How to draw a lion looking good and dominant is as follows:
Draw a horizontal teardrop shape, which is the chest and abdomen of the lion. The front of the chest is connected to the shoulders. Now the back can be drawn to complete the main body parts. To get the proportions of the legs right, we need to find the position of the horizon first. Before drawing the limbs, draw the hips at the back. Draw all the legs and the tail.
To make the head proportional, use the length of the shoulders as a basis, which are the same length, and the neck, which is slightly shorter than it. Draw the main part of the skull, which consists of the upper jaw and the brain case. Attach the bottom of the brain case and draw the lower jaw. Visualize the movement of the lower jaw toward the upper jaw to determine the length of the lower jaw. Add details of the skull that are important to the anatomical drawing: the eye sockets, cheeks, and nasal passages.
The lion, the lion, is a large fierce animal of the genus Panthera in the family Catidae of the order Carnivora. Its body is supple, strong, and thick-chested; it has a short, hard skull and jaws that make it easy to hunt prey; the lion's tongue has many hard, inward-curving protuberances that facilitate feeding and grooming; adult males are heavier than females and larger in appearance, and males have very long iguanas.
Zoological history
Lions are big cats, and scientists have concluded, based on their evolutionary trajectory, that the species originated about 120,000 years ago. The latest results, published in the British journal BMC Evolutionary Biology, were compiled by researchers from Britain, the United States, France and Australia***. They took samples from ancient lion specimens distributed in museums around the world.
Including the extinct North African Barbary lion, the Iranian lion and so on. The researchers sequenced their genes and compared the sequencing results with existing Asiatic and African lions to come up with an evolutionary roadmap for modern lions.
Morphological features
The world's only cat with both male and female morphology. Male lions have manes, while females do not. Lions have the largest skulls and shoulder heights of any feline, and males are generally larger than females.
The head and body length of males is generally 35-38 centimeters, and females are generally 28-32 centimeters. Specimens from South Africa and Egypt are larger (all males here), with head and body lengths generally exceeding 37 centimeters, and there are many specimens that are 38 and 39 centimeters.