Michigan - significado y definición. Qué es Michigan
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Qué (quién) es Michigan - definición

STATE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
MichigaN; Michigan, United States; Mitchigan; State of Michigan; Michigan.gov; Mich.; Wolverine State; The Wolverine State; The Great Lakes State; Water-Winter Wonderland; Economy of Michigan; Michigan economy; Demographics of Michigan; Michigan (U.S. state); 26th State; US-MI; Míchigan; Education in Michigan; Climate of Michigan; Transportation in Michigan; Religion in Michigan; Transport in Michigan; The weather in Michigan; Michigan (state); Micigan; MI (state); Transit in Michigan; Twenty-Sixth State; Twenty-sixth State; Culture of Michigan; Agriculture in Michigan; Art of Michigan; Tourism in Michigan; Rail transport in Michigan; Railroads in Michigan; Railways in Michigan; Ethnic groups in Michigan; Taxation in Michigan; Infrastructure in Michigan; The land of ten-thousand lakes; Energy in Michigan; The Great Lake State; Mixigen; Mixiegen
  • [[Michigan Supreme Court]] at the Hall of Justice
  • Map of [[British America]] showing the original boundaries of the [[Province of Quebec]] and its [[Quebec Act of 1774]] post-annexation boundaries
  • [[Cranbrook Kingswood School]], one of the leading college preparatory [[boarding schools]] in the country
  • Detroit Metro Airport]] (DTW)
  • [[Detroit]] in the mid-twentieth century. At the time, the city was the fourth-largest U.S. metropolis by population, and held about one-third of the state's population.
  • [[Holland, Michigan]], is the home of the [[Tulip Time Festival]], the largest [[tulip festival]] in the U.S.
  • 200px
  • [[Marquette, Michigan]], is home to a vast [[snowmobile]] trail system.
  • [[Dwarf lake iris]]
  • Ford]] Dearborn Proving Ground (DPG) completed major reconstruction and renovations in 2006.
  • 200px
  • Michigan is the center of the [[American automotive industry]]. The Renaissance Center in [[Downtown Detroit]] is the world headquarter of [[General Motors]].
  • federal wildernesses]] in Michigan
  • The world headquarters of the [[Kellogg's Company]] in [[Battle Creek]]
  • climate normals]].
  • Lower]] peninsulas of Michigan
  • [[Michigan International Speedway]] in [[Brooklyn, Michigan]]
  • 200px
  • Michigan 2020 population distribution
  • blueberries]], [[pickling cucumber]]s, [[navy bean]]s and [[petunia]]s.
  • The floor of the [[Michigan House of Representatives]]
  • D]]) speaking at a National Guard ceremony in 2019
  • [[Michigan Stadium]] in [[Ann Arbor]] is the largest [[stadium]] in the [[Western Hemisphere]], and the third-largest stadium in the world.
  • legislative branch]] of the government of the U.S. state of Michigan.
  • ''Père Marquette and the Indians (1869)'' by Wilhelm Lamprecht
  • Huron River]] at [[Lake Erie]], as well as smaller outlying areas within the [[Detroit River]].
  • The [[Basilica of Sainte Anne de Détroit]] is the second-oldest continuously operating Roman Catholic parish in the country.
  • Revolutionary War]] and gave possession of Michigan and other territory to the new United States
  • St. Ignace]].
  • Upper Peninsula]]

Mich.         
¦ abbreviation Michigan.
Michigan (1908 automobile)         
1908 AUTOMOBILE
The Michigan Buggy Company started out building high-wheeled buggies in Kalamazoo, Michigan. In 1911, they started producing low-built tourers and roadsters, which were powered by 33 hp or 40 hp four-cylinder engines.
Northern Michigan         
  • Beaver Island]].
  • Passenger pigeons were hunted to extinction sometime after the 1870s, with the last large nesting in [[Petoskey, Michigan]], in 1878.
  • Antrim Shale reserves in northern Michigan
  • Lumbering practices destroyed [[Arctic Grayling]] breeding grounds in rivers and led to their slow decline, and the sport fishing industry also contributed to the grayling's eventual disappearance from Northern Michigan.
  • archive-date=17 April 2016}}</ref> the Au Sable River in the 1880s became famous for fishing – first for grayling, and later for [[brook trout]] and [[brown trout]].
  •  As the lumber industry declined, rail lines such as the BCG & A Railroad (1915) helped to access remote inland tracts of timber.
  • Cadillac]], the second-largest city in Northern Michigan.
  • Alpena City Hall in Alpena, the third-largest city in the region.
  • Grandview Parkway]] in Traverse City serves as a bypass of downtown, and, in total, carries four different highways along its length: US-31, M-22, M-37, & M-72
  • quote="Driven by the Sioux from their Chequamegon Bay base in 1670, they moved next to Michillimackinac where they lived until 1704, then they again resettled near Detroit under French auspices. It was from this Detroit village that dissident members of the Turtle clans... began moving into the long vacant Ohio country... along the Sandusky River valley and plain.}}</ref>
  • Ludington]], the fourth-largest city.
  • Manistee]], the fifth-largest city.
  • Grand Rapids]], [[Milwaukee]] and [[Chicago]].
  • archive-date=11 August 2015}}</ref> making the Leelanau Peninsula and [[Grand Traverse Bay]] area uniquely conducive to cherries and other fruit trees.
  •  Northern Michigan is at the northern tip of Michigan's [[Lower Peninsula]].
  • Laurentian Mixed Forest]] nearly coincides with Northern Michigan
  • Petoskey]], the sixth-largest city.
  • SS ''Badger'']] connects the Wisconsin and Michigan segments of US 10
  • The 1835 Tourist's Pocket Map of Michigan by [[S. Augustus Mitchell]] shows the relatively undeveloped Northern Michigan even as a steamboat route operated between Detroit and Chicago via Michilimackinac.
  • Traverse City]], the largest city in Northern Michigan.
NORTHERN PART OF THE LOWER PENINSULA OF MICHIGAN
Northern Lower Peninsula; Northern Lower Michigan; Northwest Lower Michigan; Northeast Lower Michigan; Northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan; North Michigan; Northwest Michigan; History of Northern Michigan; Wildlife of Northern Michigan; Fauna of Northern Michigan; Tourism in Northern Michigan
Northern Michigan, also known as Northern Lower Michigan (known colloquially to residents of more southerly parts of the state and summer residents from cities such as Detroit as "Up North"), is a region of the U.S.

Wikipedia

Michigan

Michigan ( (listen)) is a state in the Great Lakes region of the upper Midwestern United States. It is bordered by Minnesota to the northwest, Wisconsin to the southwest, Indiana and Ohio to the south, and Lakes Superior, Huron, and Erie (which border the Canadian province of Ontario) to the north and east. With a population of nearly 10.12 million and an area of nearly 97,000 sq mi (250,000 km2), Michigan is the 10th-largest state by population, the 11th-largest by area, and the largest by area east of the Mississippi River. Its capital is Lansing, and its largest city is Detroit. Metro Detroit is among the nation's most populous and largest metropolitan economies. Its name derives from a gallicized variant of the original Ojibwe word ᒥᓯᑲᒥ (mishigami), meaning "large water" or "large lake".

Michigan consists of two peninsulas. The Lower Peninsula resembles the shape of a mitten, and comprises a majority of the state's land area. The Upper Peninsula (often called "the U.P.") is separated from the Lower Peninsula by the Straits of Mackinac, a five-mile (8 km) channel that joins Lake Huron to Lake Michigan. The Mackinac Bridge connects the peninsulas. Michigan has the longest freshwater coastline of any political subdivision in the United States, being bordered by four of the five Great Lakes and Lake St. Clair. It also has 64,980 inland lakes and ponds. Michigan has the second-most water of any state, behind only Alaska.

The area was first occupied by a succession of Native American tribes over thousands of years. In the 17th century, French explorers claimed it as part of the New France colony, when it was largely inhabited by indigenous peoples. French and Canadian traders and settlers, Métis, and others migrated to the area, settling largely along the waterways. After France's defeat in the French and Indian War in 1762, the region came under British rule. Britain ceded the territory to the newly independent United States after its defeat in the American Revolutionary War.

The area was part of the larger Northwest Territory until 1800, when western Michigan became part of the Indiana Territory. Michigan Territory was formed in 1805, but some of the northern border with Canada was not agreed upon until after the War of 1812. Michigan was admitted into the Union in 1837 as the 26th state, a free one. It soon became an important center of industry and trade in the Great Lakes region, attracting immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries from many European countries. Immigrants from Finland, Macedonia, and the Netherlands were especially numerous. Migration from Appalachia and of Black Southerners as part of the Great Migration increased in the 1930s, with many settling in Metro Detroit.

Although Michigan has developed a diverse economy, in the early 20th century it became widely known as the center of the U.S. automotive industry, which developed as a major national economic force. It is home to the country's three major automobile companies (whose headquarters are all in Metro Detroit). Once exploited for logging and mining, today the sparsely populated Upper Peninsula is important for tourism because of its abundance of natural resources. The Lower Peninsula is a center of manufacturing, forestry, agriculture, services, and high-tech industry.

Ejemplos de uso de Michigan
1. Here in Michigan, look at and listen to the University of Michigan and Michigan State University bands at halftime.
2. In Michigan, a group of ministry leaders launched a new anti–abortion organization, Michigan Chooses Life.
3. Dingell (D–Mich.). A Michigan native, Modlin graduated from the University of Michigan and the Michigan State University College of Law.
4. I found a campground in South Haven, Michigan, near Lake Michigan.
5. "The Michigan candidate won the Michigan primary," McCain strategist Steve Schmidt told reporters.