Could the windstorm that stoked the Los Angeles fires happen in Northern California? The answer is yes, and it also resulted in a historic fire disaster. Here's an explanation of the phenomenon.
Life in Los Angeles: The fires erupted quickly, in a way residents knew was possible but many were unprepared for. Families ...
Pacific Palisades-area residents escaping the rapidly advancing flames on Tuesday afternoon also created major traffic ...
The deadly Los Angeles wildfires turned neighborhoods into ash as officials ordered 150,000 people to evacuate their homes.
As a fire ignited in the Pacific Palisades on Tuesday, the winds crashed over and through the mountains like white water ...
Universal Studios Hollywood will be closed Wednesday amid the wildfires and high winds that continue to ravage the Los ...
Powerful Santa Ana winds, with gusts reaching hurricane strength, swept down the mountains outside Los Angeles and spread ...
Answers remain elusive about the ignition source of the fires, even after officials suspected one of the blazes was arson.
Prolonged drought and powerful Santa Ana winds set up extreme conditions that have fueled the devastating wildfires in the Los Angeles area. Those conditions were compounded by climate change.
Why did dozens of fire hydrants go dry as firefighters rushed to combat flames from spreading in the Los Angeles area? National investigative correspondent Patrick Terpstra explains.
Five questions with UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain, who warned of “extreme fire danger” in Southern California days ...