Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
U.S. Route 82 (US 82) is a 232-mile-long (373 km) U.S. Highway in the U.S. state of Georgia. It travels from the Chattahoochee River at Georgetown to its eastern end, southwest of Brunswick . It travels through such cities as Cuthbert , Dawson , Albany , Sylvester , Tifton , Pearson , Waycross , and Nahunta .
US Highway 82 crossing the high plains of the Llano Estacado of West Texas. U.S. Route 82 (US 82) is an east–west United States highway in the Southern United States.Created on July 1, 1931 across central Mississippi and southern Arkansas, US 82 eventually became a 1,625-mile-long (2,615 km) route extending from the White Sands of New Mexico to Georgia's Atlantic coast.
State Route 82 (SR 82) is a 36.1-mile-long (58.1 km) arc-shaped state highway in the Piedmont region in the U.S. state of Georgia. The highway connects Winder to a point east of Gainesville , via Arcade and Jefferson .
U.S. Route 17 or U.S. Highway 17 (US 17), also known as the Coastal Highway, is a north–south United States Numbered Highway that spans in the Southeastern United States. It runs close to the Atlantic Coast for much of its length, with the exception of the portion between Punta Gorda and Jacksonville , Florida, and the portion from ...
Three men are feared lost at sea after they failed to return from a fishing trip off the coast of Georgia.. Dalton Conway, Caleb Wilkinson and Tyler Barlow went missing last Wednesday on board the ...
The Coast Guard began searching Oct. 20 after the boat’s owner reported the fishermen, who had planned to fish in waters 80 miles (128 kilometers) off Georgia's coast, failed returned on schedule.
U.S. Highway 17 (US 17) is a 124.20-mile-long (199.88 km) United States Numbered Highway in the U.S. state of Georgia. It travels south–north near the Atlantic Ocean , serving the Brunswick and Savannah metropolitan areas on its path from Florida at the St. Marys River to South Carolina at the Savannah River .
A few days before Halloween, data collectors at the Jekyll Island Banding Station (JIBS) observe a steady, yet predictable, decline of birds in nets, signaling the end of migration.