Dictionary Definition
milepost n : stone post at side of a road to show
distances [syn: milestone]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A post on a highway, often with one or more fingerposts, showing the distance in miles to nearby places
See also
Extensive Definition
A milestone or kilometre sign is one of a series
of numbered markers
placed along a road or
boundary at regular
intervals,
typically at the side of the road or in a median.
Milestones are constructed both to reassure the traveller that the proper path is
being followed and to indicate distance travelled, or the
remaining distance to the desired destination. They are
alternatively known as a mile marker, milepost, or mile post
(sometimes abbreviated MP), notably in the United
States.
This term is sometimes used to denote a location
on a road even if no physical sign is present. This is useful for
accident reporting and other record keeping. i.e. "an accident
occurred at the 13.45km mark" even if the road is only marked with
a stone once every 10km.
The historical term milestone (from the Latin milliarium) is
still used today, even though the "stones" are typically metal signs. More closely spaced
signs, with fractional numbers, and signs along a railway or beach
also occur.
In Europe the distance
measured typically starts at a city or town, as many roads were named for
the towns at either end. In the United
Kingdom, a plaque near the Eleanor
cross at Charing
Cross in London is the
reference point from which distances to other towns and cities are
measured. In the US Interstate
highway system the numbers usually measure the distance to the
southern or western state line,
while other highways use
the county line as the
benchmark. Often, the
exits are numbered
according to the nearest milepost, known as the mile-log system.
Some historic and scenic routes use mileposts to mark
points of interest, such as along the Blue
Ridge Parkway in North
Carolina and Virginia, and the
Overseas
Highway of the Florida
Keys.
Milestones were originally stone
(granite or marble or whatever local stone
was available) obelisks
and later concrete
posts. They were widely used by the Roman Empire
roadbuilders, an important part of any Roman road
network when the distance travelled per day was only a few miles in
some cases. The first Roman milestones appeared on the Appian way. At
the centre of Rome the "Golden
Milestone" (actually bronze) was erected, marking the
metaphorical centre of the empire. This milestone has since been
lost. The Golden Milestone inspired the Zero
Milestone in Washington, D.C., intended as the point from which
all road distances in the United States should be reckoned.
Railway mileposts
In 1845 the Railways Clauses Consolidation Act was passed compelling the UK railway companies to provide their passengers with a means of determining the distance traveled (fares were set by distance at this time). Section 94 states:''The company shall cause the length of the
railway to be measured, and milestones, posts, or other conspicuous
objects to be set up and maintained along the whole line thereof,
at the distance of one quarter of a mile from each other, with
numbers or marks inscribed thereon denoting such distances.''
Similar laws applied in other countries. On the
modern railway these historical markers are still used as
infrastructure reference points. At many points the distances shown
on the markers are based upon points no longer on the network, for
example measured via a closed line or from a junction which has
subsequently been moved. Whole mileposts are usually supplemented
by half and quarter posts. Structure signs often include the
mileage to a fair degree of precision: in the UK a chain is the
usual accuracy. In the US and Canada, however, miles are
"decimalized", so that, for example, there may be a "milepost
4.83."
In metricated areas the equivalent is the pointe
kilometric, or pk.
Milestones on Indian highways
Milestones on Indian highways typically have white background with a yellow (yellow top signifies a national highway) or green top (green top signifies a state highway). The names of cities and distances are painted in black. The names of nearest towns and cities are written along with distance in kilometers. On undivided highways, both sides of the milestones are used, telling the distance to the nearest cities in each direction. The head of the milestone has the highway number written on it. The side of the milestone has a number which is the sum of distances of two nearest cities in each direction from the milestone.Milestones on boundaries
Surveyors place milestones to
mark the boundaries between the jurisdictions that borders
separate. A series of such boundary markers exists at one mile
intervals along the
borders of the District of Columbia in the United
States.
See also
- Boundary marker
- Milestone (Project management)
- Milepost equation
- Reassurance marker — a roadsign with the route number, but no distance
Gallery
UK Mile stonesReferences
External links
- Milepost Society UK
- Mileposts and milestones on the Leeds Liverpool Canal
- Article in Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities with further links, including to a photograph of a Roman milestone in Orvieto
- Inventory of Roman milestones in France (in French)
- Section 2D.46 of the U.S. Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices
- MileStonesGurus a weblog pictures project with only milestones with an equal KM point
milepost in Danish: Milepæl
milepost in German: Kilometerstein
milepost in French: Borne routière
milepost in Italian: Pietra miliare
milepost in Hebrew: אבן מיל
milepost in Latin: Milliarium
milepost in Macedonian: Миљоказ
milepost in Dutch: Mijlpaal
milepost in Japanese: マイルストーン
milepost in Norwegian: Milepel#Milepel
milepost in Polish: Kamień milowy
milepost in Swedish: Milsten
milepost in Thai: หลักกิโลเมตร
milepost in Turkish: Mil taşı
milepost in Contenese: 里程碑
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Samson post, arrow, baluster, balustrade, banister, bench mark, blaze, bookmark, cairn, catstone, compass needle,
direction, direction
post, doorjamb,
doorpost, finger post,
fist, gatepost, guide, guideboard, guidepost, hand, hitching post, hour hand,
index, index finger,
jamb, king post, landmark, lead, lighthouse, lightship, lubber line,
mark, marker, menhir, milestone, minute hand,
monument, mullion, needle, occasion, pharos, platform, pointer, post, seamark, signboard, signpost, snubbing post,
stanchion, standard, stile, tower, upright, watchtower