What remains from the fires that broke out Jan. 7 is a charred landscape, filled with skeletal trees and blackened debris.
The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health is warning residents to stay cautious near recent burn scars, including torched structures or patches of land.
The fires will have a deep and lasting impact on construction, entertainment, retail and other sectors of the Los Angeles ...
Fewer wildfires burn in North American forests today than in previous centuries, increasing the risk of more severe wildfires ...
Rain on burned hillslopes can trigger dangerous floods and debris flows. Those debris flows can move with the speed of a ...
Areas scarred by the Eaton Fire are at “high to very high risk” of debris flows this week. How do they happen? What is being done to prepare for storms?
Los Angeles County keeps building in hillsides and canyons even as the fire risk worsens. For a century, the lure of ...
Late last month, before the rains arrived, USC professor Seth John traveled through foothill neighborhoods devastated by the ...
A report published Thursday found the percentage of ED visits related to fire and smoke inhalation rose in the days after the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results