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Alberta Provincial Highway No. 54, [2] commonly referred to as Highway 54, is an east–west highway located in central Alberta.It is 70 kilometres (43 mi) in length, starting at Highway 22 (Cowboy Trail), 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) west of the Village of Caroline, and ending at exit 365 of Highway 2 (Queen Elizabeth II Highway) at the south end of the Town of Innisfail.
The following routes are within British Columbia but are considered part of the Yukon highway system. Although the Alaska Highway crosses the 60th parallel north , and thus the border with the Yukon, nine times (including six crossings between historic miles 588 and 596), the highway route number changes just once, between Lower Post, British ...
It stretches approximately 495 km (308 mi) from Highway 16 (Yellowhead Highway) near Manly Corner west of Edmonton to the British Columbia border west of Demmitt. [2] [3] It is designated as a core route in Canada's National Highway System, comprising a portion of a key international corridor that stretches from Alaska into Mexico.
Alberta Provincial Highway No. 49, commonly referred to as Highway 49, is a highway in northwestern Alberta, Canada. It runs east–west from the British Columbia border to Donnelly, and then north–south to Valleyview. [2] Highway 49 has a total length of 266 kilometres (165 mi). [1]
Sask. border in Dillberry Lake Provincial Park: Highway 641 near Onion Lake: c. 1940 s: current Runs along the Alberta-Saskatchewan border; cosigned with SK 17. Highway 18: 161: 100 Highway 43 at Green Court: Highway 63 / Highway 656 near Thorhild — — Highway 19: 12: 7.5 Highway 60 at Devon: Highway 2 / Highway 625 at Nisku: c. 1982
The Crowsnest Highway is an east-west highway in British Columbia and Alberta, Canada.It stretches 1,161 km (721 mi) across the southern portions of both provinces, from Hope, British Columbia to Medicine Hat, Alberta, providing the shortest highway connection between the Lower Mainland and southeast Alberta through the Canadian Rockies.
Through the park, the highway travels northeast along the Kootenay and Vermilion rivers for 93 km (58 mi) to Vermilion Pass and the Alberta border, where it is continues as Alberta Highway 93. [2] After crossing the border, the highway continues for another 11 km (7 mi) to meet the Trans-Canada Highway (Alberta Highway 1) near Castle Junction. [2]
In 1952, Highway 2 was extended along the John Hart Highway all the way through Dawson Creek to the border between B.C. and Alberta at Tupper. In 1953, the section of Highway 2 between Cache Creek and Dawson Creek renumbered Highway 97, and the designations co-existed until 1962, [ 3 ] when the Highway 2 designation was removed from the Cariboo ...