While the census data from Count Demadoff from April 1839 gives a breakdown of ethnic populations based on district, i.e. the number of Russians and Tatars living in each of the five main districts in Crimea, the map does not continue such a trend into the sub-district or village level. I am reminded, at this point, of the various maps of Poland which we observed in the map collection, in which ethnic composition data was shown for counties and even towns. On the one hand, doing so in Crimea at this time would have been extremely tough, and even if the data existed, there is no easy way to portray it on an already cluttered map, a map which at the end of the day was to serve a purpose unrelated to that of ethnic composition and ethnosociology. At the same time, I am left guessing as to whether these populations are well integrated, if there are pockets of Tatar settlements segregated from Russian villages, or a mix of the two.