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This is a partial and incomplete list of New Mexico wildfires.
- Calf Canyon/Hermits Peak Fire (303,341 acres) (April 2022) †
- Whitewater-Baldy Complex Fire (297,845 acres) (May 2012)
- Las Conchas Fire (156,593 acres) (June 2011)
- Silver Fire (138,546 acres) (June 2013)
- Black Fire (104,969 acres) (May 2022) †
- Donaldson Fire (101,563 acres) (June 2011)
- Dry Lakes Fire (94,580 acres) (May 2003)
- Pasco Fire (93,029 acres) (June 2009)
- McDonald Fire (92,390 acres) (March 2006)
- Ponil Fire (92,194 acres) (June 2002)
- Johnson Fire (88,918 acres) (May 2021)
- Miller Fire (88,835 acres) (April 2011)
- Black Range Complex (80,502 acres) (May 2005)
- Stiles Complex (67,008 acres) (March 2008)
- Peppin Fire (64,488 acres) (May 2004)
- OK Bar Fire (61,620 acres) (April 2018)
- Cooks Peak Fire (59,359 acres) (April 2022)
- Boiler Fire (58,413 acres) (April 2003)
- Cato Fire (55,080 acres) (June 2009)
- Bear Fire (51,307 acres (June 2006)
- Buzzard Fire (50,296 acres) (May 2018)
- Grande Complex (50,000 acres) (March 2000)
- Rocky Fire (49,132 acres) (June 2008)
- Cerro Grande Fire (47,650 acres) (May 2000) — destructive
- Cerro Pelado Fire (45,605 acres) (April 2022) †
- Little Bear Fire (44,330 acres) (June 2012) — destructive
Most destructive fires:
- McBride Fire (207 structures)
- Calf Canyon/Hermits Peak Fire (600 structures or more)
- Little Bear Fire (254 structures)
- Cerro Grande Fire (235 structures or more)
Name | County | Acres | Hectares | Start date | Structures | Deaths | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Calf Canyon/Hermits Peak Fire | San Miguel, Mora, Taos | 298,060 | 120,620 | April 2022 | 581+[1] | 0 | Calf Canyon Fire cause unknown, Hermits Peak Fire caused by escaped prescribed burn |
2. | Whitewater-Baldy Complex Fire | Catron | 297,845 | 120,534 | May 2012 | 20 | 0 | Whitewater and Baldy Fires caused by lightning |
3. | Las Conchas Fire | Sandoval, Los Alamos, Rio Arriba | 156,593 | 63,371 | June 2011 | 112[2] | 0 | Caused by tree striking powerlines |
4. | Silver Fire | Counties go here | 138,546 | 56,068 | June 2013 | Structures go here | Deaths go here | Notes go here |
5. | Donaldson Fire | Counties go here | 101,563 | 41,101 | June 2011 | Structures go here | Deaths go here | Notes go here |
6. | Dry Lakes Fire | Counties go here | 94,580 | 38,280 | May 2003 | Structures go here | Deaths go here | Notes go here |
7. | Pasco Fire | Counties go here | 93,029 | 37,648 | June 2009 | Structures go here | Deaths go here | Notes go here |
8. | McDonald Fire | Counties go here | 92,390 | 37,390 | March 2006 | Structures go here | Deaths go here | Notes go here |
9. | Ponil Fire | Counties go here | 92,194 | 37,310 | June 2002 | Structures go here | Deaths go here | Notes go here |
10. | Johnson Fire | Counties go here | 88,918 | 35,984 | May 2021 | Structures go here | Deaths go here | Notes go here |
References
edit- ^ Reed Jr., Ollie; Davis, Theresa (April 28, 2022). "166 homes gone, high winds feared". Albuquerque Journal. Retrieved 2022-05-14.
- ^ "InciWeb the Incident Information System: Las Conchas". web.archive.org. 2011-10-16. Retrieved 2022-05-14.