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Yosemite park rangers recover bodies of 2 who fell to deaths off overlook

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Yosemite National Park rangers have recovered the bodies of two people who fell from a popular overlook after working to reach them for hours, an official said Friday.

Park spokeswoman Jamie Richards said she did not know if rangers had to rappel down or hike up the “challenging area” in Taft Point as they worked all of Thursday to reach the bodies of a male and female. A tourist had spotted them Wednesday.

Officials are still investigating when the pair fell and from which spot at the overlook 3,000 feet above the famed Yosemite Valley floor, Richards said. The victims have not been identified.

Railings only exist at a small portion of Taft Point, which offers breathtaking views of the valley, Yosemite Falls and towering granite formation El Capitan. Visitors can walk to the edge of a vertigo-inducing granite ledge that does not have a railing and has become a popular spot for dramatic engagement and wedding photos.

More than 10 people have died at the park this year, six of them from falls and the others from natural causes, Gediman said.

An Israeli 18-year-old accidentally fell hundreds of feet to his death last month while hiking near the top of 600-foot-tall Nevada Fall.

In 2015, world-famous wingsuit flier Dean Potter and partner Graham Hunt died after jumping from Taft Point in an attempt to clear a V-shaped notch in a ridgeline. They were flying in wingsuits but crashed.

The activity is the most extreme form of BASE jumping, which stands for jumping off buildings, antennas, spans (such as bridges) and Earth and is illegal in the park.