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U.S. Route 50 in Utah

U.S. Route 50 (US-50) in Utah crosses the center of the state. The highway serves no major population centers in Utah, with the largest city along its path being Delta. Most of the route passes through desolate, remote areas. Through the eastern half of the state the route is concurrent with Interstate 70 (I-70). US-50 both enters and exits Utah concurrent with US-6, however the two routes are separate through the center of the state.

U.S. Route 50

US 50 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by UDOT
Length335.541 mi[1] (540.001 km)
Existed1926–present
Major junctions
West end US 6 / US 50 at the Nevada state line (east of Baker, NV)
Major intersections US 6 in Delta
I-15 in Holden
I-15 in Scipio
I-70 / US 89 in Salina
US 6 / US 191 near Green River
US 191 at Crescent Junction
East end I-70 / US 6 / US 50 at the Colorado state line (west of Fruita, CO)
Location
CountryUnited States
StateUtah
CountiesMillard, Sevier, Emery, Grand
Highway system
  • Utah State Highway System
SR-48 SR-51

Three completely different routings of US-50 have existed between Green River and Ely, Nevada. The route between these cities has become progressively shorter as new roads have been paved through this largely uninhabited region of both states. The earlier routings were a result of a dispute between Utah and Nevada over which auto trails would be paved and converted to U.S. Highways.

Route description edit

The highway enters Utah from Nevada in a desolate portion of the Great Basin Desert. Similar to many portions of the route in Nevada, there are multiple stretches without any motorist services. There are no services between the state line and the small farming village of Hinckley, just outside of Delta, a span of roadway that is about 100 miles (160 km).[2] While passing through the Great Basin the highway crosses two mountain ranges, the Confusion Range via King's Canyon, and House Range via Skull Rock Pass, before arriving at the shore of Sevier Lake, an intermittent lake fed by snow melt from many mountain ranges in the eastern half of the Great Basin. The highway follows the north shore of Sevier Lake and the Sevier River towards Delta.[2] Today much of the water in the Sevier river is diverted for agricultural use before reaching the lake, and rarely is significant water visible in the lake.[3]

The scenery changes as US-50 approaches Delta, where U.S. Route 6 and 50 separate. As the road approaches Delta, a straight passage across desert becomes zigzags through farming areas. The highway continues to zigzag through farms until arriving at more mountainous terrain at Holden. At Holden, the highway merges with Interstate 15 to cross the Pavant Range via Scipio Summit. After passing the mountains, US-50 then separates from this freeway as again a two lane road passing through desolate territory towards Salina where the road joins with Interstate 70. The two highways run concurrent from this point east to Colorado. Yet again, there is a stretch of highway 110 miles (180 km) long without services from Salina to Green River.[2]

While co-routed with I-70, US-50 crosses the Wasatch Plateau and passes through the San Rafael Swell. The construction of I-70 through the swell is noted as one of the engineering marvels of the Interstate Highway System.[4] One specific feat, the excavation through a portion called Spotted Wolf Canyon, required excavating 3,500,000 cubic yards (2,700,000 m3) of rock to have a bed for just 8 miles (13 km) of roadway. Construction workers noted that prior to the construction of the freeway a man could stand in this canyon and touch both sides of the canyon wall.[5]

US-6 rejoins US-50 near Green River. The three routes run concurrent and follow the southern edge of the Book Cliffs to Grand Junction, Colorado. Once again, services are not present from Thompson Springs to Fruita, Colorado, a span of about 60 miles (97 km).[2] This portion of US-50 is part of the Dinosaur Diamond Prehistoric Highway, a National Scenic Byway. The name of the byway comes from the large number of areas along the route with visible dinosaur remains.[6] The entire route through the state, as well as the concurrencies with I-15 and I-70, is included in the National Highway System.[7]

Photos edit

History edit

The modern route of U.S. Route 50 between Ely, Nevada and Green River, Utah is the third iteration.

