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The image displays a line graph showing the percentage of tourists to Scotland visiting four attractions: aquarium, castle, zoo, and festival from 1980 to 2010. In 1980, festivals had 30%, castles 20%, zoos 10%, and aquariums 10%. By 1985, festivals rose to 35%, castles 30%, zoos remained 10%, and aquariums stayed 10%. In 1990, festivals were at 40%, castles 35%, zoos 5%, aquariums 15%. For 1995, festival attendance dropped to 30%, castles peaked at 45%, zoos were 5%, aquariums 15%. By 2000, festivals remained 30%, castles slightly declined to 40%, zoos 10%, aquariums 15%. In 2005, festivals were at 30%, castles 35%, zoos increased to 15%, aquariums at 10%. In 2010, festivals ended at 30%, castles 30%, zoos 10%, aquariums slightly increased to 20%.
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The line graph provides the proportion of tourists who visited various attractions in Scotland from 1980 to 2010.
Overall, the percentage of castle and zoo visitors increased, with the latter witnessing a more significant rise. In contrast, the proportion of aquarium and festival attractions declined, with the aquarium experiencing the sharpest decrease.
Between 1980 and 1995, the proportion of tourists visiting castles rose considerably, climbing from just over 20% to a peak of around 45%, making it the most popular attraction during this period. By contrast, aquariums saw an initial rise from about 20% in 1980 to nearly 35% in 1985, but this figure then fell steadily, reaching less than 10% by 2010. Festival attendance also showed a downward trend, decreasing from approximately 30% to around 20% over the period. Zoo figures fluctuated, starting at about 10% in 1980 and falling below this by 1990. However, numbers rose steadily after 2000, reaching around 20% in 2010.
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