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Sasabe (O'odham: Ṣaṣawk) is a small hamlet in the Altar Valley of southern Pima County, Arizona, United States, immediately north of the international border with Mexico. It hosts a minor border crossing, an adobe sales outlet, a public school, a guest ranch, a general store with fuel pumps, a weekend bar, and a post office serving the ZIP ...
On 1 July 2010, members of two rival cartels clashed near the village of Sáric, in Mexico's northwestern state of Sonora, approximately 12 miles southeast of the little-used port of entry in Sasabe, Arizona.
El Bajío, Sonora This crossing, also known also as "the Gate" has never been a legal border crossing for most people. Nomadic Native Americans are permitted use this gate to traverse their land on both sides of the border. Lochiel Lochiel, Arizona: Santa Cruz Santa Cruz de Noria, Sonora Station of Nogales which closed in 1983 due to lack of ...
“Sasabe, Ariz., is a town for like 500 people. I mean, like 50 families or so,” Rodriguez said. “And Sasabe, Sonora, is another very rural town; the population of locals is like 1,500 but it ...
The southern terminus of SR 286 is located at the U.S.-Mexico border at Sasabe. The highway heads north from the border traversing a sparsely populated area and does not pass through any cities or towns aside from minor settlements. It provides access to the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge as well as small settlements in Southern Arizona.
The Altar Valley is a 45-mile (72 km) long north–south valley, trending slightly northeast from Sasabe, Arizona on the Mexico border to the Avra Valley west of the Tucson Mountains. It is delimited by Arizona State Route 86 , from east-to-west on the north separating it from the Avra Valley which then trends northwesterly , merging into the ...
Sasabe, Aragon, a former town and bishopric in Aragon, Spain, now a Latin Catholic titular see the Monastery of San Adrián de Sasabe, which remains there; In the Americas. Sasabe, Arizona, a US town notable for: Sasabe Port of Entry; El Sásabe, Sonora, in Mexico, across the Arizona homonym; In Asia
The Sasabe, Arizona Port of Entry has been in existence since 1916, and was substantially renovated during the early 1990s. [1] During the renovation, the historic 1930s-era border station, which was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 2014, was preserved as office space. Sasabe is the least-trafficked crossing in Arizona.