Gridded 1 km Population for the Conterminous United States
Population Data
About this data set:
Population values at a 1 km2 grid cell resolution were prepared
for the conterminous United States (CONUS) for 1930-2000 using two U.S.
Census Bureau data sets: The 2000 U.S. Census Bureau 1 km2 population density
grid for CONUS (National Geophysical Data Center/NESDIS/NOAA, 2002)
and tabular U.S. Census county data (U.S. Census Bureau 2002). These
data sets were merged in two steps. First, the 1 km2 2000 gridded population
density dataset for CONUS was merged with a 1 km2 gridded data set
that defined the spatial extent of all counties. This combined information
was then used to estimate the spatial distribution of population
within each county for each decade. Weights for each grid cell, summing
to 1.0 for each county, were computed. Then these weights were multiplied
by the county total for each decade. Finally, values were adjusted
for rounding so that the sum of each county's grid cells precisely matched
the published census values.
Articles
Scientists at NOAA's National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) have
used the gridded 1 km population data in a number of research applications.
The following article citations summarize these efforts:
Owen, T. W., and K. P. Gallo, 2000: Updated population metadata for the United States Historical Climatology Network Stations. J. Climate, 13:22, 4028-4033. [Abstract]
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Peterson, T.C., 2003: Assessment of Urban Versus Rural In
Situ Surface Temperatures in the Contiguous United Stats: No Difference
Found. J. Climate, 16:18, 2941-2959. [Abstract]1
Peterson, T. C., and T.W. Owen, 2005: Urban Heat Island Assessment: Metadata Are Important. J. Climate, 18:14, 2637-2646. [Abstract]2
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