As of June 2023, in the Northern Territory of Australia, about 9.7 percent of the population was between 30 and 34 years old. In comparison, just 0.6 percent of the population was over the age of 85.
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The Northern Territory population projections are estimates of the future size and characteristics of the Territory population, and have been developed to assist Northern Territory Government agencies, non-government organisations and business to plan service delivery across the Territory.
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Australia Population Change: Natural Increase: Northern Territory data was reported at 530.000 Person in Sep 2024. This records a decrease from the previous number of 593.000 Person for Jun 2024. Australia Population Change: Natural Increase: Northern Territory data is updated quarterly, averaging 686.000 Person from Jun 1981 (Median) to Sep 2024, with 174 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 858.000 Person in Jun 2012 and a record low of 365.000 Person in Dec 2023. Australia Population Change: Natural Increase: Northern Territory data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Australian Bureau of Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Australia – Table AU.G003: Population Change.
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Australia Population Change: Net Interstate Migration: Northern Territory data was reported at -800.000 Person in Sep 2024. This records a decrease from the previous number of -657.000 Person for Jun 2024. Australia Population Change: Net Interstate Migration: Northern Territory data is updated quarterly, averaging -264.500 Person from Jun 1981 (Median) to Sep 2024, with 174 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 1,806.000 Person in Jun 1981 and a record low of -1,189.000 Person in Dec 2023. Australia Population Change: Net Interstate Migration: Northern Territory data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Australian Bureau of Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Australia – Table AU.G003: Population Change.
In the Northern Territory in Australia, about 1.66 children were born per woman in the period of 2022-2023. This figure represents a slight increase compared to the previous year.
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Australia Population: Resident: Estimated: Annual: Northern Territory: Greater Darwin data was reported at 148,884.000 Person in 2017. This records an increase from the previous number of 147,102.000 Person for 2016. Australia Population: Resident: Estimated: Annual: Northern Territory: Greater Darwin data is updated yearly, averaging 131,105.500 Person from Jun 2006 (Median) to 2017, with 12 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 148,884.000 Person in 2017 and a record low of 113,461.000 Person in 2006. Australia Population: Resident: Estimated: Annual: Northern Territory: Greater Darwin data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Australian Bureau of Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Australia – Table AU.G002: Estimated Resident Population.
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This dataset presents the Northern Territory (NT) elector numbers as at 15 February 2019 against 2016 Australian Statistical Geography Standard (ASGS) Statistical Area Level 1 (SA1) indexes and NT Legislative Assembly (LA) division names.
In the instance where an SA1 is divided between two or more LA divisions, the SA1 index will appear on multiple rows in the file. An individual row in the file will represent elector numbers for a whole or partial SA1 as it relates to any given LA division boundary.
For more information please visit the Northern Territory Government Open Data Portal.
Please note:
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Australia Population: Resident: Estimated: Northern Territory data was reported at 255,559.000 Person in Sep 2024. This records an increase from the previous number of 255,069.000 Person for Jun 2024. Australia Population: Resident: Estimated: Northern Territory data is updated quarterly, averaging 201,830.500 Person from Jun 1981 (Median) to Sep 2024, with 174 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 255,559.000 Person in Sep 2024 and a record low of 122,616.000 Person in Jun 1981. Australia Population: Resident: Estimated: Northern Territory data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Australian Bureau of Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Australia – Table AU.G002: Estimated Resident Population.
This portal contains datasets released openly by Northern Territory Government agencies. To request a dataset that is not already published, please email us with as much detail as possible to assist in locating and providing the data. Open data is data that anyone can access, use and share. The real value of data greatly increases when it is shared, enabling greater benefits to be generated for the community. The Northern Territory Government recognises that the data it collects and creates is a strategic asset that can realise value when it is made available for analysis. Businesses and individuals can use government’s open data to create innovation, for research or simply to be more informed. The NTG Open Data Portal provides non-sensitive government information only. Personal or identifiable information will always be protected and will never be released. When using licensed content under a Creative Commons Licence, you are required to attribute the work in the manner specified in the licence (but not in any way that suggests that the Northern Territory Government endorses you or your use of the work). The Northern Territory Government requires that you use the following form of attribution: Attribution to: Organisation name, Northern Territory, title of dataset, date the content was sourced, dataset URL Example: Department of Treasury and Finance, Northern Territory, NT Population Projections_, Sourced on 22 July 2018, https://treasury.nt.gov.au/ If you experience technical problems, please contact us
https://ega-archive.org/dacs/EGAC00001000261https://ega-archive.org/dacs/EGAC00001000261
Here we provide a catalogue of variants called after sequencing the exomes of 50 Aboriginal individuals from the Northern Territory (NT) of Australia and compare these to 72 previously published exomes from a Western Australian (WA) population of Martu origin. Sequence data for both NT and WA samples were processed using an ‘intersect-then-combine’ (ITC) approach, using GATK and SAMtools to call variants. The data is provided as 2 VCF files, one for the WA population and one for the NT population.
As of December 2023, the proportion of the Australian population that lived in New South Wales amounted to 31.3 percent. The Northern Territory had the least number of residents in the country, with less than one percent of the population residing there.
