US Curriculum Alignment
CCSS SL.K.5, NGSS K-LS1-1
Animal Poster – African Buffalo
Adult African buffalo shown without background, focusing on horn formation, body weight, and stance for clear, structured observation. Prepared as a reliable reference for animal study and comparison.
- Instant digital download after checkout
- Print at home, as many times as you like
- High-resolution PDF — ready for A4 & US Letter
- Formats
- A2, A3, A4, Arch C, Tabloid, US Letter
- Type
- Animal Poster
The African buffalo's heavy curved horns and stocky build make it one of the more recognizable silhouettes on the savanna, and this poster gives kids a clear, calm look at the animal itself. It downloads instantly as a digital file in A2, A3, A4, Arch C, Tabloid, and US Letter, so sizing to your frame is simple.
Print it for a homeschool nature corner or a classroom wall, no shipping wait involved. As a single poster, it's an easy add to a growing set of African wildlife prints.
The subject
comes first.
The same hand-drawn look across the whole collection — verified against the real species, animal by animal.
“This makes the material easier to combine, easier to read and suitable for a wide range of learning environments.”
The cards use a clean background and restrained typography so the illustration remains easy to see. Decorative frames, patterns and additional graphics are kept to a minimum.
Often
asked.
The horns fuse into a hard shield called a boss across the forehead once a bull matures, usually by around five to six years old. Younger bulls and cows have a visible gap down the middle that never fully closes.
It carries a barrel-shaped body and thick neck muscles built to support that bony boss and power the head during fights. Bulls can weigh up to 900 kg, making it one of the bulkiest grazing animals in Africa.
They are genuine weapons, curving outward and down before hooking upward into sharp tips. Bulls use them in dominance clashes and as serious defense against predators like lions.


