Educational biological infographic of the human lymphatic network in a vintage scientific plate style, designed with clear arrows, labeled anatomy, and child-friendly captions. This photosynthesis flow chart style visual blends editorial medical clarity with aged paper tones for a polished, classroom-friendly brand aesthetic.
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 "Lymphatic Network Flow" centered on a clean labeled pathway diagram of the human lymphatic network, shown as an educational full-body front view with simplified internal flow from tissue fluid input to venous blood output, designed for kids ages 8–12. Arrange 7 labeled components around the central diagram with thin leader lines, short English labels in quotes, and one-line English function captions in quotes. Show pathway direction with clear arrows and input → output markers: interstitial fluid entering lymphatic capillaries, flowing through collecting vessels and lymph nodes, joining larger trunks and ducts, and emptying into the bloodstream near the subclavian veins. Include these 7 labels exactly: 1. "Lymphatic Capillaries" — "Pick up extra fluid from body tissues." 2. "Lymph Vessels" — "Carry lymph through the body with one-way flow." 3. "Lymph Nodes" — "Filter lymph and help trap germs." 4. "Tonsils" — "Help defend the mouth and throat from infection." 5. "Thymus" — "Helps young immune cells learn to fight disease." 6. "Spleen" — "Filters blood and supports immune defense." 7. "Thoracic Duct" — "Returns lymph to the bloodstream." Add simple input marker "Tissue Fluid In" near peripheral tissues and output marker "Bloodstream Out" near the venous return at the base of the neck. Use biologically accurate anatomical naming and child-friendly simplification, with tasteful human anatomy proportions and a clear visible lymph vessel network. Visual style: vintage 1900s scientific plate, editorial scientific illustration with delicate ink linework, aged paper background, subtle engraved shading, natural anatomy tones palette of muted beige, soft brown, olive, dusty red, and faded blue, calm educational mood. Emphasize medical-textbook clarity, editorial scientific illustration, vector-clean lines, no photographic textures. All text sharp, high contrast, and readable. 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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