The given bar chart illustrates total distance travelled by five different kinds of transportation in the UK from 1990 to 2000.
Overall, we can see in the bar chart that most people prefer travelling by bus and rail, while fewer prefered bicycle, motorbike and air travelling through the 10 years of time period. In the last year the total distance showed by far the most long kilometres in the bar chart.
Focusing on the first types of transports: bicycle, motorbike, and air between 1990 and 2000, there was not huge difference between the total distances of this three types of information. For example, overall distance that bicycle showed in the bar chart is nearly 5 kilometres in the 1990, but it experience a significant decline in the 2000 from approximately 5 to about 2 kilometres. Likewise, total distance of motorbike in 1990 was about 6 kilometres, before the fall to nearly 3 kilometres in the 2000. However, the overall distance of air travelling changed the trend with the total distance of about 6 kilometres in the 2000, after the 1 kilometre of total in 1990.
The next overalls from other two types of transportation and total distances showed significant increases. For instance, the total distance that travelled by bus was 40 kilometres in the 1990, before growing nearly to the 42 kilometres in 2000. But unlikely that overall distance that travelled by rail fell slightly in both years. In 1990, total distance travelled by rail was approximately 36 kilometres, but then it increased to one more kilometre (37) in the letter year. Finally, the total distance that travelled by all types of transportation was 100 kilometres in the 1990, but it was 150 kilometres in 2000.
