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The image shows a line graph of legal immigrants to the U.S. from 1990 to 2020 and a pie chart depicting their ethnic composition. The line graph reports immigrant numbers as follows: 1.46 million in 1990, dipping to 0.60 million in 1995, rising to 1.10 million in 2000, peaking at 1.25 million in 2005, slightly decreasing to 1.10 million in 2010, reaching 1.20 million in 2015, and again dropping to 1.00 million in 2020. The pie chart reflects ethnic proportions: Asian 25%, Hispanic 40.4%, Other 14.8%, Black 10.3%, White 9.5%.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The charts provide information on U.S. legal immigrants and their ethnic composition from 1990 to 2020. Initially, the number of immigrants plummeted and then rose dramatically, with Hispanics accounting for half the ethnic composition.
In 1990, the number of immigrants decreased dramatically to around 1.00 until 1995. In contrast, the number soared to its maximum of 1.17 between 1995 and 2005. Additionally, the line repeatedly went upward and downward to points no lower than 1.05, with a maximum number of immigrants at 1.17 every five years until 2020.
Hispanics stand out the most compared to the rest of the composition, occupying 45%, almost half the total number. Whereas, the smallest groups in the distribution are Others, with 5% and 10%, and Black, White, and Asian, with 25%, 35%, and 25%, respectively.
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