ColorBrewer:
The linear and adjusted progression color ramps appear to follow a much more rigid association with the starting and ending colors. The ramp I found from the ColorBrewer website quickly appeared to lose the greenish hue and end on more grey and white notes. While this would appear visually distinct on the map, I find that it loses some of the intrinsic association between features. If I have a dark green and a light green, and I know both come from the same dataset, I can judge that they represent some degree of intensity or increase in amount of data represented. When I compare dark green to white, that doesn’t tell me much about the difference between these two features without referring to the legend. The time saving aspect of ColorBrewer is wonderful in comparison though, and I could have spent more time selecting a color gradient that suited my needs.
I used a blue to red color system with percentages shown.
Blue shows a decrease in population with increases becoming more and more red,
I did this as I associated increased population with an increase in temperature.
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