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- Twin Northern California blazes fueled by dry vegetation and hot, windy weather grew Monday to become the largest wildfire in state history.
- Fire officials said on Monday that the two fires burning a few miles apart, known as the Mendocino Complex are being treated as one incident. It has scorched 283,800 acres (443.4 square miles or 1,148.4 square kilometers), fire officials said Monday.
- The fires, north of San Francisco, have burned 75 homes and is only 30 percent contained as of Monday evening.
LAKEPORT, Calif. (AP) — Twin Northern California blazes fueled by dry vegetation and hot, windy weather grew Monday to become the largest wildfire in state history, becoming the norm as climate change makes the fire season longer and more severe.
The two fires burning a few miles apart and known as the Mendocino Complex are being treated as one incident. It has scorched 283,800 acres (443.4 square miles or 1,148.4 square kilometers), fire officials said Monday.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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See Also:
- The Carr fire — one of the most destructive in California history — has now killed 7 people, and it's still spreading
- I've been on the front lines of the devastating wildfires sweeping the US — here's what you should know about fighting them
- Firefighters in California gain ground on deadly blaze that devoured more than 1,000 homes
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