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Kamshet is a village in India, situated in Mawal taluka of Pune district in the state of Maharashtra. It encompasses an area of 242.96 ha (600 acres). It encompasses an area of 242.96 ha (600 acres).
Kamshet is a region located in Pune district in the state of Maharashtra, India, 110 km from Mumbai City, and 45 km from Pune in Pune district. It is 16 km from the twin hill stations of Khandala and Lonavala [ 1 ] and is accessible by road and rail from Mumbai (Bombay) and Pune.
Etobicoke: "The place where the alders grow" from the word wadoopikaang in the Ojibwe language. Fort Erie: Iroquoian, erige, meaning "cat". Gananoque: Origin unknown, thought to be derived from Native languages for "place of health" or "meeting place" or "water running over rocks." Garafraxa: Possibly derived from the word for "panther country".
S. Samish Island, Washington; Sammamish, Washington; Seattle; Semiahmoo Bay; Sequim Bay; Sequim, Washington; Shilshole Bay; Mount Shuksan; Similkameen River; Skagit Bay
Kamshet railway station or Kamshet station is a railway station of Pune Suburban Railway on Mumbai–Chennai line. Local trains between Pune Junction–Lonavala, Shivajinagar–Lonavla stop here. The only passenger train having a stop at this station is the Pune Junction–Karjat Passenger. The station has two platforms and a foot overbridge.
Cases where sources always call the group a "tribe", e.g. the Tribe of Naphtali of the ancient Hebrews. Do not add Nation onto a name for a group of people, unless that term is part of their official title, for instance, the Cherokee Nation. See US Native tribes (Lower 48) and Alaska Native tribes.
Indian Place Names of New England, Museum of the American Indian Heye Foundation; O'Brien, Frank Waabu (2010). Understanding Indian Place Names in Southern New England. Colorado: Bauu Press. Trumbull, James H. (1881). Indian Names of Places, etc., in and on the Borders of Connecticut: With Interpretations of Some of Them.
Beginning in the early 19th century non-native settlers moved into the area, resulting in the displacement of the local tribe from both its water-rich lowland winter and tree-rich mountainous summer campgrounds. Significant permanent settlement began after 1855 when the area was annexed to the United States.