Fugro is underway with ground investigations along a 45.8km section of the A9 road.
The works are taking place under a £2.5m contract from Transport Scotland.
The contract is for an advanced phase of ground investigation of the superficial deposits and bedrock along the road, from Pass of Birnam to Glen Garry.
The scope of works includes exploratory holes in soil and rock, in situ testing, high quality sampling, installation of instrumentation, laboratory testing, post site monitoring and factual reporting.
Fugro is also currently contracted to HS2, the company developing the new high speed railway between London and Birmingham.
In recent years, Fugro has completed similar linear route investigations of roads, tunnels, railways, pipelines and cable routes including Crossrail, Thames Tideway Tunnel, the A1 and the A14.
The A9 road passes through areas which contains some wildlife and landscape which are of national or international importance.
It links Edinburgh with Thurso and is a strategic link in the Scottish trunk road network, supporting economic growth in the north of Scotland.
Proposals involve dualling the entire A9 between Perth and Inverness.
Infrastructure Secretary, Keith Brown, said: "Dualling of the A9 has been talked about for decades, but I am proud that the Scottish Government is now delivering this much needed upgrade. This investment represents the most expensive transport project in Scotland's history and presents some of the most challenging work ever undertaken."
The ground investigations, which started on 24 August between Birnam and Glen Garry, will help inform the ongoing design work for the southern section of the dualling programme.
(LM)
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