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The 600-series highways are minor highways that run north and south; generally, the last two digits increase from east to west. Highway 600 is near the eastern border with Manitoba and Highway 699 is near the western border with Alberta. Many of these highways are gravel for some of their length.
Yellowhead Highway or Saskatchewan Highway 16 connects the four western provinces in an east and west travel route north of the Saskatchewan Highway 1. CanAm Highway [11] travels in a north–south direction comprising Saskatchewan Highways SK 35, Sk 39, Sk 6, Sk 3, Sk 2 [12] as well as U.S. Route 85. [13]
[42] Saskatchewan Motor Transport association director A.R. Mang blamed the poor condition of the road on a failure to place a suitable "base course", a layer of gravel and clay, between the pavement and the road's earthen base. [43] A 1955 map shows that a segment between Estevan and Lang had reverted to gravel [41] and a 1956 highway map ...
Several maps, such as MapArt's mapbook of Saskatchewan Cities and Towns shows a Highway 4S spur heading east from the intersection of Highway 4 in Swift Current to the city's airport, following Airport Road. [6] The roadway is not designated Highway 4S on the Saskatchewan Highway's Official Highway Map. [7] [8]
A system began of improved and unimproved dirt, gravel, oil-gravel surfaced roads, and all weather paved roads and highways. [2] Currently Saskatchewan Highways and Transportation operates over 26,000 kilometres (16,000 mi) of highways and divided highways, over 800 bridges, 12 separate ferries, and one barge. There are also municipal roads ...
At Km 95.0, the highway returns to its north-east direction. The village of Reynaud is to the east of this mile point. At Km 107.8, Highway 41 intersects with Highway 20. Yellow Creek is located at Km 117.8; travel on Highway 41 is due east at this juncture. In approximately 19 kilometres (12 mi), the highway returns to its north-east direction.
Highway 6 is a paved undivided major provincial highway in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. [2] It runs from Montana Highway 16 at the Canada–US border near the Canada customs port of Regway to Highway 55 near Choiceland .
The Saskatchewan Highway Act was established in 1922, in compliance with the 1919 Canadian highway act. At the initial stages of the Saskatchewan Highway Act, 10 miles (16 km) of provincial highways were gravel and the rest were earth roads. The road allowances were laid out as a part of the Dominion Land survey system for homesteading.