The FastSound projectтАЩs 3-D map of the large-scale structure of a region in the universe about 4.7 billion years after the Big Bang. This area covers 2.5 times 3 degrees of the sky, with a radial distance spanning 12-14.5 billion light-years in comoving distance or 8-9.6 billion light-years in light travel distance. The colors of the galaxies indicate their star formation rate, i.e., the total mass of stars produced in a galaxy every year. The gradation in background color represents the number density of galaxies; the underlying mass distribution (which is dominated by invisible so-called тАЬdark matterтАЭ that accounts for about 30 percent of the total energy in the universe) would look like this if we could see it. The lower part of the figure shows the relative locations of the FastSound and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) regions, indicating that the FastSound project is mapping a more distant universe than SDSSтАЩs 3-D map of the nearby universe. // NAOJ, SDSS, CFHT