First iteration edit

In 1926, when the U.S. Highway system was first announced, there was a gap in US-50 between Ely and Thistle.[8] At the time the states of Utah and Nevada were feuding about which of the old auto trails would be paved and used for the new U.S. Highway System. Nevada favored the Lincoln Highway, which the modern US-50 closely follows in that state. Utah refused to consider the Lincoln Highway west of Salt Lake City. Officials perceived that route would carry all California bound traffic directly to Nevada while passing through very few communities in Utah. Utah instead favored the Victory Highway (modern Interstate 80 west of Salt Lake) and the Arrowhead Trail (modern Interstate 15). By favoring these routes Utah could force travelers destined for southern California to use a different route than those destined for northern California, with both of these traversing through more cities in Utah than the Lincoln Highway. The Arrowhead trail was especially beneficial to Utah as it passed through many communities in the state, but only Las Vegas in Nevada.[9]

Utah prevailed and US-50 did not continue to follow the Lincoln Highway to Salt Lake City as Nevada had wanted. The first continuous route of US-50 across eastern Nevada and western Utah was an arch shaped route. US-50 proceeded north from Ely along what is now numbered U.S. Route 93 and Alternate US-93 where the highway would merge with the Victory Highway (U.S. Route 40 along the Wendover Cut-off, since replaced by I-80) to Salt Lake. From there the highway returned to Green River via what is now numbered State Route 201, U.S. Route 89 and U.S. Route 6.[10]

Second iteration edit

The second iteration has its origins with the formation of US-6. In 1937, US-6 was extended west from its former terminus at Greeley, Colorado to Long Beach, California.[11][12] In eastern Utah the route used the existing alignment of US-50. However, in western Utah the route used an unpaved road through Delta reconnecting with US-50 in Ely.[10] In 1953, US-50 was approved to use this shorter alignment with the older US-50 alignment designated as U.S. Route 50 Alternate.[13] Nevada first showed this alignment as paved and signed as US 50 in their 1954 map.[14] With this change, US-6/50 ran concurrent from Ely to Grand Junction, Colorado.

The paved version did not exactly follow the unpaved roads. The dirt route passed through the numerous mountain ranges of the Great Basin using Marjum canyon and Marjum Pass to and through the Tule Valley. Once paved, the route was relocated to follow the north shore of Sevier Lake, which reduced the number of mountain ranges crossed.[2] Although US-50 was moved to yet another alignment, this route remains US-6 today.

Third iteration edit

The modern route of US-50 was created in 1976.[15][16] This iteration of US-50 has its origins in a dispute over the route of Interstate 70 in Utah. While I-70 was in the planning stage Colorado lobbied for an extension of the original proposal to run across Colorado and into Utah. Utah supported an extension using then US-6/50 to connect Denver, Colorado with Salt Lake City. However, federal planners did not see value in this route and instead supported a route that could be used to connect Denver with Los Angeles, California. I-70 was built using the federally selected route.[17] In 1976, US-50 was changed again to a routing mostly concurrent with I-70. The portion of modern US-50 between Delta and Scipio had been previously numbered State Route 26,[15] and the portion between Scipio and Salina had been numbered State Route 63, with the SR-63 portion being transferred to SR-26 in 1971.[18]

East of Green River I-70 closely follows the original route of US-50, with some minor straightening by Crescent Junction, Cisco, and Westwater.[2]

Major intersections edit

CountyLocation[2]mi[1]kmExitDestinationsNotes
Millard0.0000.000 
 
 
 
US 6 west / US 50 west – Ely
Continuation into Nevada
0.6651.070 
 
SR-159 south – Garrison, Milford
83.897135.019 
 
SR-257 south – Deseret, Milford
Delta88.302142.10850 North / 500 WestInterchange; westbound exit and eastbound entrance
89.402143.879 
 
US 6 east – Salt Lake City
East end of overlap with US-6
92.976149.630 
 
 
 
