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Datalayers
from the 1990 U.S. Census - December 1995
OVERVIEW
The U.S. Bureau of the Census developed and now distributes the Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing System
(TIGER) extract data sets as part of the 1990 Decennial Census. These
files are available nationwide and serve as a geographic framework for
Census summary statistical and demographic data. EOEA has obtained
these files and has reprocessed them into Arc/INFO format and the
Massachusetts State Plane Coordinate System to match the existing
MassGIS data base.
The Census Bureau developed the "TIGER/Line" geographical database to
support its census enumeration and publication programs starting with
the 1990 Decennial Census. Linework contained in these files includes
the boundary features that the Bureau uses in preparing its data
tabulations, including roads, streams, and political boundaries. Much
of this linework is comparable to the 1:100,000 scale Digital Line
Graphs (DLGs) produced by the U.S. Geological Survey, and in fact DLGs
of roads and streams were the source of much of the linework compiled
outside of metropolitan areas. Unlike DLGs, the TIGER/Line data
includes feature names and, in metropolitan areas, ranges of street
addresses. Street name and address attributes facilitate the process of
"address-matching" or "geocoding"--linking addresses with geographic
coordinates in a GIS.
The TIGER network of lines forms the boundaries of "census block"
polygons, the smallest units used by the Census Bureau in tabulating
its data. Census blocks are typically the size of city blocks: in fact,
they often are city blocks, but they can be bounded not only by streets
but also by other linear geographic features in the TIGER files
including streams and political boundaries. Each of these polygons is
assigned a census block number in the TIGER file which is used to
reference tabular data published by the Census Bureau.
The tabular data files ("matrices") published by the Census Bureau, not
the TIGER files themselves, contain the demographic summaries produced
as a result of the 1990 Census. However, in the reprocessing of TIGER
files for use at MassGIS, a few selected data attributes were extracted
from these matrices and incorporated into the MassGIS Census datalayers.
WHAT MASSGIS PROVIDES
As federal digital data
products, Census data including TIGER files and matrices are available
for purchase directly from the Census Bureau in Washington, D.C. Data
are also available to the public at 41 Federal and Census Depository
Libraries in Massachusetts, including many university libraries and the
Boston Public Library.
MassGIS has extracted and reprocessed data from the original TIGER
files for use in its Geographic Information System. The reprocessed
Census datalayers have been converted into the Massachusetts State
Plane Coordinate system; to minimize processing requirements, the data
have been extracted into three datalayers:
-
Census 1990
Blocks - Block boundary polygons with a few demographic data items appended from a variety of Census Bureau publications.
-
Census 1990 Block Groups - Block Group boundary polygons with many demographic data fields from the Census Bureau's STF-1a and STF-3 publications.
- Census 1990
TIGER Linework - complete set of TIGER linework - roads, trains,
rivers, boundaries, etc.
CONSIDERATIONS WHEN
USING TIGER DATA
The development of a
nationwide, standard 1:100,000 scale geographic data set for the 1990
Census has been hailed as the "backbone" of a federal geographic data
infrastructure. The TIGER files are a unique resource, containing a
wealth of geographic data attributes unavailable in earlier data sets
such as the 1:100,000 scale Digital Line Graphs published by the U.S.
Geological Survey. The link between the TIGER files and Census Bureau
data--and potentially with data to be published by other federal
agencies--makes TIGER data an attractive option for GIS users.
Furthermore, the relatively low cost of Census Bureau data and its
availability at depository libraries makes TIGER data easily accessible.
As with all sources of GIS data, TIGER data is not suitable for use at
scales larger than that at which it was compiled. In the case of TIGER
data this scale is 1:100,000--a regional scale which is not recommended
for use on the larger scale of a Massachusetts town. MassGIS has found
the accuracy of TIGER linework to be inconsistent, especially in
metropolitan areas where a variety of source maps were used to compile
the TIGER files. Another concern for potential users of this data is
the size of the TIGER files. As issued by the Census Bureau, county
TIGER files are very large and may strain the processing capacities of
microcomputers; the smaller town coverages produced by MassGIS may
reduce this problem.
TIGER linework frequently does not match the MassGIS "base map"
coverages, so care should be exercised when using other MassGIS
datalayers together with the Census datalayer for spatial analysis. For
this reason, the individual town coverages may contain small polygons
with Census codes relating to neighboring towns.
Due to the large volume of data, not every town in the Commonwealth has
been checked systematically. The TIGER files contain many errors that
were created by the Census Bureau during the production process--for
example, legitimate arcs that are smaller than 0.1 feet in length.
While these arcs have little meaning in a cartographic database, they
are part of the TIGER data structure; without them, the relationship
between graphics and attributes is degraded or destroyed. In order to
maintain this relationship, MassGIS does not intend to edit or make
corrections to the TIGER linework.
Also see the Datalayers from the 2000 U.S. Census.
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