The U.S. Black immigrant population has more than doubled since 2000, reaching 5.6 million in 2024 and now making up 11.4% of the total Black population.
Geography By Geoff on MSN
The power of population density: What if every person lived in one city
Discover the impact and scale of placing every person on Earth in a single city. Explore how population density shapes resources, infrastructure, and daily life in this extreme scenario.
Study finds childhood PFAS exposure, especially PFOA, linked to lower adolescent bone mineral density and possible higher ...
Huntsville in Alabama and other states with military installations rank as high targets in the event of war against the United States.
WashU researchers created a state-level index and maps showing how socioeconomic and health factors drive vulnerability to ...
The Department of Homeland Security revealed large percentages of foreign countries whose total national populations illegally entered the U.S., noting the majority of crossings occurred between ...
Legal battle unfolds with November elections looming Map at issue delineates California U.S. House districts Redesigned map came in response to similar Texas effort Feb 4 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme ...
There has been an alarming shift in how many people are living in the United States. A new report from the U.S. Census Bureau shows the most recent numbers reflect the slowest growth rate ever in this ...
America is still growing. But not by much. According to U.S. census estimates released on Jan. 27, population growth has slowed "significantly," with just 1.8 million more people between July 1, 2024, ...
President Trump's immigration crackdown contributed to a year-to-year drop in the U.S. growth rate. The nation’s population hit nearly 342 million people in 2025. The 0.5% growth rate for 2025 was a ...
The U.S. government’s dramatic immigration restrictions have slowed population growth to the lowest levels since the Covid pandemic, new federal data show. Immigrants have become a major source of ...
The U.S. population is expected to begin shrinking by 2056 due to decreasing birth rates and immigration, according to projections over the next 30 years from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget ...
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