California Wildfires Burn Nearly 60,000 Acres

Six wildfires were burning across California on Saturday, consuming nearly 60,000 acres.

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By Abby Sewell

Six wildfires were burning across California on Saturday, consuming nearly 60,000 acres.

More than 4,500 firefighters were battling the fires, which stretched from the Klammath National Forest in Northern California to the Mexican border in San Diego County, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

The largest and most destructive of the blazes is the Erskine fire in Kern County, which had burned 35,711 acres as of Saturday afternoon, destroying more than 150 homes and killing at least two people. Authorities have found what they believe are the remains of a third victim.

The Kern County fire is about 5% contained.

In Southern California, the 7,609-acre Border fire in San Diego County, which has destroyed five homes and damaged another, was 70% contained, officials said Saturday. The 5,285-acre San Gabriel Complex fire in Los Angeles County's mountains was nearly half contained, and evacuation orders had been lifted as of Saturday.

The 7,474-acre Sherpa fire, which threatened homes and destroyed one structure in Santa Barbara County, was almost entirely contained Saturday.

Farther north, the Marina fire in Mono County, which broke out north of Lee Vining on Friday, had burned 819 acres as of Saturday and was 5% contained.

In the Klamath National Forest, the lightning-sparked Pony fire had burned 2,858 acres and was 60% contained.

Red-flag fire warnings were in effect across much of southern and central California, including in the mountains of Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara and Kern counties and in the Sacramento Valley from Redding to Sacramento, because of gusty winds and low humidity.

(c)2016 the Los Angeles Times

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Caroline Cournoyer is GOVERNING's senior web editor.
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