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The image shows a line graph tracking data over time from 1992 to 2016, with three separate lines representing Melbourne, Sydney, and Brisbane; y-axis is labeled "(thousands)" with a range from 0 to 120, x-axis is marked with years in a non-linear scale; Melbourne starts at approximately 35 in 1992, dips to about 31 in 1994, peaks at nearly 86 in 2002, drops to around 63 in 2006, and ends close to 118 in 2016; Sydney starts near 38 in 1992, decreases to about 32 in 1995, reaches around 90 in 2002, falls to near 70 in 2006, and closes at nearly 112 in 2016; Brisbane begins at approximately 23 in 1992, goes down to about 21 in 1995, climbs to roughly 42 in 2002, dips to around 38 in 2006, and finishes close to 72 in 2016; no other numerical data points/percentages for each section/country/category/year are visible.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The line graph illustrates data about the growth in the number of people who lived in Melbourne, Sydney, and Brisbane over the 24 years.
Overall, it is clear that the population growth in the three significant cities of Australia increased steadily over time, whereas Melbourne was the most populated city compared to the others.
Focusing Melbourne and Brisbane by 1992, it had an almost identical beginning at 21k, whereas the number population increased in Melbourne throughout the period, before reaching the highest in 2016, around 110k, it faced fluctuation. In 2013, this figure declined sharply from 110k to around 75k in 2010 to 2013 respectively. Brisbane had around 43k in 2016, but the population growth was the highest between 2007 and 2010 at 21k.
Sydney had the highest beginning among others approximately 27k. This figure also faced some fluctuation before rose in 2016 at 105k which was lower than Melbourne. Sydney’s population growth fell in 2004 and 2010 sharply from 21k and 38k respectively. All of three figures showed a continued increase throughout the period.
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