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Graphics

Data visualization, maps and other visual journalism from The New York Times Graphics Desk

Data visualization, maps and other visual journalism from The New York Times Graphics Desk

Highlights

  1. How Has Gun Violence Changed in Your Neighborhood?

    The footprint of gun violence in the U.S. expanded during the pandemic. Use these maps to compare data on gun homicides in your area with others around the country.

     By Eli MurrayJosh WilliamsRebecca Lieberman and

    CreditThe New York Times
    1. An Inside Look at Covid’s Lasting Damage to the Lungs

      This 3-D reconstruction of lung scans reveals damage that has lingered for years in patients who became severely ill early in the pandemic.

       By Jeremy WhitePam BelluckNoah Bassetti-BlumEleanor Lutz and

      Cinematic renderings of CT scans can show the lasting damage to a person’s lungs after severe Covid infection.
      Cinematic renderings of CT scans can show the lasting damage to a person’s lungs after severe Covid infection.
      CreditJeremy White/The New York Times
    2. How Counterprotesters at U.C.L.A. Provoked Violence, Unchecked for Hours

      The New York Times used videos filmed by journalists, witnesses and protesters to analyze hours of clashes — and a delayed police response — at a pro-Palestinian encampment on Tuesday.

       By Neil BediBora ErdenMarco HernandezIshaan JhaveriArijeta LajkaNatalie ReneauHelmuth Rosales and

      CreditThe New York Times
    3. A New Pacific Arsenal to Counter China

      With missiles, submarines and alliances, the Biden administration has built a presence in the region to rein in Beijing’s expansionist goals.

       By John IsmayEdward Wong and

      CreditThe New York Times
  1. Maps of Two Cicada Broods, Reunited After 221 Years

    Brood XIII and Brood XIX are making their first dual appearance since 1803.

     By

    CreditThe New York Times
  2. No Box to Check: When the Census Doesn’t Reflect You

    Most people of Middle Eastern and North African descent are classified as “white” in U.S. census data. Thousands of respondents to a Times survey told us how they actually identify.

     By Karen ZraickAllison McCannSarah AlmukhtarYuliya Parshina-KottasRobert Gebeloff and

    Credit
  3. Inside the Deadly Maui Inferno, Hour by Hour

    The Times reconstructed the day of the Lahaina wildfire, tracing the path of the blaze and the failures that left so many people trapped.

     By Mike BakerMalika KhuranaK.K. Rebecca LaiRiley MellenNatalie ReneauBedel SagetElena ShaoAnjali Singhvi and

    CreditBy The New York Times
  4. They Started Playing Football as Young as 6. They Died in Their Teens and Twenties With C.T.E.

    They started playing football as kids, began to suffer mentally and died before 30. Researchers found they had C.T.E., the brain disease linked to hits to the head. If their families could go back, would they still let them play?

     By Kassie BrackenJohn BranchBen LaffinRebecca Lieberman and

    CreditThe New York Times
  5. Where Migrant Children Are Living, and Often Working, in the U.S.

    Data shows where a record number of unaccompanied children traveling to the U.S. from Central America and other countries have ended up.

     By Eli MurrayHannah Dreier and

    CreditThe New York Times
  1. How the U.S. Humanitarian Pier in Gaza Will Work

    A pier operation being assembled by U.S. service members will involve an elaborate process to provide Gazans with just a portion of the aid they need.

     By Elena ShaoMika GröndahlAnjali Singhvi and

    Credit
  2. Which President Can Claim These Economic Wins?

    Both President Biden and former President Trump presided over robust economies in their first three years in office. Can you tell who did better in each metric?

     By Jim Tankersley and

    CreditThe New York Times
  3. One Area Where Biden Is Leading Trump: His Number of Donors

    President Biden recently overtook former President Donald J. Trump in the total number of donors who have given to his campaign, which is often seen as a proxy for voter engagement.

     By Albert SunScott Reinhard and

    CreditThe New York Times
  4. Who’s Running for President in 2024?

    See who is in, and who is out.

     By Martín González Gómez and

    CreditThe New York Times
  5. 2023: The Year in Visual Stories and Graphics.

    Selected Times graphics, visualizations and multimedia stories published this year. All free to read for a limited time.

     

    CreditThe New York Times

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  2. Why GPS Is Under Attack

    Satellite signals run the modern world. See just how vulnerable they are.

    By Selam Gebrekidan, K.K. Rebecca Lai, Pablo Robles and Jeremy White

     
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  14. Inflation’s Wild Ride

    As the presidential election approaches, politicians are focused on who is to blame for price increases. How did we get here?

    By Jeanna Smialek, Karl Russell and Lazaro Gamio

     
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  16. The Vanishing Islands That Failed to Vanish

    Low-lying tropical island nations were expected to be early victims of rising seas. But research tells a surprising story: Many islands are stable. Some have even grown.

