MAMMOTH HOT SPRINGS, Wyo. (AP) A woman illegally visited Yellowstone National Park while its closed during the coronavirus pandemic and suffered burns when she fell into a thermal feature, officials said.
She was reportedly backing up while taking photos and fell into a hot spring or hole where hot gases emerge near Old Faithful geyser, park spokeswoman Linda Veress said in an email.
Despite her injuries, the woman drove for roughly 50 miles (80 kilometers) until park rangers stopped her near Mammoth Hot Springs. She was flown to a hospital in Idaho Falls, Idaho.
Park officials did not release the womans name or the extent of her injuries.
Yellowstone National Park has been closed since March 24. Yellowstone and nearby Grand Teton National Park will announce plans for a phased reopening Wednesday.
Visitors are warned to stay on the boardwalks near Yellowstones often boiling or acidic thermal features, which include geysers, hot springs, steam vents and mud pots. Tourists sometimes go off the designated walkways and are injured or killed.
Last fall, a man who was walking off a boardwalk near Old Faithful at night fell into a hot spring, suffering serious burns.
In June 2016, 23-year-old Colin Scott of Portland, Oregon, fell into a superheated, acidic mud pot and died. His remains couldnt be recovered.
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