Preview

LOST IN THE DESERT

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1295 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
LOST IN THE DESERT
LOST IN THE DESERT!

By David Evans
Natural Sciences
Penn College/PSU
Williamsport, PA

Part I: July 13th, AM

Mark, a white, 35-year-old male weighing approximately 70 kilogram (kg) started a three-hour drive across the desert on US 95 from Yuma, Arizona, to Blythe, California. He set out at 7 AM on what was expected to be a very hot July day. He anticipated that it would take him about three hours to reach Blythe—plenty of time to make his 11 AM appointment with Sarah, his fiancée. When he failed to appear by noon, Sarah became concerned and called the highway patrol.
By 12:30 PM, Search and Rescue Officer Maria Arroyo, who was patrolling nearby, reported finding an abandoned car on the side of the road with a damaged radiator that matched Sarah’s description of Mark’s vehicle. Maria noticed shoe prints leading into the desert toward some low mountains in the distance. At that point Maria called for helicopter assistance, consulted her GPS, and relayed the exact coordinates to base.
By 1 PM Henry Morningstar, paramedic and a member of the helicopter crew, reported a shirtless, hatless man wandering down a desert wash. The local radio station reported at about the same time that the air temperature was hovering at 105° F in the shade (and there was darned little of that). The relative humidity was less than 5%. The helicopter crewmembers spotted a man staggering on the desert. They realized they had found Mark. His driver’s license identified him as the missing man. Mark was still conscious but clearly delirious. Henry also noted that Mark was weak, nauseous, disoriented, and complained of a headache. His blood pressure was quite low—70/50—and he was not sweating despite the oppressive heat. His body temperature was also high—105°. The patient was diagnosed as having heat stroke. The paramedic also noted first degree burns on his face and back.
Suddenly, Susan Liu, the pilot, reported that they had lost radio contact with the hospital. It was all up to
Henry

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Dax Cowart essay

    • 479 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In 1973, Dax Cowart and his father went to view some property near their Texas home. They parked their car in a dry creek bed. This was not uncommon as, in parts of the desert areas in Texas, there aren’t roads, or only some dirt roads. After surveying the land, the men returned to their vehicle. They were unable to get their vehicle started so they started working on its spark plugs. As chance would have it, under the creek bed was a faulty gas line. A spark from the accelerator resulted in an explosion that left Dax Cowart’s father dead. Sixty-seven per cent of Dax’s body sustained second- and third-degree burns. Prior to this he was a healthy young jet pilot and amateur rodeo performer. Crawling from the scene of the accident he was, by chance, seen by a ranger. He begged him to shoot him. When emergency paramedics arrived he again made this request.…

    • 479 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Cruthis recalls that as she was driving, “I felt the car skid a little bit, and then I lost control and I couldn’t turn the wheel.” She remembers that when the car started to swerve, “I tucked my feet under the seat because my dad told me never to hit the brakes in this situation. I tensed my arms up so I didn’t touch the wheel and cause any more damage than was about to happen.” The car began to spin in the opposite direction. “I spun about three times before it drove straight into a ravine. It (the car) flipped over once, and then all I remember was the car being at the bottom of the ravine, blood being everywhere, and my head out the window,” states Cruthis.…

    • 773 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    A few moments after the accident, Kelly comes back to the vacation spot in a different boat, panicking, desperately trying to explain that there was an accident. Cathy gets a ride to the scene, where she finds her husband unconscious and still in the skiff. Alan is rushed over to the nearest hospital via helicopter, riding alongside him is Cathy. At this point, Cathy is alerted by the paramedics of the fleeting hope of Alan…

    • 2276 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    1. Observations made by the paramedics were; the Underhills being under water at the bottom of the hot tub, empty bottles of wine, the water in the hot tub felt way too hot, and that the bodies had been dead for some time.…

    • 602 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    ‘There was no escaping the heat or the people. There was no space to stretch out your legs and arms. Everywhere were sweating, salty bodies with brown, dirty faces peeling from sunburn and slowly darkening.’ Page 22…

    • 2286 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    On Friday morning Craig Donaldson saw on the news that Hurricane Katrina had moved into the Gulf, heading in their direction. Craig and Alice, his wife contemplated leaving the following day or the day after for Oxford, Mississippi. Saturday morning started out rocky. Malcolm, their son, woke up with a burning fever. With all of this going on Craig prepared for their evacuation by getting the house in order before Katrina hit on Sunday. Around mid-day they decided to get on the road; unfortunately, the highway was backed up. Craig then decided to take a different route on a two-lane highway; traffic flowed at first but that too got backed up. Due to the extensive amount of traffic and the effects of the storm, they stopped at a hotel. They had wanted to stay with Alice’s parents but there were too many complications of not having enough room space, so her mom says. They waited at the hotel until the weather was clear enough for them to continue driving.…

    • 1010 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    CJA Signature Assignment

    • 1597 Words
    • 7 Pages

    1. Scenario: You are the first responding officer to a “dead body” call. The body is located on a dirt road in a remote area that can be best described as “desert terrain.” As you approach the crime scene in your patrol vehicle, you notice the body lying in the middle of the road. Around the body are numerous large rocks and bushes. You also notice the following in and around the crime scene:…