    By Raymond Zhong, Jason Gulley and Jonathan Corum

     
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  21. A Massacre Threatens Darfur — Again

    Darfur, the region of Sudan once synonymous with genocide, may be on the brink of a new chapter of horror.

    By Lauren Leatherby, Declan Walsh, Sanjana Varghese and Christoph Koettl

     
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  24. Carnage and Contradiction: Examining a Deadly Strike in Rafah

    Israel said it took care to avoid harming civilians when it targeted two Hamas fighters. An investigation shows civilian casualties were almost inevitable.

    By Bilal Shbair, Iyad Abuheweila, Neil Collier, Cassandra Vinograd, Christiaan Triebert and Lauren Leatherby

     
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  28. Where India Turned Against Modi

    Maps show how Modi lost support throughout the country, including in areas that had embraced his party’s Hindu-nationalist ideology.

    By Agnes Chang, Mujib Mashal and Pablo Robles

     
  29. Israeli Strike Kills Dozens at Civilian Shelter in Gaza

    The Israeli military said it had been targeting militants who were hiding in the complex in an effort to evade attack. The former U.N. school was housing 6,000 displaced Gazans.

    By Aaron Boxerman, Abu Bakr Bashir, Erika Solomon and Thomas Fuller

     
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  32. 2024 India General Election: Live Results

    See results and maps from India’s 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

    By Matthew Bloch, Agnes Chang, Saurabh Datar, Martín González Gómez, Mujib Mashal and Urvashi Uberoy

     
  33. What Ukraine Has Lost

    We measured every town, street and building blown apart in Ukraine to show the first comprehensive picture of where people can’t return home.

    By Jeffrey Gettleman, Finbarr O’Reilly, Tim Wallace and Marco Hernandez

     
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  36. The Trump Manhattan Criminal Verdict, Count By Count

    Former President Donald J. Trump faced 34 felony charges of falsifying business records, related to the reimbursement of hush money paid to the porn star Stormy Daniels in order to cover up a sex scandal around the 2016 presidential election.

    By Lazaro Gamio, Karen Yourish, Matthew Haag, Jonah E. Bromwich, Maggie Haberman and K.K. Rebecca Lai

     
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  38. Tracking Biden and Trump on the Campaign Trail

    President Biden and former President Donald J. Trump’s rematch is testing their ability to make the traditional appearances on the trail that voters have come to expect.

    By The New York Times

     
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  40. Access to Aid in Gaza Was Dire. Now, It’s Worse.

    The amount of food aid and other basic necessities making it into the enclave has shrunk so much that humanitarian officials say their operations are at risk of shutting down.

    By Amy Schoenfeld Walker and Elena Shao

     
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  56. How the Pandemic Reshaped American Gun Violence

    The footprint of gun violence in the U.S. has expanded, as shootings worsened in already suffering neighborhoods and killings spread to new places during the pandemic years.

    By Robert Gebeloff, K.K. Rebecca Lai, Eli Murray, Josh Williams and Rebecca Lieberman

     
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  64. The Major Supreme Court Decisions in 2024

    In a momentous term, the Supreme Court issued major victories for former President Donald J. Trump, a sustained attack on the power of administrative agencies and mixed signals on guns and abortion.

    By Adam Liptak, Abbie VanSickle and Alicia Parlapiano

     
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  76. TimesVideo

    Our Reporter on the Fate of a Gazan University Class

    These university graduates in Gaza finished training just one week before the war began. We reached out to everyone in the class WhatsApp group to find out what happened to them.

    By Emma Bubola, Rebecca Suner, James Surdam and Lauren Leatherby

     
  77. Ukraine’s Race to Hold the Line

    The days of lightning battlefield breakthroughs may be over. With Russia preparing to make a big push, the Ukrainians can do little but dig in.

    By Josh Holder, Eric Schmitt and Thomas Gibbons-Neff

     
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  86. TimesVideo

    Our Reporter on the Problem of New York City Trash

    Is this how one of the world’s greatest cities still deals with garbage? Larry Buchanan, one of the New York Times reporters who walked miles around the city pondering trash for this story, explains what will be required to take New York’s trash bags off the street.

    By Larry Buchanan, Karen Hanley and Ruru Kuo

     
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  89. Few Signs of Progress on Aid to Gaza After Israeli Pledges

    Israel promised last week to open a border crossing and a port to aid shipments, but it is not clear when either change will occur. Israel and the U.N. also disagree on how much aid is reaching Gaza.

    By Matthew Mpoke Bigg, Vivian Yee and Lauren Leatherby

     
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  94. Dozens of Major Bridges Lack Shields to Block Wayward Ships

    The collapse of the Key Bridge in Baltimore has prompted a reassessment of critical bridges around the country that may be similarly vulnerable to a ship strike.

    By Mike Baker, Anjali Singhvi, Helmuth Rosales, David W. Chen and Elena Shao

     
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