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Geographic contiguity

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Åland, the autonomous region of Finland, and the Turku archipelago belonging to the rest of Finland in the Archipelago Sea.

Geographic contiguity is the characteristic in geography of political or geographical land divisions, as a group, not being interrupted by other land or water. Such divisions are referred to as being contiguous. In the United States, for example, the "48 contiguous states" excludes Hawaii and Alaska, which do not share borders with other U.S. states.[1]

Other examples of geographical contiguity might include the "contiguous European Union" excluding member states such as Ireland, Sweden, Finland (between Åland and Turku Archipelago), Malta and Cyprus (these being non-contiguous), or the "contiguous United Kingdom" referring to all parts of the country excepting Northern Ireland (it being geographically non-contiguous).

Two or more contiguous municipalities can be consolidated into one, or one municipality can consist of many noncontiguous elements. For example, the Financially Distressed Municipalities Act allows the commonwealth of Pennsylvania to merge contiguous municipalities to reduce financial distress.

Geographic contiguity is important in biology, especially animal ranges. For a particular species, its habitat may be a 'contiguous range', or it might be broken, requiring periodic, typically seasonal migrations (see: Disjunct distribution). The same concept of contiguous range is true for human transportation studies in an attempt to understand census geography.[2] It also comes into play with electoral geography and politics.[3]

In United States real property and mineral rights law, touching of two tracts at a common corner (as checkerboarded land) is generally considered contiguous.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Wetlands Metadata for the Lower 48 States, US Fish and Wildlife Service Archived 5 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Census Metropolitan Area, Statistics Canada Archived 17 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ The Electoral Geography of Weimar Germany: Exploratory Spatial Data Analyses of Protestant Support for the Nazi Party, by John O'Loughlin.
  4. ^ "Contiguous". Legal Information Institute (Cornell Law School). June 2021. Retrieved 28 Dec 2021.