 Hey there. Chad Bonser here for High University Libraries. In this video, I'm going to show you how to use the American Fact Finder, the free data source from the American government to find population density based on the census. So here you go. So to get to the American Fact Finder, you're going to go to factfinder2.census.gov. That's the current URL web address as of the publication of this video here. You can also Google American Fact Finder, it'll also get you there the same way. So once we're here, we're going to click on Advanced Search, and we'll click Show Me All, and we're looking for population density. So I'm just going to go in and search for density here, and you see it brings up a bunch of things. I'm actually going to bypass those and click Go, because I don't really want any of those datasets. So I'm going to click Go here. If you scroll down, you can see there's different kind of things that have to do with density. Now, I was looking for population density by county, and so here is one for population housing density by county, by state, and for Puerto Rico. If you want to preview that, you can just click on it, and it'll take you to a page, and you'll basically see what this data looks like. And so here's our dataset here. Looks pretty good. We have Alabama by county, and it looks like we have population housing units and density population housing units per square mile. So that looks good for me. If I scroll down, we see it goes from Alabama to Alaska. So we are getting multiple states. I'm going to go back to our advanced search here, because that's the dataset that I do want. And then I'm just going to click on Make Sure. The one I had is selected, and that is selected, and we're going to click on Download. And it's going to say, yeah, it may take several minutes. So we'll just click OK, and it's going to go, and sometimes it may take a little while to download this, and it will give you an estimated time remaining, that sort of thing. Once your file is complete, all you have to do is click on Download, and that will open up a zip file. Just save the zip file somewhere on your computer, and then once you open it up, you can see what folder it's in. What you'll want to make sure you do is you can go in and extract all your data, and we'll just call it census.edge.download1 there. It's fine. We'll extract, and then the dataset we want is right here. It's called with annotations, I guess, is what that means. So we'll open that up in Excel, and then here we have our dataset in Excel. We can manipulate it however we want to. We can hide tables, that sort of thing. So that's how you find population density in the American Fact Finder using the 2010 decennial census data. Hope this video helped you use the American Fact Finder. Should it need more help, look for the contact link on the business blog. I'll be glad to help you anyway, Ken. Take care, and have a great day.