The table and chart illustrate the average precipitation and temperature in two large cities in the united states throughout the year. What stands out is that as the temperature increase, the precipitation drop, and while the temperature is decreasing, the precipitation is rising.
According to the line graph, it begins at 2.1℃ in January, rising to 5.2℃ in February. In March, it reachs 8.9℃. After that, this figure continues to increase and doubles in May(18.2). In June, it goes up to 23.8℃, remaining at almost the same figures until August. Subsequently, the figure starts to drop by approximately 5℃ each month until October. In November, it rapidly declines to 6.4℃, reaching 2.3℃ in December.
Looking at the bar graph, the precipitation starts at 12.4 mm in January. From that time until July, the figure keeps decreasing and it remains stable until February (11.2 mm). In March, the figure soars to 13.5 mm, but it decreases to 12.7 mm in April. After that, it rebounds to 15.2 mm in May. From May until August, the figure continues to rise, reaching 43.1 mm in August. In September, it declines to 29.2mm and falls further in October (25.4mm). From then on, it keeps falling, and hits 12.4mm in December.
