Unlike census officials, newspaper proprietors have a keen interest in counting the newspapers and the takings. |
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Blacks who owned small farms and also rented or sharecropped were often identified as renters or sharecroppers in the census. |
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In the meantime, however, he worked as the Beloit town clerk in 1855, a job that made him responsible for the city's 1855 census count. |
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Teachers, already burdened with the extra duties of census, official surveys, vaccination programmes and other sundry jobs, are bellyaching. |
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We fit 24 animals with radio collars to follow their movements and we also fly over and follow their tracks to take a census. |
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The best time of the year to census goatsuckers is early in the breeding season when birds are most vocal. |
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Both the core city and the surrounding metropolitan area lost population in the 2000 census. |
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The number of nonbreeders was estimated from census data on the ratio of floaters to residents during the rainy season. |
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Until the 1930 census, the U.S. government lumped Latvians in with Lithuanians and Russians. |
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Secondly, we built a database of information transcribed from the census returns. |
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From January 2nd 2002 researchers will be able to access the entire 1901 census returns for England and Wales online. |
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The recently published 2001 census provides an interesting snapshot of UK society today. |
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In America, Hollerith, working on census returns, developed a machine using electric current and capable of analysing returns at speed. |
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However, SER staff registers suggest that the staff at Ashford works in 1881 was 1,366, far beyond the 496 of the census return. |
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According to the last census there are 15, 141 of these unsung and unpaid heroes in Merton with around 2,000 of them young carers. |
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Mary, who turned twenty years old in 1860, cannot be found on census returns, but Juliett, still single, worked as a domestic. |
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The printed census returns, upon which the figures are based, can be regarded as accurate only up to a point, even at the national level. |
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This is a very strange solution, as it seems that the second census was unnecessary. |
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According to census figures, just over a third of the properties in the area are occupied by renters. |
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Part of the reason for the result is that no subdivisions were available in the census question. |
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A local census of population, resource audit, and needs analysis will also be compiled. |
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The census report and the Great Exhibition of 1851 offered the alluring prospect that Britain would become rich. |
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We will be counting the loss of that census miscount for years unless the cash is refunded. |
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The law now allows the Legislature to redraw its own districts every 10 years to reflect the population changes in the most recent census. |
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He offers a few simple tables of population, wealth, occupation, and slaveholdings culled from the census. |
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This area of London was surveyed again in 1991 as part of the UK census of population. |
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The area, which was redistricted after the 2000 census, covers parts of seven counties in the southern metro area. |
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It's a national survey, it's a massive survey, but it's not a national census. |
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One of the main surprise findings of the census is that the population is ageing quicker than was previously thought. |
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Neither the county or district councils has felt it necessary to conduct a traffic census in recent years. |
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Collections were transported on ice to Flinders University, where census data were obtained from intact galls without kleptoparasites. |
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The U.S. census estimates there are about 8 million undocumented immigrants in the United States. |
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There is no other state where the local populace is prouder to be counted in the census. |
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By 1851 the census showed the urban population was larger than that of the rural areas. |
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He must've lived here with other people, but as it's outwith the 1901 census I'm not exactly sure how I can find out. |
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To divide the census into the above two groups, the following check boxes could be included in the name section of the questionnaire. |
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Old maps, census and grave records, parish registers and thousands of photographs of Haworth have all been made available to historians. |
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Elderly Pennsylvanians are increasingly less likely to enter nursing homes now than they were a decade ago, the latest census numbers show. |
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The Family Records Centre, in Islington, holds census information from 1841, wills and birth, death and marriage certificates. |
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From the late 1960s, big-city mayors and civil rights leaders charged that the census undercounted minorities and the poor. |
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Changes in diurnal census data were associated with specific patterns of nocturnal migratory behavior observed by radar and ceilometer. |
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Since census figures were released two weeks ago, Hempfield Township officials have insisted their community was undercounted. |
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Thirdly, the inherent weaknesses of using existing census data are readily admitted by health economists. |
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In a census year a piece of uncultivated land was not taxed until the following census. |
