Sandover Highway
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- 22°58′S 133°50′E / 22.967°S 133.833°E (Southwest end)
- 20°58′S 137°55′E / 20.967°S 137.917°E (Northeast end)
Sandover Highway | |
|---|---|
Map of central Australia with Sandover Highway (State Route 14) highlighted in red | |
| Coordinates |
|
| General information | |
| Type | Track |
| Length | 561 km (349 mi) |
| Route number(s) | |
| Major junctions | |
| Southwest end | |
| Northeast end | Alpurrurulam, NT/Qld Border |
| Restrictions | |
| Fuel supply | |
| Facilities | Arlparra, Ammaroo Station |
The Sandover Highway is an outback unsealed track in the Northern Territory between the Plenty Highway north of Alice Springs and the Northern Territory/Queensland border.[1]
The highway's name is derived from the Sandover River because its alignment follows that of the river.[2]
At its western end the road branches north from the Plenty Highway 27 kilometres (17 mi) east of the Stuart Highway. Its total length is 561 kilometres (349 mi) and it passes through semi-arid spinifex deserts and blacksoil Mitchell grass plains. The designated highway finishes just east of Alpurrurulam at the Northern Territory/Queensland border, but the track continues into Queensland for 55 kilometres (34 mi) where it joins the Camooweal Urandangi Road, which runs north to Camooweal.[3]
Accessibility
The track crosses Urapuntja lands, which is an Aboriginal homelands area. No permits are needed to travel on the track; however, they are necessary for travellers wishing to visit Aboriginal communities off-track.
Although the first part of the track can be negotiated by conventional vehicles, use of a four-wheel drive vehicle is recommended after Ammaroo. Each year the wet season floods the black soil plains at the eastern end of the Sandover Highway and Alpurrurulam and Lake Nash become completely inaccessible, even to four-wheel drive vehicles. Flooding can also occur after brief but heavy thunderstorms during the dry season.