Glenn_Highway

Glenn Highway

Glenn Highway

Highway in Alaska


The Glenn Highway (part of Alaska Route 1) is a highway in the U.S. state of Alaska, extending 179 miles (288 km) from Anchorage near Merrill Field to Glennallen on the Richardson Highway. The Tok Cut-Off is often considered part of the Glenn Highway, for a total length of 328 miles (528 km).

Quick Facts Route information, Length ...

Route description

The longest stretch of freeway in Alaska runs mostly along the Glenn Highway, beginning in north Anchorage, continuing onto the Parks Highway at the interchange of the two roads, and ending in the city limits of Wasilla, for a total of approximately 38 miles (61 km). This 38-mile (61 km) portion of the Glenn Highway is the only road access to Anchorage for most of the state (with the exception of the Kenai Peninsula on the Seward Highway), and as such is the main traffic corridor for Anchorage's suburbs in the Chugiak-Eagle River and Mat-Su areas. The highest point on the highway is 3,332 feet (1,016 m) at Eureka Summit, which sits on the divide between the Chugach and Talkeetna mountain ranges.[2]

History

The highway originated as the Palmer Road in the 1930s, to reach the agricultural colony at Palmer. During World War II it was completed to Glennallen as part of a massive program of military road and base building that also resulted in the Alaska Highway,[3] and connected Anchorage to the continental highway system.[4]

It is named for Captain Edwin Glenn (1857–1926), leader of an 1898 U.S. Army expedition to find an Alaska route to the Klondike gold fields[5] (the eventual Richardson Highway). The highway was paved in the 1950s.

Paleontology

The "Talkeetna Mountains Hadrosaur" specimen was discovered in 1994 in a quarry being excavated for road material.[6] That fall, excavation began, and was resumed in the summer of 1996.[6] The quarry is near the Glenn Highway, approximately 150 miles northeast of Anchorage.[7] This specimen was the first associated skeleton of an individual dinosaur discovered in all of Alaska.[8]

Interstate Highway System

Quick Facts Interstate A-1, Location ...

Glenn Highway is part of the unsigned part of the Interstate Highway System as Interstate A-1.[9][10]

Major intersections

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Footnotes

  1. Google (December 28, 2013). "Glenn Highway" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  2. The Milepost, 59th edition, pg. 322, ISBN 978-1-892154-21-7
  3. Alaska Yukon Place Names, James W. Phillips author, University of Washington Press (1973)
  4. "Introduction," in Pasche and May (2001); page 220.
  5. "Location and Geologic Setting," in Pasche and May (2001); page 220.
  6. "Abstract," in Pasche and May (2001); page 219.

References

  • Pasch, A. D., K. C. May. 2001. Taphonomy and paleoenvironment of hadrosaur (Dinosauria) from the Matanuska Formation (Turonian) in South-Central Alaska. In: Mesozoic Vertebrate Life. Ed.s Tanke, D. H., Carpenter, K., Skrepnick, M. W. Indiana University Press. Pages 219–236.
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