SR-125 east / SR-136 north – Oak City, Lynndyl
107.597173.161 
 
SR-100 south – Fillmore
Holden116.497187.484  
 
 
SR-64 to I-15 south
Former US-91 south
119.723192.675 
 
I-15 south
West end of overlap with I-15; exit 178 on I-15
125.031201.218184Tower RoadExit number follows I-15; signed as "Ranch Exit" until 2015
129.816208.919 
 
I-15 north – Salt Lake City
East end of overlap with I-15; exit 188 on I-15
Sevier154.805249.134 
 
 
 
 
SR-260 south to I-70 west – Aurora
Salina157.803253.959 
 
SR-24 east – Aurora
158.633
227.689
255.295
366.430
 
 
I-70 BS begins / US 89 north (State Street north) – Gunnison, Salt Lake City
West end of overlap with I-70 Bus./US-89
Mileposts reflect distance along US-89
225.956
56.979
363.641
91.699
 
 
 
 
 
 
I-70 BS ends / I-70 west / US 89 south – Richfield
East end of overlap with I-70 Bus./US-89; west end of overlap with I-70; Mileposts reflect distance along I-70
63.193101.69963Gooseberry Road
73.924118.96973Ranch exit
86.773139.64886Ivie Creek rest areaAccess via SR-76
91.011146.46891 
 
 
 
SR-10 north / SR-72 south – Price, Loa
Emery99.488160.11099Ranch exit
104.620168.370Salt Wash view area (westbound)
Sand Beach view area (eastbound)
108.011173.827108Ranch exit
115.634186.095Devil's Canyon view area (eastbound)
116.513187.509116MooreEagle Canyon view area also signed westbound
122.566197.251Ghost Rocks view area
131.507211.640131Ranch exit
142.585229.468Spotted Wolf Canyon view area
146.337235.507San Rafael Reef view area (westbound)
149.198240.111149 
 
SR-24 west – Hanksville
157.924254.154157 
 
 
 
US 6 west / US 191 north – Price, Salt Lake City
West end of US-6/191 overlap
160.403258.144160  
 
I-70 BL / SR-19 east – Green River
I-70 Bus. not signed westbound
Grand164.547264.813164  
 
I-70 BL / SR-19 west – Green River
I-70 Bus. not signed eastbound
175.585282.577175Floy
Crescent Junction182.153293.147182 
 
US 191 south – Crescent Junction, Moab
East end of US-191 overlap; former US-160 east
187.413301.612187Thompson Springs (SR-94)
189.876305.576Rest area / Visitors Center (westbound)
193.469311.358193Yellowcat
204.738329.494204 
 
SR-128 south – Cisco
214.367344.990214Danish Flat
221.885357.089221Sulphur
227.086365.459227Westwater
228.352367.497Harley Dome view area (westbound)
231.673372.842 
 
 
 
 
 
