Census block group
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A census block group is a geographical unit used by the United States Census Bureau which is between the census tract and the census block. It is the smallest geographical unit for which the bureau publishes sample data, i.e data which is only collected from a fraction of all households.
Census blocks are identified by a number, usually single digit. This number determines the first digit of all the blocks which comprise the block group, for instance census block 2 would have any block numbered 2000 to 2999.
The United States including Puerto Rico has 211,267 block groups, each containing an average of 39 blocks.
[edit] References
- Definition is from glossary from the United States Census Bureau. "Explain census geography" link on the FactFinder page
- Statistics from the Census Bureau's description of the Landview 6 software.