A Comparison of Sunshine Frequencies

London has a reputation for being perpetually gloomy. And yet, although the frequency of sunniness in London is in fact subpar, there do exist major cities on Earth that naturally experience even less sunshine than London.

The below chart plots the frequency of sunniness in June and in December in several locations across the world. Note that sunniness requires (1) that it is daytime and (2) that there aren’t obstructing clouds. For instance, during an equinox, it’s day approximately 50% of the time, so with no clouds ever sunshine frequency during the equinox is 50%.

sunniness

Note that associated with each location is a line connecting the plotted point to a corresponding point on a central diagonal line. That corresponding point represents what frequencies would be in a city of that latitude if it was sunny 50% of the daytime, for further comparative purposes.

This chart is made with Raphael.js.

A Chain of Counties from Atlantic to Pacific, with Less than 1 Million People Total

Shown below are 74 counties that total to less than 950000 people in population (thus averaging about 12000 people per county), and yet span from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Also highlighted in a darker shade in the map are a handful of counties, any single one of which has more population than this entire chain of counties combined.

GfNIO4fI


Contents of the Chain of Sparse Population
Georgia: 13 counties totaling 176000 people
McIntosh County
Wayne County
Appling County
Jeff Davis County
Telfair County
Wilcox County
Turner County
Worth County
Mitchell County
Baker County
Calhoun County
Randolph County
Quitman County

Alabama: 7 counties totaling 130000 people
Barbour County
Pike County
Crenshaw County
Butler County
Wilcox County
Marengo County
Sumter County

Mississippi: 7 counties totaling 85000 people
Noxubee County
Winston County
Attala County
Holmes County
Humphreys County
Sharkey County
Issaquena County

Louisiana: 1 parish totaling 7000 people
East Carroll Parish

Arkansas: 8 counties totaling 121000 people
Chicot County
Ashley County
Bradley County
Calhoun County
Ouachita County
Nevada County
Hempstead County
Little River County

Oklahoma: 17 counties totaling 190000 people
McCurtain County
Pushmataha County
Atoka County
Johnston County
Marshall County
Love County
Jefferson County
Cotton County
Tillman County
Kiowa County
Greer County
Beckham County
Roger Mills County
Ellis County
Beaver County
Texas County
Cimarron County

Colorado: 7 counties totaling 36000 people
Baca County
Las Animas County
Huerfano County
Saguache County
Hinsdale County
San Juan County
Dolores County

Utah: 4 counties totaling 26000 people
San Juan County
Wayne County
Piute County
Beaver County

Nevada: 5 counties totaling 40000 people
Lincoln County
White Pine County
Eureka County
Lander County
Humboldt County

Oregon: 2 counties totaling 15000 people
Harney County
Lake County

California: 3 counties totaling 80000 people
Modoc County
Siskiyou County
Del Norte County

The 24 Most Common County Names in the United States

406 of the United States’ 3142 counties (more than 1 in 8) have one of just twenty-four names:

  • Washington
  • Jefferson
  • Franklin
  • Lincoln
  • Jackson
  • Madison
  • Clay
  • Montgomery
  • Union
  • Marion
  • Monroe
  • Wayne
  • Grant
  • Greene
  • Warren
  • Carroll
  • Polk
  • Marshall
  • Lee
  • Johnson
  • Douglas
  • Clark
  • Adams, and
  • Lake.

usa_counties_multiple

(We’re including county-equivalents as counties.)

Each of these names comes up at least 12 times among American counties; that is, for each of these 24 names, about 1 out of 4 states (or more) decided to name one of its countries this name. For the top three, that is, Washington, Jefferson, and Franklin, at least half of the states have a county named so.

In some of these cases, identically-named counties are not even very far apart: note, for instance, the closeness of Virginia’s and Tennessee’s Washington Counties, or of Minnesota’s and South Dakota’s Grant Counties.

Washington County, Oregon nearly touches Washington State, which incidentally is one of only 19 states not to have a Washington County. One may theorize this is to avoid confusion, but clearly there at least exists other states that don’t consider this confusing (as well as a county touching a state of the same name).

13 states have all three of a Washington County, a Jefferson County, and a Lincoln County; only 12 states have none of the three. The following chart demonstrates the distribution of these.

washington_jefferson_lincoln

Of the 24 most frequent county names mentioned above, 5 states have none (Delaware, Connecticut, Arizona, Alaska, and Hawaii), and 4 states have only one (Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and California).

The presence of these most common county names is most prevalent in the South and Midwest, where most states are teeming with them (the three relative exceptions being South Carolina, Michigan, and North Dakota). Some particularly extreme cases include Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas, and Iowa, where a supermajority of these 24 names are represented.

Finally, let’s mention a county name that’s not one of the most frequent but is frequently the name of a populous county: Orange. California’s Orange County is the 6th most populous county in the United States, with over 3 million people, home to Anaheim, Santa Ana, Irvine, and other cities. Florida’s Orange County is the 34th most populous, home to Orlando. Orange County, New York is not nearly as populous as California’s or Florida’s, but is within the New York Metropolitan Area and is still fairly populous. And Orange County, North Carolina is home to Chapel Hill.

