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The image shows a bar graph with data for three categories across 11 years: 1910 to 2010. In 1910, Agriculture: 500, Industrial Use: 20, Domestic Use: 10; in 1920, Agriculture: 510, Industrial Use: 20, Domestic Use: 15; in 1930, Agriculture: 550, Industrial Use: 30, Domestic Use: 20; in 1940, Agriculture: 580, Industrial Use: 40, Domestic Use: 20; in 1950, Agriculture: 1000, Industrial Use: 100, Domestic Use: 30; in 1960, Agriculture: 1210, Industrial Use: 190, Domestic Use: 40; in 1970, Agriculture: 1500, Industrial Use: 500, Domestic Use: 80; in 1980, Agriculture: 1830, Industrial Use: 900, Domestic Use: 120; in 1990, Agriculture: 2200, Industrial Use: 1210, Domestic Use: 140; in 2000, Agriculture: 2600, Industrial Use: 1500, Domestic Use: 160; in 2010, Agriculture: 3000, Industrial Use: 1700, Domestic Use: 150.
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The bar chart gives information about how much water that various sectors used during one century (1910-2010) with numbers’ being measured in kilometers per cubic. Overall, more and more water was consumed during the period. Meanwhile, only in Agriculture did the figure show significant growth during the period.
We can see that water consumption in the agricultural sector witnessed a slight increase in the initial period until 1960, then rocketed to a peak of 3000 in 2010. In addition, industrial water use remained stable in the early period at 20 until 1940, then gradually increased to a peak at 1500 in 2010.
Moving to domestic use sectors, only in these sectors the number of water consumption experienced an increase with an amount under 500. It started with 10 in the early period and finished with 150 at the end of the period.
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