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A census reveals that 8,604 people in NSW have identified their faith as Sikhism and there are over 17,000 Sikhs across Australia. |
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Displaced persons, refugees, and internees were gradually repatriated though it remained impossible to obtain accurate population census figures. |
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This census reveals the shifting locations of between six and 10 Potawatomi villages and the number of occupants who resided in them. |
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The problem centres on the different ways in which Asians and Africans are treated in the census form. |
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Federals arrested only six of the bushwhackers identified in the 1860 census in a county other than the one where he resided. |
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In a bird census undertaken in January last year in Misamari Beel, 16,575 birds were found, which included 22 greater adjutant storks. |
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People living in the northwest are in poor health, live out of wedlock and look after sick relatives, according to the latest census. |
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The latest census figures suggest fewer than 60,000 Scots speak Gaelic, compared to more than 250,000 over a century ago. |
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Their names, birthdates, and birthplaces can now be confirmed by the family records and the population census. |
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This will become obvious by the beginning of the next decade, as the results of the 2010 census begin to rearrange the electoral map. |
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For every nightly census, a minimum of three and a maximum of 21 quadrats were sampled. |
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In the 1989 Soviet census, there were already fewer than 100,000 Abkhazians. |
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Indeed, by 1890, census officials stopped counting mixed-race people as a separate category, and the nation became officially biracial. |
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The new census figures show a lower rate of increase than in any decennium of the last century. |
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The census also includes two questions about the knowledge of languages, official and non-official. |
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Forecast is American Demographics' bimonthly newsletter devoted to census coverage. |
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Flood et al studied 580 children or adolescents with diabetes and compared maternal age at delivery with data from a census bureau. |
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In 2001, for the first time, the decennial UK census asked the entire population about caring responsibilities and general self rated health. |
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The 1790 census reported about half a million people living west of the original thirteen states. |
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At each census the number of marked caterpillars still present and visible in each patch was recorded. |
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This painstaking process involved deciphering the handwriting of the census enumerators. |
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In India, for instance, Maithili was claimed as a mother tongue by over 6 million people in the 1971 census. |
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Statistics recorded by census enumerators represented the very homes that soldiers were fighting to defend. |
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From 1935 to the present, the U.S. census offers some broad indication of the rates of return migration during the southern exodus. |
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The town was one of the six fastest growing urban areas in Ireland, according to the last census. |
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This year there has been no necessity for farmers to choose between the census or the simplified systems. |
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At the 1991 census, Utrecht town had a population of 2,866, representing only 10 percent of the total population in the magisterial district. |
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The enumerators have been trained and census material obtained for all the 13 census regions in the province, he said. |
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All of them also appear in the census, but the census enumerator made no effort to indicate which businessmen lived specifically in Blountsville. |
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The day the census enumerator came to my home, my school colleagues and I were having a meeting in my living room. |
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Ellen Smith lived with her aunt, and in the census of 1871 is described as a tailoress. |
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The Census Office has warned civil servants not seconded to the census exercise as enumerators and supervisors to withdraw from the exercise. |
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As everyone has a house and a street address the periodic census is a piece of old tackie. |
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He said using the 2001 census was benefiting urban areas at the expense of rural areas. |
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The 1901 census revealed that more than 13,000 people were living in asylums, officially classed as lunatics or imbeciles. |
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Each state then draws single-member districts to conform with the census apportionment. |
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He was assiduous in checking and double checking dates in parish records and in the various census. |
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When ecologists gather data on relative abundance, they take a census, a single snapshot of a community or assemblage. |
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You May not know which number to use unless you can read a census tract map and table. |
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The UK census in 2001 included two measures of self reported health. |
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Although the days of king coal and the smoky cities are long gone, census figures indicate manufacturing plays a significant role in the regional economy. |
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In Ozzieland, they conduct a 'bangtail muster' by the doing the same thing to cattle as a means of identifying them when taking a census of the herd. |
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To help provide a comprehensive reference source, the Census Bureau would like to receive a copy of census tract indexes developed by local users as well as other locally published reports. |
