fresno State University, and advanced Spanish grammar in Cuernavaca, Mexico.
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