eyre highway
The Overseas Highway cross many of the Florida Keys. Among these keys are East Rockland Key, Big Coppitt Key, Saddlebunch Keys, and Sugarloaf Key.
Terra firma
steepes
tidewater
plateau
The Nullarbor Plain
This is the Nullarbor Plain, located directly north of the Great Australian Bight. The name Nullarbor is derived from the Latin for "no tree". It is not an aboriginal word as many people believe.
The Nullarbor Plain. literally null arbor. = no trees.
The Trans-Canada Highway
The stretch of road between Adelaide and Perth is the Eyre Highway, one of the longest, straightest stretches of road in the world. Named after explorer Edward Eyre, this stretch of road is flanked by the Nullarbor Plain, a huge, flat limestone plain, the name of which literally means "no tree".
This is the Nullarbor Plain. The name comes from two Latin terms null and arbor, meaning "no tree".
Wylie was the faithful Aborigine who stayed with Edward Eyre as he crossed the Nullabor Plain in 1840-41.
The Nullarbor Plain is an arid, limestone region extending for some 270,000 square km above the Great Australian Bight, which straddles the west coast of South Australia and the southeast coast of Western Australia. Nothing is cultivated there, and itis characterised by being flat and treeless, whilst beneath it are vast caves popular with spelunkers. The name is not aboriginal in origin, contrary to popular belief, but rather is derived from the Latin for "no tree".
trans-canada highway or #1 ==================== The Trans-Canada Highway begins and ends in both St John's Newfoundland and Victoria B.C. The Trans-Canada Highway is not designated as Highway 1 in all provinces: only in B.C., Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland.
The Nullarbor Plain is an arid, limestone region extending for some 270,000 square km above the Great Australian Bight, which straddles the west coast of South Australia and the southeast coast of Western Australia. It is an arid region, not quite a desert. Nothing is cultivated there, and itis characterised by being flat and treeless, whilst beneath it are vast caves popular with spelunkers. The name is not aboriginal in origin, contrary to popular belief, but rather is derived from the Latin for "no tree".
The Overseas Highway cross many of the Florida Keys. Among these keys are East Rockland Key, Big Coppitt Key, Saddlebunch Keys, and Sugarloaf Key.
The word highway can be written out fully as Highway or it can also be abbreviated. The abbreviation for highway is hwy.