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A winter census of a lake in Arizona may include a thousand coots, a thousand gadwalls, a thousand baldpates, and assorted other species in lesser numbers. |
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The reason for this optimistic prognosis by the MRF, which for 11 years now has performed the role of balancer in the Parliament, is the results of this year's census. |
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If it appears in any electronic list, including census information, dictionaries, thesaurus or phone books your password will not withstand a basic dictionary attack. |
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In addition to tallying the nation's inhabitants, the federal census of 1810 counted the spinning wheels, looms, and yards of cloth in its rural households. |
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Of the 21 taxa recorded in the census 14 showed evidence of insect damage. |
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The census officers kept complaining that it was nearly impossible for them to decide who was an animist and who was a Hindu, since all worshipped God in many forms. |
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It was the first time the census included multiracial options. |
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The 1,000 enumerators recruited to collect census data across North Yorkshire in April will be asked to avoid going on to farmland with livestock. |
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At the 1981 census, there were little over 80,000 speakers, with only a few hundred under the age of five and there are few monoglot speakers above this age. |
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According to the census Bureau, 49 percent of Americans receive some kind of government benefits. |
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We have successfully completed the first South American dolphin river census and we are satisfied with all the data collected and what we witnessed. |
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Indeed, a majority of Democratic voters will be minority voters shortly after the next census is taken. |
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A closer look at the census figures shows a much more disturbing trend. |
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The following winter census showed an excellent stand of partridges. |
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In the 1880 census they identified themselves as sailors, shipbuilders, ship carpenters, teamsters, wharfingers, inspectors of customs, spar makers, seamen, and sea captains. |
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To fill in details about family and marital status and missing information on occupation, I turned to the census enumerators' books for 1841 and 1851 and local directories. |
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It would be an interesting social experiment to calibrate both the academic and student intake on campuses according to the latest poll results and census surveys. |
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Taking Sydney, a city much decried for its man shortage, the census shows the number of available men actually outnumbers available women in most age groups. |
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Secondly, there are the census enumerators' manuscript returns. |
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That is an estimate based on last year's national census, which found that the number of college diploma holders was 600,000 more than the official record tally. |
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For the first time in our history, according to the census Bureau, blacks are now voting at a higher rate than whites. |
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Jewell and Alibhai have begun using WildTrack to census tapirs in Argentina, Bengal tigers in India and Bangladesh, and Iberian lynxes in Spain and Portugal. |
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Though simple and unsophisticated by later standards, the census was a milestone in the provision of statistical data and has subsequently been held at ten-year intervals. |
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All told, the 1881 census enumerators' evidence numbered it at 319, with another eight persons who were probably, but not certainly, in railway employ. |
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That's because more than 70,000 people were counted on merchant sea-going and coasting boats, inland barges and boats as well as naval vessels when the census was taken. |
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This year sees the concluding instalment of the 1901 census returns for Annagh Parish, and it features townlands to the south, west and north-west of the town. |
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At the time of the 1851 census in Britain, there were 268,000 milliners and dressmakers, as against 502,000 people working in cotton textile manufacture. |
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The file will provide a wealth of tabulations from the census long form, including income, home value, education, occupation, language, commuting, disability, and many others. |
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Nearly 0.7 million people said they were mixed race on the last census, almost certainly an under-representation because as many more may not class themselves as such. |
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He said the results from the decennial census will be crucial in Telecom's strategic planning and provision of telecommunications services and infrastructure. |
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The 1841 census shows the Connors family squatting at Queuck. |
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Note that ectoparasite intensity was not significantly correlated with the date of its census, and brood size was not associated with female plumage spottiness. |
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Those settled in the state for generations are included in the state electoral rolls and have adopted Assamese and in census reports returned Assamese as their mother tongue. |
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Byrne invented a deceased husband named William K. Richard and hid herself from census takers. |
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The study is based on a cross sectional analysis of US census statistics and vital statistics for the years 1989 and 1990 for all US states including the District of Columbia. |
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Twenty-two census tracts in 17 municipalities were chosen for the study. |
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Some were indeed rootless men and women, like Lewis Nixon, John Fallon, Margaret Hamilton, and Martha Wright, never appearing in the census or town histories. |
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The census is a unique snapshot of a moment in time in Scottish life. |
