
Here are the caveats from the map itself:
Making Sense Of The World, One Map At A Time
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Here are the caveats from the map itself:
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The map above shows the change in counties voting for each party’s candidate in 2020 vs 2024.
At the time of writing, counting in California has not been completed, but Harris comfortably won her home state.
However, she looks set to win around 58% of the votes vs Trump’s 40%. In 2020, Biden won the state with 63.48% of the popular vote vs Trump’s 34.32%.
Will update once full results for 2024 are in.
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The map above is an interesting examples of land doesn’t vote, people do.
It shows the 2020 Presidential race results by precinct in both Kansas and Missouri. Just looking at the map you’d expect Trump (in red) won 90%+ of the vote in each state.
And while he did win both states, it was by a much smaller margin than the maps above would suggest.
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The map above gives a very rough population estimated for various parts of the Roman Empire in 165 AD. It should of course be noted that these are best guesses as we don’t have detailed census records from the Romans than we do for modern countries.
Nevertheless, I thought it would be fun to look at estimated the population of the regions in 165 and compare them to the modern populations.
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All of the amazing and brilliant population density maps presented here are the work of @researchremora. You can find more maps on their X/twitter here, Instagram here and Threads here.
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The map above shows 5 Areas of Brazil With The Same Population of 43 million people each. Basically, a lot of people live on or near the coasts.
Although that said, roughly 43 million people, around the same population as all of Canada, live in the innermost area.
You can see it a bit more clearly in this population density map:
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The map above shows Google’s official Street View coverage as of 15 October 2024. The United States, Western Europe, Japan and India among others are all really covered.