Route description edit

US 287 crosses into Texas at Kerrick and continues southeast through to Stratford, where it takes a more southerly turn. In Dumas, US 287 merges with its "parent route", US 87, and continues its south/southeasterly path as a co-signed route to Amarillo.

After passing through the heart of downtown Amarillo, US 87 splits off to the south to merge with I-27, and US 287 merges with I-40 and continues co-signed with the interstate until just west of Rick Husband Amarillo International Airport, where it veers to the southeast toward Claude, the seat of Armstrong County.

US 287 follows this east-southeasterly path through Clarendon and Childress, where it intersects US Highways 83 and 62. US 287 then proceeds to Vernon, where it merges with (and is briefly co-signed with) US 70 and US 183. After US 70 and US 183 leave the route at Oklaunion and veer to the northeast, US 287 resumes its east-southeasterly track passing through Harrold and Electra on its way to Wichita Falls. On the northwest side of the city US 287 merges with I-44, US 82, and (briefly) US 277. After leaving Wichita Falls, US 82/287 continues as a co-signed route until Henrietta, where US 82 leaves the route. After merging with US 81 in Bowie, US 287/81 continues southeast to Fort Worth, where it merges with I-35W on the north side of town. Just northwest of this interchange, Business US 287 veers off to the right following the original routing into Saginaw and into downtown Fort Worth while zig zagging its way through city streets to Kennedale and Mansfield before coming out onto the US 287 Freeway south of Interstate 20 near the Ellis County line just north of Midlothian.

Here, US 81 hits its terminus, but US 287 continues, concurrent route with I-35W through to the north end of downtown Fort Worth before splitting off to the southeast and once again picking up its own signage. This stretch of US 287, which runs from downtown to the southeast side of the city, is also known as the Martin Luther King, Jr. Freeway. In southeast Fort Worth, US 287 intersects with, and is briefly co-signed with, I-820 (which then dumps into I-20) before veering to the southeast yet again, where it passes through the extreme western side of Arlington, and then on in to Mansfield and Midlothian The freeway which previously terminated at the Tarrant/Johnson County line has been extended continuing on into Ellis County to connect with the existing freeway around Waxahachie, which includes a bypass around Midlothian and an interchange with US 67.

After intersecting with I-35E just north of Waxahachie, US 287 continues to the southeast, where it merges with I-45 just south of Ennis and follows the interstate to Corsicana where it then leaves the route and makes another sharp turn to the east. The highway continues southeastward to Palestine, where it merges with State Highway 19. US 287/SH 19 continues as a co-signed route until Crockett, where US 287 leaves SH 19 and continues its southeasterly track toward the Texas Gulf Coast.

[1]

Correction edit

US 287 starts with US 69 and US 96 in Port Arthur at an intersection with State Highway 87, heading in a northwesterly direction. In Beaumont, US 287 briefly meets Interstate 10 before heading northward towards Lumberton, where it diverges from US 96. US 287 stays with US 69, heading towards Woodville, where the two routes diverge with US 287 tracking northwesterly. After a brief concurrency with SH 94 in Groveton, US 287 continues to the northwest where in Crockett, it makes a brief concurrency with SH 21, before heading northward along with SH 19.

Ingress edit

Ingress
 
Developer(s)Niantic Labs
Publisher(s)Google
Platform(s)Android, iOS[2]
ReleaseClosed beta began November 15, 2012
Ongoing open beta began October 30, 2013
General release: December 15, 2013[3]
iOS Release: 2014[2]
Genre(s)Augmented Reality, MMOG
  1. ^ Google (2013-07-18). "overview map of US 287" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
  2. ^ a b Brandon Badger reported to AllThingsD Cite error: The named reference "Eric Johnson" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ Announcement on Google Plus