「ALASKA」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

ALASKA

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1語右で並び替え

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  • 1937) was an American Episcopal missionary to Alaska, a linguist and translator, and a professor of
  • In 1934, off the coast of Alaska, a mysterious four year old island is stirring
  • Wrangell, Alaska, a city on Wrangell Island and one of the olde
  • esult, the Enterprise arrived at Point Barrow, Alaska a fortnight after the Investigator and was for
  • Michael Wood and Colby Coombs, Alaska: A Climbing Guide, The Mountaineers, 2001.
  • year he was promoted to Regional Forester for Alaska, a post he held till 1953.
  • age is a former settlement on Turnagain Arm in Alaska, about 47 miles (76 km) south of Anchorage.
  • ed for Point Barrow (the northernmost point in Alaska above the Arctic Circle).
  • lifornia and one each in Florida, Virginia and Alaska, according to the FAA.
  • hockey defenseman who currently plays for the Alaska Aces of the East Coast Hockey League.
  • and the Quad City Mallards, the ECHL with the Alaska Aces and the International Hockey League with
  • ver he split the season between Peoria and the Alaska Aces in the ECHL.
  • fter 6 years, signing a one-year contract with Alaska Aces of the ECHL.
  • ice hockey player who currently plays for the Alaska Aces of the East Coast Hockey League.
  • y 13, 2011, he was named the head coach of the Alaska Aces of the ECHL.
  • He was formerly the head coach of the Alaska Aces of the ECHL, where he led them to a Kelly
  • The Alaska Aces and the Purefoods Tender Juicy Giants pla
  • ame between the Barangay Ginebra Kings and the Alaska Aces held at the Albay Astrodome in Legaspi wa
  • He was signed by the Alaska Aces on October 28, 2008, but only played one
  • 05 NHL Entry Draft and currently plays for the Alaska Aces of the ECHL.
  • e Elmira Jackals and back in the ECHL with the Alaska Aces before moving to Great Britain in 2005, s
  • the Welcoat Dragons, he was then traded to the Alaska Aces for Solomon Mercado.
  • On September 16, 2008, Daniels moved from the Alaska Aces to Phoenix RoadRunners.
  • the 2002-2003 season, Payne began coaching the Alaska Aces (ECHL).
  • la Tigers captured their 1st title against the Alaska Aces, beating the latter, 3-1, in their best-o
  • ell as in the ECHL teams Texas Wildcatters and Alaska Aces.
  • ed to earn a contract with ECHL affiliate, the Alaska Aces.
  • with the AHL's Peoria Rivermen and the ECHL's Alaska Aces.
  • narrowly edged out the 105 point total of the Alaska Aces.
  • the Aces to merge into the ECHL and become the Alaska Aces.
  • East Coast Hockey League training camp of the Alaska Aces.
  • butterfly, common in boreal North America from Alaska, across southern Canada to New England and the
  • sedge is native to much of North America, from Alaska across southern Canada and throughout the cont
  • th of toality was visible from eastern Russia, Alaska, across Canada, and the northeastern United St
  • Its range includes Alaska across northern Canada, including all the terr
  • The Sentinel Island Light is a lighthouse in Alaska adjacent to Lynn Canal in Alaska.
  • Galveston, Alaska), Africa (in Angola, establishing several cont
  • At the time a resident of Alaska, after his Olympic victories his father was sh
  • e air echelon, equipped with P-39's, served in Alaska against the Japanese forces that invaded the A
  • He joined the Alaska Air National Guard until 1971 and worked in th
  • Member of the Alaska Air Carriers Association
  • Alaska Airlines provides 2 flights weekly on Sunday a
  • minal A: American Airlines, Delta Airlines and Alaska Airlines
  • rticipating in recovery and salvage efforts of Alaska Airlines Flight 261 in February 2000, receivin
  • Alaska Airlines in April 2011 agreed to a deal with L
  • On September 4, 1971, Alaska Airlines Flight 1866, a Boeing 727 crashed int
  • Alaska Airlines operates twice weekly 737-400 Combi p
  • On February 24, 2010 Alaska Airlines announced it will install Aircell's G
  • ic, Cyprus Airways, Air France-KLM, Lufthansa, Alaska Airlines, American Airlines, Air India, Contin
  • Company until 1957 when he became president of Alaska Airlines.
