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・ Cuyahoga County, Ohio
・ Cuyahoga Falls City School District
・ Cuyahoga Falls High School
・ Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio
・ Cuyahoga Formation
・ Cuyahoga Heights High School
・ Cuyahoga Heights, Ohio
・ Cuyahoga Land Bank
・ Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority
・ Cuyahoga River
・ Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy
・ Cuyahoga Valley National Park
・ Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad
・ Cuyama River
・ Cuyama Valley
Cuyama, California
・ Cuyamaca College
・ Cuyamaca complex
・ Cuyamaca Mountains
・ Cuyamaca Outdoor School
・ Cuyamaca Peak
・ Cuyamaca Rancho State Park
・ Cuyamaca Water Company
・ Cuyamaca, California
・ Cuyamacamelus
・ Cuyamecalco Mixtec
・ Cuyamecalco Villa de Zaragoza
・ Cuyamel Fruit Company
・ Cuyamungue, New Mexico
・ Cuyania


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Cuyama, California : ウィキペディア英語版
Cuyama, California

Cuyama (Chumash: Kuyam, "To Rest, To Wait" ) is a census-designated place in Santa Barbara County. California. It is located in the Cuyama Valley, near the Carrizo Plain. The Cuyama River runs adjacent to the town, flowing west towards the Pacific Ocean. Cuyama is surrounded by many apricot, peach, and plum orchards. The ZIP Code is 93254, and the community is inside area code 805. The population was 57 at the 2010 census. The name "Cuyama" comes from an Indian village named for the Chumash word ''kuyam'', meaning "clam" or "freshwater mollusk".
Cuyama is located on California State Route 166 2.5 miles (4 km) east of its much larger neighbor New Cuyama.
South of the town is the Sierra Madre mountain range, most of which is included in the Los Padres National Forest. Considerable oil and gas development has taken place at the South Cuyama Oil Field in the foothills of the Sierra Madre, just south of Cuyama and adjacent New Cuyama. In July 2005, 52,000 acres (210 km2) in Los Padres National Forest, mostly in the region immediately south of Cuyama, was opened up to further development by the National Forest Service.
==History==
Rancho Cuyama, which consisted of 22,200 acres, was granted to Jose Maria Rojo in 1843. In 1943 Richfield Oil Company started oil exploration in the area, followed by the Norris Oil company five years later. In 1952 Atlantic Richfield established New Cayuma four miles East of Cayuma to house its employees.〔David W. Kean, ''Wide Places in the California Roads: The encyclopedia of California's small towns and the roads that lead to them'' (Volume 1 of 4: Southern California Counties), p. 51,52〕

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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