When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. National Highway System (Canada) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Highway_System...

    The National Highway System (French: Réseau routier national) in Canada is a federal designation for a strategic transport network of highways and freeways. [1] The system includes but is not limited to the Trans-Canada Highway, [1] and currently consists of 38,098 kilometres (23,673 mi) of roadway designated under one of three classes: Core Routes, Feeder Routes, and Northern and Remote Routes.

  3. Canadian canoe routes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_canoe_routes

    The Hayes route became more important after 1821 when much trade shifted from Montreal to York Factory) In 1803 it was found that Grand Portage was on the US side of the border and the Lake Superior base was moved 45 miles (72 km) northeast to Fort William, Ontario , from which an old trail led inland to the north and west to Lac La Croix in ...

  4. CANAMEX Corridor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CANAMEX_Corridor

    The first was the route of U.S. Route 93 across northwestern Arizona, which then included a slow route with numerous hairpin curves over the Hoover Dam. The Hoover Dam Bypass opened on October 16, 2010, resolving that issue. [7] The second issue was a gap near Phoenix. The official designation is Interstate 10 to U.S. Route 93 at Phoenix ...

  5. NAFTA superhighway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NAFTA_superhighway

    While I-69 is being built, the main routes to Mexico currently consist of portions of US Routes 45 and 51 from Kentucky to western Tennessee, I-155 from Tennessee to Missouri, portions of Interstates 55 and 40 from Missouri to Arkansas, and I-30 from Arkansas to the Texas portion of I-35, the original Nafta Superhighway that runs south to the ...

  6. Trans-Canada Highway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans-Canada_Highway

    The Trans-Canada Highway (French: Route Transcanadienne; abbreviated as the TCH or T-Can) [3] is a transcontinental federal–provincial highway system that travels through all ten provinces of Canada, from the Pacific Ocean on the west coast to the Atlantic Ocean on the east coast.

  7. Road signs in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_signs_in_Canada

    The Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO) also has historically used its own MUTCD which bore many similarities to the TAC MUTCDC. However, as of approximately 2000, MTO has been developing the Ontario Traffic Manual (OTM), a series of smaller volumes each covering different aspects of traffic control (e.g., sign design principles).

  8. List of Hudson's Bay Company trading posts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hudson's_Bay...

    This is a list of Hudson's Bay Company trading posts. [1]For the fur trade in general see North American fur trade and Canadian canoe routes (early).For some groups of related posts see Fort-Rupert for James Bay.

  9. Transportation in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transportation_in_Canada

    Settlement was along river routes. Agricultural commodities were perishable, and trade centres were within 50 km (31 mi). Rural areas centred around villages, and they were approximately 10 km (6 mi) apart. The advent of steam railways and steamships connected resources and markets of vast distances in the late 19th century. [5]