daily dective does find something else
90W is a longitude, not a latitude. It crosses the following: -- Minnesota -- Michigan -- Wisconsin -- Illinois -- Missouri -- Arkansas -- Tennessee -- Mississippi -- Louisiana
The Santa Fe Trail goes through Kansas, parts of Missouri, parts of Colorado and parts of New Mexico. It crosses the Big Blue River, Arkansas River, and the Cimerron River. The mountain route went through the Raton Mountains.
It crosses deserts and mountains, but I don't believe it crosses any water larger than the Colorado River. It also crosses over the Rio Grande.
when you trad it inColumbiano but when it crosses us border then yes.
the colorado river
Kansas City is in Kansas and Missouri because Kansas City is a rather large city; it is in Kansas but it crosses over the border and the larger part sits in Missouri, so it is considered a city in both Kansas and Missouri.
The Rio Grande River flows through New Mexico.
Depends on where you're starting. I-25, I-70. and I-76 all run through Colorado. (I-76 is a spur between Denver Colorado and nowhere-in-particular Nebraska, except that it does connect with I-80).
Yes, the Green River for example begins in Wyoming enters Utah, meanders into Colorado where it is joined by the Yampa and then heads back into Utah where it is joined by the White and Colorado Rivers. The San Juan River begins in Colorado, enters New Mexico and then turns back to the north and crosses back into Colorado and then into Utah where it joins the Colorado River in Lake Powell.
The State of Colorado ranges in latitude from about 37° to 41° North, and in longitude from about 102.05° to 109.05°. ANY latitude or longitude within either of those ranges crosses some part of Colorado.
The "Mississippi Flyway" is a waterfowl migration route through the US that follows the Mississippi River Valley and the Mackenzie River in Canada. It crosses few areas of steeply-elevated terrain and has substantial food sources. It generally includes Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Missouri, and the states of the Midwest and western Great Lakes. (map at related link)