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More than 1,400 homes have been destroyed in two of the biggest wildfires currently burning in California, officials said Sunday, making them among the worst ever in the state. The death toll rose to six after a person was killed in a new fire south of Monterrey.
Responders were shifting to damage assessment Sunday for the Valley and Butte fires, which have each burned more than 70,000 acres (28,000 hectares), as they were approximately half and 70 percent contained, respectively.
Mandatory evacuations for the Butte fire, burning about 100 miles east of Sacramento, were lifted Sunday, as were evacuations for some areas affected by the Valley fire, north of Napa Valley's wine country.
The damage assessments gave long-awaited answers to some of the thousands of displaced residents wondering whether they would have homes to return to.
But ten large fires - including two new ones - remained active in the state Sunday, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CalFire), which said 10,500 fire-fighters were currently deployed.
One resident was killed in a new fire that sprang up Saturday afternoon south of Monterey. Ten homes have been destroyed or damaged so far by that 1,200-acre blaze, which was only 10 percent contained, CalFire said.
Three residents have been killed and four firefighters injured in the Valley fire, which began last Saturday.
And another two civilians were killed in the Butte fire, in the Sierra Nevada foothills, but residents were being allowed to gradually return to their homes Sunday.
CalFire spokesman Daniel Berlant said those two had chosen to remain in their homes evacuations were put in place
"Our fire-fighters this week were forced to stop fighting the fire and went into rescue mode just trying to get people to evacuate," he told Fox News.
As the damage was tallied Sunday, CalFire said the Valley and Butte fires had become the sixth and seventh worst, respectively, in the state's history, after they razed parts of small, rural towns.
By contrast, the most damaging fire, the 1991 Tunnel fire tore through the heavily populated hills above Oakland, killing 25 and destroying some 2,900 homes and apartment buildings.
Local authorities say hot and dry weather is hampering efforts to control the ongoing blazes, which have thrived in drought-parched California.
The fires have cost California at least $244 million since July 1, compared to $240 million for all of 2013. Last year, the bill amounted to $434 million.
Several other major fires are burning in the state's national forests and other federally operated lands, though with less direct threat to homes or residents.
Other blazes continue across the western United States, particularly northern Washington state.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2015

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