1 of 19
A firefighter douses flames as they push towards homes during the Creek fire in the Cascadel Woods area of unincorporated Madera County, California.
Image Credit: AFP
2 of 19
Smoke from the Creek Fire billows beyond a ridge as seen from Huntington Lake. Three large wildfires burned in California and a fourth was growing quickly on Monday as a weekend heat wave lingered across large swaths of the western United States.
Image Credit: AP
3 of 19
The Creek Fire, which has engulfed the Fresno area in central California and caused the emergency evacuation over the weekend of more than 200 people vacationing at a popular reservoir, was still not contained as of Monday afternoon, fire officials said.
Image Credit: AP
4 of 19
Wildfires in California have torched a record more than two million acres, the state fire department said Monday, as an uncontrolled blaze forced many residents to flee their homes.
Image Credit: TNS
5 of 19
The record was hit as the wildfire season still has roughly two months to go in the most populous US state and as thousands of firefighters were battling flames during a scorching heat wave.
Image Credit: AFP
6 of 19
A vehicle streaks by in a long exposure as Fresno County Sheriff Deputy Jeffery Shipman stands along CA-168 as the Creek Fire creeps closer to town. "In the past 33 years we have not seen a single year go over two million acres until this year," said California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) spokeswoman Lynne Tolmachoff.
Image Credit: TNS
7 of 19
"This is definitely record-breaking and we have not even come close to the end of fire season yet," said Tolmachoff.
Image Credit: AP
8 of 19
At least seven people have died as a result of this year's fires and some 3,800 structures have been damaged or destroyed, according to Cal Fire figures.
Image Credit: AP
9 of 19
The last time the number of acres burned got close to two million was in 2018, the same year as the devastating Camp Fire, when a little more than 1.9 million acres (769,000 hectares) went up in flames.
Image Credit: AP
10 of 19
More than 14,100 firefighters were battling 24 different wildfires as of Monday afternoon, the fire department said in a tweet.
Image Credit: AP
11 of 19
Among those blazes was the Creek Fire, which started on Friday in steep and rugged terrain, has so far spread to 78,790 acres and is zero percent contained, according to Cal Fire.
Image Credit: AP
12 of 19
The department said on Twitter that 976 personnel were battling the fire, which had continued to grow "under extreme conditions."
Image Credit: AFP
13 of 19
Another rapidly growing fire, the Oak Fire, began Sunday in Mendocino county and has already grown to 1,000 acres.
Image Credit: AP
14 of 19
Evacuation orders were in effect throughout southern California on Monday afternoon.
Image Credit: REUTERS
15 of 19
In northern California, more than 200 people were airlifted to safety over the weekend after a fast-moving wildfire trapped them near the Mammoth Pool Reservoir northeast of Fresno.
Image Credit: AP
16 of 19
They were rescued by military helicopters, with dozens packed into a Chinook, video shared by the California National Guard showed.
Image Credit: AP
17 of 19
Record temperatures over the three-day Labor Day weekend have aggravated already dangerous fire conditions and further stressed exhausted California firefighters.
Image Credit: AP
18 of 19
California has been baking under scorching conditions with temperatures reaching a record 121 degrees Fahrenheit (49 Celsius) on Sunday in Woodland Hills, an all-time high for Los Angeles county, the National Weather Service said.
Image Credit: AFP
19 of 19
A burned structure is seen at a wildfire in Yucaipa, California.
Image Credit: AP