Posted on 12/12/2003 6:23:51 AM PST by stainlessbanner
A British tourist has died after becoming stranded in Western Australia's Great Sandy Desert near Marble Bar.
It is understood the man was attempting to drive across the desert to New South Wales.
He left the Punmu Aboriginal Community near Marble Bar on Thursday morning but became bogged.
Two motorists discovered his car that afternoon and followed his tracks for 40 kilometres back towards the community, but a sandstorm force them to abandon the search.
Constable Cindy Morgan from Marble Bar police says the man was still alive when he was found this morning.
"He was obviously in a very bad state and quite distressed, Constable Morgan said.
"They managed to get him back to a nursing clinic but despite their attempts they were unable to revive him."
The man was travelling without a satellite phone or EPIRB [Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon], and his limited water supply quickly ran out in the 43 degree heat.
His family is still to be notified.
For you people in Rio Linda that's approx. 116 degrees Fahrenheit.
Dead tourist had 80L of water
December 17, 2003
A BRITISH tourist who died of dehydration left 80 litres of water when he walked away from his bogged vehicle and into the Great Sandy Desert.
Thomas Henry Sykes, 35, of London, died on Friday at a medical clinic in the remote Aboriginal community of Punmu, in Western Australia.
Mr Sykes had been trying to drive hundreds of kilometres east towards Alice Springs when his hired four-wheel drive became bogged.
The vehicle was found on Thursday, but when Mr Sykes was seen near Punmu on Friday morning, after walking 60km in up to 40C, he was unconscious. He died a short time later in Punmu medical clinic.
Mr Sykes' death, and the rescue of a second British tourist at a remote beach north of Broome on the same day, have prompted calls for greater education about the dangers of outback travel.
Sgt David Hornsby, of Marble Bar police, said that if Mr Sykes had observed the golden rule of remote motoring and stayed with his car, he would have survived.
There were 80 litres of water in a tank fitted to the Toyota Hilux that was also equipped with a tent and tinned food.
There were enough supplies in the hired vehicle for Mr Sykes to have survived for more than a week, Sgt Hornsby said.
"What the hire car companies' responsibilities are - that's something I will be looking at as far as the investigation for the coroner goes," he said.
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