The Palisades and Eaton fires are now among the most destructive in California’s history in terms of the number of structures destroyed, according to Cal Fire.
Several iconic landmarks have been damaged or destroyed as the wildfires continue to burn across Southern California.
San Diego County has in the past dealt with its own massive and destructive fires. How do they compare to the recent blazes in Los Angeles?
Even as four wildfires continued to burn in Los Angeles County, the blazes were already rewriting the record books.
The Rams earned a home playoff game by winning the NFC West in a tiebreaker against Seattle. The Vikings, who ended the regular season with the second-best record in the NFC and third-best record in the NFL, will play on the road after losing a game last Sunday to Detroit that served as a de facto NFC North title game.
California wildfires damaged or destroyed iconic sites ... The school also served as a high school in the 2003 remake of "Freaky Friday" with Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis, the Kirsten ...
Fueled by powerful winds and dry conditions, a series of ferocious wildfires erupted the second week of January and roared across the Los Angeles area.
Twenty-seven people have died across the Los Angeles area. Officials have said the true death toll isn’t known as the fires continue to burn.
Two weeks have passed since a destructive wave of wildfires first gripped southern California, burning tens of thousands of acres and killing more than two dozen people in what has become one of the worst natural disasters in the state’s history.
The wildfire disaster in Los Angeles underscores the importance of climate change adaptation. We built our infrastructure for a world that no longer exists.
Non-native grasses and eucalyptus trees brought to California centuries ago for agriculture and landscaping have reshaped the state’s fire dynamics.