Nevada State Route 374
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State Route 374 |
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Death Valley Road | |||||||||||||
Length: | 8.84 mi[1] (14.23 km) | ||||||||||||
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Formed: | 1976 renumbering (SR 58 by 1937) | ||||||||||||
West end: | Daylight Pass Rd in Death Valley, CA | ||||||||||||
East end: | US 95 in Beatty | ||||||||||||
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Nevada State Route 374 is a state highway in Nye County, Nevada, United States. It runs southwest from U.S. Highway 95 at Beatty to the California state line in Death Valley National Park. Until the 1976 renumbering, SR 374 was State Route 58, defined by 1937.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Nevada Department of Transportation, State Maintained Highways, Descriptions, Index & Maps, January 2006
- ^ 1937 Official Road Map of the State of Nevada
Fauna, Flora and Minerals
Borax • Chuckwalla • Death Valley monkeyflower • Death Valley pupfish • Devil's Hole pupfish • Salt Creek Pupfish
History
Death Valley Railroad • Greenwater • Lake Manly • Skidoo
Tonopah and Tidewater Railroad • Twenty mule team
Places
Amargosa Range / River / Valley • Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge • Badwater • Ballarat • Beatty • Chloride City • Death Valley Junction • Eureka Dunes • Furnace Creek • Panamint City / Range / Springs / Valley • Racetrack • Rhyolite • Scotty's Castle • Stovepipe Wells • Telescope Peak • Trona • Ubehebe Crater • Zabriske Point
Transportation
CA SR127 • CA SR178 • CA SR190 • NV SR373 •NV SR374 • Trona Railway • US95