The fast-moving wildfire was spurred Friday by ferocious gusts of up to 85 mph.

Story highlights

The Caughlin Fire is contained at 1,935 acres, a fire chief says

32 homes are made uninhabitable by the blaze

Investigators are working to determine what cause the fire

CNN  — 

Firefighters in Nevada have fully contained a wildfire that engulfed dozens of homes and burned nearly 2,000 acres, an incident commander said Monday.

The Caughlin Fire in Reno burned 1,935 acres before firefighters contained the blaze, said Sierra Fire Protection District Chief Mike Brown, the incident commander.

The blaze has made 32 homes uninhabitable and damaged five, but is no longer a major threat to other structures, Reno Fire Chief Michael Hernandez said Sunday.

The cause of the fire remains unknown, but Hernandez said his department has ruled out that the blaze started at a homeless encampment or that teenagers seen in the area were responsible.

Investigators believe – though have not confirmed – that high winds caused electrical arcing on a power line, which sparked the fire, Hernandez said.

The city of Reno, the rest of Washoe County and Nevada all declared states of emergency Friday.

The fire was reported shortly after midnight Thursday, spreading within an hour and becoming a three-alarm blaze, Hernandez said.

The blaze ballooned within about 12 hours, destroying some structures and causing minimal damage to others, according to the fire chief. He estimated that firefighters had saved 4,000 to 4,500 homes by Friday.

CNN’s Shawn Nottingham contributed to this report.