Sunday, July 24th 2016, 12:01 pm
Authorities say a burned body has been found at the scene of a wildfire that's threatening thousands of homes north of Los Angeles.
Los Angeles County sheriff's Lt. Rob Hahnlein says the body was reported shortly after 7:30 p.m. Saturday outside a home on Iron Canyon Road in Santa Clarita.
He says the home also may have burned.
Detectives will try to determine whether the person died from the fire or from other causes.
The area is among those ordered evacuated because of a wildfire that has blackened more than 31 square miles of brush and continues to rage in canyons and ranchlands.
The fire erupted Friday afternoon in the Sand Canyon area of suburban Santa Clarita near State Route 14 as the region was gripped by high heat and very low humidity. Winds pushed it into the adjacent Angeles National Forest, scorching more than 17 square miles.
Los Angeles fire officials say it is currently only 10 percent contained.
Fire officials say some buildings have burned, but it's not clear whether they were homes, garages or outbuildings. A fire official says a big wildfire in mountains just north of Los Angeles and its suburbs is a threat to 1,000 homes.
Los Angeles County Deputy Fire officials say a wind shift Saturday afternoon put more communities on alert. In the event of extreme fire behavior 45,000 homes could be threatened, largely in the San Fernando Valley.
Some 400 animals were being evacuated from the Wildlife Waystation, a nonprofit sanctuary for rescued exotic creatures within the national forest.
The sanctuary's Facebook page appealed for donations of flatbed and enclosed trucks as well as an air-conditioned warehouse to house the animals.
Over many years, the sanctuary has cared for thousands of animals ranging from lions and tigers to primates and exotic birds.
"There's not much you can do, is there?" Paul Kelly, an evacuated resident, told CBS Los Angeles. "You can just hope, that's all."
About 300 miles up the coast, California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection firefighters battled a nearly 3-square-mile blaze in rugged mountains north of the majestic Big Sur region.
The blaze five miles south of Garrapata State Park posed a threat to 1,000 homes and the community of Palo Colorado was ordered evacuated, Cal Fire said. A middle school in Carmel-by-the-Sea was readied as an evacuation center.
More than 300 firefighters were on the lines.
Highway 1 and businesses in the Big Sur area, a major summer tourist destination, remained open.
One firefighter has sustained minor injuries, CBS Los Angeles reported.
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