This board shows the number of miles that have been bicycled in Britain in a 25-year time stamp by each gender and between the age of 5 to 60+. Overall, is it obvious that male cyclists tended to travel higher distances than females.
Firstly, from the first year all the way to the twenty fifth males between the age of 11 to 17 had travelled the longest distances hitting 220 miles per cyclist the first year, and even the obvious decline by approximately 45% of miles by the end in compare with 25 years ago, male teenagers had overreached female cyclists in general. In comparison, the longest miles cycled by females in the two decades was by teenagers between the age 11-17 who reached 56 miles in the first two years. While, in general females had travelled in average only little less than the half of their highest number of miles.
Secondly, the table describes an overall decrease of traveled distances between the first until the last year in all age and gender groups, except the female group between the age 5 to 10 which almost doubled their cycled length from the 18th year to the 25th, where they travelled as many miles as the boys of the same age group. It is shown that this age group succeeded in a similar amount of distance with people above 60 years old.
Finally, the table shows that each age group had a stable travelled length between the years, while most of the differences is obvious between the miles traveled in comparison to each gender group rather than the ages.
