Field Division Mapping Operations Guide 2000 - Census Bureau - census-2025

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Geographical units refer to postal codes, cities, streets or street sections. A geographical unit # or, as is usually the case, a combination of several geographical units # has a wide range of uses. The most important of these is the formation of carrier routes.
Geographic areas are organized in a geographic hierarchy. Larger units, like states, include smaller units, like counties and census tracts. This structure is derived from the legal, administrative, or areal relationships of the entities.
GEOIDs are numeric codes that uniquely identify all administrative/legal and statistical geographic areas for which the Census Bureau tabulates data. From Alaska, the largest state, to the smallest census block in New York City, every geographic area has a unique GEOID.
The economic census typically produces data for the following levels of geography: National, States, Metro Areas, Counties, Places, and some regional data. Other economic programs produce those data plus additional geographies such as Zip Code, Divisions, and Commodity Flow Survey Metro Areas.
Besides providing a user with the geographic location of an address the Census Geocoder can also provide all of the additional Census geographic information associated with a location, for example a Census Block, Tract, County, and State.

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Block groups typically contain between 600 and 3,000 people, with an optimum size of 1,500. Census Blocks are the smallest geographic unit for which the Census Bureau collects data. Blocks represent streets, roads, and railroads, bodies of water, and other visible physical and cultural features.
Want to download a slice of data? Go to the attribute table, zoom in to a desired area on the map or click on options and make a filter expression. Then click export all to CSV.
Census 2000 represented a departure from previous decennial censuses. Respondents could identify themselves as belonging to more than one racial category. It was the last decennial census to employ the long form. The American Community Survey (ACS) has taken the place of the long form.

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