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Resident Population by Region, Race, and Hispanic Origin: 2000 (Statistical Abstract 2008 Table 0019)

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Available in: csv, yaml, and xls Category: demographics/us

About

The Statistical Abstract of the United States is the standard summary of statistics on the social, political, and economic organization of the United States. It is also designed to serve as a guide to other statistical publications and sources. The latter function is served by the introductory text to each section, the source note appearing below each table, and Appendix I, which comprises the Guide to Sources of Statistics, the Guide to State Statistical Abstracts, and the Guide to Foreign Statistical Abstracts. This volume includes a selection of data from many statistical sources, both government and private. Publications cited as sources usually contain additional statistical detail and more comprehensive discussions of definitions and concepts. Data not available in publications issued by the contributing agency but obtained from the Internet or unpublished records are identified in the source notes. More information on the subjects covered in the tables so noted may generally be obtained from the source.

Although emphasis in the Statistical Abstract is primarily given to national data, many tables present data for regions and individual states and a smaller number for metropolitan areas and cities. Appendix II, Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas: Concepts, Components, and Population, presents explanatory text, a complete current listing and population data for metropolitan and micropolitan areas defined as of December 2005. Statistics for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and for island areas of the United States are included in many state tables and are supplemented by information in Section 29. Additional information for states, cities, counties, metropolitan areas, and other small units, as well as more historical data are available in various supplements to the Abstract.

Fields

nametypeunitstags

Credits

US Census Bureau source http://www.census.gov/statab/www

U.S. Census Bureau, Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2008 (127th Edition) Washington, DC, 2007; http://www.census.gov/statab/www/

Philip (flip) Kromer converted http://infochimp.org/flip
U.S. Census Bureau, http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2001/demoprofile.html

U.S. Census Bureau,

“Demographic Profiles: Census 2000”;

< http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2001/demoprofile.html >.

referenced on dataset section Data (#1)

U.S. Census Bureau, http://www.census.gov/population/www/

U.S. Census Bureau,

“Demographic Profiles: Census 2000”;

< http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/2001/demoprofile.html >.

For more information:

http://www.census.gov/population/www/

referenced on dataset section Notes (#2)

Usage Notes

[none]

Rights Info

All US Census Bureau materials, regardless of the media, are entirely in the public domain. There are no user fees, site licenses, or any special agreements etc for the public or private use, and or reuse of any census title. As tax funded product, it’s all in the public record. Some of our products, however, are special cases. [...] The Statistical Abstract has some data covered by copyright law. Check the table’s footnotes to determine if the data are covered by copyright law.

File structure

The Statistical Abstract files are distributed by the census department as excel files. These files have data mixed with notes and references, multiple tables per sheet, and worst of all the table headers aren’t easily matched to their rows and columns. The excel files in this collection are unmolested copies of the census originals, with the following exceptions:

  1. A few files had extraneous characters in the title. These were corrected to be consistent. A few files have a sheet of crufty gibberish in the first slot. The sheet order was shuffled but no data were changed.

    The tables that were changed:

    0166 0257 0362 0429 0445 0446 0459 0461 0462 0464 0465 0466 0467 0469 0479 0480 0481 0482 0483 0484 0485 0486 0487 0559 0628 0629 1144 1227 1231

  1. The first four files have been restructured to allow full comprehension of the table. If you’d like to help clean up the data follow along with what’s there.

The CSV files, and the payload portions of the yaml files, have not been processed beyond extracting an array (excel sheets) of 2-D arrays (each sheet’s cells).

Some metadata (title, footnotes, symbols, and sources) has been copied (without molesting the imported stream) into the appropriate slot in this schema. This metadata identification was purposefully done to be strict and simple, and the original files are somewhat irregular, so it’s possible that some metadata fields were missed

These files have been tagged by hand and received cursory inspection, but you’re advised to check against the originals before you go lauching any Mars rovers.

Footnotes

Notes (pg 2)

  1. Other Asian alone, or two or more Asian categories.
  2. Other Pacific Islander alone, or two or more Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander categories.
  3. Persons of Hispanic origin may be any race.

Headnotes

[As of April (281,422 represents 281,422,000). Northeast comprises New England and Middle Atlantic states. New England: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. Middle Atlantic: New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Midwest comprise East North Central and West North Central states. East North Central: Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Wisconsin. West North Central: Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas. South comprises South Atlantic, East South Central and West South Central states. South Atlantic: Delaware, Maryland, District of Columbia, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. East South Central: Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi. West South Central: Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas. West comprises Mountain and Pacific states. Mountain: Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada. Pacific: Washington, Oregon, California, Alaska, and Hawaii]

Shape

table: [36, 11]

Snippet

Race and Hispanic origin United States (1,000) United States (percent)
Northeast (1,000) Midwest (1,000) South (1,000) West (1,000) Northeast (percent) Midwest (percent) South (percent) West (percent)
Total population 281421.906 53594.378 64392.776 100236.82 63197.932 100 19.0441386606 22.8812237524 35.6179877483 22.4566498388
One race 274595.678 52365.917 63370.308 98389.805 60469.648 100 19.0701898083 23.0776785933 35.8307915538 22.0213400445
White 211460.626 41533.502 53833.651 72819.399 43274.074 100 19.6412461202 25.4580022855 34.4363867532 20.4643648411
Black or African American 34658.19 6099.881 6499.733 18981.692 3076.884 100 17.6001141433 18.7538154762 54.7682726651 8.87779771535
American Indian and …Alaska Native 2475.956 162.558 399.49 725.919 1187.989 100 6.56546400663 16.1347778393 29.3187358741 47.9810222799
Asian 10242.998 2119.426 1197.554 1922.407 5003.611 100 20.6914616209 11.6914403381 18.7680110843 48.8490869568
Asian Indian 1678.765 554.302 293.012 440.714 390.737 100 33.0184391502 17.4540212597 26.2522747377 23.2752648524
Chinese 2432.585 691.755 212.081 342.523 1186.226 100 28.4370330328 8.71833872198 14.0806179435 48.7640103018
Filipino 1850.314 202.1 151.057 244.547 1252.61 100 10.9224704564 8.1638575939 13.2165135215 67.6971584282
11=. ... snip ...
“Demographic Profiles: Census 2000”;
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Tablenum

0019

Year

2008

History

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