A Northern California wildfire raced through more than six square miles of drought-stricken timber over the weekend, threatening at least 150 rural homes in the Sierra Nevada, authorities said.
The blaze forced evacuations of some communities in and near Nevada County, about 45 miles northeast of Sacramento.
More than 785 personnel were involved in fighting the fire.
Homes and small ranches dotted the heavy timber. Mandatory evacuations were called for areas of Red Dog, Chalk Bluff and You Bet in Nevada County, and the community of Cascade Shores.
No injuries were reported.
The cause of the fire wasn’t determined but investigators asked for public help in finding a white Jeep Wrangler with a roll bar and no front doors that was seen in the area around the time the fire started.
Meanwhile, firefighters gained ground Saturday against a wildfire near Napa Valley wine country, and fire officials ended all evacuation orders and road closures.
Crews battling a separate blaze in the Sierra Nevada on Friday had reopened one lane of a freeway linking Sacramento and Reno and were escorting traffic through the fire area.
The Napa-area blaze has burned more than 10 1/2 square miles of drought-parched countryside near Lake Berryessa, about 45 miles east of wine country. Residents who evacuated about 50 homes when the fire broke out Wednesday were allowed to return by Friday.
All mandatory evacuations and road closures were lifted Saturday morning, Cal Fire said.
The blaze was 55 percent contained.
The other fire, in the Sierra Nevada southwest of Lake Tahoe, has charred 200 acres of heavy timber. It was 75 percent contained Saturday.
It was burning about 60 miles east of Sacramento on both sides of the American River and U.S. Highway 50.
Topics Catastrophe California Natural Disasters Wildfire Homeowners
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