Teen hiker dies in extreme heat in Texas desert; stepfather dies seeking help

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stepfather dies seeking help

The 14-year-old's cause of death was pending. Temperatures soared above 110 degrees at Big Bend National Park, and officials warned against afternoon hiking.

14-year-old boy fell ill and ultimately died in extreme heat while he was hiking Saturday in Big Bend National Park in Texas, officials said.

His stepfather, identified only as a 31-year-old man, died seeking help for the boy when the vehicle he was in veered off its path and crashed down an embankment beneath an overlook, the National Park Service said in a statement.

The teenager's cause of death was pending. The local sheriff's office, where the Brewster County medical examiner is based, did not immediately respond to a request for information.

The park service said the teenager was hiking with his stepfather and an older brother, all from Florida, along the Marufo Vega Trail, near the U.S.-Mexico border, as temperatures reached 119 degrees Saturday.

Park rangers received a call for help at 6 p.m. and responded alongside U.S. Border Patrol agents, the park service said. The teen was found dead at 7:30 p.m., and the stepfather's body was found in his vehicle below Boquillas Overlook about a half-hour later, it said.

The nearest National Weather Service temperature station, an airport in Terlingua, Texas, measured a high temperature of 108 Saturday. The local weather service office issued an excessive heat warning through Tuesday that included a forecast of 120-degree highs for parts of the Rio Grande Valley.

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