Flash floods strand 1,000 people in California's Death Valley National
Park
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[August 06, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - Flash flooding triggered by a
near-record downpour on Friday over one of the hottest, driest spots on
Earth has stranded nearly 1,000 people inside California's Death Valley
National Park and forced its temporary closure, park officials said.
About 60 cars belonging to park visitors and staff were buried in
several feet of debris at the Inn at Death Valley, an historic luxury
hotel near the park headquarters in Furnace Creek, site of a spring-fed
oasis near the Nevada border, the park said in a statement.
Floodwaters also pushed trash dumpsters into parked cars, shoving
vehicles into each other, and swamped many facilities, some hotel rooms
and business offices, it said.
No injuries were reported. But about 500 visitors and 500 park staff
were unable to leave the park because all roads into and out of Death
Valley were closed, according to the statement.
A water treatment system that serves the Cow Creek area for park
residents and offices was knocked out of service.
The flooding was unleashed by a torrential shower that dumped 1.46
inches (3.7 cm) of rain at Furnace Creek, nearly matching the previous
daily record there of 1.47 inches measured from a downpour in 1988, park
spokesperson Amy Wines said.
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A view shows the monsoonal rain flooded Mud Canyon in Death Valley
National Park, California, U.S., August 5, 2022. National Park
Service/Handout via REUTERS
By comparison, the park averages 2.2 inches of rainfall per year,
making it the driest place in North America. Furnace Creek holds the
record for the highest temperature ever recorded on Earth, 134
degrees Fahrenheit (56.7 degrees C), Wines said.
Flash floods from monsoonal rains are a natural part of Death
Valley's ecology and occur somewhere in the park almost every year,
constantly carving and reshaping its dramatic canyon landscape.
But flooding of a scale seen Friday last struck Death Valley in
August 2004, forcing a 10-day closure of all its roads and killing
two people whose vehicle was swept away, according to Wines.
The U.S. Park Service said no further monsoonal rain was expected
imminently, but additional showers were forecast in the days ahead.
It was not immediately clear how soon the park would reopen to road
traffic.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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