April 17, 2024, 09:22:01 PM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
News: NEW CHILD BOARD CREATED IN THE POLITICAL SECTION FOR THE 2016 ELECTION
 
   Home   Help Login Register  
Pages: 1   Go Down
  Print  
Author Topic: Bones found in Death Valley may be of four German tourists missing for 13 years  (Read 5461 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
texasmom
Monkey Mega Star
******
Offline Offline

Posts: 32407


ARUBA: It's all about Natalee...we won't give up!


« on: November 14, 2009, 08:00:29 PM »

http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/294705,bones-found-in-death-valley-may-be-of-four-german-tourists.html#

Bones found in Death Valley may be of four German tourists

Posted on : 2009-11-14 | Author : dpa

News Category : US   

Washington - Parched bones found in California's Death Valley may be the remains of a family of four German tourists who vanished without trace 13 years ago in the searingly hot region. Hikers found the remains in a remote part of Death Valley National Park, a regional newspaper, the Conta Costra Times, reported Friday.

After the family failed to return home to Dresden, Germany in 1996, relations initiated a search.
Three months later, a minivan rented by the family was found abandoned in the valley's Anvil Spring Canyon with three flat tyres, but there was no sign of the occupants. Tracks suggested the van had been driven four kilometres on the flat tyres before they left it.

The lonely desert valley, where daytime temperatures can hit 50 degrees Celsius, is a big draw with visitors on self-drive holidays from densely populated Germany, which has no real wildernesses left.

Signs in the valley warn visitors to carry water, food and survival equipment. It almost never rains there.

Authorities said it would take some time to investigate the bones and a German passport found near them, but police spokeswoman Carma Roper called the find "a milestone" in the 13-year inquiry.

US reports said the last sign of life from an architect, 34, his girlfriend, 28, and their sons aged 10 and 4 was a note dated July 23, 1996 in a guestbook at an abandoned mining village.
 
Logged

I stand with the girl, Natalee Holloway.

"I can look back over the past 10 years and there were no steps wasted, and there are no regrets,'' she said. "I did all I knew to do and I think that gives me greater peace now." "I've lived every parent's worst nightmare and I'm the parent that nobody wants to be," she said.

Beth Holloway, 2015 interview with Greta van Susteren
texasmom
Monkey Mega Star
******
Offline Offline

Posts: 32407


ARUBA: It's all about Natalee...we won't give up!


« Reply #1 on: November 14, 2009, 08:49:07 PM »

http://news.aol.com/article/death-valley-bones-may-solve-mystery-of/766810

Death Valley Bones May Solve Mystery

AP

posted: 20 MINUTES AGO



DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (Nov. 14) - Skeletal remains found in Death Valley may belong to one or more of the four German tourists who vanished in searing summer heat 13 years ago, authorities said Friday.

Two hikers discovered the bones Thursday in a remote area of the famous Mojave Desert park.

The hikers were search-and-rescue workers from Riverside County but they were off duty at the time, Inyo County sheriff's spokeswoman Carma Roper said.



Officials say bones found in a remote area of Death Valley may be those of four German tourists -- two adults and their children -- last seen in 1996. Egbert Rimkus, left, and his 10-year-old son, Georg Weber, are shown here. Two hikers made the grisly discovery Thursday.

Desert Mystery Solved?
Officials say bones found in a remote area of Death Valley may be those of four German tourists -- two adults and their children -- last seen in 1996. Egbert Rimkus, left, and his 10-year-old son, Georg Weber, are shown here. Two hikers made the gristly discovery Thursday.
Inyo County Sheriff / AP

Identification for one of the missing tourists was found near the bones, she said.

"We're fairly certain" that the remains are those of one or more of the long-missing visitors, Roper said. However, formally identifying the remains will be a long process, she said. The cause of death also must be determined.

"At this point, it's being handled like a criminal investigation ... but there is no evidence of foul play at this point," Roper said.

The remains were found southeast of Goler Wash, a rugged area accessible only by 4-wheel-drive vehicles. The area is several miles south of the spot where an abandoned minivan the tourists had rented was found months after they were reported missing.

Roper said it would be a relief to solve a mystery that stretches back to 1996.
"I know a lot of people have invested a lot of their time and energy and emotions into concluding the case," she said.

The park near the Nevada border is considered the hottest and driest location in North America.

The four who vanished in the 3-million-acre wilderness on July 22, 1996, were Dresden residents Cornelia Meyer, 27; her 4-year-old son, Max; her boyfriend, architect Egbert Rimkus, 34, and his 10-year-old son, Georg Weber.


Cornelia Meyer

They had arrived in the United States earlier in the month and were touring in a Plymouth Voyager minivan rented in Los Angeles.

They checked out of a Las Vegas hotel room on July 22 and arrived in Death Valley the same day, records indicated.

Temperatures in the park that week had topped 120 degrees.

The visitors bought an information booklet at the visitor center and then apparently stayed overnight in the park and the next day took a dirt road into a remote area.

An entry in German and dated July 23, 1996, was left in a guest book kept in a box on a metal pole in an abandoned mining camp. It indicated the visitors were going through "the pass" — possibly a reference to Mengel Pass, a dirt trail that crosses the barren Panamint Range, a barren mountain range on the park's southwestern border.

The entry was signed "Conny, Egbert, Georg, Max."

They weren't heard from again.

On Oct. 23, the locked van was found mired in sand in a ravine off roadless Anvil Spring Canyon, amid rolling hills at an elevation of 3,000 feet and far from usual tourists routes. Three tires were shredded and one had come loose from the rim.

Searchers found a beer bottle a quarter-mile away that appeared to have come from a package found in the van.

Inside the van were rolls of exposed photo film, sleeping bags, empty gallon water containers, the Death Valley information booklet and an American flag apparently taken from a stone cabin in Butte Valley, five miles away.

No tracks that could have been made by the missing tourists were found. No passports or personal effects such as keys, a purse or wallet were found.

A team of 45 searchers, eight horses and four helicopters from California and Nevada law enforcement agencies combed the area but found nothing more.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2009-11-13 18:09:23

Pictures from:  http://forthelost.wordpress.com/category/missing-adult/page/2/
Logged

I stand with the girl, Natalee Holloway.

"I can look back over the past 10 years and there were no steps wasted, and there are no regrets,'' she said. "I did all I knew to do and I think that gives me greater peace now." "I've lived every parent's worst nightmare and I'm the parent that nobody wants to be," she said.

Beth Holloway, 2015 interview with Greta van Susteren
Pages: 1   Go Up
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Use of this web site in any manner signifies unconditional acceptance, without exception, of our terms of use.
Powered by SMF 1.1.13 | SMF © 2006-2011, Simple Machines LLC
 
Page created in 5.81 seconds with 19 queries.