Investigators comb a scorched slope to solve a mystery: How did the Palisades Fire start?

So far, the probe is focusing on potential human causes, which could include arson, fireworks, unauthorized camping or a rekindling of an earlier fire, law enforcement sources said.

One week after the Palisades Fire rushed down a mountainside, swallowing whole communities and killing at least eight people, its cause remains unknown.

The answers, when they emerge, will most likely be found on a scorched and blackened ridgeline in western Los Angeles overlooking a Pacific Palisades neighborhood that includes a popular hiking trail — an area that was also the scene of a small fire six days earlier.

Understanding the catastrophic Jan. 7 fire could take months, a process that began with investigators collecting videos and photographs from nearby homes and social media, interviewing witnesses and firefighters and examining 911 calls, looking for leads.

Colin and Dylan Fields with a hose.

“All of this is going to take time,” Jose Medina, acting special agent in charge of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives’ Los Angeles office, said at a news conference Tuesday. He said there were 75 federal and local investigators on the case. “We know everyone wants answers, and the community deserves answers. ATF will give you those answers, but it will be once we complete a thorough investigation. We have no timeline on when this will occur.”

Investigators haven’t reached any conclusions, though an early focus of the probe has been on potential human causes, according to multiple law enforcement sources familiar with the investigation. The possibilities include arson, an accidental spark, fireworks, unauthorized camping activity or a rekindling of an earlier fire extinguished on New Year’s Day, the sources said.

The probe has led investigators into the ash-covered area where the fire was first spotted, hunting for the smallest of clues.

Image: Powerful Winds Fuel Multiple Fires Across Los Angeles Area palisades fire investigation

Windblown wildland fires like the Palisades Fire leave “movement patterns” on the plants, trees, grass, rocks and other objects that, to a trained eye, reveal how the flames spread. Marking those signs, the investigators work backward to the suspected start point.

“If you understand how to read those patterns, it becomes quickly evident where the origin of the fire is,” said Ed Nordskog, a retired Los Angeles County sheriff’s fire investigator, who isn’t involved in the Palisades Fire probe.

Investigators try to narrow their search down to an area of about 25 square feet, then turn the spot into a grid of zones about 4 square feet each, Nordskog said. Using magnets, metal detectors and magnifying lenses, they sift for tiny objects — like fragments of molten machinery parts, a match head, glass, remnants of fireworks —  that might explain or rule out a potential cause. They may bring in a dog trained to sniff out traces of accelerants. Nearby electrical equipment, like fences or poles, or signs of gas-powered vehicles also guide them. All the while, other investigators talk to witnesses who may have seen something suspicious.

Image: Powerful Winds Fuel Multiple Fires Across Los Angeles Area firefighter hillside palisades fire