The McKinney Fire started July 29 and within a workweek became the state’s largest blaze this year.

On Friday, federal officials put the fire to bed with their final written update amid no growth and 95% containment.

The update from the U.S. Forest Service came as local authorities released the identities of the four people killed in the blaze, which burned 60,392 acres.

The Siskiyou County Sheriff’s Office on Friday identified the deceased as Kathleen Shoopman, 73; Charles Kays, 79; Judith Kays, 82; and John Cogan, 76; all of Klamath River.

DNA and dental records had to be used to identify remains, which were found in a vehicle and in two separate homes, after a firestorm ripped through Klamath River, a community of a few hundred residents where few structures survived, sheriff’s and fire officials said.

One of the four fatalities, Shoopman, was previously identified as a McKinney fatality by the U.S. Forest Service, which said she was a longtime employee known for working at fire lookout stations in the region.

Neighbors also noted that the Kays’ were a married couple well-known in the neighborhood.

The sheriff’s office didn’t say how the four died.

Twelve others were injured, and 185 structures were destroyed in the fire in a county that borders Oregon.

The McKinney Fire rapidly expanded in size — surpassing the Oak Fire, the state’s largest at the time — and displayed unruly and unpredictable behavior, officials said at the time.

Residents described panic and chaos as a tsunami of flame menaced anyone left behind in Klamath River in late July, as the fire was fueled by tumultuous winds and lightning from nearby thunderstorms.

The home of Roger Derry, 80, and his son, Rodger, was spared by the inferno. Roger Derry described the experience as terrifying.

“When that fire came over that ridgeline, it had 100-foot flames for about 5 miles and the wind was blowing,” he said earlier this month. “It was coming down like a solid blowtorch.”

Nicole Kurkowski, 32, escaped ahead of the fire with her children Kyra, 10, and Braydàn, 13. She described a soundtrack of fear and salvation.

“I could hear the crackling,” Kurkowski said, “and I could hear trees falling and I could hear the fire.”

Erick Mendoza and The Associated Press contributed.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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