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Three rules useful in census and survey data processing to determine whether a coder, typist, or keypuncher is meeting quality standards are presented. |
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The census also noted a reverse in the long-term decline in the Church of Ireland, Presbyterian and Methodist faiths, with sizeable increases witnesses across the board. |
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Norway's polar bear population will be the subject of a census this year. |
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Arrivals and departures of birds inferred from our diurnal visual census were clearly related to nocturnal flight behavior as observed with ceilometers and radar. |
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When his client prompts him, he admits it would go faster if he could hire assistants to examine the bills of sale, the tax assessments, the census records. |
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It is possible to get a snapshot of the complete staff at any one time of the railway system of east Kent only from these census enumerators' returns. |
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A tribal block group is a cluster of census blocks having the same first digit of their four-digit identifying numbers and are within a single tribal census tract. |
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You can also overlay census data showing where the population of women of reproductive age live. |
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Just 0.5 percent of Ferguson is of Asian descent, according to 2010 U.S. census data. |
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Every 10 years, after the census, legislators get together and draw district lines in collusion. |
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To categorize providers as being located in either poor or non-poor areas at each site, we needed to know the census tract number for the location or residence of each provider. |
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Even with the option of multiple racial choices on the census forms, Wardle suspects the numbers will represent an undercount of the biracial and multiracial population. |
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The 1860 census is better suited to this purpose because its schedule for free inhabitants included property values for both realty and personalty. |
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Currently, there is no official census of religion in Russia, and estimates are based on surveys only. |
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The South African census of 1960 was the final census undertaken in the Union of South Africa. |
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The 2010 census of the People's Republic of China counted more than 7 million people of various Mongolic groups. |
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According to the 2014 Morocco population census, there were around 84,000 immigrants in the country. |
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In the Tang census of the year 754, there were 1,859 cities, 321 prefectures, and 1,538 counties throughout the empire. |
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Choropleth maps portray data collection areas, such as counties or census tracts, with color. |
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The populations quoted above for the five largest cities are from the 2004 census. |
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The data collection method is to count every person resident in Namibia on the census reference night, wherever they happen to be. |
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According to the official census of 2010, Cuba's population was 11,241,161, comprising 5,628,996 men and 5,612,165 women. |
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In 1574, a census taken of the Greater Antilles reported 1,000 Spaniards and 12,000 African slaves on Hispaniola. |
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In each census, residents predominantly identify as mestizo, reflecting years of intermarriage among the different ethnic groups. |
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However, many scholarly and organisational estimations regarding the number of these two groups differ significantly from the mentioned census. |
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As of the 2015 census, the population of Luzon Island is 53,336,134 people, making it the 4th most populated island in the world. |
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The following is a list of 20 largest cities in Borneo by population, based on 2010 census for Indonesia and 2010 census for Malaysia. |
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The first census in Mexico that included an ethnic classification was the 1793 census. |
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In the 2010 census 18,185 Mexicans reported belonging to an Eastern religion, a category which includes a tiny Buddhist population. |
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According to the 2015 census, the population of the city was 1,780,148, making it the second most populous city in the Philippines. |
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By the 1800 census the population had increased 38 per cent to nearly 340,000 of which 146,000 were slaves. |
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According to the most recent census, conducted in 2011, the majority of Jamaicans identify as black. |
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The Rastafari movement has 29,026 adherents, according to the 2011 census, with 25,325 Rastafarian males and 3,701 Rastafarian females. |
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The Russian census of 2010 found 992 speakers of Esperanto, 9 of Ido, 1 of Edo and no speakers of Slovio or Interlingua. |
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Culbert's detailed sampling data, or any other census data, it is impossible to state the number of speakers with certainty. |
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Seats in the House are distributed among the states in proportion to the most recent constitutionally mandated decennial census. |
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According to the 2001 census, the country has around 5,000 Muslims, mainly from South Asia, 3,000 Hindus and 700 Baha'is. |
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The Soviet census of 1989 showed Russia's population at 147 million people. |
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The following table shows the ethnic group of respondents in the 2001 and 2011 census in Westminster. |
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One of the largest towns in the UK, Northampton had a population of 212,100 in the 2011 census. |
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At the 2011 census, there were 91,484 dwellings, 88,731 of which are occupied households. |
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By the 1881 census, Cardiff had overtaken both Merthyr and Swansea to become the largest town in Wales. |
