unimproved$87612$ - vertaling naar grieks
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  • etymologie

unimproved$87612$ - vertaling naar grieks

UNPAVED ROAD MADE FROM THE NATIVE MATERIAL OF THE LAND SURFACE
Class Four Highway; Dirt roads; Unimproved road; Graded earth road; Dry weather road; Cart track; Fieldway; Mud road; Soil road
  • [[Cattle]] on a dirt road in [[Paraguay]].
  • A dirt road in [[Kärsämäki]], [[Finland]]

unimproved      
adj. αβελτίωτος
road surface         
  • Red surfacing for a [[bicycle lane]] in the Netherlands
  • Ewing]], [[New Jersey]].
  • An asphalt milling machine in [[Boise, Idaho]]
  • asphalt]]
  • San Jose]], [[California]]
  • Beit Gubrin]], adjacent to regional hwy 375 in Israel
  • Closeup of asphalt on a driveway
  • An example of composite pavement: hot-mix asphalt overlaid onto Portland cement concrete pavement
  • [[Gravel road]] in [[Namibia]]
  • Pavement ends and turns into gravel surface road
  • Different layers of road including asphalt layer. The total thickness of a pavement can be measured using [[granular base equivalency]]
  • Laying asphalt
  • Construction crew laying down asphalt over fiber-optic trench, in New York City
DURABLE SURFACE MATERIAL OF A ROAD
Road metal; Pavement (road); Pavement (roads); Paved (road); Metalling; Metalled; Paved highway; Unpaved; Unimproved; Paved road; Metalled road; Road metals; Road-metal; Road-metals; Roadmetal; Roadmetals; Road surfaces; Road surfaced; Road surfacing; Resurfacing; Bituminous surface treatment; Pavement (material); Pavement (road surface); Street paving; Repaving; Unmetalled road; Unmetalled; Asphalt pavement; Resurface; Paved track; Paved roadway; Brick road
οδόστρωμα

Definitie

metalled
A metalled road has a level surface made of small pieces of stone; used especially of country roads and tracks. (mainly BRIT)
ADJ: ADJ n

Wikipedia

Dirt road

A dirt road or track is a type of unpaved road not paved with asphalt, concrete, brick, or stone; made from the native material of the land surface through which it passes, known to highway engineers as subgrade material. Dirt roads are suitable for vehicles; a narrower path for pedestrians, animals, and possibly small vehicles would be called a dirt track—the distinction is not well-defined. Unpaved roads with a harder surface made by the addition of material such as gravel and aggregate (stones), might be referred to as dirt roads in common usage but are distinguished as improved roads by highway engineers. (Improved unpaved roads include gravel roads, laterite roads, murram roads and macadamized roads.)

Compared to a gravel road, a dirt road is not usually graded regularly to produce an enhanced camber to encourage rainwater to drain off the road, and drainage ditches at the sides may be absent. They are unlikely to have embankments through low-lying areas. This leads to greater waterlogging and erosion, and after heavy rain the road may be impassable even to off-road vehicles. For this reason, in some countries, such as Australia and New Zealand and Finland, they are known as dry-weather roads.

Dirt roads take on different characteristics according to the soils and geology where they pass, and may be sandy, stony, rocky or have a bare earth surface, which could be extremely muddy and slippery when wet, and baked hard when dry. They are likely to become impassable after rain. They are common in rural areas of many countries, often very narrow and infrequently used, and are also found in metropolitan areas of many developing countries, where they may also be used as major highways and have considerable width.

Terms similar to dirt road are dry-weather road, earth road, or the "Class Four Highway" designation used in the People's Republic of China. A track, dirt track, or earth track would normally be similar but less suitable for larger vehicles.

Dirt roads almost always form a washboard-like surface with ridges. The reason for this is that dirt roads have tiny irregularities; a wheel hitting a bump pushes it forward, making it bigger, while a wheel pushing over a bump pushes dirt into the next bump. However, the surface can remain flat for velocities less than 5 mph.