Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Context
The dataset tabulates the Non-Hispanic population of Hialeah Gardens by race. It includes the distribution of the Non-Hispanic population of Hialeah Gardens across various race categories as identified by the Census Bureau. The dataset can be utilized to understand the Non-Hispanic population distribution of Hialeah Gardens across relevant racial categories.
Key observations
Of the Non-Hispanic population in Hialeah Gardens, the largest racial group is White alone with a population of 813 (95.31% of the total Non-Hispanic population).
When available, the data consists of estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 2019-2023 5-Year Estimates.
Racial categories include:
Variables / Data Columns
Good to know
Margin of Error
Data in the dataset are based on the estimates and are subject to sampling variability and thus a margin of error. Neilsberg Research recommends using caution when presening these estimates in your research.
Custom data
If you do need custom data for any of your research project, report or presentation, you can contact our research staff at research@neilsberg.com for a feasibility of a custom tabulation on a fee-for-service basis.
Neilsberg Research Team curates, analyze and publishes demographics and economic data from a variety of public and proprietary sources, each of which often includes multiple surveys and programs. The large majority of Neilsberg Research aggregated datasets and insights is made available for free download at https://www.neilsberg.com/research/.
This dataset is a part of the main dataset for Hialeah Gardens Population by Race & Ethnicity. You can refer the same here
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
These datasets are part of the longterm monitoring program of the water quality and benthic communities in the East Flower Garden Bank (EFGB), West Flower Garden Bank (WFGB) and Stetson Bank. bibliographicCitation=Cite as: Blakeway, Raven D.; Nuttall, Marissa F.; Hickerson, Emma L.; Schmahl, G.P.; Sinclair, James (2021). 2018 Flower Garden Banks-Stetson Bank Long-Term Monitoring of the Reef Crest and Mesophotic Benthic and Fish Communities (NCEI Accession 0239376). [indicate subset used]. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Dataset. https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/archive/accession/0239376. Accessed [date]. cdm_data_type=Point comment=Variable description can also be found in: http://mmisw.org/orr/#http://mmisw.org/ont/ioos/marine_biogeography contributor_country=USA contributor_email=kelly.oconnell@noaa.gov contributor_institution=NOAA Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary contributor_name=Kelly O'Connell contributor_phone=+1-409-356-0387 contributor_role=contibutor contributor_role_vocabulary=https://vocab.nerc.ac.uk/collection/G04/current/ Conventions=CF-1.6, ACDD-1.3, IOOS-1.2, COARDS Country=USA date_metadata_modified=2022-08-12T14:17:28Z Easternmost_Easting=-94.297233 featureType=Point geospatial_bounds=POLYGON (26.00 -96.00, 29.00, -96.00, 29.00, -89.00, 26.00 -89.00, 26.00 -96.00) geospatial_bounds_crs=EPSG:4326 geospatial_bounds_vertical_crs=EPSG:5831 geospatial_lat_max=28.16635 geospatial_lat_min=28.16635 geospatial_lat_resolution=0.0 geospatial_lat_units=degrees_north geospatial_lon_max=-94.297233 geospatial_lon_min=-94.297233 geospatial_lon_resolution=0.0 geospatial_lon_units=degrees_east geospatial_vertical_max=24.0 geospatial_vertical_min=24.0 geospatial_vertical_positive=down geospatial_vertical_resolution=24.0 geospatial_vertical_units=m grid_mapping_FillValue=-999 grid_mapping_epsg_code=EPSG:4326 grid_mapping_inverse_flattening=298.257223563 grid_mapping_longitude_of_prime_meridian=0.0 grid_mapping_missing_value=-999.0 grid_mapping_name=latitude_longitude grid_mapping_semi_major_axis=6378137.0 grid_mapping_standard_name_url=https://mmisw.org/ont/cf/parameter/unknown history=csv files were created in 2016-10-20 16:40-04:00 id=Stetson_Florwer_Garden_Banks_Benthic_Covage_Monitoring_1993-2018 infoUrl=https://flowergarden.noaa.gov/science/monitor.html#longterm institution=NOAA Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary instrument=Nikon® D7000® SLR camera with 16-mm lens camera instrument_vocabulary=GCMD Science Keywords Version 9.1.5 keywords_vocabulary=unknwon metadata_link=https://gcoos4.tamu.edu/erddap/info/index.html?page=1&itemsPerPage=1000 naming_authority=flowergarden.noaa.gov Northernmost_Northing=28.16635 platform_vocabulary=https://mmisw.org/ont/ioos/platform processing_level=Geophysical units from raw data processor_address=3146 TAMU, Eller O&M Building processor_city=College Station processor_country=USA processor_email=mstoessel@ocean.tamu.edu processor_institution=GCOOS at Texas A&M University, Dept. of Oceanography processor_name=Marion Stoessel processor_phone=+1-979-845-7662 processor_postalcode=77843 processor_role=Senior Research Associate/Data Manager processor_state=Texas processor_type=person processor_url=https://oceanography.tamu.edu/people/profiles/research-staff/stosselmarion.html program=Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary Long-Term Monitoring of Fish and Benthic Communities Program references=https://flowergarden.noaa.gov/science/eastwestmonitor.html; https://flowergarden.noaa.gov/science/stetsonmonitor.html sea_name=Gulf of Mexico source=https://flowergarden.noaa.gov/science/science.html sourceUrl=(local files) Southernmost_Northing=28.16635 standard_name_vocabulary=CF Standard Name Table v72 subsetVariables=latitude, longitude, geodeticDatum, depth, datasetName, type, language, license, ownerInstitutionCode, basisOfRecord, organismQuantityType, occurrenceStatus, samplingEffort, waterBody, country, crs time_coverage_duration=P00Y0M00DT00H00M00S time_coverage_end=2018-01-01T05:00:00Z time_coverage_start=1993-01-01T05:00:00Z Westernmost_Easting=-94.297233
