Current:Home > MarketsTourists flock to Death Valley to experience near-record heat wave -LegacyBuild Academy
Tourists flock to Death Valley to experience near-record heat wave
View
Date:2025-04-17 17:43:00
One of hottest places on Earth is drawing more visitors this week, not in spite of near-record high temperatures but because of them.
Tourists are flocking to Death Valley National Park — a narrow, 282-foot basin on the California-Nevada border — to experience how the triple-digit temperatures feel against their skin.
Death Valley is home to Furnace Creek, an unincorporated community that includes a visitors center and an outdoor digital thermometer. Dozens of people have gathered at the temperature reading in recent days, some wearing fur coats as an ironic joke, to experience the heat and snap a picture to impress family and friends on social media.
"I just want to go to a place, sort of like Mount Everest, to say, you know, you did it," William Cadwallader of Las Vegas told the Associated Press this week, adding that he visits Death Valley regularly.
The tourism uptick started late last week and reached an inflection point Sunday when Death Valley reached 128 degrees Fahrenheit, just seven degrees shy of the highest temperature recorded on Earth — 134 degrees Fahrenheit at Furnace Creek on July 1913.
Death Valley is situated below sea level but is nestled among steep mountain ranges, according to the park service's website. The bone-dry air and meager plant coverage allows sunlight to heat up the desert surface. The rocks and the soil emit all that heat in turn, which then becomes trapped in the depths of the valley.
Measured 129 in the shade with this bad boy #DeathValley pic.twitter.com/VvGYSgCAgV
— Dave Downey⚡ (@DaveDowneyWx) July 17, 2023
"It's very hot," said Alessia Dempster, who was visiting from Edinburgh, Scotland. "I mean, especially when there's a breeze, you would think that maybe that would give you some slight relief from the heat, but it just really does feel like an air blow dryer just going back in your face."
Daniel Jusehus, a runner visiting Death Valley from Germany, snapped a photo earlier this week of a famed thermometer after challenging himself to a run in the sweltering heat.
- Doctors urge caution with 90 million Americans under extreme heat warnings
- Nearly 20 million people across U.S. under heat alerts
"I was really noticing, you know, I didn't feel so hot, but my body was working really hard to cool myself," Jusehus said.
Death Valley's brutal temperatures come amid a blistering stretch of hot weather that's put roughly one-third of Americans under a heat advisory, watch or warning. Heat waves aren't as visually dramatic as other natural disasters, but experts say they're more deadly. A heat wave in parts of the South and Midwest killed more than a dozen people last month.
–The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Khristopher J. BrooksKhristopher J. Brooks is a reporter for CBS MoneyWatch covering business, consumer and financial stories that range from economic inequality and housing issues to bankruptcies and the business of sports.
TwitterveryGood! (31)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Sweden seeks to answer worried students’ questions about NATO and war after its neutrality ends
- ‘It’s just me, guys,’ Taylor Swift says during surprise set as fans cheer expecting guest
- Medline recalls 1.5 million adult bed rails following 2 reports of entrapment deaths
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Louisiana may soon require public school classrooms to display the Ten Commandments
- US District Judge fatally killed in vehicle crash near Nevada courthouse, authorities say
- Minnesota man dismembered pregnant sister, placed body parts on porch, court papers show
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- NTSB now leading probe into deadly Ohio building explosion
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Human remains found in jaws of alligator in Houston after woman reported missing
- Comedian Matt Rife Cancels Shows After Unexpected Medical Emergency
- Owner of UK’s Royal Mail says it has accepted a takeover offer from a Czech billionaire
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- US pledges $135 million in aid to Western-leaning Moldova to counter Russian influence
- Plaza dedicated at the site where Sojourner Truth gave her 1851 ‘Ain’t I a Woman?’ speech
- What's going on with Ryan and Trista Sutter? A timeline of the 'Bachelorette' stars' cryptic posts
Recommendation
The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
Elevate Your Wardrobe With These H&M Finds That Look Expensive
RFK Jr. files FEC complaint over June 27 presidential debate criteria
The Latest | 2 soldiers are killed in a West Bank car-ramming attack, Israeli military says
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Bebe Rexha Details the Painful Cysts She Developed Due to PCOS
Xi pledges more Gaza aid and talks trade at summit with Arab leaders
Feds take down one of world's largest malicious botnets and arrest its administrator