8 weird things you’ll find in the Nevada desert — PHOTOS
By KRISTEN DESILVA REVIEWJOURNAL.COM
U.S. 95 merges with Interstate 80 west of Lovelock taken on Dec. 16, 2007. (Jeff Scheid/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Ghost Rider, a 1984 sculpture by Belgian artist Charles Albert Szukalski is shown in the Goldwell Open Air Museum adjacent to Rhyolite ghost town near Beatty in June 2011. (K.M. Cannon/Las Vegas Review-Journal file photo)
Ruins of the Cook Bank building in Rhyolite is shown in this time exposure during the Orionids meteor shower October 2009. (David Becker/Las Vegas Review-Journal file photo)
The statue of “Alabam,” situated at the corner of Nevada Way and Wyoming Street, was named Sunset magazine’s Most Outrageous Roadside Attraction of the West for 2015. (Courtesy, Steven Slivka/Boulder City Review)
Trees covered in shoes, a house made of bottles and a man covered in toilet paper are all some of Nevada’s weirdest roadside attractions.
Sure, you might know Las Vegas and you might know Reno, but do you know the rest of the state? With more than 80 percent of the state left uninhabited, those who have passed through over the years erected monuments, massive art projects and other tiny reminders of the weird state we live in.
Here are eight weird things you can find in the Nevada desert:
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