Image copyright Reuters Image caption It is thought 50-100 people were inside the venue when the fire broke out 2 December

A deadly fire at a warehouse party in Oakland may have been caused by a refrigerator or other electrical appliance, US investigators say.

They say they are looking at "anything electrical" on the first floor of the venue, known as the Ghost Ship, where the blaze started late last Friday.

Officials in California say 36 people are now confirmed dead, and 35 have been already identified.

They earlier warned that murder charges were also possible.

Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O'Malley said on Monday that her office had yet to determine whether a crime had occurred.

Charges could range from murder to involuntary manslaughter, she added.

On Tuesday, special agent Jill Snyder, the head of San Francisco's office of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, said a refrigerator was a potential source of the blaze.

However, she stressed that the investigators were yet to make their final conclusions.

Ms Snyder added that "we have no indication" that the fire had been set intentionally.

It is thought 50-100 people were inside the venue when the fire broke out.

Image caption The venue know as the Ghost Ship housed artists' studios and held music events

The blaze caused the roof to collapse on to the second floor, part of which then fell through to the ground floor.

The building was used to house artists in improvised studios but several reports say people were illegally living there too.

Media in Oakland named Derick Ion Almena as the co-operator of the collective with his partner, Micah Allison.

A Facebook post by him lamenting the loss of his belongings but saying he was "blessed that my children and Micah were at a hotel safe and sound" drew a barrage of criticism online.