I-70 east / US 6 east / US 50 east – Grand Junction, Denver
Continuation into Colorado
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Highway Reference Online - US-50". maps.udot.utah.gov. Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 16, 2023. "Highway Reference Online - US-89". maps.udot.utah.gov. Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 16, 2023. "Highway Reference Online - I-70". maps.udot.utah.gov. Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 16, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Utah Road and Recreation Atlas (Map) (2002 ed.). 1:250000. Benchmark Maps. 2002. ISBN 0-929591-74-7.
  3. ^ Haymond, Jay M. (1994). "Utah History Encyclopedia - Sevier Lake". University of Utah Press. Retrieved February 19, 2023.
  4. ^ Weingroff, Richard F. "Dwight D. Eisenhower System of Interstate and Defense Highways Engineering Marvels". Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved February 15, 2008.
  5. ^ Brown, Matthew (September 28, 1990). "I-70 Project Reaches End of Road at Last". Deseret News. Salt Lake City, UT.
  6. ^ . Dinosaur Diamond Partnership. Archived from the original on September 18, 2007. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
  7. ^ "Utah National Highway System". UDOT Data Portal. Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  8. ^ Bureau of Public Roads & American Association of State Highway Officials (November 11, 1926). United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey. OCLC 32889555. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  9. ^ Patrick, Kevin J. & Wilson, Robert E. "15: Lincoln Highway in Utah" (PDF). The Lincoln Highway Resource Guide. Indiana, PA: Indiana University of Pennsylvania. p. 203.
  10. ^ a b Road Atlas (Map). Rand McNally. 1946. p. 22. Retrieved June 15, 2008 – via Broer Map Library.
  11. ^ Executive Committee (September 16, 1937). "Agenda to Minutes of Executive Committee" (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. p. 307. Retrieved February 19, 2023 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  12. ^ Nevada State Highway Department (1937). Official Road Map of the State of Nevada (Map). Scale not given. Carson City: Nevada State Highway Department. (PDF) from the original on May 12, 2005. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  13. ^ U.S. Route Numbering Committee (1953). [Report of the U.S. Route Numbering Committee to the Executive Committee] (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. p. 272. Retrieved February 19, 2023 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  14. ^ Nevada Department of Highways; Rand McNally & Company (1954). Official Highway Map of Nevada (Map). Scale not given. Carson City: Nevada Department of Highways. (PDF) from the original on May 12, 2005. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  15. ^ a b "State Road Resolutions SR-26.pdf". Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved December 4, 2007.
  16. ^ Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering (November 12, 1976). "Route Numbering Committee Agenda" (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. p. 479. Retrieved February 19, 2023 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  17. ^ Weingroff, Richard F. "Why Does I-70 End in Cove Fort, Utah?". Ask the Rambler. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved January 30, 2007.
  18. ^ "State Road Resolutions SR-63.pdf". Utah Department of Transportation. Retrieved February 19, 2023.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  •   Media related to U.S. Route 50 in Utah at Wikimedia Commons
  U.S. Route 50
Previous state:
Nevada
Utah Next state:
Colorado

