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Fall From 380-Foot Cliff Kills Canyoneer At Death Valley National Park

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Published Date

March 25, 2019
Helicopters were used to recovery the body of a California man killed in a canyoneering accident at Death Valley/NPS

A helicopter was called in to recover the body of a California man killed in a canyoneering accident at Death Valley/NPS

A California man was killed when he fell to his death from a 380-foot cliff in Death Valley National Park. Matthew Yaussi, 41, of Glendale, California, was rappelling down the cliff when he fell while canyoneering in the park, according to park staff.

Canyoneering is an activity that combines hiking, down-climbing, and rappelling down canyons. Canyoneering has been increasing in popularity in Death Valley, and there are now about 200 documented routes.

Yaussi and his companion had hiked about 4,000 feet up a ridge before starting their descent of Bottomless Pit Canyon, the informal name of a canyon south of Titus Canyon in the Grapevine Mountains. According to an online description on ropewiki.com, this canyoneering route involves 19 rappels down cliffs or dry waterfalls. Bottomless Pit was first descended in 2012, and it is not a commonly done route.

The two canyoneers planned to break the 380-foot rappel into stages by setting up an anchor on a ledge partway down. Yaussi’s companion had already rappelled to the ground when Yaussi fell to his death at approximately 8:30 p.m. Saturday. His companion activated an emergency locator beacon and was extracted later that night by the U.S. Navy’s VX-31 helicopter, based in China Lake. 

Yaussi’s body was recovered Sunday by an Inyo County Sheriff’s Deputy and California Highway Patrol’s H-80 helicopter. 

 

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