The images of a burning Los Angeles won’t last, simply because our ways of seeing are inadequate to our predicament.
Pacific Palisades appeared more like a moonscape of destruction than an upscale neighborhood known for its ocean views, ...
Kamala Harris had a priceless reaction. In the catastrophic Palisades fire, one of the city's iconic thoroughfares was ...
While lightning is the most common source of fires in the U.S., according to the National Fire Protection Association, ...
A perfect storm of weather and climate conditions made the California wildfires nearly impossible to contain once they ...
The full scale of the wildfire disaster in Los Angeles is still emerging, but the world has been shocked by the ferocity of ...
The flammable Tasmanian blue gum has caused friction among Californians in the past for its role in wildfires. Scientists say the fire-loving tree is one factor in a complex story of climate change.
Amid the homecomings, firefighters continue to battle blazes that have killed 10 people and forced 180,000 others from their homes.
As the deadly fires continue to change the LA suburban landscape forever, officials believe the ignition point came from behind a home in the Pacific Palisades area ...
As I write this, five people are dead and at least 1000 buildings have been destroyed by wildfires that have swept across Los Angeles. Around 100,000 people have been ordered to evacuate.
The BBC's Helena Humphrey is in Altadena, California, an area that has been hit hard by the Eaton Fire. Residents in the area are still under evacuation orders. Charred vehicles line the streets and ...
From more vegetation to flying embers, the BBC Earth team look at why the fires in LA have been so intense and why they've grown so rapidly.