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Recommended citation for this dataset: Garnett, Vicky, & Lucek, Stephen. (2020). The Dublin Language Garden Perceptual Dialectology of Irish English Collection (Version 1.0.0) [Data set]. Zenodo. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4247829
About this Dataset The field of Perceptual Dialectology is an area of sociolinguistic study that investigates how non-linguists view different varieties of language. It often includes hand-drawn map exercises in which participants indicate where they believe various varieties are spoken, and their attitudes towards them.
In 2015, as part of a public linguistics outreach event (the Dublin Language Garden) held at Trinity College Dublin, the authors created an activity for members of the public and collected hand-drawn maps from them that gave responses to the following tasks:
a. Indicate where you come from on the map (using a red dot sticker) b. Draw where you think the Dublin dialect occurs c. Draw the boundaries of any other dialects you believe occur in Ireland d. Tell us what you think are the features of those dialects e. Tell us what you think are the characteristics of the people who speak those dialects.
Participants of all ages were encouraged to take part, but only data from those over 18 were retained after the event and used in this data collection. Participants were all given information on how the data was to be anonymised, processed and published on a clearly displayed poster to read before they were given a map to complete the 5 tasks (listed above). No additional information about the participants, aside from that acquired through Task a, was collected.
File List:
_READ_ME - Dublin Language Garden Perceptual Dialectology of Irish English data.txt Contains a detailed description of this dataset.
DLG_PDIE_KML_data_by_location.zip This zipped folder contains the .kml data of multiple hand-drawn maps organised into folders by their location
DLG_PDIE_KML_data_by_part.zip This zipped folder contains the .kml data of multiple hand-drawn maps organised into folders according to the participants.
These folders have been organised in this way in order to make discoverability easier between the data. Users may wish to analyse the data only by the locations of the varieties identified by the participants. Other users may only be interested in the data given by specific participants, and therefore the folder that organises the data in this way may be of better use to them. Both folders, however, contain the same data, it is simply how they are organised.
Garnett and Lucek DLG_PD_IE Qualitative Data (Nov 2020).xlsx Spreadsheet featuring tabulated qualitative data taken from all maps
Sample Hand-drawn Maps.zip Folder containing 2 sample hand-drawn maps from the participants to help contextualise the data presented here.
Any questions? Any enquiries regarding this dataset should be directed to either Vicky Garnett (garnetv@tcd.ie) or Stephen Lucek (stephen.lucek@ucd.ie).
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The official name of the collection is the Skvortsov Herbarium of the Main Botanical Garden, Russian Academy of Sciences (acronym MHA). In 2020, the herbarium was named after well-known Russian botanist Alexey Konstantinovich Skvortsov (1920–2008). For 36 years, he was the scientific supervisor of the MHA Herbarium.
1. History. The herbarium was launched soon after the founding of the Main Botanical Garden of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR in 1945. Initially, some minor collections of dry plants were stored in workrooms of the staff.
In 1958, upon the construction of the main lab building, the herbarium received a hall of 280 square meters. A special working group headed by V.N. Voroshilov formed the herbarium staff. Upon formal establishment, the MHA Herbarium received an almost complete set of exsiccates “Herbarium of the Flora of the USSR” from the Komarov Botanical Institute (Leningrad) and all botanical collections from the Timiryazev Institute of Plant Physiology (Moscow), including duplicates of important Moscow collections by D.P. Syreyshchikov, the first curator of the Moscow University Herbarium. These initial holdings were supplemented by the collections from Voronezh and Moscow Oblasts by V.N. Voroshilov, B.M. Kulkov and V.A. Shtamm (Stepanova et al. 2020).
