Advertisement
Advertisement

Body found in Jacumba Hot Springs identified as missing San Diego scientist

Derek Barge, a physicist who lived in La Jolla, was last seen alive July 31 near DeAnza Springs Resort; his body was found nearby Aug. 29

Share

Authorities have identified a body found late last month by hikers near a Jacumba Hot Springs campground resort as that of a San Diego physicist who went missing from the resort about a month earlier.

Derek Barge, 40
(Courtesy of San Diego County Sheriff’s Department)

Hikers discovered Derek Michael Barge’s body Aug. 29 along a dry creek bed about a half-mile east of DeAnza Springs Resort, according to the San Diego County Medical Examiner’s Office.

Barge was last seen alive July 31 at the resort on Carrizo Gorge Road north of Interstate 8, where he was staying while on his way to visit family in Arizona, according to a sheriff’s detective and Barge’s family. His last known contact was a phone call that same night with his mother.

Campers at the resort reported Barge missing the next morning. His vehicle was still parked nearby, with his wallet and keys inside, as well as what appeared to be his personal property, according to sheriff’s Detective Bradley Farr. His phone and charger were located that morning near a trailhead southeast of the resort.

Advertisement

Sheriff’s deputies and search-and-rescue teams, with help from the Border Patrol, searched for Barge for several days, with temperatures soaring above 100 degrees.

Barge’s 41st birthday passed in early August with his whereabouts still unknown.

Even after the hikers located Barge’s body, it took two days for authorities to be able to retrieve it, with help from a California Highway Patrol aircraft, according to the Medical Examiner’s Office.

Barge’s cause of death is still pending, according to the Medical Examiner’s Office, though Farr said foul play is not suspected. Identifying his remains took nearly a week due to the condition of the body.

According to Barge’s family, as well as his LinkedIn profile and scientific research sites, Barge earned a doctorate in physics from the University of California Santa Barbara in 2014. He also earned a bachelor’s degree in physics from UC Santa Barbara in 2003, and a master’s degree in physics in 2006 from Northwestern University near Chicago.

During his doctoral research, Barge helped conduct searches for dark matter and the Higgs boson, an elusive subatomic particle key to understanding how objects have mass. He did so by analyzing data from the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider at CERN, the European Center for Nuclear Research, near Geneva, Switzerland.

Barge’s name appears on hundreds of published research papers, alongside the names of other scientists who were conducting research on the same topics.

At the time of his death, the La Jolla resident was working as a scientist at a Torrey Pines-based biotech startup and as a senior software engineer for a Santa Barbara technology consulting firm.

In a statement, Barge’s family called him “an ocean-obsessed punk rocker, culinarian, walking encyclopedia and world traveler” who equally loved nature and big cities, and made new friends everywhere he went.

Advertisement