Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 90 Part 2.djvu/1013

 PUBLIC LAW 94-527—OCT. 17, 1976

90 STAT. 2481

Public Law 94-527 94th Congress An Act To amend the National Trails System Act (82 Stat. 919), and for other purposes.

Oct. 17, 1976 [S. 2112]

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the National National scenic Trails System Act (82 Stat. 919; 16 U.S.C. 1241 et seq.) is amended trails, as follows: In section 5(c), add the following new paragraphs; 16 USC 1244. "(15) Bartram Trail, extending through the States of Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee. "(16) Daniel Boone Trail, extending from the vicinity of Statesville. North Carolina, to Fort Boonesborough State Park, Kentucky. "(17) Desert Trail, extending from the Canadian border through parts of Idaho, Washington, Oregon, Nevada, California, and Arizona, to the Mexican border. "(18) Dominguez-Escalante Trail, extending approximately two thousand miles along the route of the 1776 expedition led by Father Francisco Atanasio Dominguez and Father Silvestre Velez de Escalante, originating in Santa Fe, New Mexico; proceeding northwest along the San Juan, Dolores, Gunnison, and White Rivers in Colorado; thence westerly to Utah Lake; thence southward to Arizona and returning to Santa Fe. "(19) Florida Trail, extending north from Everglades National Park, including the Big Cypress Swamp, the Kissimme Prairie, the Withlacoochee State Forest, Ocala National Forest, Osceola National Forest, and Black Water River State Forest, said completed trail to be approximately one thousand three hundred miles long, of which over four hundred miles of trail have already been built. "(20) Indian Nations Trail, extending from the Red River in Oklahoma approximately two hundred miles northward through the former Indian nations to the Oklahoma-Kansas boundary line. "(21) Nez Perce Trail extending from the vicinity of Wallowa Lake, Oregon, to Bear Paw Mountain, Montana. "(22) Pacific Northwest Trail, extending approximately one thousand miles from the Continental Divide in Glacier National Park,

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