Man dies in Death Valley as California national park swelters in extreme heat
A 71-year-old man collapsed and died in Death Valley on Tuesday as temperatures in the valley – the point of lowest elevation in North America as well as one of the hottest places in the world – reached at least 121F (49.4C).
“Heat may have been a factor in his death,” Death Valley national park officials said in a press release.
The man, identified so far only as being from Los Angeles, collapsed outside a restroom in the Golden Canyon area. He was found wearing a sun hat and hiking clothes and park officials believe he had probably just been hiking the popular trail there.
The Inyo county coroner’s office had not by Thursday morning determined a cause of death, but the park service noted that the temperature inside Golden Canyon was probably much higher than the 121F recorded at nearby Furnace Creek due to canyon walls radiating the sun’s heat.
Park rangers, the advisory noted, encourage people to visit Death Valley safely in the summer by sightseeing only short distances from air-conditioned cars, or hiking in the park’s cooler mountains. The man was found in the mid-afternoon; rangers do not recommend hiking at low elevations after 10.00am.
The National Park Service website describes spectacular Golden Canyon as “a rocky corridor of towering golden walls”.
The latest fatality comes two weeks after a 65-year-old man from the San Diego area was found dead in his vehicle in the park. In that incident, too, the park service said, hiking in extreme heat appears to have caused his death.
The day before the man was found on 3 July, the daytime high was 126F with an overnight low of 98F. The air conditioning in his vehicle was not operational and it had two flat tires.
The extreme heat in the valley has made rescuing visitors difficult. Heat causes air to thin and the park service says often helicopters cannot be deployed.
The ongoing heatwave has attracted what park ranger call “heat-seekers” – people seeking to experience the extreme temperatures – taking selfies next to Furnace Creek’s digital thermometer.
Alessia Dempster, visiting from Edinburgh, Scotland, was quoted by the Guardian earlier this week saying: “It’s very hot. I mean, especially when there’s a breeze, you would think that maybe that would give you some slight relief from the heat, but it just really does feel like an air blow dryer just going back in your face.”
Source: The Guardian US