Editorial-style biology infographic showing the Layers of the Muscular System in a clean side-by-side comparison. This man body organs diagram features a torso cross-section, magnified muscle tissue layers, cool blue vector styling, and clear academic labels for higher-education anatomy content.
Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Biological diagram infographic titled "Layers of the Muscular System" centered on a clean labeled comparison diagram of two structures: left panel shows an educational human body torso cross-section highlighting superficial to deep muscle organization, right panel shows a magnified structural comparison of skeletal muscle tissue layers from whole muscle to fascicle to muscle fiber. Use an editorial-grade anatomical cutaway composition with balanced side-by-side panels, thin leader lines, sharp readable typography, and university-undergraduate scientific accuracy. Mark 9 labeled components around the central diagrams, each with a short English label and one-line English function description: "Skin" — "Protective outer covering over the musculoskeletal body wall."; "Superficial fascia" — "Loose connective tissue that stores fat and allows movement of skin."; "Deep fascia" — "Dense connective layer that surrounds and separates muscles."; "Epimysium" — "Fibrous sheath enclosing the entire skeletal muscle."; "Perimysium" — "Connective tissue layer bundling muscle fibers into fascicles."; "Fascicle" — "A bundle of muscle fibers that contracts as a functional unit."; "Endomysium" — "Delicate connective tissue surrounding each individual muscle fiber."; "Muscle fiber" — "Elongated contractile cell that generates force."; "Tendon" — "Collagen-rich structure transmitting muscle force to bone." Arrange the labels evenly around the composition with thin leader lines pointing precisely to each anatomical layer, and include subtle visual hierarchy showing superficial-to-deep organization with cool blue tonal separation. Add a small unobtrusive comparison cue between panels, such as matching color bands or arrows, to show how gross body-wall layers relate to microscopic muscle organization. Visual style: colorful kids-book softened for higher education, cool clinical blues palette with cyan, teal, navy, and pale ice-blue accents, friendly but scientifically rigorous mood, simplified vector shading, crisp outlines, clean white background, medical-textbook clarity, editorial scientific illustration, vector-clean lines, no photographic textures. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no graphic gore, no real patient photos, no watermarks No graphic medical gore, no real patient photographs, no surgical blood. For human anatomy, keep illustrations educationally tasteful. For animal anatomy, no cruelty imagery. Scientifically accurate labeling and proportions.
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