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The image is a bar chart portraying the "Percent of Total Population Age 65 and Over: 1900 to 2000." Each bar represents a decade from 1900 to 2000 and is divided into three age groups: 65-74, 75-84, and 85+. Data represented in percentages for each decade and age group are as follows: 1900 (65-74: 2.9, 75-84: 1.0, 85+: 0.2), 1910 (3.0, 1.1, 0.2), 1920 (3.3, 1.2, 0.3), 1930 (3.8, 1.3, 0.4), 1940 (4.8, 2.2, 0.5), 1950 (5.6, 2.6, 0.7), 1960 (6.1, 3.0, 0.9), 1970 (6.9, 3.4, 1.0), 1980 (7.3, 4.0, 1.2), 1990 (6.5, 4.4, 1.5), 2000 (6.5, 4.4, 1.5). The total percentages for each decade are listed above the bars, from 1900 (4.1) to 2000 (12.4).
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The bar chart provides a comparison of the people age 65 and more in terms of percentage between 1900 and 2000.
Overall, it is clear that 65-74 experienced a significant upward trend. In a same time 85+ saw a gradual increase throught the period.
The figures for 65-74 reached a peak of 7.3 percent in 1990 surpasing all the other categories. 65-74 stood at 6.1 percent in 1960. IIn stark contrast the volume of 85+ was significantly lower, at only 0.5 percent. The gap between 65-74 and 75-84 are reduce over the time, with 2.9 in 1990 for 65-74 and 1 percent for 75-84 in a same period. The data for 75-84 triple between 1900 to 1970 climing to 1 percent by 3 percent. The same case is produced for the category 85+ between 1960 and 2000, passed to 0,5 by 1.5 during this period.
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