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The given chart depicts the proportion of tourists gained by Scotland by four main categories

which were aquarium, castle, zoo and festival during the 30-year period.

Overall, what stands out from the line graph is that while the ratio of zoo and castle’s visitors
experienced an upward trend, the opposite was true for festival and aquarium over the period in
question. It is also notable that castle dominated others types of recreation and remained the peak
over 30 years.

Standing at nearly 25% in 1980, the castle’s visitors then hit a peak at 45% in 1995 , levelled off
and finished at 32% in the last year. Followed by, the zoo showed fluctuation as its main trend.
The 1980s witnessed its figure at 10%, 12% in 1995 and finally saw a speedy climb to 20% in
2010.

Looking at the other attractions, there was a correlation between aquarium and festival when
these two figures all illustrated a downward trend in total. The first 5 years, the aquarium’s
tourists changed considerably, soaring to 35% in 1985, decreased and then rose to 25% in 1995.
The year 2010, aquarium showed a decline to 15% in final. The festival’s travellers remained
stable drop throughout the years. Starting at 30% and dropped to 23% in 2010.

The given charts depict the numbers of immigrants in the UK during the period of 10 years
starting in 1999.

Overall, both immigration and emigration showed ceiling trends but the higher rate was seen in
the immigration. The statistic for net migration remained stable except for the year 2004 and
2007 when this figure reached a peak.

In 1999, standing at nearly 500.000, immigration dominated other types of migration. Followed
by was emigration which figure stood at 300.000. the year 2004 witnessed specific changes by
each category. There was a correlation between immigration and emigration when both of these
kinds showed rapidly changes compared to that of 1999. The figures for immigration and
emigation was 600000 and 350000 respectively. The net one also reached a peak to 160.000 in
this year.

The next 4 years, immigrants tended to make significant change. It fluctuated from 550.000 to
600.000 and finally stood at 600.000 in 2008. Emigration’s tendency seemed to be homogenous
compared to that of previous type. fluctuating around 400.000 and then witnessed an upward
trend at 450.000 in the final year. The number for net migration remained unchanged except for
the soaring to 230.000 in 2007.
The two pie charts give information about the amount of electricity needed to generate using fuel
source by units in Australia and France. 5 categories could be seen clearly from the graph are
coal, natural gas, nuclear power, oil and hydro power.
It is obvious that the two continents showed similarities when both of these showed a vigous
growth throughout the years. While the units for total products were similar, the specific amount
of fuel used distinguished by each one.

In 1980, Australia showed 50 units for the figure of coal. This number then increased in more
than two fold at 130 percent in 2000. Hydro power also showed a 16-percent growth compared
to the previous figure at 20. Apart from coal, other kinds of fuel all showed a decrease instead.
Natural gas and oil dramatically dropped from 20 and 10 percentage to the same figures of 2
units in 2000.

It is also notable that in 1980 France witnessed a striking trend in nuclear power which soared
from 15% to 126%. Coal’s figure remained unchanged. The statistics for oil increased just 5
percent compared to that of previous years. Natural gas and hydro power both dropped from 20
and 10 percent to 2 percent in correlation.

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