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On Monday, nearly a dozen fires were burning in California. Drought, wind, lightning, a camp fire and the flaming feathers of a hawk flying in the wrong place at the wrong time are to blame for some of the them, with the causes of others still being investigated. Many of the blazes are nearly contained, and widespread evacuation orders have been lifted in most spots allowing hundreds of the thousands of people who had to flee their homes to return. The costs are just now being compiled from this latest series of fires. Less than a week old, the Santa Cruz County fire, at 80 percent containment, is nearing $10 million. The blaze in Yuba County, which was ignited by burning feathers from a red-tailed hawk that flew into a power line, is at $3 million. A complex of wildfires in Shasta County has cost more than $30 million, with full containment reached Monday. And the price tag on a massive fire in Santa Barbara County has so far totaled $18.2 million. Investigators said the blaze was started by a camp fire used by marijuana growers, fire officials said. In Alameda County, the Corral fire cost $1.8 million. It's now fully contained.
[Associated
Press;
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