Nobody Lives Here: Mapping Emptiness in the U.S. and Beyond (2024)

How do you map emptiness? Henry Holiday gave it a go in 1876, when he illustrated the Lewis Carroll poem ‘The Hunting of the Snark’ (see #93). Nikolaus M. Freeman, a.k.a. ‘maps by nik’, gave it another go last year, and his example spawned a few noteworthy tributes. As he said this about his work – a stunning view of the United States, with the empty bits highlighted in green:

“Human geographers spend so much time thinking about where people are. I thought I might bring some new insight by showing where they are not, adding contrast and context to the typical displays of the country’s population geography”.

Nik used data from the 2010 Census to identify ‘empty’ census blocks. Census blocks are the smallest area units used by the U.S. Census Bureau. They can be as small as a city block, but are typically much larger in rural areas. Their number is not fixed; population growth may lead to a census block being split up. For the 2010 Census, 11,078,300 census blocks were used. The reported population for 4,871,270 of those was… zero. That’s just short of 44% of the total number of blocks. Those empty blocks add up to 4.61 million square km (1.78 million sq. mi), which corresponds to just under 47% of the total area of the United States.

So, despite having a population of 310 million – the world’s third largest, after China and India – close to half of the U.S. is bereft of human habitation.

Does that mean that one of the most populated countries in the world is half wilderness? Hardly. Yes, those empty census blocks include large wilderness areas, filled with uninhabitable mountains, impassable deserts, off-limits nature reserves and other places where nobody lives. However, uninhabited does not equal undeveloped. Much of the empty census blocks are made up of farmland, commercial and industrial estates, military installations, traffic infrastructure, and other areas where plenty of people pass through – but where there are no ‘heads in beds’.

Nobody Lives Here: Mapping Emptiness in the U.S. and Beyond (1)

Don’t assume that non-residential places are necessarily empty either – the U.S. Census doesn’t. It finds residents in the most unexpected places. In 1990, census takers counted 63 residents in New York City Census Tract No. 143, more commonly known as Central Park. By 2000, that figure had dipped to 18, rising again to 25 for the 2010 census – a 39% increase, over a decade in which the city itself only grew by 2.1%. The Census Bureau is unsure about how these residents were counted, but suggests they could be homeless people who either were counted by Census Bureau employees on forays into the park, or who completed and mailed in a census form. By the way, Central Park is not the only open space with census-counted residents. In 2010, 56 people claimed Flushing Meadows-Corona Park as their residence, while five called Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn home.

In general, there’s relatively little emptiness east of the Mississippi, with notable exceptions in northern Maine (the largest empty region in the eastern half of the country). Another green blob, on the Florida-Georgia state line, is a swampy area corresponding to the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge on the Georgia side, and the Osceola Wildlife Management Ara on the Florida side. In southern Florida, the Everglades light up green. Other notable green zones: northern Minnesota, northern Wisconsin, Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.

Nobody Lives Here: Mapping Emptiness in the U.S. and Beyond (2)

(click here for an extremely zoomable version of the big map)

Further west, habitation drop off dramatically about half way through Texas: the western (and southern) part is as empty as the east isn’t. Wyoming (at less than 600,000 inhabitants, the least populated state), Utah, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico seem almost completely empty. In California, with its densely populated coastal zone and Central Valley, it’s about fifty-fifty. Alaska, which has only 0.2% of the overall U.S. population, contains a fair number of very large, entirely empty census tracts.

But zoom in on the map to find the curious exceptions to the rule, like this green splotch covering a large part of New Jersey – one of the most densely populated states.

Nik’s map inspired a few other mapmakers to repeat the principle for their own home countries. Like this map of France by @matamix. France is 31.7% empty. That’s the share of all the 1-km2 squares covering the country’s territory that are, according to population data provided by France’s statistical institute INSEE, devoid of human habitation. Nobody lives here, or as they say in France, personne ne vit ici.

Nobody Lives Here: Mapping Emptiness in the U.S. and Beyond (3)

As on the other maps, green indicates the empty areas. They are concentrated in mountainous areas, such as the Pyrenees on the Spanish border and the Alps, towards Italy. A much larger green area – but interspersed with more white dots and zones – covers the northeast of the country.

