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・ Buffalo, Ohio County, Indiana
・ Buffalo, Oklahoma
・ Buffalo, Pittsburgh and Western Railroad
・ Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburgh Railway Indiana Passenger Station
・ Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh Railroad Station
・ Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh Railroad Station (Springville, New York)
・ Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh Railway
・ Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburgh Railway Station (Orchard Park, New York)
・ Buffalo, South Carolina
・ Buffalo, South Dakota
・ Buffalo, Sullivan County, Tennessee
・ Buffalo, Tennessee
・ Buffalo, Texas
・ Buffalo, Trigg County, Kentucky
・ Buffalo, Victoria
Buffalo, West Virginia
・ Buffalo, Wisconsin
・ Buffalo, Wyoming
・ Buffalo-Glencoe Tondas
・ Buffalo-Lancaster Regional Airport
・ Buffalocomotive
・ Buffaloe v. Hart
・ Buffaloes F.C.
・ Buffaloland Provincial Park
・ Buffalopox
・ Buffalopterus
・ Buffaloville, Indiana
・ Buffalo–Depew (Amtrak station)
・ Buffalo–Niagara Falls metropolitan area
・ Buffard


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Buffalo, West Virginia : ウィキペディア英語版
Buffalo, West Virginia

Buffalo is a town in Putnam County, West Virginia, United States, along the Kanawha River. The population was 1,236 at the 2010 census. Buffalo is a part of the Huntington-Ashland, WV-KY-OH, Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA).
==History==
Along with numerous sites in the Kanawha River Valley, Buffalo was originally settled by waves of ancient cultures of prehistoric indigenous peoples. Clovis points indicate the presence of inhabitants more than 10,000 years ago. One of the last cultures, that of the Fort Ancient people, had a few villages such as Buffalo and Marmet that survived into the time of European exploration. Archaeologists have found European trade items among Fort Ancient artifacts.〔(Dr. Robert F. Maslowski, "The Kanawha Valley and its Prehistoric People" ), 2002, Council on West Virginia Archaeology, accessed 31 Oct 2009〕
Historic tribes such as the Huron, from the Great Lakes region, and the Conoy (also spelled ''Conois'' and ''Kanawha'') were driven out of the central valley by Iroquois' invading from their base in present-day western New York. Many of the Conoy by the early 17th century had resettled on the west side of the Chesapeake Bay and below the Potomac River. After decades of encroachment by English colonists, surviving Conoy (also called Piscataway by then) went north to Pennsylvania and allied with the Susquehannock and Iroquois.〔(Dr. Robert J. Dilger and James Marshall, "Kanawha County History" ), Institute for Public Affairs, West Virginia University, 21 Feb 2002, accessed 31 Oct 2009〕
Note that this is not the site of the 1972 Buffalo Creek Flood disaster; that occurred near Saunders, over south of the town of Buffalo.

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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