Just about all roads are "surfaced" The term "surfaced" can be applied to roads that have a gravel surface, oiled gravel, chip seal, tarmac, or concrete. A non-surfaced road would be a dirt road.
Highway, interstate, parkway, autobahn, gravel road, any road with a man made surface.
The road surface ahead changes from a hard-surfaced pavement to a low-type surface or earth road.
John Loudon McAdam, a Scottish road building expert, is credited with being the first to build tar surfaced roads. That is why they are called macadam roads.
20% of the 400,000 kilometres (250,000 miles) of the road network of the Roman Empire were the stone-paved roads.
No, aqueducts were used to carry clean water to cities. The names of the types of roads were via munita for the stone-paved road, via glareata for the gravel surfaced road and via terrena for the leveled earth road.
It means that the shoulder of the road is soft and non-compacted, probably not hard-surfaced, and you could easily get stuck on the shoulder. In a situation like this, if you need to stop at the side of the road, make sure that your left wheels are still on the pavement.
Surfaced
octahedron
An octahedron.
It contains a biosphere.
It is rocky with craters.
the sun is made of gases