Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rainbow Canyon (nicknamed Star Wars Canyon and Jedi Transition) is a canyon inside Death Valley National Park in Inyo County, California, on the park's western border. It is about 130 miles (210 km) west of Las Vegas and 160 miles (260 km) north of Los Angeles .
Rainbow Canyon is a canyon near the western edge of the park. It is commonly used by the United States Military for fighter jet training and is frequented by photographers who, from the canyon rim, are able to photograph jets flying beneath them. Since a 2019 plane crash all military air traffic has been banned from flying below the rim.
Rainbow Canyon (Nevada), a canyon located in Lincoln County, Nevada Rainbow Canyon (California) , a canyon near the western edge of Death Valley National Park in Inyo County, California Rainbow Canyon (British Columbia), a small canyon on the Moose River
Closed locations include Rainbow Canyon, Emigrant Canyon Road, Cottonwood Canyon, Marble Canyon, North Highway, Salt Creek Trail, Beatty Pass, Saline Valley. Rangers said Devils Golf Course might ...
Road 320 / River Island Drive: R32.70: Balch Park Road – Balch Park: Quaking Aspen: 56.57: Western Divide Highway: Continuation beyond the east end of western segment of SR 190, at a point in Quaking Aspen: Gap in route : Inyo INY 9.85-140.69: Olancha: 9.85: US 395 – Los Angeles, Bishop: West end of eastern segment of SR 190; former US 6 24.55
The route is known as Montezuma Valley Road, Palm Canyon Drive, Christmas Circle, Peg Leg Road, and Borrego Salton Sea Way. Route description The route begins at a junction with County Route S2 (San Felipe Road) in San Diego County and runs eastward as Montezuma Valley Road through the rural community of Ranchita .
The ghost town of Ballarat is located in the Panamint Valley about three miles east of Trona Road, near Happy Canyon. [1] The Panamint Springs Resort, on Highway 190 west of Panamint Valley Road near Rainbow Canyon, provides the only lodging, dining, and gas in the area. [2] The former Epsom Salts Monorail crossed the valley on a wooden trestle.
Rogers Peak is the fourth-highest mountain of the Panamint Range, [3] and it is set within Death Valley National Park and the Mojave Desert.Precipitation runoff from this mountain's east slope drains to Death Valley via Hanaupah Canyon, whereas the west slope drains to Panamint Valley via Wildrose and Tuber canyons.