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This dataset presents the projected enrolled population at 22 August 2020 for the Northern Territory (NT) by Legislative Assembly (LA) division areas and 2016 Australian Statistical Geography Standards (ASGS) Statistical Area Level 1 (SA1). Projected elector numbers are prepared by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) according to assumptions reflecting prevailing trends agreed to by the Northern Territory Electoral Commission. This projection is indicative of future population trends and is not official ABS population statistics. In the instance where an SA1 is divided between two or more LA divisions, the SA1 index will appear on multiple rows in the file. An individual row in the file will represent elector numbers for a whole or partial SA1 as it relates to any given LA division boundary. For more information please visit the Northern Territory Government Open Data Portal and read the ABS Projection Assumptions Document. Please note: Members of the Legislative Assembly that reside outside their electoral division are not represented in this dataset.
This statistic shows the estimated population of Northwest Territories, Canada from 2000 to 2022. In 2022, the estimated population of Northwest Territories was 45,605 people. This is an increase from 2000, when there were about 40,480 people living in Northwest Territories.
As of June 2023, there were approximately 8.33 million residents in the New South Wales region in Australia. In comparison, there were around 252 thousand residents in the Northern Territory region.
0,44 (%) in 2023Q1.
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Population: Resident: Estimated: Female: State: Northern Territory data was reported at 125,955.000 Person in Sep 2024. This records an increase from the previous number of 125,815.000 Person for Jun 2024. Population: Resident: Estimated: Female: State: Northern Territory data is updated quarterly, averaging 96,225.000 Person from Jun 1981 (Median) to Sep 2024, with 174 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 125,955.000 Person in Sep 2024 and a record low of 57,223.000 Person in Jun 1981. Population: Resident: Estimated: Female: State: Northern Territory data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Australian Bureau of Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Australia – Table AU.G002: Estimated Resident Population.
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This report summarises data from the 2004 Northern Territory (NT) Midwives’ Collection. It includes population characteristics of mothers, maternal health status, antenatal information, conditions and procedures used in labour and childbirth as well as birth outcomes of all births that occurred in 2004. While the NT Midwives’ Collection contains information on both NT resident and interstate residents who gave birth in the NT, the focus of this report is NT residents who gave birth in the NT. Notes and Corrections: On 24 October 2011 an error was observed in table 32. There has been an update to the introduction and to Table 32. An amended version of the document and the previous version are presented below.
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Data tables from the report 2020 Northern Territory (NT) Midwives’ Collection. It includes population characteristics of mothers, maternal health status, antenatal information, conditions and procedures used in labour and childbirth, as well as birth outcomes of all births that occurred in 2020.
This statistic shows the population of Northwest Territories in 2016, by ethnic origin. In that year, about ****** people in Northwest Territories reported being of North American Aboriginal origin.
https://research.csiro.au/dap/licences/csiro-data-licence/https://research.csiro.au/dap/licences/csiro-data-licence/
Summarises all available aerial survey data and metadata used to characterise the long-term distribution and abundance of magpie geese in the Northern Territory undertaken by different institutions and publically available in several journals (Appendix A). Summarised also are results from a PhD study (E. Ligtermoet) documenting the cultural harvesting values of magpie geese ascertained by interviews with Kakadu Traditional Owners (2011-2015). Lineage: Historical aerial survey data of magpie geese and their nests in the Kakadu Region (1981-2006) of the NT are used to characterise their seasonal use of floodplains in order to identify abundance “hotspots” for future site-specific management purposes. Decadal trends in abundance (1958-2000) were examined also in relation to trends in rainfall and global-scale interactions between the ENSO and PDO climate indices. Customary harvesting practices of magpie geese and their eggs were ascertained from interviews of Kakadu Traditional Owners as part of a PhD study (2011-2016) in help manage future threats in a socio-ecological context.
The data collection here comprise the Supplementary Material for the publication:
Bayliss, P., and Ligtermoet, E. (2016 in press). Seasonal habitats, decadal trends in abundance and cultural values of magpie geese (Anseranus semipalmata) on coastal floodplains in the Kakadu Region, Northern Australia. Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research. Published online. Kakadu Special Issue.
Appendix A: Magpie goose aerial survey metadata and data used in spatial and temporal analyses.
Table A1. Metadata for aerial surveys of magpie geese and their nests in the Kakadu Region (1981‐2003).
Table A2. Indirect cross calibration of population estimates of magpie geese derived by Tulloch and McKean (1983) with those derived by Morton et al. (1990) and the NT Parks and Wildlife Commission (Bayliss and Yeomans 1990a; NTPWC 2003; Delaney et al. 2009) in the Kakadu Region.
Table A3. Estimates of magpie geese population size in the Western ‘Top End’ of the Northern Territory, source of data and corrections applied to standardise data between the Tulloch and McKean (1983) time series (1958-1980) and subsequent surveys conducted by the NT Parks and Wildlife Commission (1983-1999).
Appendix B: Cultural harvesting values of magpie geese in the Kakadu Region.
Table B1. Respondent comments illustrating the diverse attributions of causality to changes in magpie goose abundance (data from E. Ligtermoet PhD thesis submitted).
All population data are in the public domain (published papers and reports as referenced). Data were acquired in the Oceans and Atmosphere Business Unit, Coastal Development and Management Program. Data in Appendix B are from a PhD study by E. Ligtermoet (co-author on the above paper) and submitted here as her contribution to the paper. Both authors have signed a licence to publish with the Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research.
As of June 2023, in the Northern Territory of Australia, about 9.7 percent of the population was between 30 and 34 years old. In comparison, just 0.6 percent of the population was over the age of 85.