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FILE - In this Monday, June 19, 2017 file photo, Fremont County undersheriff Ryan Lee inspects a bridge that was destroyed by flooding outside of Riverton, Wyo. Rivers and streams in central and western Wyoming are receding after a melting record snowpack poured the equivalent of 30 inches or more of water down mountains over the last three weeks. The high water caused widespread flooding, interrupted travel on a route to Yellowstone National Park and cut off water to farm crops by damaging an irrigation canal. (Daniel Bendsten /The Ranger via AP, File)

FILE - In this Monday, June 19, 2017 file photo, Fremont County undersheriff Ryan Lee inspects a bridge that was destroyed by flooding outside of Riverton, Wyo. Rivers and streams in central and western Wyoming are receding after a melting record snowpack poured the equivalent of 30 inches or more of water down mountains over the last three weeks. The high water caused widespread flooding, interrupted travel on a route to Yellowstone National Park and cut off water to farm crops by damaging an irrigation canal. (Daniel Bendsten /The Ranger via AP, File)

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