Abstract

ABSTRACT Autocovariance procedures provide useful insights into the spatial patterns of population change in the cities, towns, and villages of southern Ontario. Covariance patterns reflect distance decay and urban hierarchy effects, and reveal spatial constraints on population change that complement the better known temporal constraints. A close relationship between scale-variance shifts and aggregate system growth shows that spatial patterns of covariance depend on the regional growth rate. Local variability of change rates increases when aggregate growth is accelerating.

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