  • subsequently early-retired from) Seattle-based Alaska Airlines.
  • , both bush carriers and the regional airline, Alaska Airlines.
  • Vickers also states that he has spent time in Alaska almost every summer since then, and is present
  • They reside in Alaska along the Anvik River in Anvik, along the Inno
  • Cosmos in the Territory of Alaska alongside the much larger U.S. Coast and Geode
  • The Russians who arrived in Alaska also frequently visited shopping areas in Fair
  • The State of Alaska also operates Nome City Field (FAA LID: 94Z),
  • One major celebration occurs in Petersburg, Alaska also known as "Little Norway".
  • o had founded the Republican Moderate Party of Alaska, also ran.
  • The Pacific Regional Center in Alaska also offers the Alaska Youth for Environmental
  • His life in Alaska alternated between Alaska's oil fields and col
  • all primary states and in the caucus states of Alaska, American Samoa, Colorado, Idaho, Minnesota, N
  • Hughes Airport ( Alaska), an active airport in Hughes, Alaska, United
  • iter spent four seasons with the University of Alaska Anchorage before turning pro in 2004, sigining
  • In 2003, she graduated from University of Alaska Anchorage as Master of Fine Arts in Creative W
  • a Huskies and one season for the University of Alaska Anchorage before beginning his professional ca
  • om Willamette University and the University of Alaska Anchorage before taking over the family busine
  • School in 1981, and attended the University of Alaska, Anchorage from 1981-1983.
  • ayed his first game of the next season against Alaska Anchorage during the Great Alaska Shootout.
  • Kira graduated from University of Alaska, Anchorage, majoring in Japanese.
  • ve Writing and Literature at the University of Alaska Anchorage, Alaska, teaching Creative Writing a
  • , II, III certification from the University of Alaska, Anchorage.
  • University of Alaska Anchorage.
  • pik (юпик) peoples of western and southcentral Alaska and northeastern Siberia.
  • It is found from Alaska and New Brunswick to Ontario, south to Connect
  • Previously, it alternated between Alaska and Southern Caribbean itineraries.
  • San Bernardino, California, Magers grew up in Alaska and Washington state.
  • ough is a borough located in the U.S. state of Alaska and was incorporated in 1990.
  • missionary work, scholarship and leadership in Alaska and the Russian Far East during the 19th centu
  • t 1945, she was decommissioned at Cold Harbor, Alaska, and transferred to the Soviet Union under Len
  • ( Alaska and Hawaii produced no copper in 2003.)
  • It is present in Alaska and Greenland and has a European distribution
  • kwaan of the Tlingit, today based at Wrangell, Alaska and whose territory included the basin of the
  • She lives in Anchorage, Alaska and was born March 24, 1948.
  • 0 June 1965 Clover was stationed at Ketchikan, Alaska, and performed ATON duties.
  • rip from the Brattleboro Free Folk Festival to Alaska and during the wedding of band members Paul La
  • Then Clover was re-assigned to Sitka, Alaska and homeported there from 1 July 1965 through
  • he Pacific, she ranged as far north as Barrow, Alaska, and as far south as Taka Atoll in the Marshal
  • ranti) is a subspecies of the caribou found in Alaska and adjacent parts of Canada.
  • , Urals, Siberia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, China, Alaska and Canada south through the United States to
  • ns Vitus Bering and Aleksi Cherikov 'discover' Alaska and bring back fur skins (Bering shipwrecked o
  • en ancient mastodon tusk from glacier-finds in Alaska and Siberia.
  • ippine Islands, Japan, Southeast Asia, Arabia, Alaska, and the Canal Zone.
  • in areas: the west coast of North America from Alaska and British Columbia to Baja California, and C
  • ancement over the AN/FPS-19 radars deployed in Alaska and Canada, being optimized for use in severe
  • n the daisy family that is endemic to northern Alaska and the northern Yukon Territory, growing in t
  • t found in coastal forests throughout southern Alaska and the Aleutian Islands.
  • lied fully in incorporated territories such as Alaska and Hawaii, whereas it only applied partially
  • He worked for KTUU-TV in Anchorage, Alaska, and later as a free-lance cameraman in Seattl
  • It is found in North America from Alaska and Canada south of the tundra through most of
  • It is certainly related to the gold booms in Alaska, and important to them, but technically, it ha
  • ships tins of their popcorn nationwide (minus Alaska and Hawaii).
