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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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.