Hundreds of Europeans touring the American West and adventurers from around the U.S. are still being drawn to Death Valley National Park, even though the desolate region known as one of the Earth’s hottest places is being punished by a dangerous heat wave blamed for a motorcyclist’s death over the weekend.

French, Spanish, English and Swiss tourists left their air-conditioned rental cars this week to take photographs of the barren landscape so different than the snow-capped mountains and rolling green hills they know back home. American adventurers liked the novelty of it, even as officials at the park in California warned visitors to stay safe.

“I was excited it was going to be this hot,” said Drew Belt, a resident of Tupelo, Mississippi, who wanted to stop in Death Valley as the place boasting the lowest elevation in the U.S. on his way to climb California’s Mount Whitney. “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Kind of like walking on Mars.”

    • fishpen0@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Because when you name a place with the express intent to warn people not to go there, creativity almost certainly will introduce confusion

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Oddly, at least according to Wikipedia, the group that named it only lost one person there. They just expected to die.

        A group of European-American pioneers got lost here in the winter of 1849-1850, while looking for a shortcut to the gold fields of California, giving Death Valley its grim name. Although only one of the group members died here, they all assumed that the valley would be their grave.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_Valley#History

        I’m still not surprised people are dying there, but the people who named it didn’t experience a ton of death.