The provided charts compare the proportion of various sorts of waste disposed of in one country in two separate years, in 1960 and 2011.
Overall, what stands out is that with the exception of Green and Glass waste that showed stable trends within both periods, the percentage of all other categories experienced changes as Metal, Plastic, Wood and Food waste tended to be thrown more in the latter year, while the reverse could be said about Paper, Textiles and Other ones. Of particular note is that the biggest amount of rubbish came from Paper in 1960, which was overtaken by Food waste by 2011.
Looking at 1960 first, whereas Paper was the most commonly disposed one, constituting one-fourth of the total waste disposal followed by Textiles (17%), the share of "Others"(12%) and Food (12%) was relatively lower. Conversely, with only 4% to 9% ratio, Green waste (9%), Metal (8%), Plastic (8%), Glass (5%), Wood (4%) were the least thrown ones.
Turning to the year 2011, the trends were different. Food waste became the most dominant with 21%, which was slightly more disposed than Plastic and Paper. The former stood at 18% and the latter at 15%. By contrast, among remaining categories, the only one with higher index than 10% was Textiles (11%) and the rest, including Green waste (9%), Metal (9%), Wood (8%), Glass (5%) and Other (4%), displayed the lowest figures.
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Overall, what stands out is that with the exception of Green and Glass waste that showed stable trends within both periods, the percentage of all other categories experienced changes as Metal, Plastic, Wood and Food waste tended to be thrown more in the latter year, while the reverse could be said about Paper, Textiles and Other ones. Of particular note is that the biggest amount of rubbish came from Paper in 1960, which was overtaken by Food waste by 2011.
Looking at 1960 first, whereas Paper was the most commonly disposed one, constituting one-fourth of the total waste disposal followed by Textiles (17%), the share of "Others"(12%) and Food (12%) was relatively lower. Conversely, with only 4% to 9% ratio, Green waste (9%), Metal (8%), Plastic (8%), Glass (5%), Wood (4%) were the least thrown ones.
Turning to the year 2011, the trends were different. Food waste became the most dominant with 21%, which was slightly more disposed than Plastic and Paper. The former stood at 18% and the latter at 15%. By contrast, among remaining categories, the only one with higher index than 10% was Textiles (11%) and the rest, including Green waste (9%), Metal (9%), Wood (8%), Glass (5%) and Other (4%), displayed the lowest figures.
Solid 7.5! Read and learn.
#classworksample
#task1
#writinghelp
@teachershermuhammad8_5