Comparative Population Density Maps of 11 Countries

Here are maps of administrative divisions of 11 countries, colored by population density on the same density scale, to aid cross-country comparison. Rather than absolute numbers, the scale for these maps is by multiple of the population density of all the world’s land, to show whether divisions are more densely or sparsely populated than the world average: shades of red and orange for denser-than-average-populated divisions, and shades of teal for sparser-than-average-populated divisions. Note that “all the world’s land” includes Antarctica.

Australia

australia_population_density

Canada

canada_population_density

United States

us_population_density

México (Mexico)

mexico_population_density

Brasil (Brazil)

brazil_population_density

Nederland (Netherlands)

netherlands_population_density

Deutschland (Germany)

germany_population_density

Sverige (Sweden)

sweden_population_density

Россия (Russia)

russia_population_density

भारत (India)

india_population_density

中[华人民共和]国 ([People’s Republic of] China)

china_population_density

These charts are created using mapchart. Sweden’s administrative breakdown is by province rather than by county because it is the only option available on mapchart.

A Map of English Geographical Redundancy

The Mississippi River: North America’s longest river. There’s only one problem with that. Well, three. First, North America’s not a very good concept. Second, what should count as the Mississippi River is highly debatable, as it its canonical definition is neither the longest path of river water emptying at the Mississippi Delta (Missouri River) nor the path following greater water inflow at each tributary juncture (Ohio River). But third, and this is what the upcoming map is all about, ‘Mississippi’ already means ‘Great River’ in Ojibwe. So the name ‘Mississippi River’ means ‘Great River River’.

It’s like RAS Syndrome, but with language trouble instead of initialism trouble.

As you might imagine, this is not a unique situation in English naming of geographical features, and below are just some of the various rivers, lakes, mountains, and more around the world named in English when the name of the feature was already in the original name.

english_names_ras

The Lengths of California’s State Routes

The below chart compares the lengths of California’s state routes, from the tenth-of-a-mile Route 275 to the six-hundred-plus-mile Route 1. Excluded are state routes that are partial parts of highways not all of which are in another route system, like 15, 110, and 905, which are all parts of what are otherwise interstate highways, but included are state routes that were historically part of another route system but are fully state routes now but with the same number as they had in the other system, like 99 and 299, which both used to be US routes.

california_state_route_lengths

Numbered and Lettered Streets and Avenues in the Bay Area

Let’s take a tour around the Bay Area in roads numbered and lettered.

Hayward
(A Street: 2.9 miles, D Street: 2.9 miles, 2nd Street: 2.0 miles)

hayward

Union City
(7th Street: 1.4 miles, 11th Street: 1.3 miles, H Street: 1.0 miles)

union_city

Fremont
(2nd Street: 0.8 miles, 3rd Street: 0.6 miles, D Street: 0.4 miles)

fremont

San Jose
(1st Street: 9.6 miles, 10th Street: 5.0 miles, 7th Street: 4.5 miles, Avenue B: 0.3 miles)

san_jose

Livermore
(1st Street: 2.9 miles, P Street: 1.4 miles, 4th Street: 1.2 miles)

livermore

Antioch
(18th Street: 3.6 miles, G Street: 2.8 miles, 10th Street: 2.0 miles, D Street: 1.7 miles)

antioch

Benicia
(2nd Street [E]: 4.4 miles, K Street: 2.6 miles, J Street: 1.8 miles)

benicia

Vallejo
(5th Street [E]: 1.5 miles, C Street: 0.4 miles, 7th Street: 0.4 miles)

vallejo

Napa
(1st Street: 2.8 miles, 3rd Street: 1.5 miles, F Street: 0.9 miles)

napa

San Francisco
(3rd Street: 5.4 miles, 19th Avenue: 4.4 miles, 17th Street: 3.2 miles, J Street: 0.8 miles)

san_francisco

Oakland-Emeryville-Berkeley-San Leandro-Ashland
(14th Street: 13.8 miles, 7th Street: 5.0 miles, 98th Avenue: 3.5 miles, E Street: 1.3 miles)

oakland_san_leandro

California in Wyomings

California, despite having the greatest population of any state of the US, has nowhere near the highest number of counties. It has merely 58, compared to Texas’s 254, Kentucky’s 120, or even South Dakota’s 66. As such, California’s counties on average have substantially greater population than counties anywhere else in the United States, in fact on average having more population than Wyoming or Vermont, the US’s two least populous states. (The average population of a Californian county is also interestingly close to the population of Washington, DC.) Here’s a current map of California’s counties.

Thus, by splitting California into 58 sections of about equal population, you can split California into a number of parts equal to its number of counties, each part of which has more people than Wyoming. I took the liberty to go and do that, and the borders of the 58 new counties are shown below.

california_eq_pop_after_text