| Contiguous United States |
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The first definition is more traditional, back to before Alaskan statehood, and is the more commonly used definition. The second definition is the technically correct definition because Alaska is also in North America, northwest of Canada . In both senses, Hawaii – an archipelago southwest of North America in the Pacific Ocean – is excluded. __TOC__ SIMILAR TERMS To avoid confusion, people often use the term ''continental United States'' when including Alaska , and one of the following when excluding Alaska, i.e., referring to only those 48 states situated in central North America:
The term lower 48 (states) describes the states on the North American mainland from the perspective of Alaska. If interpreted from a global perspective (which would thus include Hawaii), the term could refer to all states except Alaska and Minnesota , the two northernmost states. This is not generally the case, however, and "the lower 48" is normally understood to mean the whole contiguous United States, and not Alaska or Hawaii. The District Of Columbia , while not a state, is generally understood to form part of the ''continental United States'' or ''contiguous United States'', as it is legally incorporated into the territory of the country. USE IN ALASKA AND HAWAII Some places, because of their own location relative to the contiguous United States, have their own unique labels for it:
USE IN FEDERAL LAW As the language of the Alaska Omnibus Act of 1959 makes apparent, the term was in use in U.S. federal law prior to then. It presumably dates from after the acquisition of Alaska in 1867, and probably from after the Spanish-American War and the annexation of Hawaii brought the United States its first off-continent possessions, both in 1898. Whatever else these terms may be, "continental United States" is a term defined in various federal Laws , in different ways in different time periods; it is also defined in different ways at the same time, depending on whether or not the context was the U.S. Internal Revenue Service , during at least a period that began with Alaska statehood. SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
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