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Mississippi (state) : ウィキペディア英語版
Mississippi

Mississippi is a state located in the Southern United States.
Jackson is the state capital and largest city, with a population of around 175,000 people. The state overall has a population of around 3 million people. Mississippi is the 32nd most extensive and the 31st most populous of the 50 United States.
The state is heavily forested outside of the Mississippi Delta area. Its riverfront areas were cleared for cotton cultivation in the antebellum era, but the bottomlands were cleared mostly by freedmen after the war. Blacks made up two-thirds of the property owners in the Delta by the end of the 19th century, but timber and railroad companies acquired much of the land. Clearing altered the ecology of the Delta, increasing the severity of flooding along the Mississippi. Much land is now held by agribusinesses. A largely rural state with agricultural areas dominated by industrial farms, Mississippi is ranked low or last among the states in such measures as health, educational attainment, and median household income.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Mississippi Annual State Health Rankings - 2013 America's Health Rankings Annual Edition - http://www.americashealthrankings.org/MS )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Percent of People Who Have Completed High School (Including Equivalency) statistics - states compared - Statemaster )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=State Median Household Income Patterns: 1990–2010 )〕 The state's catfish aquaculture farms produce the majority of farm-raised catfish consumed in the United States.〔("Aquaculture: Catfish" ), Mississippi State University〕
Since the 1930s and the Great Migration, Mississippi has been majority white, albeit with the highest percentage of black residents of any U.S. state. From the early 19th century to that period, it was majority black, a population composed largely of African-American slaves before the American Civil War. In the first half of the 20th century, a total of nearly 400,000 rural blacks left the state for work and opportunities in northern and midwestern cities, with another wave of migration around World War II to West Coast cities. In 2010, 37% of Mississippians were African-Americans, the highest percentage of African Americans in a U.S. state. African Americans are still a majority in many counties of the Mississippi-Yazoo Delta, an area of historic settlement during the plantation era. Since 2011 Mississippi has been ranked the most religious state in the country.
==Etymology==
The name of the state is derived from the Mississippi River, which flows along its western boundary. Settlers named it after the Ojibwe word ''misi-ziibi'' ("Great River").

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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