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Road map of Ecuador (Spanish). Highway in Cashapamba, Pichincha.Part of E35. The primary highways of Ecuador are designated with both a name and an alphanumeric designation. . The highway designations begin with the letter E followed by a number on a shield that looks like the ones of the USA interstate highw
Ecuador Highway 35 (E-35), officially named "Troncal de la Sierra" (Highland's Road) but colloquially known as "La Panamericana", is a primary highway in Ecuador. This road is Ecuador's portion of the Pan-American Highway . [ 1 ]
Ecuador uses diamond-shaped warning signs on a yellow background in common with most of the rest of the Americas. One of the rare exceptions is the "Tramway crossing" warning sign used in the Cuenca Tramway , which has a triangular shape with a red border and a white background with a black symbol of a tram , similar to warning signs used in ...
Ecuador Highway 20 (E-20), known officially as "Transversal Norte" (North Transversal), is a highway in Ecuador which crosses the provinces of Esmeraldas, Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas, Pichincha, Napo and Orellana. The E20 is 336-kilometre-long (209 mi).
Vía del Pacífico; Troncal de la Costa Alterna; Troncal Amazónica Alterna; Vía Colectora Quito-La Independencia; Vía Colectora Ventanas-Guaranda; Usage on hu.wikipedia.org Ecuador; Usage on nl.wikipedia.org Wegen in Ecuador; E5 (Ecuador) E10 (Ecuador) E15 (Ecuador) E20 (Ecuador) E25 (Ecuador) E25A (Ecuador) E30 (Ecuador) E35 (Ecuador) E40 ...
Ecuador Highway 5 (E5) is the westernmost trunk highway in Ecuador. The highway is known as the Insular Route ( Spanish : Troncal Insular ), and it runs entirely within the Galápagos Islands . E5's northern terminus is on Baltra Island , at the Seymour Airport ; its southern terminus on Santa Cruz Island , at El Garrapatero beach.
Ecuador, [a] officially the Republic of Ecuador, [b] is a country in northwestern South America, bordered by Colombia on the north, Peru on the east and south, and the Pacific Ocean on the west. It also includes the Galápagos Islands in the Pacific, about 1,000 kilometers (621 mi) west of the mainland.
The Colombia–Ecuador border is an international boundary between the territories of Colombia and Ecuador. It consists of two sections, one terrestrial and one marine, well-defined: [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The first section is a continuous line of 586 kilometres, running from east to west (from the Güepí River to the mouth of the Mataje River in Ancón ...