To determine the nearest exit to a specific mile marker, you'll need to provide the highway or interstate number, as well as the mile marker in question. Each highway has designated exits at various mile markers, and this information can usually be found on state transportation department websites or highway maps. If you provide the details, I can help you find the nearest exit.
Exit numbers on highways often correspond to mile markers, but this can vary by state and highway. To find the specific exit number at Mile Marker 65, you would need to refer to a map or highway guide for the particular interstate or highway in question. If you provide the name of the highway or state, I could assist you further.
The Maryland House is a Service Area, not a designated exit. It is located at mile marker 83.
That you have went one mile. That and in cases of emergency it is also used to locate you. Exits are also based on mile marker, Exit 111 is before, after or right on Mile marker 111, how the actual system works i don't know, like why it resets, it may be a distance between 2 specific points, or something like that
Halfway between mile marker 25 and mile marker 27.
Georgia mile marker 0. Florida mile marker 471.2.
no! mile marker is not a proper noun. a proper noun HAS TO BE capitalized.
The Vauxhall service stop is at mile marker 142 in union NJ. Exit 141 is used to get to it and vauxhall rd.
Interstate 40 mile marker 147 is in Humphreys County, Tennessee. It is near Centerville, Tennessee.
Only from mile marker 1 to mile marker 16 - nothing north of that.
Roughly 395 miles which is just north of Exit 7 on I95 (mile marker 8). If headed north from Naples to Wilmington, exit 7 will be just shy of half but there is not another exit for about 7 miles.
Mile Marker Seven - 2014 was released on: USA: 23 October 2014 (limited)
It means there are multiple exits within that mile marker, as exits are numbered according to the mile marker they're posted at. In some instances, there may be separate exits to go east and west or north and south on the road you're exiting onto, and they'll be labeled A and B according to that. Other times, they may be entirely separate roads. But all A, B, C, D, etc. means is that there are multiple exits within that mile marker.