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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 data presents the proportion of total US resident aged 65 and above from 1900 to 2000. Overall, it is clear that in 1990 and 2000 the number of aged people in each categories showed high statistics in the chart compare to others.
On the one hand, the population who aged 65.74 presented small amount of proportion(2.9%) in 1900 and the highest one was about 7.3% in 1990. Despite these fluctuations it increased throughout the decade at the result, people with age 65.74 dominated the graph with its high statistics.
On the other hand, residents who aged over 75.84 also rose per year. However, the small proportion started with 1.0 in 1900, this trend reached to peak of precentage (4.0) by 1990. Despite this increases, statistics in both ages (65.74-75-84) decreased significantly.
Moreover, the avarage aged residents (85+) got the lowest points in the trend. The increase started in 1950 with 0.4% and it grew abou 1.5 % in 2000.
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