Houston Chronicle

Two Yosemite park visitors killed in fall from overlook

- By Olga R. Rodriguez

SAN FRANCISCO — Two visitors died in a fall from a popular overlook at Yosemite National Park that allows people to walk to the cliff ’s edge, where there is no railing, an official said Thursday.

Park rangers were trying to recover the bodies of a female visitor and a male visitor spotted by another tourist Wednesday, spokesman Scott Gediman said. Officials are still investigat­ing when the pair fell and from what spot at Taft Point, which is 3,000 feet above the famed Yosemite Valley floor, he said.

Railings exist only at a small portion of the overlook, which is popular for its breathtaki­ng views of the valley, Yosemite Falls and El Capitan, and fissures on the granite rock that plunge to the valley floor. More than 10 people have died at the park this year, some from natural causes and others from falls, Gediman said.

Last month, an Israeli teenager fell hundreds of feet to his death while hiking near the top of 600-foot-tall Nevada Fall. The death of 18year-old Tomer Frankfurte­r was considered an accident, the Mariposa County coroner’s office said.

Taft Point is also where world-famous wingsuit flier Dean Potter and partner Graham Hunt died after leaping from the cliff in 2015. The pair experience­d at flying in wingsuits — the most extreme form of BASE jumping — crashed after trying to clear a V-shaped notch in a ridgeline.

BASE jumping — which stands for jumping off buildings, antennas, spans (such as bridges) and Earth — is illegal in the park.

An investigat­ion concluded that the deaths were accidental.

 ?? Amanda Lee Myers / Associated Press ?? An official with Yosemite National Park said two visitors died after falling from Taft Point, which is 3,000 feet above the famed Yosemite Valley floor.
Amanda Lee Myers / Associated Press An official with Yosemite National Park said two visitors died after falling from Taft Point, which is 3,000 feet above the famed Yosemite Valley floor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States