Triclosan in Urine — Reading Scientific Graphs
GED Science Practice — Interpreting data and graphs
Average Triclosan Concentration in Urine
Tap any bar to see its value — graph stays visible on every tab
Data: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
What is this question about?
Triclosan is an antimicrobial chemical found in many personal care products — hand soaps, toothpaste, and deodorants. Because it is absorbed through the skin, scientists have studied how much builds up in people's bodies.
The graph shows average triclosan concentrations measured in urine (µg/L) across seven age groups in the U.S. population.
The GED question asks: "Which statement is supported by the results in the graph?"
Key science vocabulary
Average triclosan concentration in urine by age group
Tap any bar to see its exact value.
Data: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.
How to read this graph
Data table — all seven age groups
The highlighted row is the age group with the highest concentration.
| Age group | Avg. (µg/L) | Rank |
|---|---|---|
| 6–11 yrs | 7 | 6th |
| 12–19 yrs | 14 | 3rd |
| 20–29 yrs | 18 | 2nd |
| 30–39 yrs | 20 | 1st (highest) |
| 40–49 yrs | 16 | 4th |
| 50–59 yrs | 9 | 5th |
| 60+ yrs | 7 | 6th |
What patterns does the data show?
- Concentration is NOT the same across groups — ranges from ~7 to ~20 µg/L
- 30–39 age group has the single highest average (~20 µg/L)
- Concentration does NOT simply increase with age — it peaks at 30–39 then drops
- Youngest (6–11) and oldest (60+) both have the lowest levels
- There is no clear upward or downward trend across all groups
Breaking down each answer choice
The graph shows variation from ~7 to ~20 µg/L — nearly a 3× difference. The data directly contradicts this.
Concentration peaks at 30–39 then FALLS in older groups. Ages 50–59 and 60+ are lower than 12–19. No simple age-increase pattern exists.
The 30–39 bar is the tallest (~20 µg/L). This is a direct, factual reading of the graph. No assumptions needed.
This requires assuming higher concentration = more product use. The graph only shows urine concentration, not product usage. Many other factors could explain the difference.
