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Wildfires are raging in several areas of Los Angeles, with high winds and extremely dry conditions fuelling their progress across thousands of acres of land.
Firefighters are so far unable to contain a number of them, with one fire official telling the BBC on Thursday that they were still rapidly expanding.
The largest blaze, in the Pacific Palisades area where many celebrities live, is the most destructive fire in the history of Los Angeles. More than 5,300 buildings have been destroyed.
It’s a rapidly changing situation – these maps and pictures chart how the fires have spread, where they are located and what they look like from space.
Among the buildings already destroyed are many of the exclusive properties that line the Malibu waterfront.
Slide your cursor across the image above to see an aerial view of what the area used to look like and what it looks like now.
Three fires have been contained.
Woodley fire: Small fire reported in local parkland. Burnt area: 30 acres.
Olivas fire: Small fire first reported in Ventura county about 50 miles (80km) east of Los Angeles. Burnt area: 11 acres.
Sunset fire: Reported in the historic Hollywood Hills area near many famous landmarks, including the Hollywood sign. Burnt area: 43 acres.
The map above shows how rapidly the Palisades fire spread, intensifying in a matter of hours. At just after 14:00 on Tuesday it covered 772 acres and within four hours it had approximately tripled in size.
It now covers almost 20,000 acres and thousands of people have been forced to evacuate the area, as more than 1,400 firefighters try to tackle the blaze.
The Eaton fire has also grown rapidly from about 1,000 acres on Tuesday to more than 13,000 acres, forcing thousands more people to flee.
Both the Palisades and Eaton fires can be seen from space, as shown in the satellite images below.
As the maps below show, about 20,000 buildings may have been damaged or destroyed already in the two biggest fires – and many more could be at risk depending on how the fires spread.
To give an idea of the size of the Palisades fire, we have superimposed it on to maps of New York and London.
As you can see by 23:00 PST, 8 January, (07:00 GMT, 9 January), it was comparable in size with an area stretching from Clapham to Greenwich in the UK’s capital, or with large areas of lower Manhattan and Queens.
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