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Its population increased dramatically since the 1903 census as the population tended to move from rural areas to towns and cities. |
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Administratively there are 12 kecamatan, covering only the island itself, having 112,873 people in the 2010 census. |
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From 2000 to 2010, the population decreased, the first such decrease in census history for Puerto Rico. |
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Between 1960 and 1990 the census questionnaire in Puerto Rico did not ask about race or ethnicity. |
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As of the census of 2000, there were 3,335 people, 1,422 households, and 992 families residing in the town. |
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It was so unusual that I went for another furtle in the 1881 census to find her family. |
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The 2011 census showed Wales' population to be 3,063,456, the highest in its history. |
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The 2001 UK census was criticised in Wales for not offering 'Welsh' as an option to describe respondents' national identity. |
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London's urban area is the second most populous in the EU, after Paris, with 9,787,426 inhabitants at the 2011 census. |
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The population of the region at the 2011 census was 8,634,750 making it the most populous English region. |
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Only the Comitia Centuriata could declare war, and ratify the results of a census. |
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During the census, they could enroll citizens in the senate, or purge them from the senate. |
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The urban area's population increased to 153,717 by the time of the 2011 UK census. |
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Also at the time of the 2001 UK census, the City of York had a total population of 181,094 of whom 93,957 were female and 87,137 were male. |
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In the 2011 Canadian census, 452,705 Canadian citizens identified as having Norwegian ancestry. |
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This includes an increase from net migration of 381,969 people into the Commonwealth since the 2010 census. |
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In the 2011 census in Northern Ireland respondents gave their national identity as follows. |
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In the 2011 census in Northern Ireland respondents stated that they held the following passports. |
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The Preston Travel To Work Area, in 2011, had a population of 420,661 compared to 354,000 in the previous census. |
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This vastly increased Derby's population from 132,408 in the 1961 census to 219,578 in the 1971 census. |
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The census also documented 910,000 residents of Australia as being born in England. |
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In countries where Gaels live, census records documenting population statistics have taken place. |
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The 2001 UK census was the first which allowed British citizens to express an Irish ethnicity. |
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A 2009 census found 6,000 Irrawaddy dolphins inhabiting the littoral rivers of Bangladesh. |
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In the 2011 UK census, 557 people in England and Wales declared Cornish to be their main language, 464 of whom lived in Cornwall. |
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In the 2001 census, 7 percent of people in Cornwall identified themselves as Cornish, rather than British or English. |
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Many people in Cornwall say that this issue would be resolved if a Cornish option became available on the census. |
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A religious census in 1851 revealed Nonconformist comprised about half that of the people who attended church services on Sundays. |
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It was the first UK census which could be completed online via the Internet. |
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A population census is a key instrument for assessing the needs of local communities. |
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Other organisations that use census data include healthcare organisations, community groups, researchers and businesses. |
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The 2011 census for England and Wales included around 25 million households. |
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In summary, this census will meet crucial requirements for statistical information that Government and others cannot do without. |
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The general style of the questionnaire is similar to that of the 2001 census. |
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Advertising promoted the notion of how the UK 2011 census would help to shape Britain's future in areas such as healthcare and education. |
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A short sentence under the census logo informed the viewer that the census was a duty that must be undertaken. |
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The board of the authority has expressed the view that the 2011 census should be the last conduction on the traditional basis. |
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The Office for National Statistics is responsible for publishing United Kingdom wide 2011 census data. |
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This release will represent the start of the dissemination of detailed census statistics for small areas. |
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The United Kingdom Statistics Authority is responsible for coordinating the release of census data by the devolved statistics authorities. |
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For England and Wales the ONS provides the access to primary data via its 2011 census site. |
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The population of the city was 40,020 at the 1801 census, making it one of the largest cities in Britain. |
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According to a 2010 census, Greenland holds the highest suicide rate in the world. |
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Speakers are drawn from across Scotland and are chosen to represent the balance of religious beliefs according to the Scottish census. |
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The census also reported 1,823 people who claim a knowledge of the Manx language. |
