There is a large area scorched by the Park Fire in California

Search for air tanker fires in the Oregon town of Seneca and the Malheur National Forest, and a world heritage site destroyed by the Los Angeles fire

A Grant County Search and Rescue team located a small air tanker that disappeared while fighting a fire in Oregon on Friday. Falls Fire burning near the town of Seneca and the Malheur National Forest. The pilot died, said Bureau of Land Management information officer Lisa Clark. No one else was in the plane when it went down.

The most damage so far has been to the Canadian Rockies’ Jasper National Park, where 25,000 people were forced to flee and the park’s namesake, a World Heritage site, was devastated, with 358 of the town’s 1,113 structures destroyed.

More than 110 active fires covering 2,800 square miles (7,250 square kilometers) were burning in the U.S. on Friday, according to the National Interagency Fire Center. Climate change increased the occurrence of lightning strikes in the region due to the heat and bone-dry conditions.

There are videos posted to social media of a man who said he heard blasts while he fled Juliaetta, which is close to the University of Idaho’s campus in Moscow. The town of just over 600 residents was evacuated Thursday just ahead of roaring fires, as were several other communities near the Clearwater River and the Nez Perce Tribal Hatchery Complex, which breeds salmon.

There is no estimate on the number of buildings that were burned in Idaho and there isn’t information about the damage to urban communities.

The Los Angeles fire is smaller than the one in Cal Fire’s list of the top 10 largest fires in the state.

On Friday, the National Interagency Fire Center reported that more than 100 fires were burning in the U.S.

A Model for the Fires that Burn: Carli Parker, 47, and Tim Hike, 40, are among Hundreds of Those Who Leave Their Families in the Park Fire

Alpers said she doesn’t know whether the fire spared her home or not, but she said that as long as her dogs are safe, she doesn’t care about the material things.

“Everything else we had burned up, but getting them out, getting us out, was my priority,” Singleton said Saturday, standing outside her SUV as her dogs rested. They have all been sleeping in the car outside a Red Cross shelter at a church that does not allow animals, and Singleton, 59, said the next thing is to find a place for her pets to stretch out.

“As evidenced by the (Park) fire to the West, some of these fires are just absolutely exploding and burning at rates of spread that it is just hard to even imagine,” Tim Hike, Forest Service incident commander of the Gold Complex fire about 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Reno, said Friday. The fire doesn’t look horrible until it does. And then that just might be too late.”

Ronnie Dean Stout, 42, of Chico, was arrested early Thursday in connection with the blaze and held without bail pending a Monday arraignment, officials said. There was no response to the email from the district Attorney asking if the suspect had legal representation or anyone who could comment on his behalf.

“I think I felt like I was in danger because the police had come to our house because we had signed up for early evacuation warnings, and they were running to their vehicle after telling us that we need to self-evacuate and they wouldn’t come back,” said Parker, a mother of five.

In Chico, California, Carli Parker is one of hundreds who fled their homes as the Park Fire pushed close. Parker decided to leave her Forest Ranch residence with her family when the fire began burning across the street. She has been forced out of two homes before, and she had little hope that the house would survive this time.

A fire in eastern Washington destroyed three homes and five outbuildings near the community of Tyler, which was evacuated Friday afternoon, said Ryan Rodruck, spokesperson with the Washington Department of Natural Resources. Firefighters were able to contain the Columbia basin fire to half a square mile, he said.

Communities elsewhere in the U.S. West and Canada were under siege Friday, from a fast-moving blaze sparked by lightning sent people fleeing on fire-ringed roads in rural Idaho to a new blaze that was causing evacuations in eastern Washington.

Officials at Lassen Volcanic National Park evacuated staff from Mineral, a community of about 120 people where the park headquarters are located, as the fire moved north toward Highway 36 and east toward the park.

After a fire exploded in size to the size of Los Angeles, thousands of firefighters were given some help from the weather. The wind and heat caused the blaze in the western US and Canada.

Cooler temperatures and an increase in humidity could help slow the Park Fire, the largest this year in California. As a result of it’s intensity, officials compared it to the Camp Fire in Paradise, California, which charred out of control in the area, killing 85 people and burning 11,000 homes.

California’s largest active fire exploded in size on Friday evening, growing rapidly amid bone-dry fuel and threatening thousands of homes as firefighters scrambled to meet the danger.

Susan and her husband packed a SUV with clothes, food, and their seven dogs and drove to Cohasset, a small town about 400 miles northeast of Chico, to evacuate their home. They have since learned that their house burned down.

The community of Havilah in Southern California was ravaged by a 44 square mile (118 square kilometer) forest fire in less than three days. The town had been under an order to leave.

The Plumas National FOREST near the California-Nevada line was the site of a complex of fires that were making progress. Traffic was backed up for miles near the border along the main highway linking Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

And in Idaho, homes, outbuildings and a commercial building were among structures lost in several communities including Juliaetta, which was evacuated Thursday. The grouping of blazes referred to as the Gwen Fire was estimated at 41 square miles (106 square kilometers) in size with no containment.

The danger zone of Paradise, Cal Fire, during the cool weather on Saturday night, according to the Cal Fire Operations Section Chief and National Weather Service

The Cal Fire operations section chief said that firefighters were taking advantage of the cool weather while it lasts.

According to the National Weather Service, temperatures will be cooler than average over the next few days, but that doesn’t mean that fires will go away.

Paradise again was near the danger zone on Saturday. The entire town was under a warning to evacuate. In other counties, evalution orders had also been issued. An evacuation warning calls for people to prepare to leave and await instructions, while an evacuation order means to leave immediately.

A wildfire in Oregon, US, has forced the evacuation of at least 600 people, officials said. The blaze, which erupted on Wednesday evening, has burned more than 7,500 square miles of terrain, the US Forest Service said. It’s one of more than 60 wildfires that have erupted in the US in the past week, the Forest Service added.