Larkspur, Alberta
Larkspur is a summer village in Alberta, Canada. It is located north of Westlock and south of Athabasca, east of Highway 44 and west of Highway 2.
Larkspur | |
---|---|
Summer Village of Larkspur | |
Location of Larkspur in Alberta | |
Coordinates: 54.44080°N 113.77025°W | |
Country | |
Province | |
Census division | No. 13 |
Government | |
• Type | Municipal incorporation |
• Mayor | Gerald Keane |
• Governing body | Larkspur Summer Village Council |
Area (2016)[2] | |
• Land | 0.26 km2 (0.10 sq mi) |
Population (2016)[2] | |
• Total | 44 |
• Density | 167.2/km2 (433/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC-7 (MST) |
Demographics
In the 2016 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, the Summer Village of Larkspur recorded a population of 44 living in 23 of its 89 total private dwellings, a 15.8% change from its 2011 population of 38. With a land area of 0.26 km2 (0.10 sq mi), it had a population density of 169.2/km2 (438.3/sq mi) in 2016.[2]
In the 2011 Census, the Summer Village of Larkspur had a population of 38 living in 16 of its 69 total dwellings, a -32.1% change from its 2006 population of 56. With a land area of 0.22 km2 (0.085 sq mi), it had a population density of 172.7/km2 (447.4/sq mi) in 2011.[3]
gollark: > In practice, on limited keyboards of the day, source programs often used the sequences $( and $) in place of the symbols { and }UTTER apiaristicaloids.
gollark: Please provide information on your "Doku"Wiki install.
gollark: > gollark the latex plugin broke my dokuwikiBroke how?
gollark: > The interpretation of any value was determined by the operators used to process the values. (For example, + added two values together, treating them as integers; ! indirected through a value, effectively treating it as a pointer.) In order for this to work, the implementation provided no type checking. Hungarian notation was developed to help programmers avoid inadvertent type errors.[citation needed] This is *just* like Sinth's idea of Unsafe.
gollark: > The language is unusual in having only one data type: a word, a fixed number of bits, usually chosen to align with the architecture's machine word and of adequate capacity to represent any valid storage address. For many machines of the time, this data type was a 16-bit word. This choice later proved to be a significant problem when BCPL was used on machines in which the smallest addressable item was not a word but a byte or on machines with larger word sizes such as 32-bit or 64-bit.[citation needed]
References
- "Municipal Officials Search". Alberta Municipal Affairs. September 22, 2017. Retrieved September 25, 2017.
- "Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), 2016 and 2011 censuses – 100% data (Alberta)". Statistics Canada. February 8, 2017. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
- "Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), 2011 and 2006 censuses (Alberta)". Statistics Canada. 2012-02-08. Retrieved 2012-02-08.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.