Quote:
Originally Posted by alex1
they aren't the same thing.
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No, they are the exact same thing.
Census tracts across the nation are an apples-to-apples comparison. The U.S. Census applies the exact same methodology.
Quote:
Originally Posted by alex1
New England was developed very differently from the rest of the country.
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Maybe, but irrelevent. The CMSA under discussion does not involve "the rest of the country", but neighboring states in the Northeast, none of which developed "very differently" from one another.
Quote:
Originally Posted by alex1
The reason you see higher densities over larger tracts of land has much to do with Puritan settlement behaviors. They placed a large emphasis in keeping many small towns scattered about over creating large urban centers.
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Again, maybe, but irrelevent. Southwest CT was never settled by Puritans, and has no different settlement patterns than the other parts of the CMSA.
Southwest CT, now the dominant population and economic center of the state, was a backwater until one of the Rockefellers moved to Greenwich in protest of a new tax across the state border.
And what you're describing applies to the entire Eastern United States. Only the American West lacks the "many small towns scattered about" settlement phenomenon. It's hardly a New England phenomenon. Go to (for example) Ohio, Georgia or Wisconsin.