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The Racial Dot Map plots a dot for every resident of Grand Rapids and beyond, and colors it based on their race and ethnicity as reported in the 2010 U.S. Census.
If you haven't seen the Racial Dot Map, you should probably take a peek. Especially if you're a map nerd. The map was created by Dustin Cable at University of Virginia's Weldon Cooper Center for ...
This morning a BRO reader sent along “The Racial Dot Map” that depicts our racial state of affairs, according to 2010 Census Block Data.
Explore the racial demographics on dot maps of America's five most populous cities above. Find your community on the full Racial Dot Map.
Removing race The Racial Dot Map also allows viewers to completely remove the color coding from the map. This paints of different picture of population density.
Each dot on the map is color-coded by race and ethnicity -- Whites are coded as blue, African-Americans as green, Asians as red, Hispanics as orange and all other racial categories are coded as brown.
The Racial Dot Map represents every person–all 308,745,538 of us–in the United States. Here, the dense population masses of New York and New Jersey.
Los Angeles is the most segregated city in the United States between whites and Hispanics, and this map illustrates just how divided we are.
No one likes to admit it but name a large city in America and you can find what main street racially divides it. ArcGIS created a Racial Dot Map, which uses census data to chart every person in ...
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