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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 to I-15 / US 95 / State Line Road – Amargosa Valley, Shoshone, Baker, Pahrump, Las Vegas: East ...
State Route 374 (SR 374) is a state highway in Nye County, Nevada, United States. It serves as Nevada's gateway to Death Valley National Park, connecting the park to Beatty. The highway was known as State Route 58 prior to 1976.
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An unimproved road through Amargosa Valley, connecting Nevada to Death Valley Junction, appears on state maps as early as 1927. This route crossed the state line roughly where the current highway crosses now, but instead veered northwest to State Route 5 (now US 95) southwest of Beatty near the now defunct town of Caracca. [3]
The road that is now SR 372 was established by 1937. The unimproved route was incorporated into the westernmost end of the State Route 52 alignment, which had been redefined to extend from the California state line, through Pahrump and the Humboldt–Toiyabe National Forest north of Charleston Peak , to State Route 5 southeast of Indian Springs ...
SR 190/Death Valley Scenic Byway in Death Valley National Park. San Gorgonio Mountain seen from SR 243 near Banning. I-280 and State Scenic Highway markers US 395 descending south into Owens Valley Descending from Mission Pass on I-680 northbound. State Route 1. I-5 in San Juan Capistrano to SR 19 in Long Beach
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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.