A 71-year-old man died at a trailhead in Death Valley National Park on Tuesday afternoon as temperatures soared to 121°F, the National Park Service (NPS) said in a statement.

The man, identified as Steve Curry by the Inyo County Coroner, collapsed outside the restroom at Golden Canyon, according to the NPS. He was wearing a sun hat and hiking clothes and carrying a backpack. His car was in the parking lot.

NPS, in its statement, said that other park visitors notified 911 at 3:40 p.m. when they saw the man collapse. Park rangers arrived at the scene within a few minutes, performed CPR and used an automated external defibrillator (AED) to revive the man but were not able to revive him. A helicopter was not able to respond due to the high temperature.

While cause of death has not yet been identified, park rangers suspect heat was a factor. The official temperature at nearby Furnace Creek was 121°F around the time of the man’s death. Actual temperatures inside Golden Canyon were likely much higher, due to canyon walls radiating the sun’s heat, said the NPS.

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Hours before his death, the Los Angeles Times interviewed Curry at Zabriskie Point, where he’d hiked from Golden Canyon – a distance of about two miles.

He was also photographed slathered in sunscreen, using a metal interpretive sign as a shade.

Heat advisory in Death Valley

Park officials and authorities have encouraged people to plan visits to Death Valley safely this summer by sightseeing short distances from air-conditioned cars or hiking in the park’s cooler mountains. They have also advised against hiking at low elevations after 10:00 a.m.