Arizona State Route 260 (Ariz.)
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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Arizona State Route 260 (Ariz.)
Other forms of name
Arizona State Highway 260 (Ariz.)
AZ 260 (Ariz.)
Route 260 (Ariz.)
S.R. 260 (Ariz.)
SR 260 (Ariz.)
State Highway 260 (Ariz.)
State Route 260 (Ariz.)
Coordinates
-111.954832 -111.954832 34.648885 34.648885 (gooearth )
See Also From tracing topical name
Roads Arizona
Other Identifiers
Wikidata:
Q815279
Library of congress:
sh2006006075
Sources of Information
- Work cat.: Administrative action for projects F-053-2(9) Clay Springs section, F-053-2(10) section: Payson-Show Low Highway, State Highway 260 in Navajo County, Arizona, 1972)
- Ariz. atlas & gaz., 2004:p. 50-51 (State Route 260)
- Rand McNally the Road Atlas, U.S./Canada/Mexico, 2006:p. 8 (State Highway 260)
- Arizona roads WWW, July 28, 2006:Arizona state routes (Route 260; AZ 260; in the 1980s AZ 260 was extended west from Payson along the General Crook Trail to Camp Verde, then took over the now defunct AZ 279 to Cottonwood; AZ 260 was formerly AZ 160)
- Wikipedia, Aug. 31, 2006(State Route 260 (Arizona); also known as SR 260; major east-west state highway in north central Arizona; start at State Route 89 in Cottonwood and ending at junction with U.S. Route 180 and U.S. Route 191 in Eagar)
Wikipedia description:
State Route 260, also known as SR 260, is a 217.78-mile (350.48 km) long east–west major state highway in the north-central part of the U.S. state of Arizona. It connects State Route 89A in Cottonwood to U.S. Route 180 and U.S. Route 191 in Eagar. The highway begins in Yavapai County before entering Coconino County and then entering Gila County before reentering Coconino County and then entering Navajo and Apache counties, where the highway ends.
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