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[Byway]: Kayenta-Monument Valley Scenic Road
[Length]: 27.7 miles
[Notes]: The scenic byway, along U.S. Route 163, passes by "unmissable monoliths" of Monument Valley, like Totem Pole, Three Sisters, and Merrick Butte.
[Designation]:
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[Byway]: Diné Biítah "Among the People" Scenic Road
[Length]: 103 miles
[Notes]: The scenic byway begin at Window Rock, Arizona, the Navajo Nation capitol, and travels along BIA Route 12 and Navajo Route 64 in New Mexico and Arizona to sacred Navajo places. Sites on the road include archaeological sites at Canyon de Chelly National Monument, the Navajo Nation Museum, and the Navajo Code Talker Monument.
[Designation]:
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[Byway]: Naat’tsis’aan (Navajo Mountain) Scenic Road
[Length]: 68 miles
[Notes]: The road travels along Arizona State Route 98 through historic, sacred lands of the Paiute, Hopi and Navajo. The earliest of these were in the area 8,000 B.C. or earlier. It includes the Navajo's most sacred mountain, Naat'tsis'aan, or Navajo Mountain. Other sites are Antelope Canyon and the Lechee Rock.
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[Byway]: Tse’nikani (Flat Mesa Rock) Scenic Road
[Length]: 48 miles
[Notes]: Red sandstone mesas, buttes and spires make up the landscape along U.S. Route 191 by Mexican Hat, Utah.
[Designation]:
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[Byway]: Vermilion Cliffs Scenic Road
[Length]: 82 miles
[Notes]: It is a scenic road through Marble Canyon, by Vermillion Cliffs and across the Navajo Bridge. The landscape scenery changes dramatically along the route with a 4,500 feet (1,400 m) change in elevation.
[Designation]:
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