A 1825 storm created a new sea connection in Denmark, producing a 27 percent population increase (elasticity 1.6 to market access) driven by fertility and occupational change toward fishing and manufacturing, with symmetric medieval declines after waterway closure.
and Redding, Stephen J
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Universal spatial scales of homophily and heterophily in global amenity networks, where heterophilic mixing predicts rental value changes more effectively than amenity diversity.
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A Perfect Storm: First-Nature Geography and Economic Development
A 1825 storm created a new sea connection in Denmark, producing a 27 percent population increase (elasticity 1.6 to market access) driven by fertility and occupational change toward fishing and manufacturing, with symmetric medieval declines after waterway closure.
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Networks of amenities reveal universal homophily and heterophily across global cities
Universal spatial scales of homophily and heterophily in global amenity networks, where heterophilic mixing predicts rental value changes more effectively than amenity diversity.