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Welcome sign for Missouri, with the two S' replaced with a snaking river: Montana Montana welcome sign seen while entering West Yellowstone. Note the sign is in the shape of the state: Nebraska Welcome sign for Nebraska seen on a highway: Nevada A weathered Nevada welcome sign: New Hampshire One of multiple New Hampshire welcome signs: New Jersey
Widen US 385 to four lanes with median from L62A to Nebraska Highway 2 (NE 2) in Alliance, Nebraska; Improve US 385 into a super-2 facility to include 12-foot (3.7 m) lanes, 10-foot (3.0 m) shoulders, auxiliary turn lanes, and passing lanes from NE 2 to US 20 in Chadron, Nebraska. This should be constructed in accordance to the super-2 criteria.
In the U.S. state of Nebraska, the Nebraska Department of Transportation (NDOT) maintains a system of state highways.Every significant section of roadway maintained by the state is assigned a number, officially State Highway No. X [2] but also commonly referred to as Nebraska Highway X, as well as N-X.
South Dakota Highway 71 (SD 71) is a 34.535-mile (55.579 km) state highway in Fall River County, South Dakota, United States, that travels from the Nebraska state line (where it continues as N-2/N-71 through the Black Hills National Forest) to U.S. Route 18 Bypass (US 18 Byp.) in Hot Springs.
In 1860, a project to build a 190-mile-long (310 km) road from Nebraska City to Fort Kearney was initiated by the Nebraska City community and Otoe County Commissioners in what became one of the most traveled roads in the west as part of the Denver Trail. In 1879, the Nebraska Legislature passed a law providing all section lines become public roads.
Three-digit highways follow the odd–even routing, but they do not sequentially remain near a "parent" route as a spur or alternate route and instead are independent of any parent two-digit route. View of an actual South Dakota state highway sign. The signs enclose the route number within the state's shape on top of a green background.
Under the 1926 highway numbering plan, two-digit U.S. Highways are numbered in a grid; east–west highways have even numbers while north–south routes have odd numbers. The lowest numbers are in the east and north. The primary east–west highways in Nebraska are numbered US-6, US-20, US-26, US-30, and US-34.
South Dakota Highway 43 (SD 43) is a 1.131-mile-long (1.820 km) state highway that exists entirely in the southern part of Gregory County in the southern part of the U.S. state of South Dakota. It begins as an extension of Nebraska Highway 11 (N-11) at the Nebraska state line south of Fairfax .