Arizona State Forestry officials: Wildfire that burned 1,200 acres of land in Pinal County is human-caused

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Margo Fire near Dudleyville now fully contained

The human-caused Margo Fire scorched about 1,200 acres in Dudleyville after fire started in a riverbed. Officials said on April 13 the fire is now 100% contained.

Officials with the Arizona State Forestry say a fire that burned 1,200 acres in Pinal County was human-caused and an investigator is working to identify the specific ignition source.

According to officials, as of the evening of April 10, the Margo Fire is 100% contained. The town of Dudleyville, which was evacuated on April 8, has been returned to "SET" status, meaning evacuated residents can return home.

Drought-stricken Arizona had one of its worst wildfire seasons in nearly a decade in 2020, according to state Forestry and Fire Management Department officials.

Officials have warned there is a potential for widespread, statewide fire activity by June.

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Evacuation notice lifted in area where fire destroyed homes

An evacuation notice for Dudleyville, a south-central Arizona community where a wildfire earlier burned at least 12 homes, was lifted on April 10, allowing approximately 200 residents to return home.

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Margo Fire prompts evacuation of Dudleyville in Pinal County

As of the night of April 8, about 500 acres of land have burned as a result of the fire. FOX 10's Stephanie Olmo reports.

Timeline of the fire:

April 10: Officials said they waited to lift the evacuation notice until Saturday so utility workers could assess power and gas lines.

April 9: about 75 personnel have been assigned to the fire.

April 8: At around 9:00 a.m., Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management officials said the wildfire was burning thick tamarisk in a river bottom.

"I saw a big old cloud of smoke. That was was when I yelled for my son and was like, hey I think my buddy Alonzo’s place is on fire," said Pablo Acuna.

Acuna headed to his friend's place and saw the fire was about 150 feet away.

"I can hear it crackling," said Acuna. "You can see the trees falling, you can see the flames, you can feel the heat. It was pretty intense."

Acuna went back home, gathered his family and some of his belongings, and headed to Hayden to stay with his aunt.

"When we left, I want to say 200 yards away from our house, so that’s what concerns me and I haven’t heard nothing after that," said Acuna.

Cheryl Chester was in Mesa when she got word about the fire burning through her community.

"I had my husband come out here to check and see what was going on, and found that the fire was close to our house," said Chester."We heard that a lot of people lost their homes, so he said that one of those planes dumped a big bucket of water right behind our barn and stopped the fire from getting to our house.

Dudleyville is a census-designated place with a population of about 1,000 located off Highway 77 about 60 miles north of Tucson.

The mining town was the site of a July 2017 wildfire that charred almost 1,200 acres and destroyed several structures, including homes.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Evacuations ordered in Pinal County due to Margo Fire

Officials say the fire was endangering structures, and video from SkyFOX shows some structures have been burned as a result of the fire.

Margo Fire burning in Dudleyville in Pinal County (Arizona Department of Forestry and Fire Management)

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