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The highways travel concurrently to north-northwest of West Thumb. US 14 / US 16 in West Thumb. Northern segment Montana The northern entrance to Yellowstone National Park south of Gardiner I-90 / US 191 in Livingston. The highways travel concurrently to northeast of Livingston. US 12 south of White Sulphur Springs. The highways travel ...
The highway is notable for its scenic value as it winds over and through Mingus Mountain as well as passing through Sedona and the Oak Creek Canyon. The route then enters Coconino County soon after leaving Sedona. The highway proceeds to Flagstaff, where it crosses Interstate 17 (I-17) and I-40. The highway ends at I-40 Business in Flagstaff ...
I-40 / Historic US 66 – Flagstaff, Los Angeles, Williams: Counterclockwise terminus; I-40 exit 165; road continues west as Historic US 66 (former BL 40) Valle: 27.83: 44.79: US 180 east – Flagstaff: Western terminus of US 180: Grand Canyon NP: 51.98: 83.65: South entrance station: Clockwise end of state maintenance: 80.59: 129.70: East ...
The station, formerly an Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway depot, doubles as a visitor center and rental-car pickup and is located in downtown Flagstaff. Northern Arizona University is located nearby, as are the Lowell Observatory (where Pluto was discovered), Sunset Crater , the Walnut Canyon National Monument , ski resorts and other ...
More than 240 Olympians and Paralympians made the winding two-hour drive up Interstate-17 from Phoenix to Flagstaff to train at altitude on their way to the Tokyo Games three years ago.
Modern Grand Canyon Railway Hotel opened in 1995 to the north of 1908 structure. Owned and operated by Xanterra since 2007. Williams Junction: ATSF: 1960: Last passenger service April 1969. Razed 1984. Platform rebuilt 1999 for restored Amtrak Southwest Chief service and connecting bus shuttle to Williams Grand Canyon Railway depot. Winslow ...
U.S. Route 287 (US 287) is a north–south (physically northwest–southeast) United States highway.At 1,791 miles (2,882 km) long, [citation needed] it is the second longest three-digit U.S. Route, behind US 281.
Uncle Tom's Trail was a steep stairway descent from the south rim of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone to a viewpoint near the base of the Lower Yellowstone Falls in Yellowstone National Park. [1] The trail was constructed in 1898 by park concessionaire, "Uncle Tom" H. F. Richardson when the Department of the Interior granted Richardson a ...