First class mail is delivered in 3 to 5 days
346.55 miles
346 miles
It would take about 8-9 hours
Wisconsin, Illinois, and Indiana. Daily Geography? Me too.
im trying to get a answer from wiki answers for geography assiment
To drive from Sault Ste. Marie to Detroit, you would pass through the states of Michigan. The approximate distance between the two cities is around 330 miles via the I-75 South route. This journey typically takes about 5-6 hours by car, depending on traffic and road conditions.
There should only be one state that is being traveled through to get to Detroit from Sault Ste. Marie: Michigan. Unless it is a different Detroit that is being used, then there would probably be more than one state needed to get to that other Detroit.
If there were no bridge connecting upper and lower Michigan, it would be almost 1,000 miles to get from Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan to Detroit, Michigan by traveling to the east around Lake Huron. It a person traveled around Lake Michigan to the west, it would be over 1,000 miles.
To drive from Sault Ste. Marie to Detroit, you would typically pass through the states of Michigan. The most direct route would involve traveling through the Upper Peninsula and then crossing the Mackinac Bridge to the Lower Peninsula. The distance between Sault Ste. Marie and Detroit is approximately 330 miles via this route.
Short answer: Yes. Long answer: But, it's kinda kept quiet. As you know SSM is a fairly catholic/italian/conservative community right? so they don't flaunt it quite so openly as a city like sudbury would (ziggs, woo!!) There's supposed to be two bars that, while not officially gay, are primarily gay hangouts. no clue what the names are though.
If you were to use I-90 to travel across NY, the distance to Toronto, ON from Worcester, MA is 512 miles. Oneida, NY is 245 miles from Worcester, so the halfway point on your drive would be 11 miles west of Oneida before you get to Syracuse.
Whenever there is a town shared between the two countries recent tensions i the world have necessitated the formal division of the two sites. Examples are:Stanstead, Que. with Derby Line, Vermont, forms one town divided by the Canada–U.S. boundaryBeebe Plain, Vermont shares its main street with the Beebe Plain area of Stanstead, Quebec