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Comparing Cities, the United States, and Earth by Scale
Visual Distance / Scale Graph (Miles)
This line shows how distance and scale explode from a city to a country to a planet.
In short
- 🟢 Green = city scale (Washington, D.C.)
- 🟠 Orange = entire United States
- 🌍 Pink = Earth’s surface
Comparing Cities, the United States, and Earth by Area
Green Circle — 68.3 sq. miles
The green circle represents an area of 68.3 square miles, which is about the size of Washington, D.C. (≈68 sq. miles).
This is one of the smallest U.S. “city-like” land areas that still feels like a major city.
Orange Circle — United States
The orange circle represents the surface area of the entire United States — about 3.8 million square miles.
This is far beyond any city. Even the largest U.S. cities are tiny dots compared to this circle.
Pink Circle — Earth
The pink circle represents the entire surface area of Earth — about 197 million square miles.
It dwarfs cities, countries, and even continents.
So, when comparing cities:
- Smallest “big-city” examples: San Marino or Vatican City (under 1 sq. mi) would be invisible here. Even San Francisco (≈47 sq. mi) or D.C. (68 sq. mi) only match the green dot.
- Largest U.S. cities by land area: Sitka, Alaska (≈2,870 sq. mi) or Jacksonville, Florida (≈874 sq. mi) are still tiny compared to the orange U.S. circle.
👉 In short:
- 🟢 Green circle = like a city (Washington, D.C.)
- 🟠 Orange circle = the entire United States
- 🌍 Pink circle = the Earth’s surface
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