HS+Peoria+IL+vs.+Chicago


 * || Chicago || || Peoria ||
 * 6 || 99 || 10 || 99 ||
 * 16 || 90 || 20 || 98 ||
 * 20 || 85 || 30 || 96 ||
 * 30 || 76 || 40 || 84 ||
 * 40 || 68 || 50 || 73 ||
 * 50 || 62 || 60 || 60 ||
 * 60 || 54 || 70 || 43 ||
 * 70 || 23 || 80 || 30 ||
 * 80 || 10 || 90 || 5 ||
 * 90 || 3 || 100 || 0 ||
 * 100 || 0 ||  ||   ||

Hypothesis: The survivorship rate will be much lower in the city of Chicago rather than the small town of Peoria, IL. 1. Not many older people live in the city of Chicago 2. There are many more shootings and minor deaths in the inner city. 3. The smaller city of Peoria doesn’t have as many gangs. 4. Ambulances have shorter response times in Peoria and are able to reach dying people and give medical attention. 5. Traffic jams and difficult city streets make it harder for police and medics to reach the scene in Chicago. 6. People who live in rural areas usually get chances to exercise more often and eat a more balanced diet. 7. Pollution is worse in Chicago. 8. The larger the city, the more competition, late nights, and all together stressful lifestyle than the country. As you can see, the graph of Chicago shows an immediate drop in population. This is most likely do to abandoned, or murdered children. This curve is altogether more steeply sloped. From this data we can see that many more people died before the age of 30 in Chicago than in Peoria. This can be for a number of reasons: Limitations: This is only a sample of 100 people out of a population of thousands and thousands of people. With each season, the data varies. More teens and young adults die in the winter when driving too fast over ice. More abandoned babies, and homeless people die in the winter. Not everyone submits an obituary. Children, who were abandoned and left to die, don’t have obituaries written for them.