LESS THAN 1 INHABITANT TO 16 SQ. MILES 

 LESS THAN 1 INHABITANT TO 1 SQ. MILE 

 FROM 1 TO 8 INHABITANTS PER SQ. MILE 



i FROM 8 TO 16 INHABITANTS PER SQ. MILE 

 MORE THAN 16 INHABITANTS PER SQ. MILE 



A MAP TO SHOW TUP, DISTRIBUTION OP THF, POPULATION 



racial relatives and picture the life of our 

 ancestors. 



MOST OP THP PpOPPP LIVE ON 

 SPACOAST 



THP 



Australia is the size of the United 

 States ; its density of population is less 

 than that of Arizona (1.67 persons to the 

 .square mile). The continent is less thickly 

 populated than Russia in Asia, or the 

 similarly situated Canadian plains, and 

 has less people to a square mile than 

 South Africa, Algeria, or even Arabia. 

 All of the States are thinly settled. 



Victoria, the most densely populated 

 State, is about equal in size to Kansas 

 plus Connecticut and Rhode Island ; its 

 population is about that of Connecticut. 

 New South Wales, much larger in area 

 than Texas, has the population of Arkan- 

 sas. Queensland, inside of which could 

 be placed the seventeen Atlantic States, 



extending from the Gulf of Mexico to 

 Quebec, in addition to Minnesota, North 

 Dakota, South Dakota, and half of Iowa, 

 enrolls less people than Oregon. South 

 Australia, larger than the three Pacific 

 States, California, Oregon, and Washing- 

 ton, plus Kentucky and West Virginia, 

 has the population of New Hampshire. 



The enormous State of West Aus- 

 tralia, within whose borders Spain, Italy, 

 France, Belgium, Germany, and Austria- 

 Hungary, or all the United States east of 

 the Mississippi, could be accommodated, 

 has 40,000 fewer people than rural Ver- 

 mont. In density it corresponds with 

 Greenland and French Sahara. Tas- 

 mania, the baby State, is a little larger 

 than West Virginia ; its population is 

 about that of Columbus, Ohio. The 

 Northern Territory, ten times the size of 

 Alabama, is inhabited by 3,672 people — 

 the sparsest population of any consider- 



