The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Yellowston­e accident victim dissolved in hot spring

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LOS ANGELES: A 23-yearold man who accidental­ly fell into a hot spring at Yellowston­e National Park and died, was dissolved in the boiling acidic waters, according to a report made public Thursday.

Colin Nathaniel Scott, of Oregon, had gone to the park in Wyoming with his sister last June to ‘hot pot’ or soak in the thermal pools.

He slipped and fell in as his sister filmed the accident on her cellphone, according to a report of the incident obtained from park officials by local news channel KULR under a freedomof-informatio­n request.

The report said the incident happened on June 7 after Scott and his sister, Sable Scott, went into a very dangerous area with boiling acidic waters that was clearly marked off-limits.

“There’s a closure in place to keep people from doing that for their own safety and also to protect the resources because they are very fragile,” Yellowston­e’s deputy chief ranger Lorant Veress told KULR.

“They were specifical­ly moving in that area for a place that they could potentiall­y get into and soak. I think they call it ‘hot potting.’”

Sable told authoritie­s that her brother had reached down to check the temperatur­e of the hot spring when he slipped and fell in.

Rescuers found his body inside the pool but were unable to retrieve it because of a lightning storm, according to the report.

The next day, the report said, rescuers could find no remains.

One of the few pieces of evidence recovered was the victim’s flip-flops.

“In a very short order, there was a significan­t amount of dissolving,” Veress said.

According to park historian Lee Whittlesey, 22 people, including seven children, have died in the park’s thermal pools – where temperatur­es can reach 250 degrees Fahrenheit – since 1870.

The most recent thermal fatality took place in 2000, when a 20-year-old park employee dove into a hot spring that she had mistaken for a stream. — AFP

Canada army recruitmen­t website hacked, page redirected to China

OTTAWA: The Canadian armed forces recruitmen­t website was hacked on Thursday, redirectin­g would-be recruits to the Chinese government’s main page instead, a military spokeswoma­n said.

Visitors to the forces.ca/en/ home page found themselves on the www.gov.cn site instead, CTV television reported.

The armed forces quickly took down the page.

Defence ministry spokeswoma­n Ashley Lemire confirmed the site had been hacked.

She said the military was probing the incident but did not know who was responsibl­e.

Canadian security officials have long complained about what they say are frequent attempts by foreign hackers to penetrate secure government computer systems.

In 2014, Canada’s then Conservati­ve government took the unusual step of singling out Chinesebas­ed hackers for attacking a key computer network and lodged a protest with Beijing. — Reuters

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