route, utah, this, article, about, section, entire, route, route, route, utah, crosses, center, state, highway, serves, major, population, centers, utah, with, largest, city, along, path, being, delta, most, route, passes, through, desolate, remote, areas, thr. This article is about the section of U S Route 50 in Utah For the entire route see U S Route 50 U S Route 50 US 50 in Utah crosses the center of the state The highway serves no major population centers in Utah with the largest city along its path being Delta Most of the route passes through desolate remote areas Through the eastern half of the state the route is concurrent with Interstate 70 I 70 US 50 both enters and exits Utah concurrent with US 6 however the two routes are separate through the center of the state U S Route 50US 50 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by UDOTLength335 541 mi 1 540 001 km Existed1926 presentMajor junctionsWest endUS 6 US 50 at the Nevada state line east of Baker NV Major intersectionsUS 6 in Delta I 15 in Holden I 15 in Scipio I 70 US 89 in Salina US 6 US 191 near Green River US 191 at Crescent JunctionEast endI 70 US 6 US 50 at the Colorado state line west of Fruita CO LocationCountryUnited StatesStateUtahCountiesMillard Sevier Emery GrandHighway systemUnited States Numbered Highway System List Special Divided Utah State Highway System Interstate US State Minor Scenic SR 48 SR 51 Three completely different routings of US 50 have existed between Green River and Ely Nevada The route between these cities has become progressively shorter as new roads have been paved through this largely uninhabited region of both states The earlier routings were a result of a dispute between Utah and Nevada over which auto trails would be paved and converted to U S Highways Contents 1 Route description 2 Photos 3 History 3 1 First iteration 3 2 Second iteration 3 3 Third iteration 4 Major intersections 5 References 6 External linksRoute description editThe highway enters Utah from Nevada in a desolate portion of the Great Basin Desert Similar to many portions of the route in Nevada there are multiple stretches without any motorist services There are no services between the state line and the small farming village of Hinckley just outside of Delta a span of roadway that is about 100 miles 160 km 2 While passing through the Great Basin the highway crosses two mountain ranges the Confusion Range via King s Canyon and House Range via Skull Rock Pass before arriving at the shore of Sevier Lake an intermittent lake fed by snow melt from many mountain ranges in the eastern half of the Great Basin The highway follows the north shore of Sevier Lake and the Sevier River towards Delta 2 Today much of the water in the Sevier river is diverted for agricultural use before reaching the lake and rarely is significant water visible in the lake 3 The scenery changes as US 50 approaches Delta where U S Route 6 and 50 separate As the road approaches Delta a straight passage across desert becomes zigzags through farming areas The highway continues to zigzag through farms until arriving at more mountainous terrain at Holden At Holden the highway merges with Interstate 15 to cross the Pavant Range via Scipio Summit After passing the mountains US 50 then separates from this freeway as again a two lane road passing through desolate territory towards Salina where the road joins with Interstate 70 The two highways run concurrent from this point east to Colorado Yet again there is a stretch of highway 110 miles 180 km long without services from Salina to Green River 2 While co routed with I 70 US 50 crosses the Wasatch Plateau and passes through the San Rafael Swell The construction of I 70 through the swell is noted as one of the engineering marvels of the Interstate Highway System 4 One specific feat the excavation through a portion called Spotted Wolf Canyon required excavating 3 500 000 cubic yards 2 700 000 m3 of rock to have a bed for just 8 miles 13 km of roadway Construction workers noted that prior to the construction of the freeway a man could stand in this canyon and touch both sides of the canyon wall 5 US 6 rejoins US 50 near Green River The three routes run concurrent and follow the southern edge of the Book Cliffs to Grand Junction Colorado Once again services are not present from Thompson Springs to Fruita Colorado a span of about 60 miles 97 km 2 This portion of US 50 is part of the Dinosaur Diamond Prehistoric Highway a National Scenic Byway The name of the byway comes from the large number of areas along the route with visible dinosaur remains 6 The entire route through the state as well as the concurrencies with I 15 and I 70 is included in the National Highway System 7 Photos edit nbsp US 50 and US 6 between Nevada border and Delta nbsp I 70 and US 50 routed through Spotted Wolf Canyon nbsp US 50 descending from Skull Rock Pass in western Utah nbsp Eastbound US 50 arrives at a T intersection at the edge of Holden and turns left and the SR 64 is to the right May 2020 nbsp Signage at the T intersection in Holden To the right is SR 64 but the BGS simply points the way to Interstate 15 May 2020 History editThe modern route of U