A mythic atlas plate shows a lion in African savanna grass.

Full-bleed lion as living legend with old-world typography, compass marks, and accurate facts on Panthera leo, range, habitat, diet, social hunting, size, speed, and conservation.

Prompt

1 Mythic Atlas Plate - Lion

Create a 4:5 mythic natural-history atlas infographic about the lion. Show the lion as a full-bleed living legend in African savanna grassland, but keep all facts accurate. Use map lines, compass marks, old-world typography, and organic labels for Panthera leo, Mammalia / Carnivora / Felidae, range, habitat, diet, social hunting behavior, size, weight, speed, lifespan, predators, prey, Vulnerable conservation status, adaptations, and 3 surprising facts.

2 Beast of the Old Map - Giant Pacific Octopus

Create a 4:5 old-map wildlife infographic for the giant Pacific octopus, with the animal emerging from a full-bleed cold North Pacific kelp forest map. Include a small world map, range marks, Enteroctopus dofleini, Cephalopoda / Octopoda / Enteroctopodidae, physical stats, diet, hunting style, speed, lifespan, predators, prey, conservation status, unique adaptations, and 3 lesser-known facts.

3 Legendary Anatomy - King Cobra

Create a 4:5 ancient anatomy infographic for the king cobra, combining a powerful full-body hero in Southeast Asian forest with fine engraved callouts to hood, venom glands, fangs, scales, eyes, and body length. Include Ophiophagus hannah, Reptilia / Squamata / Elapidae, habitat, range, size, weight, speed, lifespan, diet, behavior, prey, predators, Vulnerable conservation status, world map, human scale diagram, and 3 surprising facts.

4 Creature of the Biome Atlas - Polar Bear

Create a 4:5 biome-atlas infographic where the polar bear stands as the central species of Arctic sea ice. The full-bleed scene should include ice, water, wind, seals, and distant seabirds as subtle background elements. Overlay Ursus maritimus, Mammalia / Carnivora / Ursidae, range, body stats, diet, hunting behavior, speed, lifespan, Vulnerable conservation status, adaptations, map, scale comparison, and 3 surprising facts.
Published: June 2, 2026 by