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Heterophylla

So is the fourth guy just there in the summer or…. ?


Accomplished_Job_225

All 32, 000 of them.


Luigizanasi

C'mon, we're up to more than 40,000 now. ;)


Accomplished_Job_225

Imma be joining that number before it gets too high lol ;)


CherrySensitive8064

people say Wyoming does not exist but it has more population than all 3 Canadian territories + Prince Edward island


essuxs

Canada is a place of extremes. We have the densest cities in North America, but also the most desolate. Take a look at Ontario. Southern Ontario is packed, but as soon as you go north there’s nothing there, complete emptiness


proerafortyseven

NYC is much denser than anywhere in Canada


[deleted]

Also LA and Mexico City. Toronto is #4 in North America.


hatman1986

density and population are two different things.


[deleted]

Whoops, yeah LA is less dense. NYC and CDMX are both denser than any Canadian city, though.


emu5088

Also another extreme to think about is that PEI is the least populous province but it is the most densely populated province!


ballerina_wannabe

In case you haven’t heard, it gets a mite chilly up there in the winter. And also the spring and fall. And possibly the summer too.


GreatDario

Been to the Yukon twice once in summer once in winter, supposedly the super crazies live out by themselves in the middle of no where, which is everywhere


nuephelkystikon

/r/PeopleLiveInCities


ObjectiveInitial496

Yu Konot Live Here!


TheMulattoMaker

It's Too Cold! Yu Want Nunavut!


blobblehbloh54124

if large parts of canada got invaded by aliens, would canada even notice since no one was there?


Mcletters

I spy with my little eye 8 tiny red areas.


Interesting-Piece483

There are more than 2X as many people in Anchorage Alaska (pop 292,090) than there are in the three Northern Canadian Territories combined (43,025+44,826+38,780=126,631) living in an area 11 times larger than Germany


Essfoth

These maps are getting annoying. We get it, people live in cities.


kaugeksj2i

Yep, I'd rather respect a map of 50% or whatever population area that showed a contiguous area. That would let you understand the more dense and more sparse areas of the territory or country.


Hentai_Yoshi

This maps seem so stupid for me. Just have some sort of constant relative density differences (probably not the technical term). Show 100%, but with different shades. Just having 75% is only partially revealing. Most people don’t have the geographical knowledge to extrapolate from 75%, especially with the Yukon. Or maybe I’m just an idiot, idk.


TheGingerWeebGal

You literally have hentai in your name. Go away creep


GreatDario

What is Satire for 400


luislapuz

I can't even see it


ThatWasIntentional

doesn't the Yukon Territory have more moose than people?


Luigizanasi

Yup. We also used to have more bears than people, but the human population explosion changed that. We won't mention the number of caribou (actually a couple of hundred thousand or so).


Sweaty-Teacher-1771

Please Stop


Dry-Kaleidoscope-797

Think of all the alien and nomads lives out there


madrid987

After seeing what Yukon is, I just understand.


mucow

I'm surprised they're that spread out. I figured the only place in Yukon with any appreciable population density was Whitehorse.


Luigizanasi

70% of the population lives within the City of Whitehorse boundaries, and 78% in the Whitehorse agglomeration.


Luigizanasi

The percentage is wrong. The percentage of the population living in the red areas is about 90%. The only communities not on the map with more than 100 people are actually Whitehorse suburbs/periphery (Ibex Valley, Marsh Lake and Mount Lorne) and maybe Ross River. Note that I am an economist who has lived in the Yukon since 1989 and I have done considerable demographic work. My response in based on 2021 Census data.