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The largest wildfire in the US has burned almost 400,000 acres

<i>Spencer Platt/Getty Images</i><br/>The Statue of Liberty sits behind a cloud of haze on July 20
Getty Images
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
The Statue of Liberty sits behind a cloud of haze on July 20

By Steve Almasy and Aya Elamroussi, CNN

The largest wildfire in the United States approached 400,000 acres burned with containment at just 38%, officials said Thursday.

The Bootleg Fire has charred 399,359 acres in southern Oregon, including some land that is set aside for carbon offsets.

“The fire will continue to be extremely active with gusty winds and extremely dry fuels,” says an update posted to InciWeb, the national clearinghouse for wildfire information.

Officials in recent days have touted progress against the massive fire, which was started July 6 by lightning.

“Fire crews and support personnel have made significant progress in containing this fire in the last few days,” Joe Prummer of the Northwest Interagency Incident Management Team said. “However, we still have a long road ahead of us to ensure the safety of the surrounding communities.”

How to support western wildfire victims

The blaze grew about 4,000 acres Thursday and officials said there was growth and activity in two areas but the advance was controlled with bulldozers.

It is now the third-largest fire in Oregon since 1900, Marcus Kauffman, spokesperson for Oregon Department of Forestry, told CNN’s Poppy Harlow on Thursday.

More than 2,100 people under some form of evacuation due to the fire, according to Kauffman.

Record-breaking, triple-digit temperatures and severe drought have devastated parts of Oregon. Those conditions have been fueling the fire and forcing evacuations.

Doug Grafe, chief of fire protection at the Oregon Department of Forestry, this week predicted a “long, difficult fire season.”

He said Tuesday — when the fire had burned 388,000 acres — it’s possible that another 50,000 to 100,000 acres could burn before the Bootleg Fire is contained.

“The future for us for the remainder of the season continues to look above normal dry and above normal temperatures,” Grafe said. “So this is not going to return to normal anytime soon.”

A ban on campfires will be banned in state parks and state-managed forests east of Interstate 5 started Thursday, the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department said. That covers all regions of the state except the Pacific coast and a portion of the Willamette Valley.

The ban includes not only charcoal and propane fires, but also tiki torches and even candles.

People in other areas of US getting short break from thick smoke

There was a break Thursday in poor air quality stretching as far as the East Coast. A cold front helped pushed out smoke created by the US and Canadian fires.

But by Thursday night, smoke from wildfires could return, before another front will push through the region on Saturday into Sunday to help clean it out again, according to CNN meteorologist Michael Guy.

This will be the pattern until the jet stream changes direction and/or the fires have diminished, he said.

The intensity of the fires was so strong that high-level winds had carried their smoke to the East Coast, where New York City recorded its worst air quality day in over a decade.

The city saw a 24-hour average Air Quality Index of 154 on Tuesday, the worst it’s been since June 2006, when the AQI was 157.

With 79 large fires burning across 13 states, more than 21,700 wildland firefighters are battling blazes across the country. The fires have collectively scorched at least 1.49 million acres as of Thursday, according to the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC).

And in Canada, a state of emergency was declared for British Columbia, where 3,180 firefighters are working on 300 fires across the province, officials said.

More fires ravage US lands

The NIFC says eight active large fires in California have already burned more than 230,000 acres and additional evacuations were issued Wednesday around the Dixie Fire in Butte and Plumas counties.

“Firefighters fought the fire aggressively. Firefighters continued construction on control lines and engaged in structure defense overnight. Fire is going to continue to move Northeast. Air and ground firefighting resources will work together to strengthen and improve control lines,” according to a statement from InciWeb.

Montana currently has 17 large wildfires — the most in the country — that have charred almost 100,000 acres, and Idaho is seeing 16 active wildfires that burned 178,000 acres, according to NIFC.

Following Oregon, the states with the most acres burned are California, Idaho and then Alaska.

The Dixie Fire has scorched more than 103,000 acres since it began last week and was 17% contained as of Thursday, according to Cal Fire. Evacuations have been ordered in the area, and the fire already destroyed eight structures.

On Tuesday, Pacific Gas and Electric said the fire may have been sparked by equipment it manages.

In a preliminary filing with the California Public Utilities Commission, PG&E detailed an outage alert July 13, the same day the fire started. A responding utility worker found three blown fuses and a tree leaning into a pole, with a small fire on the ground near the base of the tree.

The-CNN-Wire
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CNN’s Joe Sutton, Chris Boyette and Andy Rose contributed to this report.

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