Stations
Station | Distance | Transfers | Location | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
JR Central | |||||
Gifu | 岐阜 | 0.0 |
|
Gifu | Gifu |
Nagamori | 長森 | 4.2 | |||
Naka | 那加 | 7.2 | Kakamigahara | ||
Sohara | 蘇原 | 10.4 | |||
Kagamigahara | 各務ヶ原 | 13.2 | |||
Unuma | 鵜沼 | 17.3 |
|
||
Sakahogi | 坂祝 | 22.5 | Sakahogi, Kamo | ||
Mino-Ōta | 美濃太田 | 27.3 |
|
Minokamo | |
Kobi | 古井 | 30.3 | |||
Nakakawabe | 中川辺 | 34.1 | Kawabe, Kamo | ||
Shimoasō | 下麻生 | 37.9 | |||
Kamiasō | 上麻生 | 43.2 | Hichisō, Kamo | ||
Shirakawaguchi | 白川口 | 53.1 | Shirakawa, Kamo | ||
Shimoyui | 下油井 | 61.7 | |||
Hida-Kanayama | 飛騨金山 | 66.7 | Gero | ||
Yakeishi | 焼石 | 75.7 | |||
Gero | 下呂 | 88.3 | |||
Zenshōji | 禅昌寺 | 93.5 | |||
Hida-Hagiwara | 飛騨萩原 | 96.7 | |||
Jōro | 上呂 | 100.8 | |||
Hida-Miyada | 飛騨宮田 | 105.4 | |||
Hida-Osaka | 飛騨小坂 | 108.8 | |||
Nagisa | 渚 | 115.9 | Takayama | ||
Kuguno | 久々野 | 123.2 | |||
Hida-Ichinomiya | 飛騨一ノ宮 | 129.5 | |||
Takayama | 高山 | 136.4 | |||
Hozue | 上枝 | 141.0 | |||
Hida-Kokufu | 飛騨国府 | 147.6 | |||
Hida-Furukawa | 飛騨古川 | 151.3 | Hida | ||
Sugisaki | 杉崎 | 153.6 | |||
Hida-Hosoe | 飛騨細江 | 156.0 | |||
Tsunogawa | 角川 | 161.7 | |||
Sakakami | 坂上 | 166.6 | |||
Utsubo | 打保 | 176.5 | |||
Sugihara | 杉原 | 180.5 | |||
Inotani | 猪谷 | 189.2 | Toyama | Toyama | |
JR West | |||||
Inotani | 猪谷 | Toyama | Toyama | ||
Nirehara | 楡原 | 196.2 | |||
Sasazu | 笹津 | 200.5 | |||
Higashi-Yatsuo | 東八尾 | 205.0 | |||
Etchū-Yatsuo | 越中八尾 | 208.7 | |||
Chisato | 千里 | 213.6 | |||
Hayahoshi | 速星 | 217.9 | |||
Fuchū-Usaka | 婦中鵜坂 | 219.6 | |||
Nishi-Toyama | 西富山 | 222.2 | |||
Toyama | 富山 | 225.8 |
|
Read more about this topic: Takayama Main Line
Famous quotes containing the word stations:
“mourn
The majesty and burning of the childs death.
I shall not murder
The mankind of her going with a grave truth
Nor blaspheme down the stations of the breath”
—Dylan Thomas (19141953)
“After I was married a year I remembered things like radio stations and forgot my husband.”
—P. J. Wolfson, John L. Balderston (18991954)
“A reader who quarrels with postulates, who dislikes Hamlet because he does not believe that there are ghosts or that people speak in pentameters, clearly has no business in literature. He cannot distinguish fiction from fact, and belongs in the same category as the people who send cheques to radio stations for the relief of suffering heroines in soap operas.”
—Northrop Frye (b. 1912)