Source: Tourism MediaHarmony Borax WorksSee where Death Valley’s borax boom started when you explore the ruined structures of a 19th-century ore-processing plant in Furnace Creek Springs.WorldNorth AmericaUSAInyo CountyCaliforniaDeath ValleyHarmony Borax Works
Source: Tourism MediaCharcoal KilnsLearn the story behind these beehive-shaped stonemasonry structures, which have been beautifully preserved in the Wildrose Canyon since the 1870s.WorldNorth AmericaUSAInyo CountyCaliforniaDeath ValleyCharcoal Kilns
Source: Tourism MediaBorax MuseumThe oldest house in Death Valley is a 19th-century miners’ bunkhouse that now contains a shop surrounded by equipment that supported the valley’s primary product.WorldNorth AmericaUSAInyo CountyCaliforniaDeath ValleyBorax Museum
Source: Tourism MediaEureka MineOn top of Providence Ridge, ruins remain of this once prosperous mine, which was run by a single prospector who lived alone here for almost 40 years.WorldNorth AmericaUSAInyo CountyCaliforniaDeath ValleyEureka Mine
Source: Tourism MediaHarmony Borax WorksSee where Death Valley’s borax boom started when you explore the ruined structures of a 19th-century ore-processing plant in Furnace Creek Springs.WorldNorth AmericaUSAInyo CountyCaliforniaDeath ValleyHarmony Borax Works
Source: Tourism MediaHarmony Borax WorksSee where Death Valley’s borax boom started when you explore the ruined structures of a 19th-century ore-processing plant in Furnace Creek Springs.WorldNorth AmericaUSAInyo CountyCaliforniaDeath ValleyHarmony Borax Works