Use the population density map below to answer the following question. Note that darker areas on the map indicate more dense population. A population density map of Europe is shown. Areas are shaded from light tan to yellow to orange, red, and finally black. Light tan to light yellow indicates there are less than 20 persons per square kilometer. Orange to red indicates there are between 20 and 500 persons per square kilometer. Dark red to black indicates there are typically 500 to 5,000 persons per square kilometer, with the possibility of being higher. Most of Spain is light tan or yellow except the southern and western coasts, which are orange with one primary black region. Most of France is dark yellow to light orange with a few black regions. Most of Italy, except the interior land between the coasts, is dark orange to red. There are several dark black regions. Most of Germany is dark orange or red, with more than several dark black regions. England is mostly dark orange with many dark black regions. Most of Eastern Europe is yellow, but Poland is mostly orange. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported The set of countries with the greatest population densities are England, France, Spain France, Italy, Spain Germany, Italy, England Poland, England, Germany