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The image contains a bar graph titled "Australia telephone calls, by category, 2001-2008," displaying three categories: Local, National & International, and Mobiles. In 2001, Local had 72 units, National & International had 38 units, and Mobiles had 2 units. In 2002, Local had 78 units, National & International had 41 units, and Mobiles had 5 units. In 2003, Local had 85 units, National & International had 45 units, and Mobiles had 7 units. In 2004, Local had 89 units, National & International had 48 units, and Mobiles had 9 units. In 2005, Local had 90 units, National & International had 50 units, and Mobiles had 12 units. In 2006, Local had 84 units, National & International had 55 units, and Mobiles had 23 units. In 2007, Local had 79 units, National & International had 50 units, and Mobiles had 39 units. In 2008, Local had 72 units, National & International had 46 units, and Mobiles had 51 units.
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The bar chart illustrates the total duration of telephone calls in Australia, measured in billions of minutes, across three types—Local, National & International, and Mobile—between 2001 and 2008.
Overall, local calls were the most common type of telephone communication throughout the period, although their usage peaked in 2005 and then declined. In contrast, the number of minutes spent on national and international calls as well as mobile calls increased steadily over the years.
In detail, local calls started at 72 billion minutes in 2001 and rose gradually to a high of 90 billion in 2005. After that, they saw a slight decline, falling back to 72 billion by 2008, the same level as in 2001. National and international calls grew steadily from 38 billion minutes in 2001 to 61 billion in 2008.
Mobile calls experienced the most dramatic growth. Starting at just 2 billion minutes in 2001, this category saw a continuous rise, reaching 46 billion minutes by 2008—more than twenty times the initial figure.
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