Tech makes it easier to search wilderness for missing people

This May 19, 2019, screenshot of a cell phone screen provided by Yesenia D’Alessandro shows the route, as measured by the cellphone’s GPS, taken by a volunteer who was searching for Amanda Eller, a yoga teacher and physical therapist who went missing during a hike in Haiku, Hawaii. The dramatic rescue of a hiker lost for more than two weeks in a remote Hawaii forest is showing how emerging technology is helping search teams more efficiently scour the wilderness for missing people. (Courtesy of Yesenia D’Alessandro via AP)

FILE - In this May 28, 2019, file photo, rescued hiker Amanda Eller, left, embraces her mother, Julia Eller, before a news conference begins at Maui Memorial Hospital in Wailuku, Hawaii. Amanda Eller said she fell to the ground and started bawling when a rescue helicopter spotted her in a forest where she had survived for two weeks by eating plants and drinking stream water. (Craig T. Kojima/Honolulu Star-Advertiser via AP, File)

This April 17, 2017, photo provided by Michael St. John shows search and rescue volunteer and SARTopo creator Matt Jacobs, left, and search and rescue volunteers Mike Russo, center, and Bob Gehlen, right, in Sierraville, California, as they consult a SARTopo map while making plans to search for a missing aircraft. The dramatic rescue of a hiker lost for more than two weeks in a remote Hawaii forest is showing how emerging technology is helping search teams more efficiently scour the wilderness for missing people. (Michael St. John/Marin County Sheriff’s SAR unit via AP)

HONOLULU — Yesenia D’Alessandro loaded a GPS tracking app on her cellphone and trudged into a remote Maui forest, joining more than 100 other volunteers looking for a missing hiker.