The land area of Shelby County, IN was 411 in 2009. The land area of Logan County, OH was 458 in 2009.
Land Area
Water Area
Land area is a measurement providing the size, in square miles, of the land portions of geographic entities for which the Census Bureau tabulates and disseminates data. Area is calculated from the specific boundary recorded for each entity in the Census Bureau's geographic database. Land area is based on current information in the TIGER® data base, calculated for use with Census 2010.
Water Area figures include inland, coastal, Great Lakes, and territorial sea water. Inland water consists of any lake, reservoir, pond, or similar body of water that is recorded in the Census Bureau's geographic database. It also includes any river, creek, canal, stream, or similar feature that is recorded in that database as a two- dimensional feature (rather than as a single line). The portions of the oceans and related large embayments (such as Chesapeake Bay and Puget Sound), the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean Sea that belong to the United States and its territories are classified as coastal and territorial waters; the Great Lakes are treated as a separate water entity. Rivers and bays that empty into these bodies of water are treated as inland water from the point beyond which they are narrower than 1 nautical mile across. Identification of land and inland, coastal, territorial, and Great Lakes waters is for data presentation purposes only and does not necessarily reflect their legal definitions.
Above charts are based on data from the U.S. Census American Community Survey | ODN Dataset | API -
Geographic and Area Datasets Involving Logan County, OH or Shelby County, IN
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Smoke Detector Risk
data.bloomington.in.gov | Last Updated 2023-05-12T19:23:11.000ZAfter coming across the open source data analysis tool created by Enigma, Bloomington FD (BFD) decided to pursue this data driven prevention project. After uploading 16 years of fire response data, the department was given a spreadsheet with our data analysis. The complexity of the project exceeded internal Fire Department capabilities and quickly moved to the collaborative project list established by our interdisciplinary team. This team based out of Indiana University includes data science researchers from the School of Informatics and Computing, leading technologists from the University’s Information Technology Services (UITS), and BFD members. The mapped data was created by Logan Paul, a graduate researcher in Prof. David Wild’s Integrative Data Science Laboratory and is much easier to use than the raw data. BFD plans to use the data to help focus smoke detector installations to areas that will have the biggest impact. If Bloomington's results are similar to other Cities across the nation, this data driven approach will increase our accuracy of smoke detector installations from 5-8 percent to nearly 65 percent. This represents a more efficient delivery of service that will also save lives. How it works: https://www.enigma.com/blog/developing-a-risk-model-for-residences-without-smoke-alarms Open Source algorithm: http://labs.enigma.io/smoke-signals/
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Community Survey: 2023 Survey Data
data.bloomington.in.gov | Last Updated 2023-08-03T19:34:23.000ZThe City of Bloomington contracted with National Research Center, Inc. to conduct the 2023 Bloomington Community Survey. This is the fourth time a scientific citywide survey has been completed covering resident opinions on service delivery satisfaction by the City of Bloomington and quality of life issues. <br> The 2023 survey received responses from 367 households (from a scientific sample of 3,000) and an additional 557 residents completed the opt-in survey. Read more at: <a href="https://bton.in/LWVOR">bton.in/LWVOR</a>.