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This is Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Christopher Intagliata. Got a minute?

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If you haven't already picked up on the trend from all the whining on Bravo's Princesses: Long Island, marriage rates in America are at an all-time low.

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And the median age at which women do say "I do" is now 27, the highest it's been in a century.

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That's according to a new report by Bowling Green State University's Julissa Cruz,

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published by the National Center for Family and Marriage Research.

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In the 1920s, 92 women walked down the aisle each year per 1000 single women of marrying age.

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Today, it's a third that.

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Marriage rates were expected to plateau in the wake of the baby boom, but so far they just keep dropping.

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Apparently, many college-educated women are simply putting off getting hitched,

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and many black women might be foregoing it altogether.

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Because while every ethnic group has seen a drop in the proportion of married women since the '50s, it's dipped lowest for black women, just 26 percent of whom are married.

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In the UK and most of Europe, the average age for women tying the knot is already more than 30.

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And if Long Island's reality stars are an indicator, we're soon to follow.

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Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Science. I'm Christopher Intagliata.

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