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Death Valley National Park: 42.70: Death Valley National Park west boundary: 57.91: Panamint Valley Road (to SR 178) – Trona, Ridgecrest: 93.21: Scotty's Castle Road – Scotty's Castle, Beatty: 128.33: Death Valley National Park east boundary: Death Valley Junction: 140.69
SR 127 continues along the eastern edge of Death Valley National Park, passing by Eagle Mountain and the Amargosa River before intersecting SR 190 at Death Valley Junction. The road ends at the California-Nevada border, where Nevada State Route 373 begins. [3] It is the "Lost Highway" featured in David Lynch's film Lost Highway.
SR 160 east (Pahrump Valley Highway) – Pahrump: Amargosa Valley: 30: 48 — SR 373 south (Death Valley Junction Road) – Death Valley Junction: Beatty: 60: 97 — SR 374 south (Death Valley Road, Main Street) – Rhyolite, Death Valley 95: 153 — SR 267 west (Scotty's Castle Road) – Scotty's Castle: Esmeralda ES 0.00–44.19 4: 6.4 —
The second segment resumes four miles (6 km) west of Salisberry Pass in the southeasterly part of Death Valley National Park in Inyo County at what had been the former boundary of Death Valley National Monument until 1994. It then meets up with State Route 127. SR 178 then branches northward from SR 127 to the California-Nevada State Line.
SR 374 begins at the boundary to the Nevada portion of Death Valley National Park in Nye County. From there, it runs due northeast across the open desert. The route curves eastward as it passes through the mountains southwest of Beatty. The road becomes Main Street as it enters the town's southern limits.
A major rockslide prompted two highways to be shut down in Colorado over the weekend and witnesses captured the frightening moment on video. Highways 96 and 165 from Wetmore to Westcliffe in ...
State Route 373 (SR 373) is a 16.304-mile-long (26.239 km) state highway in Nye County, Nevada, United States. It is a highway connecting California State Route 127 to U.S. Route 95, providing southern Nye County access to the eastern areas of Death Valley National Park.
After the road's completion, there were frequent closures along SR 39 through the San Gabriel Valley. [16] During the winter of 1978, following a period of heavy rainfall, a rockslide damaged the northernmost 4.5-mile (7.2 km) stretch of SR 39 near Crystal Lake to the road's terminus at SR 2 , at Islip Saddle .