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Hydrologically the lake and river section are an arm of Lake Huron, and Munuscong Lake shares a common water level with the Great Lake into which it flows. [1] Munuscong Lake is bounded by the Upper Peninsula, Neebish Island in Michigan, and St. Joseph Island in Ontario. The lake's surveyed elevation, like Lake Huron, is 581 feet (177 m) above ...
The Munuscong River is a 31.8-mile-long (51.2 km) [1] river on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan in the United States. It is a tributary of Munuscong Lake , which is part of the St. Marys River waterway and an arm of Lake Huron .
On July 1, 1919, M-80 existed as a highway in the Lower Peninsula connecting Adrian with Somerset. [8] The highway was included in the route of US Highway 127 in 1926. The M-80 designation was then shifted to a section of highway that was previously part of M-18 near Beaverton [9] The M-80 designation was decommissioned in 1939 when the roadway was transferred back to local control.
The Little Munuscong River is a 16.2-mile-long (26.1 km) [1] river on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan in the United States. It is a tributary of Munuscong Lake , which is part of the St. Marys River waterway and an arm of Lake Huron .
M-28 is Michigan's longest state highway; it ends at M-129 eight miles (13 km) south of Sault Ste. Marie. M-48 is a highway that goes through Pickford and Rudyard, and ends at exit 373 on I-75. M-80 is a highway that begins at exit 378 on I-75, goes through the former base in Kincheloe, and terminates at M-129. M-123 is a highway that is the ...
Lake Huron is the second largest of the Great Lakes (after Lake Superior) with a surface area of 23,010 square miles (59,600 km 2). Michigan is the only state to border Lake Huron, while the portion of the lake on the other side of the international border belongs to the province of Ontario.
South of Pickford, M-129 and M-48 merge along Meridian Road at 26 Mile Road. M-129 picks up the Lake Huron Circle Tour designation and the two roads cross together over the Munuscong River, which empties into Munuscong Lake, a part of the St. Marys River. These two highways run concurrently through Pickford to 22 Mile Road. [4]
[14] [15] In 1938, the Michigan State Highway Department (MSHD) returned the road to local control. [16] [17] When the rest of the state highway system was first designated, [18] by July 1, 1919, the first state highway in the area of today's M-134 was a section of M-12. [19] That highway segment was used for US 2 in 1926. [20]