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A handful of nations have not conducted a census in over 30 years, providing high error margin estimates only. |
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The list includes all urban areas with a population in excess of 100,000 at the 2011 census. |
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Official estimates derived from the census regarding the city's total population have been disputed. |
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On the River Lagan, it had a population of 286,000 at the 2011 census and 333,871 after the 2015 council reform. |
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At the 2001 census, the population was 276,459, while 579,554 people lived in the wider Belfast Metropolitan Area. |
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This rise slowed and peaked around the start of the Troubles with the 1971 census showing almost 600,000 people in the Belfast Urban Area. |
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For the first time ever in British census history the 2011 Census gave the opportunity for people to describe their identity as Welsh or English. |
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The population of the Raj reached 255 million according to the first census taken in 1881 of India. |
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Figures from 1831 onwards are available as official census results, but the censuses did not cover the whole population. |
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For example, the 1831 census only counted men and did not cover the whole empire. |
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The 2011 census records 94 Scottish islands as having a usually resident population of which 89 are offshore islands. |
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The following table shows population trends for the ten most populous islands as of the last census. |
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In the 2011 census, Shetland registered a higher proportion of people with no religion than the Scottish average. |
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Cardiff is the capital city and had a population of around 346,000 at the 2011 census. |
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They exist as individual census divisions, as well as separated municipalities. |
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Although they have had no administrative function since 1930, they still exist and are still used for statistical purposes such as the census. |
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The 2006 census listed some Falklands residents as descendants of French, Gibraltarians and Scandinavians. |
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A major traffic census in April 1961, which lasted one week, was used in the compilation of a report on the future of the network. |
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England conducted its first formal census when the Domesday Book was compiled in 1086 under William I for tax purposes. |
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Before this legislation, it was necessary to have a separate act of parliament for each census. |
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Unlike the censuses for England and Wales, there was a statutory bar on early release of the 1911 census details. |
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No census was taken in 1921 due to the disruption of the Irish War of Independence. |
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It was estimated that up to one million people were not counted by the 1991 census due to such evasion. |
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In 2001, the SAR system was extended, and it is anticipated that there will be SAR files from the 2011 census. |
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The 1851 census included a question about religion on a separate response sheet, whose completion was not compulsory. |
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But the 2001 census was the first in which the government asked about religion on the main census form. |
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Several identity and status options were included for the first time in the census, including options relating to civil partnerships. |
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A number of different questions and answer classifications were suggested and tested, culminating in the April 1989 census test. |
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The Department for Education's annual school census collects data on pupils in nurseries, primary, middle, secondary and special schools. |
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The ethnic group categories used in the National Health Service in England are based on the 2001 census. |
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It has been argued that this causes problems, as other agencies such as social services use the newer 2011 census categories. |
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The 1991 census was the first UK census to have a question on ethnic group. |
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A total of 342 people were prosecuted for not completing their census returns. |
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According to the last official census in Poland in 2011, over half a million people declared Silesian as their native language. |
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The Irish census of 1851 showed that there were still a number of older speakers in County Dublin. |
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In the 2011 Scottish census, a question on Scots language ability was featured. |
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In the 2011 census 5,583 identified themselves as Brethren, 10,979 as Methodist, 1,339 as Quaker, 26,224 as Baptist, and 13,229 as Evangelical. |
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The 1891 census records the Wildes' residence at 16 Tite Street, where he lived with his wife Constance and two sons. |
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In the 1851 census of church attendance, noncomformists who went to chapel comprised half the attendance of Sunday services. |
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As of 2006 while there are more than 40,000 Americans of Icelandic descent, according to the 2000 US census. |
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According to the 2010 US census, there are 1,533,826 Americans of full or partial Czech descent. |
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Geography, the census, and the meticulous keeping of written records were central concerns of Roman Imperial administration. |
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One purpose of the Roman census was to determine the ordo to which an individual belonged. |
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A senator also had to meet a minimum property requirement of 1 million sestertii, as determined by the census. |
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A census valuation of 400,000 sesterces and three generations of free birth qualified a man as an equestrian. |
