U.S. census maps to topple your assumptions and beautifully illustrate who we are, how we live, where we came from, and where we’re going.
In 1874 , the U.S. Census Bureau published theStatistical Atlas of the United States . For the first clip , essential selective information about who we were , where we live and how we lived was available in the form of substance abuser - friendly U.S. nosecount maps that could be access by all .
The Bureau preserve to publish atlases after each census until 1930 , when the powers that be decide to cease production . In fact , no such atlas was produced again until 2007 , when the Bureau write theCensus Atlas of the United States , based on the consequence of the 2000 census . But with no plans in the works for an atlas based on the 2010 census ( with only some U.S. census maps made availableandhardly anyone else stepping up ) , one intrepid statistician , Dr. Nathan Yau of FlowingData , take affair into his own hands .
Below are Yau ’s elegant and interminably absorbing homemade U.S. nose count maps , sporting a design similar to those in the original atlas most 150 years ago . Some of these maps will , no doubt , confirm your assumptions ( universe density ) . Others will upend them ( balance of non - citizens ) .
Others still will come up to takings about which you belike had no assumptions in the first office ( cancer mortality ) . Some show how slowly the gears of story can move ( universe with Gallic ancestry ) . Some show how tight the gears of history can move ( English not speak at home ) . And almost all show that , for whatever reason , Nevada is a major wild menu .
Who We Are
In which the myth of the deal world of the west prove true and America is still very , very snowy …