In 1966, A.K. Skvortsov became the scientific supervisor of the MHA Herbarium. The main vectors of the herbarium development were formed in this time: “Our collections should provide: 1) orientation in the flora, which can serve as a source of the material for introduction; 2) documentation of the introduction <...> The location of the herbarium in the center of European Russia obliges us to create a regional herbarium” (Skvortsov and Proskuryakova 1973). Skvortsov formed the main sections of the herbarium—the Russian Far East, Siberia, Middle Asia, the Caucasus, the Moscow Region, the European part (European Russia and adjacent republics of the former USSR), the Crimea; General Herbarium (foreign countries); Herbarium of Introduction; Dendrological Herbarium; type collection; Skvortsov’s personal herbarium (taxonomic collections of Salix, Populus, Betula, Epilobium, as well as materials on the flora of the Middle Russia and Lower Volga).
Some Russian-language references describe the main milestones in the history of the MHA Herbarium (Skvortsov and Proskuryakova 1973, Skvortsov 1977, Belyanina and Makarov 1994, Skvortsov and Belyanina 2005, Ignatov et al. 2010, Ignatov 2015, Stepanova et al. 2020). Current digitization activities allow us to detail the list of collectors, the time and place of their work, the number of the collected specimens and its taxonomic composition.
2. The current state. As of January 2020, the MHA Herbarium holds 615223 specimens of vascular plants and ca. 70000 specimens of bryophytes. This is the fourth largest herbarium of Russia after the Komarov Institute, RAS in St. Petersburg (LE), Moscow State University (MW) and the Joint Novosibirsk Herbarium, RAS (NS + NSK). The general geographical structure of the MHA Herbarium is given in Table 1. The annual growth of the collections since 2015 was ca. 5900 accessions of vascular plants and ca. 2000 accessions of bryophytes.
The herbarium of vascular plants is located in two halls (334 square meters) in the main lab building of the Garden. Duplicates and unmounted backlog are stored in several rooms (120 square meters) at Botanicheskaya Street, 33-4 (ten minute walk from the main building). The herbarium of bryophytes is also stored at Botanicheskaya Street in several rooms (180 square meters).
Currently, the MHA Herbarium has 12 staff members (of which six are working with vascular plants). There are eight curators & researchers, a mounter, and three employees who are digitizing and filing the specimens. The staff members conduct field research across Russia in Tver, Tula, Kaluga, Belgorod, Rostov, Saratov, Volgograd, Orenburg Oblasts, Kalmykia, Dagestan, Ingushetia, Stavropol Krai, Yakutia, etc. The total duration of expeditions is ca. 240 person-days per year. Fresh collections of the employees forms 70% of new accessions. Other accessions are coming from the exchange, gifts and old backlog.
In 2018–2019, the herbarium staff imaged the Moscow section (100%) and the Eastern European section (14.1%) of the MHA Herbarium. In total, 64008 specimens were digitized (600 dpi images and key metadata). These data were published in the Moscow Digital Herbarium in 2019–2020 and fully available in GBIF. Based on these data, a detailed overview of the physical collections of these two sections is given below, as well as spatial, temporal, and taxonomic description of the dataset.
As of May 2020, 50324 specimens from MHA Herbarium have georeferences (78.6%) and 39448 specimens have fully captured label transcriptions (61.6%).
3. Moscow section holds 49621 specimens and covers two subjects of the Russian Federation—the City of Moscow and Moscow Oblast. The section is completely imaged and curated as a separate unit. Physical separation of the Moscow section from other collections is a result of geographical location of the MHA Herbarium and high intensity of the field research in the area. Full list of collectors consists of 823 surnames, including 127 people who collected more than 10 specimens. The list of top collectors of the Moscow section is given in table 2.
The basis of the Moscow section was formed by ca. 2000 specimens by D.P. Syreyshchikov and ca. 700 specimens by P.A. Smirnov collected in 1920s and received from the Timiryazev Institute of Plant Physiology (Moscow).
The staff collected later accessions right in the Garden (Ostankino in Moscow) and various areas across the Moscow Oblast – V.N. Voroshilov (1940–1950s), T.N. Evtyukhova (1940s), V.A. Shtamm (1940–1960s), G.P. Rysina (1960s), B.M. Kulkov (1940–1950s). The donations of V.I. Sobolevsky (1950s), A.A. Nekrasov (1950–1960s), A.I. Manin (1960–1970s), A.P. Khokhryakov (1950–1960s) and others from different areas of the Moscow region enriched the section as well.