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The census of 28 BC uncovered large numbers of men who qualified, and in 14 AD, a thousand equestrians were registered at Cadiz and Padua alone. |
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Civil parishes are still used for some statistical purposes, and separate census figures are published for them. |
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The population began to stabilize around 1700, with a 1704 census listing 30,437 white people present with 7,163 of those being women. |
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This was done by comparing the results of a census of existing school places with the number of children of school age recorded in the Census. |
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In the 2001 census Kilmuir had just under half Gaelic speakers, and overall, Skye had 31 per cent, distributed unevenly. |
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The working age population of the town in 2011 was 29,079 as recorded by the census. |
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Many countries, such as the United Kingdom, recognize Sikhs as a separate ethnic race on their census. |
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The Sikh population has the lowest gender balance in India, with only 903 women per 1,000 men according to the 2011 Indian census. |
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A general increase in all classes of nonbreeding seals is perhaps the most obvious comparative result of the census. |
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As of the 2010 census, there were 2,695,598 people with 1,045,560 households living in Chicago. |
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Holyhead is located on Holy Island, which is eperated from Anglesey by a very narrow channel, and has a population of 13,659 at the 2011 census. |
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According to the 2011 census 68 per cent were born in Wales, with 25 per cent being born across the border in England. |
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By the end of the 20th century the number of black Londoners numbered half a million, according to the 1991 census. |
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In the 2011 census, the Australian Bureau of Statistics listed 336,410 and 263,673 speakers of Mandarin and Cantonese, respectively. |
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The table also shows the population change in the ten years to the 2011 census by subdivision. |
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West Devon has the fewest residents, having 63,839 at the time of the census. |
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An example is population density, which can be calculated by dividing the population of a census district by the surface area of that district. |
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At the time of the 2011 government census, there were 10,520 people of Russian origin living in Cyprus. |
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Similarly, there were 16,915 reported Swedish speakers in Canada from the 2001 census. |
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The census overcounted people in some neighborhoods, and undercounted them in others. |
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However, contemporary scholars now accept that Bar Hebraeus based his figure on a census of total Roman citizens. |
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In 2001 Iona's population was 125 and by the time of the 2011 census this had grown to 177 usual residents. |
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For various reasons, the census did not always include all of the slaves, especially in the West. |
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There were hundreds of Native American slaves in California, Utah and New Mexico that were never recorded in the census. |
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This excludes the two new ethnic groups added to the 2011 census of Gypsy or Irish Traveller and Arab. |
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Urban districts that lay across county boundaries were to be included in the county with the greater part of the population in the 1881 census. |
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With a population of around 50,000 at the 1881 census, the City of London was initially proposed for county borough status. |
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The decennial census recorded a continuing decline in population until 1921, when just 2,616 people were recorded. |
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The table below shows the population change up to the 2011 census, contrasting the previous census. |
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The 1996 Australian census counted more than 7000 respondents as followers of a traditional Aboriginal religion. |
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Other large cities are usually divided into districts, or stadsdelen, for census purposes. |
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The population was 9,663 in the 2001 census, which doubles during the regatta in early August. |
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Newport had a population of 23,957 according to the 2001 census, increasing to 25,496 at the 2011 census. |
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As of the census of 2010, there were 35,270 people, 11,319 households, and 8,670 families residing in the county. |
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The Central Statistics Office of the Republic of Ireland has a special definition of census towns. |
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Statistics South Africa asks people to describe themselves in the census in terms of five racial population groups. |
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The 2006 census showed that there were nearly 17,000 Indigenous Australians in the State. |
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Caesar relates that census accounts written in the Greek alphabet were found among the Helvetii. |
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In 107 BC Marius decided to ignore the census qualification altogether and recruited with no inquiry into the property of the potential soldier. |
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According to census information published by Statistik Austria for 2001 there were a total of 710,926 foreign nationals living in Austria. |
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According to the 1897 census, there were 223,000 ethnic Ukrainians in Siberia and 102,000 in Central Asia. |
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Data of the Romanian census 1939 was not completely processed before the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia. |
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Thus, in 443 BC, the responsibility to conduct the census was taken from the consuls and given to the censors. |
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