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Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway bridge over Canyon Diablo, c. 1883–1903 Canyon Diablo ( Navajo : Kin Łigaaí ) is a canyon near Two Guns in Northern Arizona . Part of it is located on the Navajo Nation .
Another deep canyon (approximately 400 feet in depth) runs along the southern edge of the Caja, cut by the Santa Fe River. The canyon of the Santa Fe River separates the Caja land grant from another land grant to the south: the Mesita de Juana Lopez Grant. At the southern part of the Caja is La Bajada Mesa, dominated by Tetilla Peak (7,203 feet).
The Diablo Canyon Power Plant is a nuclear power plant near Avila Beach in San Luis Obispo County, California. Following the permanent shutdown of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in 2013, Diablo Canyon is now the only operational nuclear plant in California, as well as the state's largest single power station. It was the subject of ...
San Luis Obispo County analyzed the environmental impacts of the eventual dismantling of the nuclear power plant.
Diablo Canyon was set to close in 2025 after PG&E chose to decommission the plant rather than invest in expensive environmental and earthquake safety upgrades. But the governor, seeking to avoid ...
In 1880, long before Two Guns was established as a settlement, the construction of the Santa Fe Railway was progressing across northern Arizona. At the location where the rail line crossed Canyon Diablo, about 3 mi (4.8 km) north of Two Guns, construction was delayed while a trestle was built.
That list includes Diablo Canyon, but that bill did not include any estimate of how much money would be required to keep the plant open beyond its scheduled 2025 shut down.
The bridge was at first part of the National Old Trails Road (known as the Santa Fe Highway in Arizona), which in 1926 became part of U.S. Route 66. The bridge was used until a new bridge was erected just north of Canyon Diablo Bridge in 1938, after which Route 66 followed Interstate 40 at the Two Guns location. [4]