S Route 50 between Ely Nevada and Green River Utah is the third iteration First iteration edit In 1926 when the U S Highway system was first announced there was a gap in US 50 between Ely and Thistle 8 At the time the states of Utah and Nevada were feuding about which of the old auto trails would be paved and used for the new U S Highway System Nevada favored the Lincoln Highway which the modern US 50 closely follows in that state Utah refused to consider the Lincoln Highway west of Salt Lake City Officials perceived that route would carry all California bound traffic directly to Nevada while passing through very few communities in Utah Utah instead favored the Victory Highway modern Interstate 80 west of Salt Lake and the Arrowhead Trail modern Interstate 15 By favoring these routes Utah could force travelers destined for southern California to use a different route than those destined for northern California with both of these traversing through more cities in Utah than the Lincoln Highway The Arrowhead trail was especially beneficial to Utah as it passed through many communities in the state but only Las Vegas in Nevada 9 Utah prevailed and US 50 did not continue to follow the Lincoln Highway to Salt Lake City as Nevada had wanted The first continuous route of US 50 across eastern Nevada and western Utah was an arch shaped route US 50 proceeded north from Ely along what is now numbered U S Route 93 and Alternate US 93 where the highway would merge with the Victory Highway U S Route 40 along the Wendover Cut off since replaced by I 80 to Salt Lake From there the highway returned to Green River via what is now numbered State Route 201 U S Route 89 and U S Route 6 10 Second iteration edit The second iteration has its origins with the formation of US 6 In 1937 US 6 was extended west from its former terminus at Greeley Colorado to Long Beach California 11 12 In eastern Utah the route used the existing alignment of US 50 However in western Utah the route used an unpaved road through Delta reconnecting with US 50 in Ely 10 In 1953 US 50 was approved to use this shorter alignment with the older US 50 alignment designated as U S Route 50 Alternate 13 Nevada first showed this alignment as paved and signed as US 50 in their 1954 map 14 With this change US 6 50 ran concurrent from Ely to Grand Junction Colorado The paved version did not exactly follow the unpaved roads The dirt route passed through the numerous mountain ranges of the Great Basin using Marjum canyon and Marjum Pass to and through the Tule Valley Once paved the route was relocated to follow the north shore of Sevier Lake which reduced the number of mountain ranges crossed 2 Although US 50 was moved to yet another alignment this route remains US 6 today Third iteration edit The modern route of US 50 was created in 1976 15 16 This iteration of US 50 has its origins in a dispute over the route of Interstate 70 in Utah While I 70 was in the planning stage Colorado lobbied for an extension of the original proposal to run across Colorado and into Utah Utah supported an extension using then US 6 50 to connect Denver Colorado with Salt Lake City However federal planners did not see value in this route and instead supported a route that could be used to connect Denver with Los Angeles California I 70 was built using the federally selected route 17 In 1976 US 50 was changed again to a routing mostly concurrent with I 70 The portion of modern US 50 between Delta and Scipio had been previously numbered State Route 26 15 and the portion between Scipio and Salina had been numbered State Route 63 with the SR 63 portion being transferred to SR 26 in 1971 18 East of Green River I 70 closely follows the original route of US 50 with some minor straightening by Crescent Junction Cisco and Westwater 2 Major intersections editCountyLocation 2 mi 1 kmExitDestinationsNotes Millard 0 0000 000 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 6 west US 50 west ElyContinuation into Nevada 0 6651 070 nbsp nbsp SR 159 south Garrison Milford 83 897135 019 nbsp nbsp SR 257 south Deseret Milford Delta88 302142 10850 North 500 WestInterchange westbound exit and eastbound entrance 89 402143 879 nbsp nbsp US 6 east Salt Lake CityEast end of overlap with US 6 92 976149 630 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp SR 125 east SR 136 north Oak City Lynndyl 107 597173 161 nbsp nbsp SR 100 south Fillmore Holden116 497187 484 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp SR 64 to I 15 southFormer US 91 south 119 723192 675 nbsp nbsp I 15 southWest end of overlap with I 15 exit 178 on I 15 125 031201 218184Tower RoadExit number follows I 15 signed as Ranch Exit until 2015 129 816208 919 nbsp nbsp I 15 north Salt Lake CityEast end of overlap with I 15 exit 188 on I 15 Sevier 154 805249 134 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp SR 260 south to I 70 west Aurora Salina157 803253 959 nbsp nbsp SR 24 east Aurora 158 633227 689255 295366 430 nbsp nbsp I 70 BS begins US 89 north State Street north Gunnison Salt Lake CityWest end of overlap with I 70 Bus US 89Mileposts reflect distance along US 89 225 95656 979363 64191 699 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 