Los Angeles Times

‘Unpreceden­ted’ rainfall shuts Death Valley park

About 1,000 guests, staff are stranded after near-record deluge causes flash flooding.

- By Christian Martinez

Death Valley National Park, famous for its parched, otherworld­ly landscapes, closed completely Friday due to historic rainfall and flash flooding, trapping about 500 visitors and 500 staff members in the park after the closures.

No major injuries were reported, though about 60 vehicles were damaged.

The park experience­d “unpreceden­ted amounts of rainfall” of 1.46 inches measured at Furnace Creek, which caused substantia­l flooding.

The rainfall total is just below the daily record of 1.47 inches.

The total represents nearly three-fourths of a year’s worth of rain for the park, which sees yearly average precipitat­ion of 2 inches.

The incident marks the second time flash flooding has hit the park this week. On Monday, flooding affected many roads, and a Facebook post from the park showed a vehicle buried up to its headlights in dirt and gravel.

Sunny and hot conditions are expected to return to Death Valley this weekend, with highs in the 80s and 90s.

“The flood waters pushed dumpster containers into parked cars, which caused cars to collide into one another,” the park said in a statement.

“Additional­ly, many facilities are flooded, including hotel rooms and business offices.”

Park officials noted that most of the vehicles damaged were in a parking lot.

As of Friday evening, most of the visitors remained in the developed area of the park, with a few able to leave the park as crews managed to create makeshift roadways by moving mounds of gravel.

“All roads into and out of the park are currently closed and will remain closed until park staff can assess the extensiven­ess of the situation,” the park said in its statement.

Reopening of some roads had been expected to take around six hours from Friday morning. As of 6 p.m., however, all roads remained closed and it was unclear when they would reopen.

The last time a closure of this size occurred in Death Valley was in August 2004, when a rainstorm caused flash flooding, said Abby Wines, Death Valley’s public informatio­n officer. The rain totals for that incident are unknown.

The park did not open for 10 days, Wines said.

Friday’s flooding came a week after monsoonal downpours sent water cascading into another famously arid region, the Las Vegas Strip, inundating casino f loors and downing numerous trees. The floodwater­s in Vegas were accompanie­d by wind gusts of up to 70 mph.

 ?? National Park Service ?? THESE CARS at the Inn at Death Valley are among the dozens stranded in debris when 1.46 inches of rain hit the area Friday, causing flash flooding.
National Park Service THESE CARS at the Inn at Death Valley are among the dozens stranded in debris when 1.46 inches of rain hit the area Friday, causing flash flooding.

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