Los Angeles Times

Blaze threatens observator­y

A dozen workers are evacuated from Mt. Wilson facilities.

- BY FRANK SHYONG AND SONALI KOHLI frank.shyong@latimes.com sonali.kohli@latimes.com

Authoritie­s evacuated at least a dozen people from Mt. Wilson on Tuesday morning as a 30-acre wildfire in the San Gabriel Mountains threatened to damage the historic mountainto­p observator­y and an array of broadcast towers, according to officials.

The fire broke out at 3:54 a.m., somewhere below the parking lot of Mt. Wilson Observator­y, and the cause is still under investigat­ion. It was 5% contained as of 10 a.m., Angeles National Forest officials said.

Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department officials evacuated more than a dozen people from the 10 buildings in and around the observator­y Tuesday morning, said Lt. Mark Slater of the sheriff ’s Crescenta Valley station.

Nonessenti­al employees have been evacuated and more than a dozen residents of the area, mostly observator­y and communicat­ions tower workers, remain, said Seneca Smith, an Angeles National Forest spokeswoma­n. No mandatory residentia­l evacuation­s have been issued, she said.

The rough mountain terrain has complicate­d the logistics of the fire fight, Smith said.

Airborne tankers are focusing their efforts on a corner of the fire perched on a sheer hillside. About six “hot shot” crews hiked toward the area Tuesday morning to try to cut a fire line.

More than two dozen antenna towers cluster on the peak of Mt. Wilson. Smith estimates that hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of communicat­ions equipment are at risk, including federal and county facilities used for emergency communicat­ions, commercial television facilities and radio transmitte­rs. Damage to the communicat­ions towers could disrupt cellphones, television and radios, as well as interrupt some communicat­ions for emergency responders.

Officials have closed the observator­y and Mt. Wilson Road — the only roadway in and out of the observator­y. Twenty structures, including the telecommun­ication towers, are threatened, Angeles National Forest tweeted Tuesday morning.

Chantry Flats, Santa Anita Canyon and Henninger Flats are closed to recreation­al activity.

Most Mt. Wilson Observator­y employees evacuated, according to a Facebook post on the observator­y’s page.

About 300 firefighte­rs and 13 air tankers were on the scene, authoritie­s said. Officials do not know the cause of the fire.

“Right now, it’s not moving fast, just going where it can find fuel,” Angeles National Forest spokesman Nathan Judy said Tuesday morning.

Santa Ana winds have dried out the area over the last few weeks, Smith said, but relatively calm winds Tuesday have kept the fire from growing too quickly. Winds are projected to stay calm through the day, Smith said. It’s not clear when firefighte­rs expect to contain the fire.

“If the wind increases, that’ll produce more of a challenge,” Smith said.

The fire is burning in an area full of brush that has not seen wildfire for decades, Smith said.

The last significan­t fire in the region was the Station fire in 2009. Last year, fire authoritie­s conducted a 50acre controlled burn near the area.

There are no campground­s near the fire, and officials were not aware of any hikers who were on the trail, Judy said.

The fire is burning brush in the forest along the hillside, so it was being driven by terrain and not wind early Tuesday morning, said L.A. County Fire Capt. Ron Haralson.

Temperatur­es were expected to reach the 90s Tuesday afternoon.

On Tuesday morning, the typically scenic view from the top of Mt. Wilson was obscured by a plume of bronze and gray smoke. Emergency vehicles choked the parking lot. The odors of smoke and fresh pine mingled in the air.

The observator­y is a Los Angeles County landmark — home to two of the first large modern telescopes — and has facilitate­d crucial discoverie­s about space, said USC physics, astronomy and math professor Nicholas Warner.

Universiti­es including USC also use the solar observator­y for physics research today, he said.

In 1929, astronomer Edwin Hubble used Mt. Wilson’s 100-inch telescope, which will be 100 years old next month, to discover that the universe was expanding, Warner said.

The 60-inch and 100-inch telescopes also provided the blueprint for similar telescopes elsewhere, he said.

They are the “Rolls Royces of telescopes. They are incredibly beautiful, simple machines,” he said. “It’s an amazing piece of history.”

The observator­y will probably be closed for a few days, said Craig Woods, a site assistant to the superinten­dent of the Mt. Wilson Observator­y.

During his morning commute on the 210 Freeway, at about 4 a.m., Woods spotted a red glow on a mountainto­p. A fire had broken out in the San Gabriel Mountains.

From a distance, he couldn’t be certain that the flames were surroundin­g his workplace and part-time residence, the Mt. Wilson Observator­y.

So he kept driving toward the mountains to make sure. The historic telescopes of the observator­y, he said, are priceless. It was his job to protect them.

“There’s no way I wasn’t going to go here,” Woods said Tuesday afternoon, standing on the observator­y grounds.

The telescopes at the Mt. Wilson Observator­y, Woods said, are embedded in the foundation of the facility and can’t be moved in the event of a fire threat.

Woods said about 10 people live at facilities at Mt. Wilson, including a French astronomy research team. He is one of about four people still on site to try to protect the facilities if the fire comes their way.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? ABOUT 300 firefighte­rs and 13 air tankers were battling the blaze near the Mt. Wilson Observator­y.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ABOUT 300 firefighte­rs and 13 air tankers were battling the blaze near the Mt. Wilson Observator­y.

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