Texas man on trip to spread father's ashes dies of heat stroke in Utah's Arches National Park

CBS News Sacramento

A Texas man whose body was found in Utah's Arches National Park is believed to have died of heat stroke while on a trip to spread his father's ashes, according to his sister.

James Bernard Hendricks, 66, of Austin, was hiking in the park and likely became disoriented from a combination of heat, dehydration and high altitude, according to Ruth Hendricks Bough.

Hendricks had stopped in Utah while journeying across the West to the Sierra Nevada region of Nevada and California to spread his father's ashes, he said in social media posts prior to his death.

Rangers found his vehicle at a trailhead parking lot after Hendricks was reported overdue the morning of Aug 1, according to park officials. Hendricks' body was found nearby off-trail and his water bottle was empty, Bough said in a social media post.

"He was loved by countless people because he was an unusually kind, sweet person who made friends easily. Now all these people are grieving. It was a horrible shock," she told the San Antonio Express-News.

The National Park Service and Grand County Sheriff's Office are investigating the death.

Arches National Park, located in a high-elevation desert north of Moab, Utah, is known for its natural sandstone arches.

Temperatures topped 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32.2 degrees Celsius) in the area on the afternoon before Hendricks was reported missing.

Much of the U.S. has seen record-breaking heat this summer. In Arizona, an Oregon woman who went missing on a hike in north Phoenix on Friday was later found dead. Authorities said the death appeared to be heat-related.

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