With this representation, we get a pretty, rainbow-colored view of the gritty reality of segregation in America.

This tool can lead to a lot of stunning (and depressing) findings about modern-day segregation and racial gaps in America, many of which I’ve already written about. For instance:

There are 56 majority-black neighborhoods in Wisconsin. Of these black neighborhoods, 21 are low-income housing, two are homeless shelters, and 31 — more than half — are jails.

Black and Latino neighborhoods in Madison, Wisconsin are directly correlated with struggling schools, fast food joints, payday loan outlets, and heightened usage of free/reduced lunch.

But there’s even more to uncover. I’ve compiled a list of shocking findings from the Racial Dot Map about modern-day segregation and racial disparities in America. Let’s get right into it.

It’s Hard to Find a Single Blue Dot on New York City’s Rikers Island Jail Complex

According to reports, the jail complex at Rikers Island is 57% Black and 33% Hispanic. Accordingly, practically every dot above is green, orange, or brown. This is heavily incongruous with New York City’s general population, which is 44% white.

Jails and Homeless Shelters in LA Are Almost Exclusively Black and Hispanic

Men’s Central Jail and the Skid Row homeless shelters of Los Angeles seem to lack a single blue dot.

Native Hawaiians Are Incarcerated Disproportionally

Hawaii doesn’t have any actual jails on its islands. Instead, the majority of Hawaiian prisoners are flown out to Arizona to be held in Saguaro Prison, located in the bottom left corner of this image (the other prisons in the complex hold Arizonan prisoners). Although only 10% of Hawaii’s general population is native, Native Hawaiians make up nearly 40% of the state’s inmates, as can be seen with the plurality of brown dots above.

Streets Often Serve As Explicit Racial Borders

Quite commonly, streets and other physical barriers like rivers or train tracks serve as explicit racial dividers. This is the case with Eight Mile Road in Detroit:

This phenomenon also appears with Austin Blvd. (vertical white-black border) and Roosevelt Rd. (horizontal white-Hispanic border) in Chicago:

And check out this bizarre layer cake in western New Orleans:

Many Burmese Refugees Are Sent to Kansas to Work at Tyson Foods

If you’re unfamiliar with the xenophobic persecution of the Rohingya minority in Myanmar, called “the world’s most persecuted minority” by the UN, please read my blog post on the subject. Many Rohingya refugees, as well as refugees from Somalia, are sent to Garden City, Kansas (the patch of red dots towards the top) to work for Tyson Foods.

These refugees make an already-poor city even poorer. Largely due to the influx of refugees, 341 children in Garden City were homeless in 2012 — up from 43 just five years earlier, in 2007.

Native American Reservations Have Some of America’s Highest Mortality Rates