Tunnel No. 41

Tunnel Number 41, or the Big Hole, is a single-track railway tunnel underneath Mount Judah in the Sierra Nevada, near Norden, California. It is owned by the Union Pacific Railroad, in service as a part of the Roseville Subdivision of the Overland Route. Daily freight trains as well as Amtrak's California Zephyr utilize the line.

History
The first bore through the Sierras, Tunnel Number 6, was built as part of the first transcontinental railroad. In 1901, Southern Pacific proposed building a long tunnel via a new alignment to both lower the track elevation and cut several miles off of the Donner Pass route. Bores with lengths up to 18 mi in length were reportedly considered, but an option for a 5 mi tunnel route was under consideration as late as 1912. The uncertain corporate fate of the Central Pacific Railroad and the outbreak of World War I stalled further work.

After Southern Pacific was cleared to take ownership of the Central Pacific in 1923, they announced a new tunneled route would be constructed and work began soon after. The tunnel opened to traffic on September 19, 1925 as the third-longest rail tunnel in the United States at 10325 ft in length. The new tunnel and cutoff shortened the route by 1.29 mi and was 132 ft lower in elevation than the previous bore through the summit, Tunnel No.6. The new and old single track routes were used in tandem as a double-tracked route until the old route was mothballed in 1993. The line is capable of transporting double-stacked containers.