Evacuation order may be lifted Friday as California wildfire grows

(Reuters) - Some residents of a historic gold-mining town in central California may be able to return on Friday after they fled their homes amid a spreading wildfire nearby that has destroyed dozens of houses over the past week, fire officials said. About 2,000 residents of the town of Mariposa, in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, evacuated their homes on Tuesday as the so-called Detwiler Fire approached. It eventually destroyed 99 structures, including 50 houses, in the area, according to local and state officials. The fire has razed through 74,083 acres (29,980 hectares) as of Friday morning, an increase of about 4,000 from Thursday. It is now 15 percent contained, up from 10 percent Thursday, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said on its website. "Even though the fire has grown in one area, there's containment in other areas and those are safe for the owners to go back," Cal Fire spokesman John Clingingsmith said on Friday. "We can start repopulating. It'll be done neighborhood by neighborhood in an orderly fashion." Mariposa County Sheriff Doug Binnewies said during a community meeting on Thursday that authorities were engaged in "detailed conversations" about repopulating and hoped county residents would be able to return to their homes on Friday. A total of 5,000 residents in the small communities on the edge of the Yosemite National Park have been evacuated since the fire began on Sunday. The community of Coulterville was evacuated on Wednesday. After growing by more than 22,000 acres overnight, the fire's progress slowed on Thursday, taking only 500 acres during the day, Cal Fire said. By Friday morning, it mushroomed. "Except for (Wednesday), this fire doubled in size every day," Tim Chavez, a state fire official said during the community meeting. "That is really unusual for it to progress like that." More than 3,700 firefighters, working in temperatures of 90 to 96 degrees Fahrenheit (32 to 36 Celsius), were battling the fire, Cal Fire said. Chavez blamed the fire's growth on spot fires, drought and grassy vegetation. The area's rough topography made fighting the blaze harder, he said. Governor Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency for Mariposa County on Tuesday. The cause of the fire is under investigation. A total of 44 large fires across 11 western states were burning on Thursday, according to the National Interagency Fire Center's website. (Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee and Gina Cherelus in New York; Editing by Larry King and Bernadette Baum)