Ad
related to: map of sealed roads queensland city of chicago- Best Books of 2024
Amazon Editors’ Best Books of 2024.
Discover your next favorite read.
- Best Books of the Year
Amazon editors' best books so far.
Best books so far.
- Best Books of 2024
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The State Road Network of Queensland (PDF) map and enlargements (PDF) – state controlled and state strategic roads shown and listed by classification, and local roads of regional significance. Also shows road regions, LGAs, destinations, and rest areas/scenic stops. Available under CC-BY-3.0-AU licence.
Queensland General highways map of Queensland. Queensland, being the second largest (by area) state in Australia, is also the most decentralised. Hence the highways and roads cover most parts of the state unlike the sparsely populated Western Australia. Even Queensland's outback is well served as it is relatively populated.
The Barkly Highway is a national highway in Queensland and the Northern Territory in Australia. [1] It is the only sealed road between Queensland and the Northern Territory. [2] [3] The highway is named after the Barkly Tableland, which in turn was named by explorer William Landsborough in December 1861 after Henry Barkly, the then Governor of Victoria.
It is a state-controlled regional road (numbers 34A, 34B and 34C). [2] [3] Named after bushman James Venture Mulligan the sealed highway follows the old Cooktown Developmental Road and was completed in 2006. Since it was sealed, travelling time from Cairns to Cooktown has reduced from 6 to 3½ hours.
Warwick–Killarney Road is a state-controlled regional road (number 221). [1] [4] It runs from the Cunningham Highway in Warwick to the New South Wales border in Killarney, a distance of 38.3 kilometres (23.8 mi). It intersects with Bracker Road in Warwick, and with Yangan–Killarney Road and Spring Creek Road in Killarney. [15]
The decades following the war saw substantial improvements to the network, with freeways established in cities, many major highways sealed, development of roads in northern Queensland and Western Australia under the Beef Cattle Roads Grants Acts, and interstate routes between Sydney and Melbourne upgraded. In 1974, the federal government ...
Atherton–Herberton–Longlands Gap Road is a continuous 33.5-kilometre (20.8 mi) road route in the Tablelands local government area of Queensland, Australia. It has two official names, Atherton–Herberton Road and Longlands Gap–Herberton Road. The entire route is signed as part of State Route 52. [1]
Despite its sparse population, it has a network of sealed roads which connect Darwin and Alice Springs, the major population centres, the neighbouring states, and some other centres such as Uluru (Ayers Rock), Kakadu and Litchfield National Parks. Some of the sealed roads are single lane bitumen.