Colorado explosion left one house obliterated and one person dead on Thursday. According to a fire official, a cadaver dog tracked the scent of a body, later found dead, from the Colorado explosion.

The body from the Colorado explosion was recovered by investigators on Friday. According to ABC News, the body was found amongst rubble caused by the Colorado explosion which at a suburban Denver house.

Reports say that crews from the Poudre Fire Authority of Fort Collins with cadaver dogs found the man's body late Thursday night as they went through the rubble of the Colorado explosion home. The scent of the man in the Colorado explosion was picked up by the search dog, says fire officials. According to KDVR, the man was identified to be in his 20s.

It was the Thornton Fire Department which first confirmed the Colorado explosion when a structure fired up in the area about 3:06 p.m.

According to witnesses, they the ground shook as they saw plumes of smoke rising from the sky when the Colorado explosion occurred.

The home obliterated in the Colorado explosion has been reported as located at 13072 Monroe Drive. The Colorado explosion caused the house to spray debris across two square blocks and shower pink insulation onto neighbors' rooftops. Debris reportedly also clung to surrounding trees in the northern Denver suburb of Thornton involved in the Colorado explosion.

Numerous roads in the neighborhood have been closed due to the Colorado explosion. Fortunately, the Colorado explosion did not involve serious damage onto neighboring homes.

Meanwhile, Lisa Wilson, a spokeswoman for the city said that utilities and fire officials are still looking into determining the cause of the Colorado explosion, as to whether it was caused by natural gas or something else.

TFD said that twenty firefighters responded to the Colorado explosion and a persistent fire has been extinguished around 4:30 p.m.

KCNC-TV interviewed neighbor Robert Lance Russel. Russel said that "the blast from the Colorado explosion knocked" him and his son off their feet at their home across the street. He added that they even called out to see if anyone was in the debris but heard no one responding.

A neighbour behind the home by the name of Todd Branson also said that he was watching TV when he heard a boom. He told KUSA-TV, "My back window just blew in, my screen door, the glass just totally blew in. When I had a chance to go out and see my back fence, my back fence was completely gone."

According to reports, the Colorado explosion house had three residents. Wilson said two were at work at the time of the Colorado explosion. She added, that those two told investigators the third resident was most likely inside the home because his truck and motorcycle were there.

Colorado explosion victim's name has not been released. The identities of the two other residents have not been revealed as well.

Click here to see a video of the explosion.