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The graph compares the change in the number of foreigners who visited three regions in a country in Europe from 1987 to 2007.
It is clear that there was a sharp rise in the number of foreign tourists who visiting the coast, the mountains and the lakes. It is noticeable that the figure for foreigners to the coast was the highest during the given period.
In detail, the number of visitors from foreign countries to the lakes increased from 10.000 in 1987 to 40.000 in 2000 before reaching a peak of around 73.000 visitors in 2002. By contrast, this figure dropped significantly to only 50.000 people at the end of the period.
There was an upward trend of overall both coastal and mountainous. However, mountainous areas remaied the least attracting of the three possible travel options. In 1987, the quantity of visitors traveling to the coast and the mountains were 40.000 and 20.000, respectively. In 1992, the coast witnessed a slight decline to 36.000, which was followed by a significant climb to around 60.000 peoples, whereas the number of those visiting mountainous areas went up especially to 30.000 in 2002. In 2007 while the quantity of overseas tourists going to the coast rose to 75.000, there was an increased slightly in those who paid a visit to the mountains to about 35.000.