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Sunday, July 3, 2011
By holding your fire ground against the largest fire ever in New Mexico, the most important laboratory staff the nation's nuclear weapons in the surrounding city planned for the return of thousands of employees and residents evacuated .
The fire was several miles uphill from Los Alamos National Laboratory yesterday, increasing confidence that no longer posed an immediate threat to the facility.
Thousands of experiments, including two supercomputers and studies on extending the life of pumps the 1960 nuclear, were suspended because of fire. Hundreds of employees began returning to the lab yesterday to start preparing things for the scientists, technicians and other employees.
The employees were reviewing the filters in air systems to ensure that they were not affected by smoke and public services were running, and restart the computer systems.
"Once we start operating phases of the laboratory, it will take about two days to bring everyone back and have the full lab operations,''said lab director Charles McMillan." I would like to continue asking employees the laboratory to continue to be patient.''
Authorities did not give a timetable for when lifted the evacuation order that started on Monday at Los Alamos, home to 12,000 people.
However, some county workers were already back to prepare for the final race of the so-called public service and possible flooding in the surrounding hillsides denuded by fire. Los Alamos County Fire Chief Doug Tucker sent some of your fire home to rest while waiting for the Fire Department can respond to regular calls from residents.
Firefighters were sure the fire did not spread in the laboratory along its northern and western borders. While they are confident that the fire did not spread to Los Alamos Canyon and in the city and parts of the lab, firefighters planned to burn grass and shrubs along the western edge of Los Alamos, despite the burned area in 2000.
The fire is burning in the western and northern areas of Los Alamos that the tribe of Native Americans it holds sacred is an indication of the seriousness of the danger of fires in the southwest. Burn areas often offer places to help stop the fires.
The fire has blackened more than 177 square kilometers in the last six days. Erratic winds and dry conditions helped to overcome a fire in 2003, which took five months to burn through 94,000 acres in the Gila National Forest.
A key challenge remains to stop the flames do more damage in Santa Clara Pueblo. The fire had moved north to the reservation last week, reaching sites and cultural watershed.
Santa Clara was not the only indigenous community to feel the effects of fire. To the south, Cochiti Pueblo residents were also concerned about damage to land cover that affect the watershed.
Moreover, the Pajarito Plateau is hundreds of archaeological sites in the Bandelier National Monument to maintain a great importance to the tribes of the area. About half the park burned, Bandelier Superintendent Jason Lott said.
"The impact of our nations is unprecedented,''said U.S. Rep. Ben Lujan Ray, a Democrat from New Mexico.
More than 1,200 firefighters are trying to stop the flames while National Guard troops, state troopers, deputies and patrol neighborhoods and enforce evacuation orders.
Fire chief of operations section of Jerome Macdonald said that the parts of Santa Clara fire burned hot barrel, while other areas saw less damage from temperatures at night and lighter winds.
Tags:manager, oknation, คมชัดลึก, ไทยรัฐ, ผู้จัดการ
The fire was several miles uphill from Los Alamos National Laboratory yesterday, increasing confidence that no longer posed an immediate threat to the facility.
Thousands of experiments, including two supercomputers and studies on extending the life of pumps the 1960 nuclear, were suspended because of fire. Hundreds of employees began returning to the lab yesterday to start preparing things for the scientists, technicians and other employees.
The employees were reviewing the filters in air systems to ensure that they were not affected by smoke and public services were running, and restart the computer systems.
"Once we start operating phases of the laboratory, it will take about two days to bring everyone back and have the full lab operations,''said lab director Charles McMillan." I would like to continue asking employees the laboratory to continue to be patient.''
Authorities did not give a timetable for when lifted the evacuation order that started on Monday at Los Alamos, home to 12,000 people.
However, some county workers were already back to prepare for the final race of the so-called public service and possible flooding in the surrounding hillsides denuded by fire. Los Alamos County Fire Chief Doug Tucker sent some of your fire home to rest while waiting for the Fire Department can respond to regular calls from residents.
Firefighters were sure the fire did not spread in the laboratory along its northern and western borders. While they are confident that the fire did not spread to Los Alamos Canyon and in the city and parts of the lab, firefighters planned to burn grass and shrubs along the western edge of Los Alamos, despite the burned area in 2000.
The fire is burning in the western and northern areas of Los Alamos that the tribe of Native Americans it holds sacred is an indication of the seriousness of the danger of fires in the southwest. Burn areas often offer places to help stop the fires.
The fire has blackened more than 177 square kilometers in the last six days. Erratic winds and dry conditions helped to overcome a fire in 2003, which took five months to burn through 94,000 acres in the Gila National Forest.
A key challenge remains to stop the flames do more damage in Santa Clara Pueblo. The fire had moved north to the reservation last week, reaching sites and cultural watershed.
Santa Clara was not the only indigenous community to feel the effects of fire. To the south, Cochiti Pueblo residents were also concerned about damage to land cover that affect the watershed.
Moreover, the Pajarito Plateau is hundreds of archaeological sites in the Bandelier National Monument to maintain a great importance to the tribes of the area. About half the park burned, Bandelier Superintendent Jason Lott said.
"The impact of our nations is unprecedented,''said U.S. Rep. Ben Lujan Ray, a Democrat from New Mexico.
More than 1,200 firefighters are trying to stop the flames while National Guard troops, state troopers, deputies and patrol neighborhoods and enforce evacuation orders.
Fire chief of operations section of Jerome Macdonald said that the parts of Santa Clara fire burned hot barrel, while other areas saw less damage from temperatures at night and lighter winds.
Tags:manager, oknation, คมชัดลึก, ไทยรัฐ, ผู้จัดการ
Labels: International
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