  • Canada to southern British Columbia, north to Alaska and Yukon Territory, and south at least into M
  • ertebrates of the Pacific Coast Between Sitka, Alaska, and Northern Mexico."
  • He was born in Anchorage, Alaska and his middle name is Thomas.
  • It has a foothold in North America in Alaska, and has also occurred in California
  • very popular amongst bush pilots in Canada and Alaska and missionaries who fly into rough, relativel
  • When Alaska and Hawaii were being considered for Statehood
  • It is a vagrant to Alaska and northeastern North America.
  • nly caught in the Bering Sea and Norton Sound, Alaska, and is particularly difficult to catch, but i
  • , she departed Seattle, Washington for Kodiak, Alaska, and escorted troop transports back to Seattle
  • e Okhotsk and Bering seas, east to the Gulf of Alaska, and south to northern Baja California in Mexi
  • stretches from southern British Columbia into Alaska and the Yukon.
  • el in mid-coastal California north to southern Alaska and west to the Rocky Mountains of Colorado to
  • Saint Ioasaph, Enlightener of Alaska and the American land
  • Docking gave many speeches in Alaska and California and recruited teachers for the
  • living along the Pacific Coast of Washington, Alaska and British Columbia and in the northern reach
  • 4, and climbed a number of other high peaks in Alaska and Canada.
  • operating as far north as the Beaufort Sea off Alaska and as far south as the Palmer Peninsula in An
  • in, Minnesota, North Dakota and in Petersburg, Alaska and Ketchikan, Alaska.
  • issionary and later a bishop and archbishop in Alaska and the Russian Far East.
  • ing among indigenous people of eastern Russia, Alaska, and western Canada--an area it calls the "Nor
  • The Bowl has had representation from both Alaska and Hawaii.
  • native to western North America from southern Alaska and British Columbia to California and Arizona
  • bills providing for Delegates in Congress from Alaska, and the statehood of Oklahoma, Arizona, and N
  • ed as a Christmas town, similar to North Pole, Alaska, and other Christmas themed locations.
  • halls" on the issue in places like Anchorage, Alaska, and that people are still using the slogan at
  • in North America in the North-Eastern part of Alaska and some isolated populations in the Canadian
  • from the western part United States including Alaska and Hawaii.
  • native to much of western North America, from Alaska and northwestern Canada to California and to N
  • ited States" is more precise in excluding both Alaska and Hawaii.
  • ir sampler aboard an AFOAT B-29 flying between Alaska and Japan detected debris from the first Russi
  • far west as the pacific coast, as far north as Alaska and as far south as Mexico, infecting virtuall
  • t Bainbridge made cruises to British Columbia, Alaska, and Hawaii.
  • rs aboard High Endurance Cutters operating off Alaska, and providing logistical support to various C
  • There are related Bible colleges in Alaska and California.
  • er, E. l. kenyoni (Wilson, 1991), is native to Alaska and the Pacific west coast from the Aleutian i
  • Air Force Station and Shemya Air Force Base), Alaska, and provided support to tenants organizations
  • uth Dakota, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Alaska and Hawaii.
  • ifty-ninth Congress as the first Delegate from Alaska and served from August 14, 1906 to March 3, 19
  • is known from all of North America, including Alaska and the arctic regions of Canada.
  • It is native to western North America from Alaska and northwestern Canada to the southern Rocky
  • 2-35 as tender to aerial survey expeditions to Alaska and the Aleutian Islands.
  • vin Islands in Oceania and the promontories in Alaska and Sakhalin still commemorate his name.
  • It is found in from Newfoundland to Alaska and Vancouver Island, north to near the treeli
  • enomenon is common along the northern coast of Alaska and in the Bering Sea along its costal waters.
  • It is native to western North America from Alaska and most of western Canada to California to Ne
  • she was based at Seattle for patrols north to Alaska, and along the western seaboard.
  • He served as a director of First National Bank Alaska, and was active in a number of fraternal organ
  • erica, from south central Saskatchewan west to Alaska and coastal British Columbia, south to at leas
  • reasing the number of trade agreements between Alaska and foreign nations, constructing a pipeline f
  • eives service from two bush carriers: Wings of Alaska, and Air Excursions.
