N6 road (Gabon)

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N6 road
Location
Country Gabon
Highway system

The N6 road is one of the national highways of Gabon. It connects the far south-west of the country at Mayumba to the centre at Lastoursville.

Towns located along the highway include:

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Modes of transport in Gabon include rail, road, water and air. The one rail link, the Trans-Gabon Railway, connects the port of Owendo with the inland town of Franceville. While most of the country is connected by roads, not all areas are accessible. Much of the road network remains unpaved, and it primarily revolves around seven "national routes" labeled N1 through N7. The largest seaports are Port-Gentil and the newer Owendo, and 1,600 km of inland waterways are navigable. There are three international airports, eight other paved airports, and over 40 with unpaved runways. Nearly 300 km of pipelines carry petroleum products, mainly crude oil.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ogooué River</span> River in Gabon, Africa

The Ogooué, also known as the Nazareth River, some 1,200 km (750 mi) long, is the principal river of Gabon in west-central Africa and the fourth largest river in Africa by volume of discharge, trailing only the Congo, Kasai and Niger. Its watershed drains nearly the entire country of Gabon, with some tributaries reaching into the Republic of the Congo, Cameroon, and Equatorial Guinea.

The Adouma are an ethnic group of Gabon, in central Africa. They primarily live on the South bank of the upper Ogooué River, in the vicinity of Lastoursville, and are known as expert canoeists or the boatmen. They speak Duma, a Nzebi language of the Bantu family.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ogooué-Lolo Province</span> Province of Gabon

The Ogooué-Lolo Province is one of the nine provinces of Gabon, slightly southeast of central Gabon. The regional capital is Koulamoutou, a city of approximately 16,000 people. It is the ninth largest city in Gabon and the home of slightly more than one-third of the provincial population.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Trans-Gabon Railway</span> Railway line in Gabon

The Trans-Gabon Railway is the only railway in Gabon. It runs 670 km (420 mi) east from Owendo port station in Libreville to Franceville via numerous stations, the main ones being Ndjolé, Lopé, Booué, Lastoursville and Moanda.

Mayumba is a Vili- and Lumbu-speaking town of about 5,208 people on the Atlantic Ocean coast of Gabon, at the end of the N6 road, lying on a peninsula separated from the mainland by the Banio Lagoon.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lastoursville</span> Place in Ogooué-Lolo Province, Gabon

Lastoursville or Mandji is a city in east-central Gabon, lying on the Ogooué River, the Trans-Gabon Railway and the N3 road. It was founded as a slave depot named Mandji, renamed Maadiville in 1883 before being named for François Rigail de Lastours in 1886. It grew around palm oil production and as an administrative centre, and soon became a major missionary centre. The town is also known for its caves.

Oliver N'Goma was a Gabonese afro-zouk and soukous singer and guitarist. He was born in Mayumba in south-west Gabon in 1959. He is best known for his 1990 song Bane.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Departments of Gabon</span>

The provinces of Gabon are divided into forty-nine departments. The departments are listed below, by province :

Mayumba National Park is a national park in southwestern Gabon. It is a thin tongue of beach, dunes, savanna, and rain-forest in the extreme south of the country, between Mayumba and the Congo border. Mayumba National Park shelters 60 km of the most important leatherback turtle nesting beaches on Earth and is home to unique coastal vegetation and a variety of terrestrial animals, including forest elephants, buffaloes, leopards, gorillas, chimpanzees, antelopes, crocodiles, hippos, and several species of monkeys. It also stretches for 15 km out to sea, protecting important marine habitats for dolphins, sharks, and migrating humpback whales. It is Gabon's only primarily marine park.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Basse-Banio (department)</span> Department in Nyanga Province, Gabon

Basse-Banio is a department of Nyanga Province in southern Gabon. The capital lies at Mayumba. It had a population of 7,192 in 2013.

The N3 road is one of the national highways of Gabon. It connects to the east of the country along the centre. Towns located along the highway include:

The Stade Mbéba is a stadium primarily used for football matches in Lastoursville, Gabon. It is the home of the Gabonese club Wongosport of the Gabon Championnat National D1. The stadium has capacity of 4,000 spectators.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Air Inter Gabon</span> Defunct scheduled and charter airline in Gabon

Air Inter Gabon was a scheduled and charter airline based in Port-Gentil, Gabon that has since ended all operations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cantons and communes of Gabon</span>

As of 2011, Gabon contains 152 Cantons, 52 Communes, 29 Arrondissements, and 26 Districts. These are the third-level administrative units of Gabon and between them make up the units of the Departments of Gabon. Arrondissements tend to be units of major cities such as Libreville and communes are generally seated in the main cities and towns and incorporating the surrounding rural area. The cantons of Gabon are largely rural in nature with a small town or large village as the main centre.

Louis Chavance (1907–1979) was a French screenwriter. He also worked occasionally as a film editor and assistant director. He is best known for his screenplay for Le Corbeau which he first wrote in 1933 although the film was not made for another decade.

Mayumba Airport is an airport serving the town of Mayumba in the Nyanga Province of Gabon. The runway is 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) southeast of the town.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lozo Sport</span> Football club

Lozo Sport are a football club based in Lastoursville, Gabon.