    • 1597 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hatchet

    • 330 Words
    • 2 Pages

    When the pilot had heart attack and passed away, Brian had to immediately find the solution to land the plane. There before him was a microphone that can contact for emergency. Luckily he successfully contacted but later on the signal became worse, unfortunately there was no signal to be found. Brian had to immediately find a way to land safely across the lake instead landing near the trees.…

    • 330 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The drone lay on the table next to the monitor. Raman was asleep on the floor with a rolled up sleeping bag for a pillow. He didn’t look well. Len was going to take him to the hospital after John…

    • 393 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    In 1991 March 3rd, Rodney Glen King lead police on a high speed chase through the city of Los Angeles. It all started when California highway patrol officer noticed King speeding in the freeway. King was intoxicated and also on probation, for this reason he did not pull over when the officer turn on his siren. Rodney was under the influence of PCP but was never prosecuted for it, because of the way the arrest occurred. Instead, this simple traffic violation lead to a high speed chase on the freeway. As the chase continued, King “exited the freeway near the Hansen Dam Recreation Center and the pursuit continued through residential surface streets, at speeds ranging from 55 to 80 miles per hour (89 to 129 km/h)”(Stevenson, 1991). This is a dangerous…

    • 1720 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    My feet ached as I passed through the automatic screen door to the snow filled Gunnison-Crested Butte Regional Airport parking lot. The cool, crisp air stung my face, but my smile remained. Seven slow years have passed since I visited Crested Butte, Colorado, and I have been craving to return the moment I left. The towering mountains, blissful blue sky, and blinding white snow from the piercing sun makes Colorado a place like no other. I stood waiting on the icy concrete for my dad to pull around Baby Blue, a 1996 Chevrolet Astro van my family had nicknamed. My family visited Colorado in 2010, because my mom’s boss owns a timeshare condo, which included Baby Blue. He offered us a vacation to Crested Butte where we could have a free place to…

    • 218 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Book of Sand

    • 906 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The book had affected the narrator to a great extent. At first he did not care for the book, until the stranger selling Bibles said “the number of pages in this book is literally infinite. No page is the first page; no page is the last”. This intrigued the narrator’s mind. After he had bought the book, he began investigating. He noted down things in the book. He began losing sleep from the investigation and when he actually got sleep, his dreams were about the book. As it states in the short story, “At night, during the rare intervals spared me by insomnia, I dreamed of the book”. He had grown an obsession with the book, which altered his lifestyle and forced him to hide the book in the library.…

    • 906 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jennifer Kauffman decided that her little Vespa was more fuel efficient than her volvo, so she packed the underseat trunk on her Vespa with blankets and warm clothing and went to the damaged area of town. While people were using the blankets and clothing she brought, Jennifer Kauffman rode around searching for gas stations and collecting data on the time of waiting, the cost, etc. When Jennifer Kauffman went back to the area everyone used her information to get their cars filled up before the gas tanks were…

    • 994 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    "It was raining, the camera bags were packed, and I had on the seat beside me in the car the results of my long trip, the box containing all those rolls and packs of exposed film ready to mail back to Washington. It was a time of relief. Sixty-five miles an hour for seven hours would get me home to my family that night, and my eyes were glued to the wet and gleaming highway that stretched out ahead. I felt freed, for I could lift my mind off my job and think of home.…

    • 499 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Mojave Desert occupies a significant portion of Southern California and parts of Utah, Nevada, and Arizona. Named after the Mohave Native Americans[->0] it occupies roughly 54,000 square miles in a typical Basin and Range topography. The Mojave Desert is bound in part on the western end by the Tehachapi[->1] together with the San Gabriel[->2] and San Bernardino[->3] mountain ranges. The mountain boundaries are quite distinct since they have been created by the two largest faults in California: the San Andreas[->4] and the Garlock[->5]. Its northern and eastern boundaries are less distinct. One way to determine location is by observing the presence of Joshua Trees[->6]. The Mojave Desert receives less than 6 inches of rain a year and is generally between 3,000 and 6,000 feet in elevation. The Mojave Desert also contains the Mojave National Preserve[->7], Joshua Tree National Park[->8] and the lowest-hottest place in North America: Death Valley[->9], where the temperature can approach 120F in late July and early August. The Mojave, like all deserts in general, is known for its summer heat, however, there is wintertime cold. Snow[->10], although uncommon, does fall in parts of the Mojave. Amounts range from just a trace to a foot or more of heavy wet snow, which can lead to freeway traffic closures and being "snowed in". The coldest wintertime temperature ranges below freezing yet above 0F. Many parts of the Mojave typically range from highs of around 95-105F in the summer to lows of around 20-30F in the winter. High winds, often above 50 miles per hour, are also a weather factor and occur frequently along the western end of the Mojave[->11], and are less common toward the east[->12]. There are two important wind events - the June Gloom winds push cooler air into the desert from Southern California and the Santa Ana winds blow hot air from the desert into the Los Angeles…

    • 2083 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays