just 8 mi in a sentence
1. The highest is 100 °F (38 °C) in Fort Yukon (which is just 8 mi or 13 km inside the arctic circle) on June 27, 1915, making Alaska tied with Hawaii as the state with the lowest high temperature in the United States.
2. On March 31, Marines of the Amphibious Reconnaissance Battalion landed without opposition on Keise Shima, four islets just 8 mi (13 km) west of the Okinawan capital of Naha.
3. Two deep submarine canyons cut into the shelf near the Big Sur coast: the Sur Submarine Canyon, reaching a depth of 3,000 ft (910 m) just 8 mi (13 km) south of Point Sur, and Partington Submarine Canyon, which reaches a similar depth of 6.8 mi (10.9 km) offshore of Grimes Canyon.
4. One of the tornadoes followed the deadly Jemison event by one hour and passed just 8 mi (13 km) to the southeast, killing 31 people in and around the Clanton area in Chilton County.
5. The Sur Submarine Canyon reaches a depth of 3,000 ft (910 m) just 8 mi (13 km) south of Point Sur.
6. The highest is 100 °F (38 °C) in Fort Yukon (which is just 8 mi or 13 km inside the arctic circle) on June 27, 1915, making Alaska tied with Hawaii as the state with the lowest high temperature in the United States.
Some Words
- the lowest high temperature
- The lowest official Alaska temperature
- (−62
- one degree
- the lowest temperature
- the extreme north
- (Köppen
- long, very cold winters
- short, cool summers
- the average low temperature
- 34 °F
- many places
- Numerous indigenous peoples
- European peoples
- Linguistic and DNA studies
- the Upward Sun River site
- a six-week-old infant
- The baby's DNA
- other native groups
- the Pleistocene
- the Upward River Sun site
- this new group
- The Tlingit people
- a matrilineal kinship system
- property inheritance
- the Yukon
- the Haida
- their unique arts
- The Tsimshian people
- President Grover Cleveland
- later the U.S. Congress
- these peoples
- other indigenous peoples
- smallpox outbreaks
- the late 18th
- the most devastating epidemics
- the 1830s
- social disruption
- the Aleut people's seafaring society
- the first Native Alaskans