The wildfires raging in Northern California spread on Wednesday as National Guard troops were called in to search for victims while firefighting crews received a little help from the weather in their battle against the deadliest blaze in the state's history.
The state-wide death toll from both the Camp and Woolsey fires had risen to at least 60.
Overnight, the Camp Fire had grown 5,000 acres to 135,000, even though diminished winds and rising humidity on Tuesday had allowed firefighting crews to set up containment lines.
The fire, in Butte County about 280 km north of San Francisco, remained about 35 percent contained after burning for nearly a week.
A National Guard contingent of 100 military police trained to seek and identify human remains was going into Paradise, a town of about 27,000 in the Sierra foothills that has been reduced to little more than embers and ash by the Camp Fire.
They were joining coroner-led recovery teams, cadaver dogs and forensic anthropologists already searching the ghostly landscape.
Stewart Morrow, an official of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire), was assessing damage to homes in Paradise, comparing piles of charred rubble where houses once stood with online photos of the structures before the fire. He also was keeping an eye out for human remains.
"I’ve been a firefighter for 20 years and I’ve never seen a place so destroyed," Morrow said on Wednesday. "It’s unreal."
TRT World's Ediz Tiyansan reports.
A group of three law firms representing multiple victims of the Camp Fire has filed a lawsuit against Pacific Gas & Electric alleging PG&E failed to properly maintain and replace its equipment and that "its inexcusable behavior" contributed to the cause of the Camp Fire.
US Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and California Governor Jerry Brown were scheduled to tour the area, as well as the site of the Woolsey Fire, where two people have died about 64 km west of Los Angeles.
US President Donald Trump has declared both to be disaster areas, making federal emergency assistance more readily available.
Wind-driven flames roared through Paradise so swiftly that residents were forced to flee for their lives with little or no warning.
Nearly 230 people have been listed as missing, but on Tuesday night Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said those numbers were highly fluid as some individuals may simply have fallen out of touch during chaotic evacuations.
A home destroyed by the Woolsey Fire is seen in Thousand Oaks, California, US November 12, 2018.
Dry conditions
The Camp Fire, fed by drought-desiccated scrub and fanned by strong winds, has capped a catastrophic California wildfire season that experts largely attribute to prolonged dry spells that are symptomatic of global climate change.
Anna Dise, a resident of Butte Creek Canyon west of Paradise, told KRCR TV that her father, Gordon Dise, 66, was among those who died. They had little time to evacuate and their house collapsed on her father when he went back in to gather belongings.
Dise said she could not flee in her car because the tires had melted. To survive, she hid overnight in a neighbour's pond with her dogs.
"It [the fire] was so fast," Dise said. "I didn't expect it to move so fast."
Josh Campbell of Cal Fire told local media early on Wednesday, however, that in at least one instance the strong wind gusts in a canyon near the city of Chico, not far from Paradise, were actually helping by slowing the spread of the fire.
"This gives us the opportunity to construct our lines, so we can be ready for the fire and put it out," he said.
The Woolsey Fire was the worst of a flurry of blazes in Southern California, where it killed two people, destroyed more than 400 structures and displaced about 200,000 people in the mountains and foothills west of Los Angeles.
The state-wide fatality count far exceeds the previous record for the greatest loss of life from wildfires in California history – 29 people killed by the Griffith Park fire in Los Angeles in 1933.
The origins of both the Camp and Woolsey fires are under investigation.
Utility companies Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas & Electric reported to regulators they experienced problems with transmission lines or substations in areas around the time the blazes were first reported.