In 1970–1990s, V.V. Makarov, M.S. Ignatov, A.N. Shvetsov, V.D. Bochkin, E.E. Gogina, A.E. Matsenko made the largest collections across the Moscow region due to the research missions of the Garden employees devoted to rare and endangered plant species, audit and organization of the protected areas with a focus on the districts west of Moscow.
Also, the Garden staff studied intensively the alien flora of the Moscow region. This resulted in the special collections by A.K. Skvortsov, V.V. Makarov, M.S. Ignatov, A.N. Shvetsov, expanded later by V.D. Bochkin assisted by S.R. Mayorov, Yu.A. Nasimovich and Yu.K. Vinogradova. Their collections became the basis of monographic reviews on the alien flora of the Moscow region (Ignatov et al. 1990, Mayorov et al. 2012, Mayorov et al. 2020).
E.I. Kurchenko (Serpukhov District), N.M. Reshetnikova (Ruza District), V.B. Kuvaev (Znamenskoye near Moscow), Yu.A. Nasimovich with L.A. Deystfeldt (several districts) donated their collections from the Moscow region (Skvortsov and Belyanina 2005). In the last decade, K.Yu. Teplov transferred large collections of rare plants from the locations across the region.
4. Eastern European section covers plant collections from European Russia, the Urals, the Baltic countries, Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova, and Western Kazakhstan (west of the Ural River). The section does not include Moscow region, the Caucasus and the Crimea. Today, the section contains 101034 specimens, incl. 14288 imaged specimens (14.1%). Thus, statistics on collectors and collection dates for this section are based on a 14-percent sample that covers pteridophytes, conifers, and most monocots.
The collection consists mainly of specimens of the Garden staff collected during field trips since the 1950s. Initially, herbarium vouchers accompanied living plants and seeds collected in wild for the expositions of the Garden. This documentation activity was later supplemented by extensive floristic and taxonomic studies, conservation research and monitoring of alien species.
4.1. Lower Volga. The flora of the southeast of European Russia is the most fully represented regional flora of the Eastern European section. The region known as Lower Volga includes Volgograd, Astrakhan, and Saratov Oblasts and the Republic of Kalmykia. This is a predominantly semi-arid steppe region. The list of collectors includes 136 surnames (see top-collectors in Table 3), but for 53 people only one specimens have been digitized so far.
A.K. Skvortsov began the studies of the Lower Volga region in 1950s. In 1970–1990s, floristic expeditions were regular and the key collectors of that time were A.K. Skvortsov, A.E. Matsenko, V.V. Makarov, N.B. Belyanina, I.A. Shantser, V.D. Bochkin, as well as staff members of the Volgograd Pedagogical University (N.G. Volodina, V.A. Sagalaev, G.Yu. Klinkova). In 2010s, the collection activities were continued by N.Yu. Stepanova assisted by A.V. Kuvaev (Severtsov Institute) and I.N. Safronova (Komarov Institute) during their floristic studies of the Kuma-Manych depression and the Caspian Lowland.
Vast materials helped to assess critically the current state of the flora of the southeast of European Russia and to publish two volumes of the “Flora of the Lower Volga” (Skvortsov 2006, Reshetnikova 2018). The third volume of the series is expected in near future.
4.2. Other areas. The MHA Herbarium covers with varying degree of completeness all regions of Eastern Europe within the former USSR. Table 4 shows the main collections from this territory, excluding Lower Volga. Borders of the curatorial areas used in the Moscow Digital Herbarium (https://plant.depo.msu.ru/) are available online.
A large number of specimens from the Central forest-steppe
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Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Context
The dataset tabulates the Non-Hispanic population of Hialeah Gardens by race. It includes the distribution of the Non-Hispanic population of Hialeah Gardens across various race categories as identified by the Census Bureau. The dataset can be utilized to understand the Non-Hispanic population distribution of Hialeah Gardens across relevant racial categories.
Key observations
Of the Non-Hispanic population in Hialeah Gardens, the largest racial group is White alone with a population of 813 (95.31% of the total Non-Hispanic population).
When available, the data consists of estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 2019-2023 5-Year Estimates.
Racial categories include:
Variables / Data Columns
Good to know
Margin of Error
Data in the dataset are based on the estimates and are subject to sampling variability and thus a margin of error. Neilsberg Research recommends using caution when presening these estimates in your research.
Custom data
If you do need custom data for any of your research project, report or presentation, you can contact our research staff at research@neilsberg.com for a feasibility of a custom tabulation on a fee-for-service basis.
Neilsberg Research Team curates, analyze and publishes demographics and economic data from a variety of public and proprietary sources, each of which often includes multiple surveys and programs. The large majority of Neilsberg Research aggregated datasets and insights is made available for free download at https://www.neilsberg.com/research/.
This dataset is a part of the main dataset for Hialeah Gardens Population by Race & Ethnicity. You can refer the same here