![]() ![]() NASA Tests Docking Port on SpaceX’s Starship Lunar Lander.Mysterious Power Outage Paralyzes Tajikistan.US Permanently Deploys Special Forces Training Mission in Taiwan.Nuclear Debt Passes Early Investor Test in Canada with Pair of Green Deals.Surprising Link Found Between Gut Bacteria and Vision Loss. ![]() NASA Shutters $2B Satellite Refueling Project, Blames Contractor for Delays.Houthi Fight Extracts Heavy Financial Cost on Pentagon.Alaskan Fisherman Catch Possible Spy Balloon, FBI to Examine Wreckage: Report.Is the 100-Year Old TB Vaccine a New Weapon Against Alzheimer’s?.The Man Who Remembered Everything-and Thought It Was Normal.US Army Is Slashing Thousands of Posts in Major Revamp to Prepare for Future Wars.Northern Ireland Judge Rules That Amnesty Law for ‘The Troubles’ Breaches Human Rights.Ukraine Says Downed a Record Number of Russian Jets.4,000-Year-Old Copper Dagger Unearthed by Metal Detectorist in Poland.National Debt Is Rising by $1 Trillion About Every 100 Days It’s free and we won’t send any promotional materials. If you would like to be updated via email when we post a new article, please click here. Keep in mind that the map does not include Native American populations, which declined dramatically during the same period. The West (barring the West-Coast) and Alaska remain the least populated areas of the county. By 2000, the US population density had risen to 79.6 residents per square mile and today it stands over at 92 residents per square mile. The California Gold Rush, which started in 1848, further accelerating the migration west. Beginning in the early 1800s, population centers began to develop just west of the Mississippi and, beginning in the 1840s, the first significant populations began to arrive in the West, settling in what is now San Fransisco, Salt Lake City, and Denver. In 1800, the average population density in the US was just 6.1 residents per square mile. The population of the US remained overwhelmingly east of the Mississippi for the first several decades after independence. The following map, from Vivid Maps, shows the population density of the United States from 1790 until 2010. Enjoy The Sounding Line? Click here to subscribe for free.Įnjoy The Sounding Line? Click here to subscribe. ![]()
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