Trans-Amazonian highway
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Trans-Amazonian highway
Summary
Trans-Amazonian highway is a road[1]. It ranks in the top 2% of road entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (316 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Trans-Amazonian highway is located in Paraíba[3].
- Trans-Amazonian highway is located in Ceará[4].
- Trans-Amazonian highway is located in Piauí[5].
- Trans-Amazonian highway is located in Maranhão[6].
- Trans-Amazonian highway is located in Q43695[7].
- Trans-Amazonian highway is located in Pará[8].
- Trans-Amazonian highway is in the country of Brazil[9].
- Trans-Amazonian highway's transport network is recorded as Federal Roads in Brazil[10].
- Trans-Amazonian highway's instance of is recorded as road[11].
- Trans-Amazonian highway's crosses is recorded as Amazonia[12].
- Trans-Amazonian highway's Commons category is recorded as Trans-Amazonian Highway[13].
- Trans-Amazonian highway's official name is recorded as {'lang': 'pt-br', 'text': 'Rodovia Transamazônica'}[14].
- Trans-Amazonian highway's road number is recorded as BR-230[15].
- Trans-Amazonian highway's connects with is recorded as BR-101[16].
- Trans-Amazonian highway's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Climate change[17].
Body
Geography
Trans-Amazonian highway is in the country of Brazil[9]. Located in include Paraíba[3], a federative unit of Brazil[18], in Brazil[19], founded in 1889[20]; Ceará[4], a federative unit of Brazil[21], in Brazil[22], founded in 1891[23]; Piauí[5], a federative unit of Brazil[24], in Brazil[25], founded in 1889[26]; Maranhão[6], a federative unit of Brazil[27], in Brazil[28], founded in 1889[29]; Q43695[7], a federative unit of Brazil[30], in Brazil[31], founded in 1988[32]; and Pará[8], a federative unit of Brazil[33], in Brazil[34], founded in 1889[35].
Designation and Status
Trans-Amazonian highway's instance of is recorded as road[11].
Why It Matters
Trans-Amazonian highway ranks in the top 2% of road entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (316 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[36] It is known by 20 alternative names across languages and contexts.[37]