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Two killed, 100 homes destroyed by fast-moving California wildfire

California Governor declared a state of emergency for Kern County

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This handout photo released by the Kern County Fire Department shows people fighting the Erskine Fire as a house burns in the background, near Lake Isabella, California, late June 23, 2016.
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 A massive California wildfire that has already killed two people and destroyed 100 structures was burning out of control on Friday evening as officials said it was possible more victims could be found in the rubble.

The so-called Erskine Fire, which broke out on Thursday afternoon in the foothills of Kern County about 42 miles (68 km) northeast of Bakersfield, had mushroomed on Friday to char more than 12,140 hectares, making it one of the worst in an already intense California fire season. The blaze has also sent three firefighters to the hospital for smoke inhalation and forced hundreds of residents to flee their homes ahead of the flames.

California Governor Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency for Kern County. "This has been a massive amount of evacuations, people going door to door asking people to leave their homes because it's very dangerous out there," Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood told reporters at a Friday evening press conference.

Youngblood said two people had been confirmed killed in the inferno and that more fatalities could be discovered once authorities were able to search burned out neighbourhoods. "We're gonna go back over the rubble with cadaver dogs," he said. "We don't know if there are other victims who were unable to escape this fire."

Fire officials said they had zero containment of the Erskine Fire, which was being driven by high temperatures and bone-dry vegetation from a five-year California drought. "Everything is just working into a perfect storm," Kern County fire Captain Mike Nicholas said in a phone interview.

Some 800 firefighters struggled against the fast-moving flames in steep terrain. On Friday, authorities warned the more than 3,000 residents of the community of Lake Isabella on the shore of a reservoir to be prepared to evacuate.

Southeast of Lake Isabella, dozens of burned-out homes and car frames could be seen in a neighbourhood reduced to a field of mangled metal and collapsed roofs. Two groups of residents picked through the rubble while firefighters worked in the area.

The rapidly expanding blaze 241 km north of Los Angeles has destroyed 100 structures, including homes, outbuildings and detached garages, Nicholas said. Another 1,500 structures were threatened. Morgan Rivers, an evacuee from the blaze, told Los Angeles television station KABC she lost the house that belonged to her late grandmother. "It's fully mine now and I just lost it after getting it last year," Rivers told the station.

To the south, firefighters were struggling to manage the so-called San Gabriel Complex fire in the foothills of Los Angeles County. As of Friday, it had burned over 2,144 hectares of chaparral and short grass, and containment lines were drawn around 30 percent of its perimeter. All evacuation orders have been lifted.

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