Yuma Sun

Fatal fires

3 dead as wildfire explodes in Northern California

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OROVILLE, Calif. – Three people died in a wind-whipped Northern California wildfire that has forced thousands of people from their homes while carving a 25mile path of destructio­n through mountainou­s terrain and parched foothills, authoritie­s said Wednesday.

California Highway Patrol Officer Ben Draper told the Bay Area News Group that one person was found in a car and apparently had been trying to escape the flames.

Hundreds, if not thousands, of homes and other buildings are believed to have been damaged or destroyed by the blaze northeast of San Francisco, fire officials said at an evening news conference.

The fire has also threatened Paradise, a town devastated just two years ago by the deadliest blaze in state history that prompted a deadly traffic jam as panicked residents tried to escape.

The North Complex fire was one of more than two dozen burning in California. Including three of the five largest ever in the state.

Since the middle of August, fires in California have killed 11 people, destroyed more than 3,600 structures, burned old growth redwoods, charred chaparral and forced evacuation­s in communitie­s near the coast, in wine country and along the Sierra Nevada.

Thick smoke Wednesday choked much of the state and cast an eerie orange hue across the sky as thousands of people in communitie­s near Oroville were ordered to evacuate.

Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, conservati­vely estimated the fire had burned about 400 square miles in 24 hours.

“The unbelievab­le rates of spread now being observed on these fires – it is historical­ly unpreceden­ted,” Swain tweeted.

The U.S. Forest Service, which had taken the unpreceden­ted measure of closing eight national forests in Southern California earlier in the week, ordered all 18 of its forests in the state closed Wednesday for public safety.

The fire raging outside Oroville, 125 miles northeast of San Francisco, jumped the middle fork of the Feather River on Tuesday and, driven by 45 mph winds, leapt into a canopy of pines and burned all the way to Lake Oroville – about 25 miles, said Jake Cagle, one of the fire chiefs involved.

The fire had been 62 square miles and 50% contained before it grew more than sixfold.

Firefighte­rs were focused on saving lives and homes instead of trying to halt the fire’s advance, Cagle said.

The fire tore into several hamlets along the river and near Lake Oroville, leveling countless homes and other buildings, said Daniel Berlant, a spokesman with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS IMAGE TAKEN WITH A SLOW SHUTTER SPEED, embers light up a hillside behind the Bidwell Bar Bridge as the Bear Fire burns Wednesday in Oroville, Calif.. The blaze, part of the lightning-sparked North Complex, expanded at a critical rate of spread as winds buffeted the region.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS IMAGE TAKEN WITH A SLOW SHUTTER SPEED, embers light up a hillside behind the Bidwell Bar Bridge as the Bear Fire burns Wednesday in Oroville, Calif.. The blaze, part of the lightning-sparked North Complex, expanded at a critical rate of spread as winds buffeted the region.

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