The day and time the photos were taken can be said to be the same. The lighting is similar to one another. However, panel A is more zoomed in the picture than panel a. The stem and the grass patch can be seen in panel a, where the distance the photographer was standing was different. The orientation and lighting look quite the same, but it is a little brighter in A than a.
For panel b and c. The lighting is the same. The zoom, the adjusting of scale is different causing panel B, and C only showing the parking lot and the building, where panel b, and c show the tree patch and the components panel B, and C are presenting. In panel b, and c, there also is a scale bar at the top right corner which in Panel B, and C it is invisible.
The quality of photos, color, and the size as on big panel match between both panels. The lack of instruction in where the photographer took the photograph made the replicator not able to have the correct zoom to the tree, nor the map. Also if the photographer has instructed how to change the ratio of each photo to create the one big panel, there would be no difference in each panel size.
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