Could this be an after effect of the First World War, which raged across this region? Indeed, the French government defined a so-called Red Zone after the war, a string of areas originally covering more than 1,200 km2 (460 sq. mi) that was judged too compromised by war for resettlement, due to unexploded ordinance (1) and/or pollution by various poisons (2). Although the Zone rouge has been greatly reduced, some restrictions still apply. However, most of the green in the northeast is due simply to a historical abundance of forests and farmlands.

Similarly, the smaller (but densely greener) zone on the southern Atlantic coast corresponds to large forested areas in Aquitaine. Corsica looks to be mostly uninhabited, especially the interior. The island covered not just in forests but for at least 25% in macchia (3), the impenetrable Mediterranean shrubland which in its French translation (maquis) also means ‘underground’ or ‘resistance’, because it offers such good opportunity for guerrilla fighters to hide themselves.

Paris, France’s capital and biggest city, is the whitest area on the map. About 20% of France’s total population lives in the Greater Paris Area alone.

Finland, having recently celebrated its 100th birthday, is just about as empty as it was back in December 1917. There are some 5.5 million Finns nowadays, compared to 3 million a century earlier. Which means that the vast country – roughly the same size as California – remains very sparsely populated: with no more than 17 inhabitants per square kilometre, it is the third emptiest country in Europe (4).

Nobody Lives Here: Mapping Emptiness in the U.S. and Beyond (4)

As this map shows, Finland’s population distribution is very uneven. About 85% live in urban areas. About 25% of all Finns live in the Helsinki metropolitan, which comprises just 1% of the country’s territory. In contrast, Finnish Lapland (in the north) has a population density of no more than 2 inhabitants per square kilometre. On the map, which uses data from Statistics Finland, there are white splashes on the coasts and in the south (the biggest one is Helsinki), while inland, white splashes in a sea of green shrink to dots and pinpricks towards the north. As they say in Finnish: Kukaan ei asu täällä (Nobody lives here).

And you can take that green quite literally: about 72% of Finland is covered by trees, making it the 5th most forested country in the world (5).

New Zealand is a huge country, but above all an empty one. With a population and an area roughly similar to that of Finland (6), it has a comparable population density, of 16 inhabitants per square kilometre.

Nobody Lives Here: Mapping Emptiness in the U.S. and Beyond (5)

But it looks a lot emptier. As this map shows, 78.21% of the one-square-kilometre squares making up its total territory are empty. Nobody lives there (in Maori: Kahore he tangata e noho ana i konei). The splashes of white are concentrated on the North Island, where 77% of the country’s total population lives. Fully one third of all New Zealanders live in or around Auckland, at the base of the Northland peninsula. Auckland is the country’s biggest city, but not its capital – that is Wellington, strategically placed on the southern tip of the North Island.

In fact, kiwis are an extremely urban species, with 73% of New Zealanders living in the 17 main urban areas and 54% living in just the four largest cities (Christchurch and Hamilton, plus Auckland and Wellington).

That explains the large swathes of green on the map. And yes, it would look quite differently if it counted sheep instead of people, although the country doesn’t count 20 ruminants per human, as is often believed.

Sheep numbers peaked in 1982, when there were just over 70 million sheep in New Zealand. At that time, there were just 3.2 million people in the country, which does work out to 22 sheep per person. But according to a recent statement by Stats NZ, the country’s official data agency, there are about 30 million sheep in New Zealand, which gives a sheep-to-people ratio of just about six. That’s still one of the highest rates in the world, and more than double the figure for Australia.

And finally, a UK version of the map uses yellow for blocks without reported human habitation.

Nobody Lives Here: Mapping Emptiness in the U.S. and Beyond (6)

The map shows a total of 114,421 grids measuring 1 by 1 km. Based on data from the most recent census (2011), 1,784 of these have no permanent inhabitants. Combined, those yellow-coloured empty grids produce this map, which shows huge tracts of open space in the north of Britain. Except for its densely populated central belt, Scotland is predominantly yellow.

Nobody Lives Here: Mapping Emptiness in the U.S. and Beyond (7)

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South of the Scottish border, it’s a different story. The dark blobs of London and other major metropolitan areas give England a predominantly blue appearance. But there are some yellow zones and pockets, in the north of England but even in the south (for example Dartmoor National Park, in the southwest). In mid-England, the Peak District inserts a sliver of yellow in between the conurbations around Manchester (to the west) and Sheffield (to the east). Snowdonia, the northwestern part of Wales looks, as empty as parts of Scotland.

