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• Following an aerial survey Sunday, officials lowered the damage estimate from the Wellnitz fire from about 150 to about 120 square miles burned. The blaze crossed into South Dakota on Friday and broke through containment lines on Saturday. • "Everything looks really good today. We're making a lot of progress," Rocky Mountain Incident Management Team spokesman Bill Kight said Monday afternoon. He said the fire is more than 25 percent contained. • Firefighters were extending the containment lines and putting out hot spots within 100 feet of the line, Kight said, in hopes that embers wouldn't jump the line to start new fires. • The northwestern corner of Nebraska is a sparsely populated area of rolling prairie hills, badlands and stands of Ponderosa pines. • Officials identified two areas of concern. One was near the Oglala Reservoir in South Dakota where dried reeds and cattails were smoldering. The other area is in pine timber in the southeast quadrant of the fire zone in Nebraska. • Firefighters were also being warned of the danger of downed power lines. Officials said power to some lines had been shut off, but the damage is so widespread that officials don't have a clear idea of which downed lines have been secured. • Conditions are likely to remain ripe for fires for at least several more weeks because the hot weather and drought. No rain was predicted until Thursday night. • Authorities have lifted evacuation orders for most northwest Nebraska and southwest South Dakota residents whose homes had been threatened by the flames. But it was unclear Monday whether similar orders had been lifted for residents of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota near the Nebraska border. • Oglala Sioux Tribe President John Yellow Bird Steele had issued an order to evacuate Slim Buttes, Tobacco, Lakeside, Oglala and other reservation communi (Continued on page 21)
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