Tuesday, February 15th 2011, 4:24 pm
The Associated Press
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- Census bureau figures released today show there are more Hispanics in Oklahoma than there are Native Americans. In some of state's largest cities, Hispanics make up more than 10 percent of the population.
The state as a whole has 3.75 million residents, and nearly 9 percent identify themselves as Hispanic or Latino. Just over 8.5 percent identified themselves as Native Americans.
The Hispanic population climbed 85 percent between 2000 and 2010. The Native American population was up 18 percent over the decade.
In Oklahoma City, more than 17 percent of its 580,000 residents identified themselves as being of Hispanic descent. In Tulsa, the figure is 14 percent of its 392,000 residents. Other cities with significant Hispanic concentrations are Lawton and Enid.
Figures show that counties surrounding the state's two major cities have grown the fastest during the past 10 years.
Four counties in the Oklahoma City metropolitan area --Cleveland, McClain, Canadian and Logan -- grew by more than 20 percent, as did two counties in the Tulsa metropolitan area -- Rogers and Wagoner.
Marshall County in far south-central Oklahoma also had a growth rate of more than 20 percent. Of Oklahoma's 77 counties, Canadian County had the highest growth rate at 31.8 percent and now has a population of more than 115,000.
Four rural counties saw population drops of 10 percent or more during the past decade -- Cimarron, Tillman, Harmon and Grant.
Nineteen other rural counties lost population during the decade.
The 10 most-populous cities in Oklahoma, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
February 15th, 2011
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