L.A. was his destination; the desert was his graveyard. After nearly 40 years, his bones have been identified

NEWBERRY SPRINGS, CALIF. -- MONDAY, JULY 8, 2019: Repairs continue on Southern California Gas Line 235, following an October 2017 explosion near Newberry Springs, Calif., on July 8, 2019. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
A stretch of desert near Newberry Springs, Calif. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

In September 1986, Dennis Earl Seger packed his belongings into his green Ford Torino, leaving his Seattle home for Los Angeles.

He never made a new home in L.A.

His car was found in Barstow, a month after he was last seen, about 120 miles out from Los Angeles. He was 50 years old the last time anyone heard from him, according to the National Missing Person Directory.

More than a year later, off-road motorists stumbled across skeletal remains in a remote swath of desert in Newberry Springs, about 150 miles from Seger's destination. It was Nov. 23, 1987. Deputies confirmed the remains were a human skeleton, but with no investigative leads or identification on the body, the case went cold, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department.

Nearly four decades later, there are finally some answers.

Using a bone fragment taken from the remains, the California Department of Justice was able to determine through DNA testing that the skeleton belonged to Seger, according to a news release from the department Thursday. Family members had shared their DNA during the Los Angeles Police Department investigation that followed Seger's disappearance.

Read more: Detectives say a karate teacher had a gruesome secret. It took 42 years to make their case

What happened on that trip and in that lonesome stretch of desert may forever remain a mystery.

The LAPD concluded its investigation, saying there was no evidence that Seger died because of assault or criminal action by another person, the department said.

Seger spent his early childhood in St. Cloud, Minn., with his parents and older sister, according to the 1940 census. He lived in Seattle in the years preceding his disappearance.

Read more: He lived to be outdoors, even in extremes like Death Valley. He died doing what he loved

He was born on April 29, 1936.

Those with additional information are asked to contact Det. Edward Hernandez at (909) 890-4904 or WeTip at (800) 782-7463, or go to the WeTip website.

Sign up for Essential California, your daily guide to news, views and life in the Golden State.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.