Wildfires that have killed two people in western Oklahoma are nearing conditions not seen in at least a decade because of the mixture of high temperatures, low humidity and heavy winds, the National Weather Service said Monday.

Weather service meteorologist Doug Speheger said Tuesday’s forecast represented the most potential for the spread of wildfires in the past 10 years of a database that considers a variety of factors.

Temperatures are projected to reach the mid-90s with humidity below 10 percent and winds gusting to 40 mph (64 kph). The forecast includes northwestern Texas and the Texas Panhandle where firefighting aircraft is stationed in Amarillo, Childress, Abilene and Fort Stockton.

“With these conditions wildfires can spread rapidly, present control issues for firefighters and pose a real threat to public safety,” said Texas A&M Forest Service Fire Chief Mark Stanford. The area also is in extreme to exceptional drought, the two most severe designations.

Firefighters sent by the U.S. Forest Service’s Southern Area Coordination Center are fighting one fire that’s burned more than 245,000 acres (990 sq. kilometers) near Leedey, about 110 miles (180 kilometers) northwest of Oklahoma City and another blaze that’s burned nearly 68,000 acres (275 sq. kilometers) near Woodward, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) north of Leedey.

From the Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/oklahoma-wildfires-kill-2-threat-nears-historic-level/2018/04/17/7389ac4c-4224-11e8-b2dc-b0a403e4720a_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.3146db6fe660