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The Park Fire surpassed the LNU Lightning Complex Fire, which was caused by lightning and arson in August 2020, and burned 363,220 acres in Napa, Solano, Sonoma, Yolo, Lake and Colusa.
On Friday, the Park Fire became the fourth-largest wildfire in California history. Now at 401,301 acres, the blaze surpassed the 2020 SCU Lightning Complex fire that torched 397,000 acres across ...
Cal Fire officials said the Park Fire had so far destroyed 134 structures as it marched northward from Chico and spread from Butte to Tehama County. After four days of no containment, firefighters ...
The Park Fire, as of Tuesday morning, had burned a total of 429,259 acres (670 square miles) with containment at 39%; up by a percentage point Monday morning, according to Cal Fire. Most of the ...
On Friday morning, Cal Fire reported that the Park Fire had burned 164,286 acres (66,484 ha) and was zero percent contained. Evacuation orders were in place for northeastern Chico, Forest Ranch, and Cohasset in Butte County, and Campbellville in Tehama County. [25] On Friday, the fire crossed Highway 36 near Paynes Creek. [29]
The NWS forecast predicts that Park Fire smoke will generally head north and east, affecting communities such as Redding and Red Bluff. The current forecast runs to Sunday. Park Fire smoke forecast
The Mill Fire was a fast-moving, deadly and destructive wildfire that burned during the 2022 California wildfire season, destroying parts of the communities of Weed, Lake Shastina and Edgewood in Siskiyou County in the U.S. state of California. Igniting during hot, dry & windy conditions on September 2, 2022, amid a record-breaking heat wave ...
It has shut down two highways so far, according to Cal Fire’s map — Highway 32 and Highway 36 East. A car burned during the Park Fire sits near the intersection of Cohasset Road and Vilas Road ...