Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On State Route 72, Death Valley National Park 37°01′33″N 117°22′02″W / 37.025833°N 117.367222°W / 37.025833; -117.367222 ( Death Valley Scotty Historic Death Valley National Park
Railtown 1897 State Historic Park; Robert Louis Stevenson State Park; San Juan Bautista State Historic Park; San Pasqual Battlefield State Historic Park; Santa Cruz Mission State Historic Park; Santa Susana Pass State Historic Park; Shasta State Historic Park; Sonoma State Historic Park; State Indian Museum State Historic Park; Sutter's Fort ...
Death Valley National Park is a national park of the United States that straddles the California–Nevada border, east of the Sierra Nevada. The park boundaries include Death Valley , the northern section of Panamint Valley , the southern section of Eureka Valley and most of Saline Valley .
The marker is at the corner of State Route 190 and Badwater Road. The California Historical Landmark reads: NO. 442 DEATH VALLEY GATEWAY - Through this natural gateway the Death Valley '49ers, more than 100 emigrants from the Middle West seeking a shortcut to gold fields of central California, entered Death Valley in December 1849.
The highest temperature ever recorded in Death Valley was 134 degrees in 1913. The park came close to breaking the record on July 7, 2024, when temperatures reached a staggering 129 degrees, the ...
Death Valley National Park visitor Steffi Meister, from Switzerland, photographs the landscape at Zabriskie Point where temperatures were as high as 125 degrees recently. As the body struggles ...
A Death Valley National Park visitor has stepped forward and taken responsibility for knocking over a 113-year-old salt tram tower last month, claiming it happened during a time of desperation and ...
California Historical Landmark number 826, Old Stovepipe Wells, founded on August 7, 1968, reads: NO. 826 OLD STOVEPIPE WELLS - This waterhole, the only one in the sand dune area of Death Valley, was at the junction of the two Indian trails. During the bonanza days of Rhyolite and Skidoo, it was the only known water source on the cross-valley road.