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The image shows a horizontal bar chart with data for 12 different countries across three categories: Gold, Silver, and Bronze. Data for each category is presented in separate, adjacent bars for each country, with numerical values extending from 0 up to 2,500. USA has the longest bars for Gold and Silver, extending past 2,000 and 1,500 respectively, while the Bronze bar reaches 1,000. Soviet Union's Gold bar extends to 1,000 and Silver to 500, while Bronze is slightly less than 500. UK's Gold bar is around 500, with Silver and Bronze bars around 250 each. France's Gold bar is around 250, and Silver and Bronze are around 150 each. Germany has Gold and Silver bars near 750, and Bronze close to 500. Italy's Gold bar reaches 500, with Silver at 250 and Bronze near 200. Sweden's Silver and Bronze bars are near 150 and Gold is around 100. Australia's Gold bar is around 250, Silver near 150, and Bronze close to 200. Hungary's Gold bar is close to 400, Silver near 250, and Bronze past 200. East Germany has Gold and Silver bars just past 400 and Bronze at 250. Japan's Gold is just over 200, Silver around 100, and Bronze over 50. China's all three bars are close to the starting point, with Gold, Silver, and Bronze around 50 each.
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The bar chart illustrates the total number of Olympic medals, categorized by gold, silver, and bronze, awarded to twelve different nations.
Overall, the USA and the Soviet Union stand out as the leading medal-winning countries by a significant margin. The remaining ten nations all earned considerably fewer medals, with their totals falling well below the top two.
The USA dominated the medal table with over 2,000 medals in total. The gold medals made up the largest portion of this haul, followed by silver and bronze. The Soviet Union came in second, approximating just over 1,000 medals, with a fairly EQUAL distribution of gold, silver, and bronze. This total was about half of what the USA achieved. The UK and France were the next highest-ranking countries, both achieved ACHIEVING just under 500 medals.
Germany, Italy, Sweden, Australia, and Hungary all secured ROUGHLY similar medal counts, with their totals ranging from roughly 350 to 450. At the lower end of the chart, the four countries with the fewest medals were East Germany, Japan, and China, each with totals of around 300 to 350 medals.
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