Adelaide
Hills bushfire: Dozens of homes feared lost in SA's most dangerous
day since Ash Wednesday; Victoria fires downgraded
More
than 800 firefighters from three states are battling the fire front
in the Adelaide Hills this morning with almost 12,000 hectares
destroyed.
Authorities
are still trying to confirm how many homes have been destroyed as a
massive fire burns uncontrolled on all fronts in the Adelaide Hills.
Meanwhile,
all fire warnings in Victoria have been downgraded to advice level,
as a cold front moves through the state
An aerial view of damage caused by the fires in South Australia. (Photo: ABC News 24)
Remnants of one family's home destroyed in Adelaide hills. Damage Assmt teams busy counting losses today @ABCNews24 http://t.co/r6sPwTvtWt
Victorian weather: state swelters before the storm
4
January, 2014
After
two days of blistering heat, Victoria's high temperatures gave way to
wind, hail and heavy rainfall.
Hopetoun
airport reached 44.6 degrees yesterday – the highest temperature
for the day – just before 3pm, while Walpeup climbed to 43.9
degrees at 2.56pm and Mildura reached 43.1 at 2.33pm.
Melbourne
was at its hottest just after 3pm yesterday, when it reached 38.4
degrees.
Warrnambool
and Horsham, already hit by rain, could be the first to face the
damaging winds, hail and heavy rainfall brought on by the storm.
As
Victoria sweltered, two children were found locked in cars, and
paramedics treated 17 others for heat-related illnesses, Ambulance
Victoria said.
Melburnians
endured temperatures that topped the rest of the state on Friday
night, with Ambulance Victoria receiving more than 20 calls to treat
people with heat-related illnesses. The city hit a low of 28.6
degrees at 7am yesterday.
Melbourne's
hottest night was in January 2010, when the mercury dipped
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