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Hundreds Flee Their Homes As Wildfires Spread Through Parts Of Central Texas

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Hundreds of people have been forced to leave their homes as a wildfire destroys homes and properties in parts of central Texas. Lots of firefighters are working tirelessly to contain the rapidly spreading wildfires.

By early Friday morning, the Eastland Complex fire, a blaze that formed Thursday after several smaller fires converged had burned through more than 39,800 acres of land in Eastland County, the Texas A&M Forest Service said in an update,

Just two percent of the fire had been contained as of 5:15 am, the service said.

“This is a large, developing incident and it will continue to burn and things will change throughout the night and into tomorrow,” Adam Turner, the service’s regional wildland-urban interface coordinator, told NBC Dallas-Fort Worth on Thursday.

Some other active fires also continued to burn, including in Sterling, Reagan, and Runnels counties. Those fires were more than 75 percent contained as of Friday morning.

Evacuations were ongoing late Thursday evening in several areas in Eastland County, Texas, according to the national Inciweb wildfire database.

Around 475 homes in the city of Gorman were being evacuated, with residents instructed to head south. The city of Carbon and Lake Leon were also affected, it said.

Shelters were opened at a number of locations, including at the Eastland First Baptist Church.

The Texas A&M Forest Service said firefighters had been working alongside local responding agencies overnight on a number of wildfires that ignited the previous day.

“Strong winds and critically dry grasses contributed to extreme fire behavior and rapid rates of spread across the landscape,” it said.

The service said fire crews continued to “focus on life safety and structure protection, as well as constructing containment lines where possible.”

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