Since Tuesday, multiple wildfires in Southern California have burned through at least 39,000 acres — an area nearly the size of Brooklyn — and firefighters have barely made a dent.
Satellite imagery shows neighborhoods burned down, roads closed, and fires spreading across Los Angeles.
Below are some satellite images, showing before and after the wildfires hit the Los Angeles region.
Satellite images of Los Angeles, showing the effects of California wildfires, were recently released by various agencies. The ...
The Los Angeles area faces devastating fires exacerbated by dry conditions and Santa Ana winds, with the Palisades and Eaton ...
The stream of smoke is also visible from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES). The GeoColor imagery below is a six-hour time ...
Five wildfires—the biggest of which are the Palisades and the Eaton fires—are still currently burning (as of 10 January 2025) ...
Satellite images show the massive scale of destruction caused by huge, fast-moving wildfires in Southern California that were still raging through Friday (Jan. 10), killing at least 10 people, ...
The Palisades Fire in Pacific Palisades is currently the largest wildfire threatening L.A., and is estimated to be nearly 20,000 acres (over 31 sq mi) in size. Left: A satellite image of buildings ...
New satellite images from Maxar Technologies show the scale of the destruction and damage left so far by the wildfires raging in Southern California. As of Wednesday afternoon, the Los Angeles Fire ...
One company in Colorado is helping first responders with fire mapping in California. Maxar Intelligence is a space technology ...