## pp_rawpca_la.png The image is a graph that displays data related to "Mean trajectory (gray) and upper (maize) and lower (blue) variability for LA Data." The x-axis represents "Normalized Time," which ranges from approximately 0 to 1,000. The y-axis represents the "Line," ranging from about 0.25 to 0.75. The graph is divided into six panels labeled as numbers 1 through 6 at the top of each panel. Each panel shows a different set of data points and lines that represent the mean trajectory, upper variability (maize), and lower variability (blue) for LA Data over time. - **Panel 1**: The gray line representing the mean trajectory starts high on the y-axis and gradually decreases as it moves to the right along the x-axis. The maize line (upper variability) is above the gray line throughout, while the blue line (lower variability) is below the gray line. - **Panel 2**: Similar to Panel 1, the gray mean trajectory starts high on the y-axis and gradually decreases as it moves to the right along the x-axis. The maize upper variability line remains above the gray line, and the blue lower variability line stays below. - **Panel 3**: This panel shows a similar pattern where the gray mean trajectory starts high and decreases over time. The maize upper variability is consistently above the gray line, while the blue lower variability is below it. - **Panel 4**: Here, the gray mean trajectory also begins at a higher point on the y-axis and gradually decreases as it moves to the right along the x-axis. The maize upper variability remains above the gray line, and the blue lower variability stays below. - **Panel 5**: In this panel, the gray mean trajectory starts high and decreases over time. The maize upper variability is consistently above the gray line, while the blue lower variability is below it. - **Panel 6**: This final panel shows a similar pattern where the gray mean trajectory begins at a higher point on the y-axis and gradually decreases as it moves to the right along the x-axis. The maize upper variability remains above the gray line, and the blue lower variability stays below. Each panel provides a snapshot of how these variables change over normalized time for different data sets or conditions labeled by numbers 1 through 6 at the top of each panel. This description was generated automatically from image files by a local LLM, and thus, may not be fully accurate. Please feel free to ask questions if you have further questions about the nature of the image or its meaning within the presentation.