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El Toro is the main attraction of the Mexican-themed section of the park, Plaza Del Carnaval. It replaced another roller coaster, Viper, which closed following the 2004 season. When it opened, El Toro had the steepest drop of any wooden roller coaster in the world at 76 degrees, a record that was later broken by T Express at Everland in 2008.
Rolling Thunder was a racing roller coaster located at Six Flags Great Adventure in Jackson Township, New Jersey. Designed by William Cobb, it opened in 1979 as the park's first wooden coaster during its fifth operating season.
The Jersey Devil Coaster is a single-rail roller coaster located at Six Flags Great Adventure in Jackson Township, New Jersey. The roller coaster was built by Rocky Mountain Construction (RMC). It is themed to the Jersey Devil , a mythical creature rumored to live in the New Jersey Pine Barrens . [ 1 ]
JACKSON, NJ. (WHTM) — Six Flags Great Adventure in New Jersey just announced they would be retiring two of their most popular roller coasters to make way for something new. Six Flags Great ...
Six Flags Great Adventure has become a destination for those wanting to climb high and speed through the air on roller coasters. The Runaway Mine Train sends riders careening over a lake at 38 ...
Small kiddie coaster that was located about where Roaring Rapids' entrance is today. Z-Force: 1985 1987 Intamin Space Diver County Fair Steel roller coaster that featured a stacked design and numerous steep rolling track dives. Later located at Six Flags Over Georgia as Z-Force and at Six Flags Magic Mountain as Flashback. [1] Tidal Wave: 1978 1991
Six Flags Great Adventure is an amusement park located approximately 20 miles (32 km) southeast of Trenton in Jackson Township, New Jersey.Owned and operated by Six Flags, the park complex is situated between New York City and Philadelphia and includes a water park named Hurricane Harbor.
Six Flags came in, added $20 million of upgrades, mainly in the form of roller coasters, and reopened as Six Flags New Orleans in 2003. That was, until Hurricane Katrina stopped by in 2005.