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The remains of six more victims of California’s most lethal and destructive wildfire in history have been found, bringing the death toll to 48 in the so-called Camp Fire in northern California and 51 total, statewide.
Forensic teams with cadaver dogs spent the day combing through ash and charred debris in what was let of the town of Paradise, around 175 miles (280km) north of San Francisco, near the state capital of Sacramento. Butte County Sheriff Kory Honea said 100 National Guard troops were being sent in at his request to assist in the search for additional human remains left by the Camp Fire.
The names of 80 people, many of them elderly, have been released in an effort to locate them amid the blaze damage.
The intensified effort to locate victims comes on the sixth day of a blaze that has incinerated more than 8,800 homes and other buildings, including most of Paradise, a town once home to 27,000 people that was largely erased hours after the fire began last Thursday. More than 50,000 local residents remained under evacuation orders.
In southern California, the Woolsey Fire has killed three people, destroyed more than 400 structures and displaced some 200,000 people in the mountains and foothills near the Malibu coast west of Los Angeles.
Darkened skies could be seen for days as the fire raged on, with winds picking up the smoke and sending it as far as Wisconsin nearly 2,000 miles away.
Night vision military drone shows Camp Fire tearing through California
The Woolsey Fire has displaced several celebrities as well including Gerard Butler, Neil Young, and Lady Gaga, who was seen delivering pizzas, coffee, and gift cards to a nearby evacuation centre in Los Angeles.
That fire has consumed more than 97,000 acres through Los Angeles and Ventura counties and leaving 57,000 residents still in danger as firefighting authorities said only half of the blaze has been contained.
Wildfires spread across California – in pictures
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Donald Trump was briefed on the situation by Federal Emergency Management Agency (Fema) director Brock Long. Mr Trump said he had a phone call with California governor Jerry Brown “to let him know that we are with him, and the people of California, all the way!”
The president had tweeted over the weekend the fires were due to "poor" "forest management" in the state but did not elaborate on what that actually meant. He also threatened to stop federal government payments to California, presumably funds earmarked for forest management.
However, the current spate of wildfires is not in forests.
The Camp and Woolsey fires actually began in what the New York Times called the "wildland-urban interface: places where communities are close to undeveloped areas, making it easier for fire to move from forests or grasslands into neighbourhoods."
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According to a 2015 report by the US Department of Agriculture, there were 44 million homes in those areas. That number is certainly higher in 2018 as urban areas expand in California.
Regarding his threat to withdraw federal funds for forest management in California - approximately 60 per cent of the forest land in the state is actually federally held and managed.
Of the 33 million acres, 40 per cent are owned and managed by individuals, Native American tribes, and timber companies. Only 3 per cent is owned by the state.
After devastating fires last year, California had allocated more than $250 million to lower the risk of more wildfires but drought, possibly due to climate change, has exacerbated conditions.
Meanwhile, several homeowners filed a lawsuit against utility company Pacific Gas & Electric for causing the fire.
The suit alleged the company did not properly inspect its high voltage power lines, a spark from which is thought to have ignited dry brush and grassland nearby.
The company has lost approximately 45 per cent of its stock value as the fires continue to rage.
To see how the day unfolded follow our live blog below
Winds the strength of “hurricane gusts” are likely to fuel a wildfire raging in California as firefighters continue the arduous and exhaustive process of battling flames while rescuing victims.
Meanwhile, cars were within metres of a fire in Ventura County as residents attempted to escape the blaze reporting stretching nearly 200 acres.
Kim Kardahsian-West and Kanye West reportedly hired a team of private firefighters to battle the blazes near their Hidden Hills mansion in California, which costs upwards of $60m.
The couple was forced to evacuate the home with their children, though the home remains reportedly unscathed from the deadly wildfire.
Actor Liam Hemsworth posted the following image of his and Miley Cyrus' destroyed home to Twitter, writing, "It’s been a heartbreaking few days. This is what’s left of my house. Love. Many people in Malibu and surrounding areas in California have lost their homes also and my heart goes out to everyone who was affected by these fires."
He re-directed viewers to The Malibu Foundation and Happy Hippy Foundation, both of which are working to provide resources in the wake of California's deadliest wildfire.
ABC News captured this live footage over Southern California of firefighters battling back some of the deadly Woolsey Fire, the state’s deadliest in record-keeping history.
The aerial footage shows just how arduous the process has become, with helicopters shooting water above the blazing mountains.
Therapy dogs that had been working with victims and those impacted by the recent mass shooting in Thousand Oaks, California waited in line to say goodbye to firefighters who were going to fight the wildfires in the surrounding areas.
Brynn Parrott, who narrowly escaped the California wildfires in Paradise, told CNN “We thoughts our tires would melt … we didn’t know what was in front of us.”
A horse was found stuck on a backyard pool cover in in California, “shivering uncontrollably” with “a look of defeat” after surviving the wildfires in the area. It wasn’t immediately clear how long the horse had been stuck inside of the pool.
Cal Fire posted a message to Twitter thanking its out of state partners who have contributed to the state’s search and rescue missions, as well as battling back the blazes that continue to rage across the state.
The death toll has reached 50 across California, as officials reported the Camp Fire in the northern region of the state had killed at least 48 people. Hundreds remain missing as of Wednesday morning, with fire agencies across the country assisting in relief efforts and battling back the flames.
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