Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Deadline

Biggest Fire Ever Recorded In California Is Now 60% Larger At 746,000 Acres

Tom Tapp
2 min read

Even in a year of record wildfires, the August Complex Fire north of San Francisco is staggering.

The conflagration, located in hilly wooded land that includes the Mendocino National Forest, is now more than 60% bigger than the previous biggest blaze known to have hit the state, the deadly Mendocino Fire Complex that blackened 459,123 acres in the same area in 2018. For a chart listing the blazes, click here.

On Wednesday, the August Complex Fire had already become the biggest in California’s recorded history at 471,000 acres. Since then, it has grown to over 746,000 acres after merging with other large fires nearby.

Advertisement
Advertisement

The largest active fire on the August Complex is the Doe Fire, currently at 471,185 acres about24 percent contained. The Doe Fire is so big, it’s burning in five counties: Glenn County, Mendocino County, Lake County, Tehama County and Trinity County.

In the past 24 hours, the August Complex merged with — and now includes — the nearby Elkhorn Fire.

But the numbers alone do not tell the story.

On Wednesday, the North Complex Fire, which is about one-third the size of the August Complex, swept through the small town of Berry Creek, killing 10 people and leaving 16 missing.

Earlier on Thursday, California Governor Gavin Newsom toured the North Complex fire zone and, after what he saw, did not mince words.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Newsom called “BS” on climate deniers and said bluntly, “We’re in the midst of a climate emergency.”

More from Deadline

Best of Deadline

Sign up for Deadline's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Advertisement
Advertisement