70 BS ends I 70 west US 89 south RichfieldEast end of overlap with I 70 Bus US 89 west end of overlap with I 70 Mileposts reflect distance along I 70 63 193101 69963Gooseberry Road 73 924118 96973Ranch exit 86 773139 64886Ivie Creek rest areaAccess via SR 76 91 011146 46891 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp SR 10 north SR 72 south Price Loa Emery 99 488160 11099Ranch exit 104 620168 370Salt Wash view area westbound Sand Beach view area eastbound 108 011173 827108Ranch exit 115 634186 095Devil s Canyon view area eastbound 116 513187 509116MooreEagle Canyon view area also signed westbound 122 566197 251Ghost Rocks view area 131 507211 640131Ranch exit 142 585229 468Spotted Wolf Canyon view area 146 337235 507San Rafael Reef view area westbound 149 198240 111149 nbsp nbsp SR 24 west Hanksville 157 924254 154157 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 6 west US 191 north Price Salt Lake CityWest end of US 6 191 overlap 160 403258 144160 nbsp nbsp nbsp I 70 BL SR 19 east Green RiverI 70 Bus not signed westbound Grand 164 547264 813164 nbsp nbsp nbsp I 70 BL SR 19 west Green RiverI 70 Bus not signed eastbound 175 585282 577175Floy Crescent Junction182 153293 147182 nbsp nbsp US 191 south Crescent Junction MoabEast end of US 191 overlap former US 160 east 187 413301 612187Thompson Springs SR 94 189 876305 576Rest area Visitors Center westbound 193 469311 358193Yellowcat 204 738329 494204 nbsp nbsp SR 128 south Cisco 214 367344 990214Danish Flat 221 885357 089221Sulphur 227 086365 459227Westwater 228 352367 497Harley Dome view area westbound 231 673372 842 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 70 east US 6 east US 50 east Grand Junction DenverContinuation into Colorado 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Incomplete accessReferences edit a b Highway Reference Online US 50 maps udot utah gov Utah Department of Transportation Retrieved March 16 2023 Highway Reference Online US 89 maps udot utah gov Utah Department of Transportation Retrieved March 16 2023 Highway Reference Online I 70 maps udot utah gov Utah Department of Transportation Retrieved March 16 2023 a b c d e f g Utah Road and Recreation Atlas Map 2002 ed 1 250000 Benchmark Maps 2002 ISBN 0 929591 74 7 Haymond Jay M 1994 Utah History Encyclopedia Sevier Lake University of Utah Press Retrieved February 19 2023 Weingroff Richard F Dwight D Eisenhower System of Interstate and Defense Highways Engineering Marvels Federal Highway Administration Retrieved February 15 2008 Brown Matthew September 28 1990 I 70 Project Reaches End of Road at Last Deseret News Salt Lake City UT Dinosaur Diamond Prehistoric Highway Dinosaur Diamond Partnership Archived from the original on September 18 2007 Retrieved October 13 2007 Utah National Highway System UDOT Data Portal Retrieved February 21 2019 Bureau of Public Roads amp American Association of State Highway Officials November 11 1926 United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials Map 1 7 000 000 Washington DC United States Geological Survey OCLC 32889555 Retrieved November 7 2013 via Wikimedia Commons Patrick Kevin J amp Wilson Robert E 15 Lincoln Highway in Utah PDF The Lincoln Highway Resource Guide Indiana PA Indiana University of Pennsylvania p 203 a b Road Atlas Map Rand McNally 1946 p 22 Retrieved June 15 2008 via Broer Map Library Executive Committee September 16 1937 Agenda to Minutes of Executive Committee PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials p 307 Retrieved February 19 2023 via Wikimedia Commons Nevada State Highway Department 1937 Official Road Map of the State of Nevada Map Scale not given Carson City Nevada State Highway Department Archived PDF from the original on May 12 2005 Retrieved April 25 2023 U S Route Numbering Committee 1953 Report of the U S Route Numbering Committee to the Executive Committee PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials p 272 Retrieved February 19 2023 via Wikimedia Commons Nevada Department of Highways Rand McNally amp Company 1954 Official Highway Map of Nevada Map Scale not given Carson City Nevada Department of Highways Archived PDF from the original on May 12 2005 Retrieved March 25 2023 a b State Road Resolutions SR 26 pdf Utah Department of Transportation Retrieved December 4 2007 Special Committee on U S Route Numbering November 12 1976 Route Numbering Committee Agenda PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials p 479 Retrieved February 19 2023 via Wikimedia Commons Weingroff Richard F Why Does I 70 End in Cove Fort Utah Ask the Rambler Federal Highway Administration Retrieved January 30 2007 State Road Resolutions SR 63 pdf Utah Department of Transportation Retrieved February 19 2023 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML U S Route 50 in UtahKML is from Wikidata nbsp Media related to U S Route 50 in Utah at Wikimedia Commons nbsp U S Route 50 Previous state Nevada Utah Next state Colorado Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U S Route 50 in Utah amp oldid 1152000207 Third iteration, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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