Northern Ireland is fairly evenly populated – that yellow blob in the middle is Lough Neagh – except for some areas in the west and north. The dearth of uninhabited space across much of England raises the question whether there remains much land left to develop. Certainly, if we take forestation as a gross measure of land still available for repurposing, then the UK is almost full: only 11.8% of the country is covered by trees, which puts it in the league of Morocco, Rwanda and Somalia. In the EU, only the Netherlands (11.1%), Ireland (8.8%) and Malta (>1%) do worse.

Map of the U.S. by Nikolaus M. Freeman, found here on his site, maps by nik. Map of France by @matamix (his site here), found here on Reddit. Map of Finland by hezec, found here on Reddit. Map of New Zealand by Andrew Douglas-Clifford (here’s his site), found here on Whale Oil. Map of the UK by Georgia Corr (her page here), found here on ART + marketing.

Strange Maps #878

Got a strange map? Let me know at [emailprotected].

(1) TheSécurité civileestimates that it will take about 700 years to completely clear the area of unexploded ammunition buried in the soil.

(2) In a few isolated areas, arsenic constitutes up to 17% of soil samples, and 99% of plants die.

(3) the scent in early summer is so typically ‘Corsican’ that Napoleon, sailing in the Mediterranean, is said to have recognised the island of his birth by its smell alone.

(4) After Iceland (3 inhabitants per square kilometre) and Norway (13/km2)

(5) Excluding small island nations such as Micronesia (89.7%), the Seychelles (89.5%), Tuvalu (89.1%), Palau (87.1%) and the Solomon Islands (79%), the four most forested nations are, in descending order: Suriname (90%), Gabon (85%), Mozambique (78%) and North Korea (73%).

(6) Well,roughly. Total area for New Zealand is 270,467 km2 (104,428 sq. mi) and 338,424 km2 (130,666 sq. mi) for Finland. Population-wise, there are 4.8 million kiwis versus 5.5 million Finns.

Nobody Lives Here: Mapping Emptiness in the U.S. and Beyond (2024)

FAQs

What percent of US land is undeveloped? ›

Those empty blocks add up to 4.61 million square km (1.78 million sq. mi), which corresponds to just under 47% of the total area of the United States.

What state has the most uninhabited land? ›

The least-populated place in the United States is Alaska's Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area. At over 145,000 square miles, it's larger than New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia -- combined.

Where is a place where no one lives? ›

An uninhabited place is one where no-one lives. ... an uninhabited island.

What percent of the USA is uninhabited? ›

There are over 11 million blocks in the U.S., and 47 percent of them are uninhabited.

How much land in the U.S. is abandoned? ›

Nationally, an average 16.7% of large US cities' land area is considered vacant, with approximately 4% of city addresses unoccupied. The ratio of vacant land to city size has increased by 1.3 percentage points since 1998 but decreased by 3 percentage points since 1963.

What is the least inhabited state in US? ›

Wyoming is the least populated state in the U.S. According to the 2020 census, Wyoming has a population of 576,851 people.

What is the largest area with no people? ›

The only parts of the Arctic that are truly uninhabited are the interior and northernmost coasts of Greenland, many of the islands in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and some other islands in Northern Norway and the Russian North. Devon Island, in the Canadian North, is the world's largest uninhabited island.

What state takes up the most land? ›

Alaska has the largest land area in the United States followed by Texas and California. Alaska has more land area than Texas, California & Montana combined. Eight (8) states have over 100,000 square miles of land area. Alaska accounts for more than 17% of the land area in the United States.

What is a place where one lives permanently called? ›

The house or apartment where you live is your place of residence.

What is the largest uninhabited land mass in the world? ›

Devon Island (Inuktitut: ᑕᓪᓗᕈᑎᑦ, Tallurutit) is an island in Canada and the largest uninhabited island (no permanent residents) in the world. It is located in Baffin Bay, Qikiqtaaluk Region, Nunavut, Canada.

