A man returned home on Friday to find his girlfriend's two dogs waiting outside. He went searching for her that night only to find her remains near a Colorado highway.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife: Human remains found in 2 of 3 bears involved in deadly attack on woman
CPW
and last updated 2021-05-03 12:44:12-04
DENVER â Human remains were found inside the stomachs of two of the three bears that were euthanized after attacking and killing a woman Friday night north of Durango, Colorado Parks and Wildlife said Sunday.
The sow bear, which wildlife officers was at least 10 years old, and one of the two yearling bears that were with her after the attack had the remains in their stomachs, necropsies conducted on the bears on Saturday confirmed. The other yearling did not have human remains inside its stomach.
A 39-year-old woman is dead after what officials suspect was a bear attack north of Durango. The woman’s boyfriend found her body Friday night after returning home to find her missing and her two dogs outside the house. He searched for her and called 911 around 9:30 p.m. after finding her.
CPW says significant fish kill in N. St. Vrain Creek after spill; EPA says fuel has dissipated
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Courtesy Colorado Parks and Wildlife
Initial water sample analysis done by the Environmental Protection Agency on North St. Vrain Creek show the gasoline that spilled into the creek after a fuel truck crashed earlier this week has dissipated, but Colorado Parks and Wildlife says there was a âsignificantâ fish kill event caused by the spill.
EPA and CPW assessing fish kill, other impacts after truck crash and fuel spill near Lyons
CDOT says Highway 36 will be closed during daytime hours for next few days
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Lance Hernandez/Denver7
Employees with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency work to clean up and test water in North St. Vrain Creek on Wednesday a day after a truck crashed and spilled around 8,000 gallons of gasoline, including some into the creek.
Posted at 5:21 PM, Apr 28, 2021
and last updated 2021-04-28 19:21:49-04
DENVER â Officials with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Colorado Parks and Wildlife said they are continuing to monitor several miles of North St. Vrain Creek for fish kill after a gasoline truck crashed and spilled thousands of gallons of fuel along the roadway and into the creek on Tuesday.