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Biological Drawing Guidlines

The document provides guidelines for preparing biological drawings and tables. It lists 11 guidelines for drawings, such as drawing what is observed, using a mechanical pencil, keeping drawings large enough to show all parts, and including cell boundaries to indicate tissue appearance. It also lists 3 guidelines for tables, such as drawing tables in mechanical pencil with a ruler and printing titles in all caps below the table. The guidelines are intended to help create clear, accurate, and consistently formatted biological drawings and tables.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
499 views2 pages

Biological Drawing Guidlines

The document provides guidelines for preparing biological drawings and tables. It lists 11 guidelines for drawings, such as drawing what is observed, using a mechanical pencil, keeping drawings large enough to show all parts, and including cell boundaries to indicate tissue appearance. It also lists 3 guidelines for tables, such as drawing tables in mechanical pencil with a ruler and printing titles in all caps below the table. The guidelines are intended to help create clear, accurate, and consistently formatted biological drawings and tables.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING BIOLOGICAL DRAWINGS AND TABLES :

1. Draw what you see, not what you think should be there.

2. A lead pencil, preferably a 2H MECHANICAL PENCIL, is to be used for drawings,


titles, and labels.

3. Drawings (or diagrams) should be as simple as possible with clean cut lines (do
not sketch) showing what has been observed

4. Drawings must be large enough to show all parts without crowding. The greater
the number of parts to be included, the larger the drawing should be. Drawings
must be about 3/4 a page in size.

5. Keep your drawing to the left of the centre of the page. (Save the right-hand
side of the page for labels)

6. All labels should be in a column to the right of the drawing and printed.
Lines to the labelled parts should be drawn with a ruler and parallel to
each other . The lettering of the words should be horizontal.

7. Use a ruler for label lines.

8. Do not shade your drawing. If you wish to indicate a darker area use
dots(stipple).

9. Indicate the thickness of a plant cell wall by using 2 lines.

10. Most plant and animal tissues are made up of individual cells. When one
representative cell of such a tissue is to be drawn, make sure you include the cell
boundaries of the other cells that border it. This will indicate the general
appearance of the tissue without the necessity of drawing every cell.

11. All drawings are titled. The all caps printed and underlined title appears
immediately BELOW the drawing, against the left-hand margin. The magnification
of the object drawn follows the title and is in parentheses. Example: Blood Cell
(300X).

GUIDELINES FOR DRAWING TABLES :

1. ALL TABLES MUST BE DRAWING IN MECHANICAL Pencil WITH A


RULER.
2. Contents of table must be written in pen
3. Titles of tables must be printed in all caps ,underlined and printed
BELOW the table.

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