Peaks of People: Using Topographic Prominence as a Method for Determining the Ranked Significance of Population Centers

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Abstract

This article borrows a statistical method from physical geography—topographical prominence—to suggest a new technique for measuring the relative significance or rank of population centers. Unlike raw population measures, prominence gives consideration to both the spatial intensity of concentrated population areas as well as the spatial dependence or independence of neighboring settlement clusters in relation to one another. We explain how to apply the topographic prominence calculation method to gridded population data and examine its practical utility through case studies of several U.S. states. We then discuss some ways in which parametric choices about point-to-surface transformations can result in considerably different outcomes and offer further suggestions for conceptualizing and measuring population center significance.

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Nelson, G. D., & McKeon, R. (2019). Peaks of People: Using Topographic Prominence as a Method for Determining the Ranked Significance of Population Centers. Professional Geographer, 71(2), 342–354. https://doi.org/10.1080/00330124.2018.1531039

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