News / World News

    Australian Wildfires Destroy Homes, Kill Cattle as Hundreds of People Flee

    Australian authorities urged people to remain alert on Monday as wildfires that have destroyed dozens of homes, killed cattle and forced hundreds of residents to flee continued to burn out of control in the southeast of the country.



    Fire on the hills to the north of Lithgow during the October 2013 bushfires.


    No deaths or serious injuries were reported as of Monday morning, but the bushfires have caused extensive damage in rural areas of Victoria and New South Wales (NSW). At least 75 homes had been destroyed.

    "We can't be 100 percent sure that everybody is accounted for... but each one of those homes that have been affected by fire will need to be looked at and just confirm that," NSW Rural Fire Service Deputy Commissioner Rob Rogers told Australian Broadcasting Corp.

    "There are 22 fires and five of those are not contained. There's still a lot of fire around the landscape," he said, adding it would be at least several days before they were extinguished.

    The fires, believed to have been sparked by lightning on Saturday, were fanned by dry, hot winds as temperatures reached 41 C (106 F) throughout Sunday.

    Emergency officials said conditions should ease on Monday but "watch and act" warnings remained in place for five locations.

    At least 70 homes and a school were destroyed in the small coastal town of Tathra in New South Wales, authorities said, where people fled to the beach to avoid the flames and flying embers carried the fire front forward quickly.

    About 700 residents were evacuated to centers set up at the nearby town of Bega and several schools in affected areas were closed on Monday.

    About 280 firefighters were battling the blazes while 22,000 homes were without power in the region after the high winds brought down trees.

    In the north Australian city of Darwin, about 25,000 homes were also without power after a tropical cyclone felled trees. No deaths were reported.

    Bushfires are a common and deadly threat in Australia's hot, dry summers, fueled by highly flammable eucalyptus trees. (Tasnim News Agency)

    MARCH 19, 2018



    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

    Despite a recent decline in earthquakes, Ubinas Volcano erupted an ash plume on April 28, 2014. The Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer collected this false-color view of the volcano on the same day.
    The deforestation of the Atlantic Forest, Brazil's second most important forest, grew 57.7% in a year, from 2015 to 2016, when the biome lost 29,075 hectares, or 29 thousand football fields.
    Learn math playing. That's the idea of Matemagos, a game designed for smartphones that combines magic with the subject considered the horror of students.
    The world's largest colony of king penguins has declined by nearly 90 percent in 35 years, according to an alarming study.
    Despite large temperature increases in Alaska in recent decades, a new analysis of NASA airborne data finds that methane is not being released from Alaskan soils into the atmosphere at unusually high rates, as recent modeling and experimental studies have suggested. The new result shows that the changes in this part of the Arctic have not yet had enough impact to affect the global methane budget.
    The Brazilian Health Surveillance Agency granted the registration for the first cannabis-based (marijuana) medicine in Brazil. Dubbed Mevatyl, the product is prescribed for the treatment of adults who suffer from spasms triggered by multiple sclerosis.

    © 1991-2023 The Titi Tudorancea Bulletin | Titi Tudorancea® is a Registered Trademark | Terms of use and privacy policy
    Contact