  • than the Ruddy Turnstone, breeding in western Alaska, and wintering mainly on the Pacific coast of
  • n forests, bogs, tundra and meadows in Canada, Alaska and northern Washington and New England.
  • Northeast and West Coast of the United States, Alaska and Hawaii, as well as the Bahamas, Mexico, So
  • As Alaska and Hawaii did not gain statehood until 1959,
  • clude most of the Atlantic Ocean, a portion of Alaska, and a small portion of the Pacific bordering
  • Alaska and Hawaii were to have special, unspecified a
  • A map of the 2004 fire season's effect on Alaska and the Yukon.
  • Alaska and its resources.
  • in the northern Pacific ocean, from Russia to Alaska and as far south as Monterey Bay.
  • ratory School was the future U.S. Senator from Alaska and 2008 presidential candidate Mike Gravel in
  • o the Bering Sea, concentrating in the Gulf of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands.
  • rthern Pacific seastar (Asterias amurensis) in Alaska and Canada.
  • received 37.89% of the total statewide vote in Alaska and lost the state to Republican John McCain i
  • a law practice in his home town of Fairbanks, Alaska and began his political career by winning thre
  • he ship tends buoys in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska, and has acquired the nickname Aleutian Keeper
  • en, a type 2-8-2 locomotive) from the State of Alaska and restored it for operation.
  • Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Alaska and Virginia) that does not have a dome.
  • Shot detonation took place on Amchitka Island, Alaska and the remainder were at the Nevada Test Site
  • ) is made up of 66 First Nations and tribes in Alaska and Canada, living along the Yukon River.
  • It is found in Alaska and northern United States and across Canada.
  • le in port off-loading at Saint Paul Island in Alaska and subsequently died on February 9 from a pul
  • Wrangellia Terrane ( Alaska and Canada)
  • Colias tyche thula ( Alaska and in Canada on Banks, Victoria and Melville
  • them celebrated by transiting north to Juneau, Alaska and Victoria, B. C. for some well deserved res
  • , Mainland Russia, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Mainland Alaska and Manila, and other areas of the Philippines
  • e been found in Miocene rocks of Greenland and Alaska and in Cretaceous formations in Nebraska.
  • subspecies A. i. morinella occurs in northern Alaska and in Arctic Canada as far east as Baffin Isl
  • entertained troops in the Middle East, Europe, Alaska, and the Caribbean.
  • ur Rendezvous World Championship in Anchorage, Alaska and the Open North American Championship in Fa
  • He traveled extensively in Alaska and then prepared the Report on the Population
  • 1945, Barrier was decommissioned at Cold Bay, Alaska, and was simultaneously transferred to the Sov
  • She ended her career in Alaska and is featured in Cherry Lyon Jones' book Rem
  • He was a prominent physician in Alaska and head of the Alaska Native Health Services
  • is found in British Columbia in Canada and in Alaska and Washington in the United States.
  • hone calls expressing sympathy from throughout Alaska and the rest of the United States following hi
  • "A Beautiful Lie" was going to be shot in both Alaska and the North Pole.
  • th century walrus intestine parka from western Alaska and contemporary dolls from Kotzebue and St. L
  • he northern Pacific, from Japan to the Gulf of Alaska and down the Pacific coasts of Canada and the
  • residential election prior to the statehood of Alaska and Hawaii, who would first take part as state
  • National Park near the small town of McCarthy, Alaska and the historic ghost town of Kennecott, Alas
  • ial radio stations simulcasting in North Pole, Alaska and Houston, Alaska respectively.
  • e represented the timber industry in Southeast Alaska, and has also been an advocate for public radi
  • icott River Wilderness area of Haines Borough, Alaska and flows eastward into the Lynn Canal.
  • It is native to western North America from Alaska and Alberta to California and New Mexico, wher
  • urence for his many admirers and collectors in Alaska and beyond.
  • ter, the Near and Middle East, Mexico, Canada, Alaska, and the Caribbean
  • of Traditional and Grassroots communities from Alaska and the Traditional Chair and founding member
  • t is native to northwestern North America from Alaska and northern Canada to Montana to northern Cal
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