Published: 17:01 EST, 7 August 2015 | Updated: 02:07 EST, 8 August 2015
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A French couple who died during an afternoon hike across the searing New Mexico desert likely saved their 9-year-old son by giving him two sips of water for each one they took before the supply ran out, a sheriff said Friday.
The boy was dehydrated but in remarkably good shape when he was found alongside his dead father on a trail in the White Sands National Monument, Otero County Sheriff Benny House said.
The father and son were found Tuesday about an hour after park rangers found the mother dead.
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Couple: David Steiner, 42, and his wife, Ornella Steiner, 5, died during an afternoon hike across the searing New Mexico desert
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The boy was dehydrated but in remarkably good shape when he was found alongside his dead father on a trail in the White Sands National Monument, Otero County Sheriff Benny House said
'That may be why he fared so well, is he was a lot smaller and probably had twice as much water,' House said. 'He was well hydrated, compared to the other two.'
House identified the couple as David Steiner, 42, and his wife, Ornella Steiner, 51. The boy's name wasn't released. They were tourists from the small town of Bourgogne, near the city of Reims, France.
The couple appears to have died of heat-related causes, House said. An autopsy to determine the official cause of death was pending, according to the state medical investigator's office.
The family had two 20-ounce water bottles when they set out on the hike along the national monument's Alkali Flat trail at about 1 p.m., House said. The trail is known for crystalline-white sand dunes and ends at the edge of the Alkali Flat, an ancient dry lake bed.
There is no vegetation or shade, and the National Park Service warns summertime visitors to hike only in the cool hours and carry at least a gallon of water per person.
The high temperature at the monument Tuesday was 101, according to the National Weather Service.
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Supplies: The family had two 20-ounce water bottles when they set out on the hike along the national monument's Alkali Flat trail at about 1 p.m., House said
House said warning signs were posted in several languages, including French, at the trailhead.
The boy told deputies that his mother began feeling ill and complained of an injured knee about a mile and a half into the hike.
'So she made the decision that you guys go ahead and go on, I'm going to go back to the vehicle,' House said. 'She made it about a hundred yards before she went down.'
He said the father and son were unaware that she was in trouble and continued on the trail, making it about 2,000 feet before the father collapsed.
Park rangers on a routine patrol found the family.
The sheriff's office contacted the French consulate in Los Angeles and officials there notified the family's relatives.
The boy's grandmother flew to Albuquerque and was reunited with him Thursday.
I have been seeing a lot of these kinds of stories lately. I mean, people who go out and hike and get lost and die. I mean, how did the early pioneers survive all that they have survived? Mom died after a mile and a half.
sad--ordinary folks just don't consider the stress in extreme environments--the ambient temp might have been 101 but the radiant heat was probably much higher--no vegetation, no shade--if you considered the same situation in a frigid environment, with no preparation, no basic precautions, the results would be similar
some people just don't think and consider
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" the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. "--edmund burke
Oy. Desert heat is a very dry heat. It's desiccating. People don't realize how quickly you dehydrate in desert heat. It's so hot, sweat evaporates quickly and you lose that indicator of being too hot. Heat stroke can come on quickly.
40 oz of water for 3 people is not nearly enough. Those people were idiots.
I have been seeing a lot of these kinds of stories lately. I mean, people who go out and hike and get lost and die. I mean, how did the early pioneers survive all that they have survived? Mom died after a mile and a half.
Well, they didn't hike through the desert for fun, and they were better prepared. They were also probably in better shape physically from harder living.
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LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
They could have gone ten miles in a more normal environment.
But they basically went for a hike in a kiln.
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