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・ Puget Sound Community School
・ Puget Sound Convergence Zone
・ Puget Sound Electric Railway
・ Puget Sound Energy
・ Puget Sound faults
・ Puget Sound fishermen's strike of 1949
・ Puget Sound Gunners FC
・ Puget Sound king crab
・ Puget Sound Maritime Historical Society
・ Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet
・ Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility
・ Puget Sound Navigation Company
・ Puget Sound Navy Museum
・ Puget Sound Outcast Derby
・ Puget Sound Plaza
Puget Sound region
・ Puget Sound Regional Council
・ Puget Sound salmon recovery
・ Puget Sound Senior Baseball League
・ Puget Sound Shore Railroad
・ Puget Sound Soccer Academy Rapids
・ Puget Sound War
・ Puget Systems
・ Puget-Rostang
・ Puget-sur-Argens
・ Puget-Théniers
・ Puget-Ville
・ Pugets Sound Agricultural Company
・ Pugettia
・ Pugettia gracilis


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Puget Sound region : ウィキペディア英語版
Puget Sound region
The Puget Sound region is a coastal area of the Pacific Northwest in the U.S. state of Washington, including Puget Sound, the Puget Sound lowlands, and the surrounding region roughly west of the Cascade Range and east of the Olympic Mountains. It is characterised by a complex array of saltwater bays, islands, and peninsulas carved out by prehistoric glaciers.
== History ==

The Puget Sound region was formed by the collision and attachment of many terranes ("microcontinents") to the North American Plate between about 50 to 10 million years ago. About 15,000 years ago, the Puget Sound region was covered by a lobe of the Cordilleran Ice Sheet. The ice was about thick in the vicinity of Seattle.〔Kruckeberg (1991), pp. 20–21.〕 By the time Captain George Vancouver found the Sound, early native people had already been there for over 5,000 years.
Logging started as early as 1853. In the 1880s logging railroads cut their way into Puget Sound. 1886 the St. Helens fire burned . Mount Rainier National Park started in 1899. The 1902 Yacolt fire burned . Olympic National Park was established in 1938.〔Kruckeberg, Arthur R. (1999). ''A Natural History of the Puget Sound Basin'' pp.52-68〕
George Vancouver explored Puget sound in 1792. Vancouver claimed it for Great Britain on 4 June 1792, naming it for one of his officers, Lieutenant Peter Puget. It became part of the Oregon Country, and became U.S. territory when the 1846 Oregon Treaty was signed.
After arriving along the Oregon Trail, many settlers wandered north to what is now Washington and settled the Puget Sound area. The first non-indigenous settlement was New Market (now known as Tumwater) in 1846. In 1853 Washington Territory was formed from part of Oregon Territory. In 1888 the Northern Pacific railroad line reached Puget Sound, linking the region to eastern states.
For a long period Tacoma was noted for its large smelters where gold, silver, copper and lead ores were treated. Seattle was the primary port for trade with Alaska and the rest of the country and for a time possessed a large shipbuilding industry. The region around eastern Puget Sound developed heavy industry during the period including World War I and World War II, and the Boeing Company became an established icon in the area.
During World War II the Puget Sound area became a focus for the war industry, with Boeing producing many of the nation's heavy bombers and the ports of Seattle, Bremerton and Tacoma available for shipbuilding.
Since 1995, Puget Sound has been recognized as an American Viticultural Area by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau.〔(Code of Federal Regulations. "§ 9.151 Puget Sound." ) Title 27: Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms; Part 9 — American Viticultural Areas; Subpart C — Approved American Viticultural Areas. Retrieved Jan. 30, 2008.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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