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California Fires: Almost 6,000 Buildings Destroyed, 36 People Killed

California Fires: Almost 6,000 Buildings Destroyed, 36 People Killed
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Local Editor

Reinforcements from other regions are helping firefighters contain more of the largest wildfires devastating Northern US state of California, though strong winds expected over the weekend could challenge those gains, a fire chief said Friday.

California Fires: Almost 6,000 Buildings Destroyed, 36 People Killed

Meanwhile, officials are making grim discoveries -- victims burnt beyond recognition -- as they search blackened ruins of some of the 5,700 homes and business that have been destroyed.

"Some of [the remains] are merely ashes and bones," Sonoma County Sheriff Rob Giordano said at a Thursday evening news conference. "And we may never get truly confirmative identification on ashes. When you're cremated, you can't get an ID."

Thirty-six people have been killed since the wildfires began Sunday night, making this outbreak one of the deadliest in state history, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection [Cal Fire].

Firefighters are making progress on some of the bigger fires, Napa County Fire Chief Barry Biermann said Friday, thanks in large part to the gumption of those who've been on the lines for days and the reinforcements who are relieving them.

Since Sunday, the deadly fires have consumed thousands of homes and forced evacuations in Northern California's wine country and produced unhealthy air quality in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Meanwhile, though progress has been made on the big fires, much more work is ahead.

The 48,000-plus acre Atlas fire in Napa and Solano counties was 45% contained Friday -- up from 3% the day earlier. The 44,000-acre Nuns fire in Sonoma County -- an amalgamation of three recently merged fires north and west of Glen Ellen -- was 5% contained.

The 34,000-acre Tubbs fire in Napa and Sonoma counties was 44% under control.

The 34,000-acre Redwood and Potter fires in Mendocino County were 10% contained.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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