Home » California’s Fire Death Toll Doubles as Chaos Grips Los Angeles 

California’s Fire Death Toll Doubles as Chaos Grips Los Angeles 

Lukman

Wildfires are raging in several areas of Los Angeles, with high winds and extremely dry conditions fuelling their progress across thousands of acres of land.

Firefighters are so far unable to contain a number of them, with one fire official telling the BBC on Thursday that they were still rapidly expanding.

The largest blaze, in the Pacific Palisades area where many celebrities live, is the most destructive fire in the history of Los Angeles. More than 5,300 buildings have been destroyed.

It’s a rapidly changing situation – these maps and pictures chart how the fires have spread, where they are located and what they look like from space.

Among the buildings already destroyed are many of the exclusive properties that line the Malibu waterfront.

Slide your cursor across the image above to see an aerial view of what the area used to look like and what it looks like now.

Five fires are still burning in the Los Angeles area.

  • Palisades fire: The largest active fire is burning between Santa Monica and Malibu. Burnt area: more than 20,000 acres. More than 5,300 structures destroyed. At least 30,000 people evacuated.
  • Eaton fire: Second largest fire burning north of Pasadena. Burnt area: at least 13,690 acres. Potentially more than 4,000 structures damaged or destroyed. Five deaths reported.
  • Hurst fire: To the north east of the city. Burnt area: 850 acres.
  • Lidia fire: Reported in the hills north of Los Angeles. Burnt area: 350 acres.
  • Kenneth fire: In the West Hills area, just north of the Palisades. Began on Thursday afternoon and has so far burned 960 acres.

Three fires have been contained.

Woodley fire: Small fire reported in local parkland. Burnt area: 30 acres.

Olivas fire: Small fire first reported in Ventura county about 50 miles (80km) east of Los Angeles. Burnt area: 11 acres.

Sunset fire: Reported in the historic Hollywood Hills area near many famous landmarks, including the Hollywood sign. Burnt area: 43 acres.

(BBC)

You may also like

Leave a Comment

We strive to publish high-quality news content and report stories/news that inform, educate, entertain, and hold leaders and institutions accountable while upholding the ethics of journalism to safeguard trust in news reportage.

 

Content does not represent the official opinions of Stallion Times unless specifically indicated.

Edtior's Picks

Latest Articles

Copyright 2024. All Rights Reserved. Stallion Times Media Services Ltd.

-
00:00
00:00
Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00

Adblock Detected

Please support us by disabling your AdBlocker extension from your browsers for our website.