What is the most uninhabited part of the United States? ›

The Most Isolated, Uninhabited (Or Least Inhabited) Territories Of The US
RankTerritoryAcquired
1Navassa Island1858
2Midway Atoll1867
3Wake Island1899
4Jarvis Island1856
5 more rows
Aug 1, 2017

Does the U.S. have a declining population? ›

Is the US on the road to a shrinking population like China? FREY: No, the US isn't dealing with a shrinking population like China. I think we're going to continue to have growth, but much slower growth. These last few years, the pandemic created very slow growth, almost flat growth.

What city in the U.S. has 0 population? ›

Carbonate, Colorado. This ghost town is the smallest town in America—with a population of zero. How can that be? The historic mining site features only a handful of old cabins on a beautiful stretch of countryside in the mountains near Glenwood Springs and the White River National Forest.

Is there any land not owned in US? ›

Is There Any Land in the US That No One Owns? Depends on what you mean by no one. There is plenty of publically-held land owned by the federal government or states. However, there is no land in the US that does not have a designated owner.

Who owns the most US land? ›

The 2022 Land Report 100, compiled each year by The Land Report magazine, released its annual list of landowners who own the most acres in the United States. The nation's largest private landowners are the Emmerson family in California who own over 2.4 million acres.

What percent of US land is owned by foreigners? ›

In terms of percentages, as shown in Table 3, foreign entities owned 2 percent of U.S. agricultural land in 2011, and in 2021, foreign entities owned 3.1 percent of this land.

What is the most self sufficient state in the US? ›

In 2022, Kentucky is the nation's least independent state, followed by Louisiana, Mississippi, Alaska, and South Carolina. In contrast, the nation's top five most independent states are Utah, Colorado, Massachusetts, Virginia, and Nebraska, respectively.

What is the least white state in the United States? ›

Despite their large white populations, these four states are considered to be among the most diverse in the U.S.. The states with the lowest percentage of white people are Hawaii (25.5%), the District of Columbia (46.0%), and Maryland (58.5%).

Why is Montana population so low? ›

According to worldatlas.com, this is one of the main reasons Montana's population is so low. "Homesteaders settled Montana on large tracts of land that were divided among families. This population spread contributes to the low density of people here and the main economic activity, agriculture.

What is the biggest unclaimed island? ›

Devon Island is the largest uninhabited island in the world, measuring 21,331 square miles. Devon Island is the largest uninhabited island in the world, measuring 21,331 square miles. As a comparison, it is a bit smaller than Croatia. Devon Island is situated in Baffin Bay, Nunavut, Canada.

Are there still unclaimed islands? ›

Yes, there are many unclaimed lands in the world and the biggest unclaimed territory is Antarctica. Can you claim an unclaimed island? The answer is yes, you can claim unclaimed islands but it is going to be difficult. Unclaimed islands are usually unclaimed for a reason and are mostly declared national monuments.

What is the largest uninhabited island in the United States? ›

It is the westernmost point of the U.S. state of Alaska. The island became uninhabited in 2010, making it the largest uninhabited island to be politically part of the United States. The Battle of Attu was the site of the only World War II land battle fought in the United States.

Where is most federally owned land? ›

The state with the highest percentage of land held by the federal government is Nevada (80.1%); the states with the lowest percentage of land held by the federal government are Connecticut and Iowa (0.3%).

What is most US land used for? ›

The Components of U.S. Land Use
Land typeLand use (%)Land area
Forests27%842,400 mi²
Shrubland24%748,800 mi²
Agriculture17%530,400 mi²
Grasslands and Pasture17%530,400 mi²
5 more rows
Jan 14, 2020

What is the biggest use of land in the US? ›

About 52 percent of the 2012 U.S. land base (including Alaska and Hawaii) is used for agricultural purposes, including cropping, grazing (on pasture, range, and in forests), and farmsteads/farm roads. Land-use change occurs for a variety of reasons.

What is a person with no permanent home called? ›

A nomad is someone with no permanent home, like the member of a tribe that moves from place to place in search of food, or the rock star who spends 365 days a year in tour buses and hotel rooms.

What is a person who has gone to live in another country called? ›

An expatriate (often shortened to expat) is a person who resides outside their native country.

What is living two lives called? ›

What is another word for double life?
Jekyll and Hydeambiguity
duplicityproteus
split personalitytwo-facedness

What is the largest piece of unclaimed land in the world? ›

The largest unclaimed territory on Earth is in Antarctica. Marie Byrd Land, a 620,000-square-mile collection of glaciers and rock formations, lies in the western portion of the southernmost continent. Because of its remoteness, no nation has ever claimed it.

What percentage of the world is uninhabited by humans? ›

Why it matters: The new study finds that just 5% of the Earth's land surface is currently unaffected by humans, far lower than a previous estimate of 19%. 95% of the Earth's land surface has some indication of human modification, while 84% has multiple human impacts, the study found.

How much land on Earth is uninhabitable? ›

The total land surface area of Earth is about 57,308,738 square miles, of which about 33% is desert and about 24% is mountainous. Subtracting this uninhabitable 57% (32,665,981 mi2) from the total land area leaves 24,642,757 square miles or 15.77 billion acres of habitable land.

What is the most secluded city in America? ›

But the Oxford data can now tell us what American town is farthest from "civilization" (here defined as a metro area with more than 75,000 people). Glasgow, Montana, near the Canadian border, is the "middle of nowhere" in rural America, 4.5 hours from a city in any direction.

What is the most remote place on earth uninhabited? ›

The Most Remote Uninhabited Island On Earth

Bouvet Island has been claimed by Norway since 1977, and it's home to an automated meteorological station on the island.

What allowed the United States to claim uninhabited islands? ›

Answer and Explanation: In 1856, the United States Congress passed the Guano Islands Act. This law allowed the United States to claim uninhabited islands if they were uninhabited and unclaimed by any other nation or government.

How much of US land is conserved? ›

In the U.S., about 12 percent of the land and one-quarter of the oceans are within permanently protected areas, which include marine sanctuaries, national parks and wildlife refuges.

What percent of US land is wild? ›

Even after the loss of some 24 million acres to development between 2001 and 2017, scientists reported in 2019 that about 60% of the continental U.S. is still in a “natural” or wild state.

How much of the U.S. is natural land? ›

Approximately 60 percent of U.S. lands in the lower 48 states are in a natural condition.

What country has the most undeveloped land? ›

Greenland is the largest country with no arable land, while the smallest nation—the small city-state of Vatican City—has none as well.

How much of land is unaffected by US humans? ›

Satellite imagery has previously estimated that 20-40% of the Earth's surface is still in relatively good condition and has not been affected by significant human activity.

How much US land is protected as wilderness? ›

As of 2022, the 42,826 protected areas covered 1,235,486 km2 (477,024 sq mi), or 13 percent of the land area of the United States. This is also one-tenth of the protected land area of the world.

How much is all the land in the U.S. worth? ›

New Estimates of Value of Land of the United States (PDF)

Estimates suggest that this 1.89 billion acres of land are collectively worth approximately $23 trillion in 2009 (current prices), with 24% of the land area and $1.8 trillion of the value held by the federal government.

What is the most wild U.S. state? ›

Alaska. Perhaps the wildest state in the entire country, Alaska is home to plenty of remote and untouched lands. Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge consists of 2,400 islands, headlands, rocks, islets, spires and reefs, with a total area of 4.9 million acres—more than half of which is wilderness.

What is 30 protection by 2030? ›

During the 2022 UN biodiversity conference, COP15, countries reached a landmark agreement that aims to reverse the unprecedented destruction of nature. One of the agreement's twenty-three targets, known as 30x30, aims to protect at least 30 percent of the planet's land and water by 2030.

What country owns most of the world? ›

The largest country in the world is Russia with a total area of 17,098,242 Km² (6,601,665 mi²) and a land area of 16,376,870 Km² (6,323,142 mi²), equivalent to 11% of the total world's landmass of 148,940,000 Km² (57,510,000 square miles). See also: Most Populous Countries.

Where is the best farmland in the US? ›

The best states for farmland include Montana, Kansas, Oklahoma, South Dakota, North Dakota, Texas, Iowa, Kentucky, Wyoming, and California. Consider factors like profitability, cost of operation, infrastructure, and availability when selecting a location.

What states have the least developed land? ›

Least Developed States in the USA
  • North Carolina. ...
  • Georgia. ...
  • Nevada. ...
  • New Mexico. Human Development Index score: 0.901. ...
  • Oklahoma. Human Development Index score: 0.896. ...
  • Tennessee. Human Development Index score: 0.895. ...
  • South Carolina. Human Development Index score: 0.893. ...
  • Louisiana. Human Development Index score: 0.888.
May 13, 2023

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