This infographic from UsefulCharts.com, titled 'Evolution of the Alphabet', illustrates the transformation of letters from their earliest forms to the modern Latin script. The chart is structured in rows, each representing a different script or time period, with columns for each letter. The rows are labeled as follows from top to bottom: Proto-Sinaitic (c. 1750 BCE), Phoenician (c. 1000 BCE), Archaic Greek (c. 750 BCE), Old Italic (c. 400 BCE), Roman Square Capitals (c. 1 CE), Roman Cursive (c. 1 CE), New Roman Cursive (c. 300 CE), Uncial (c. 500 CE), Carolingian (c. 1000 CE), Blackletter (c. 1250 CE), Modern Latin Lowercase (c. 1500 CE), and Modern Latin Uppercase (c. 1500 CE). Each row shows the evolution of letters with lines connecting them to their modern counterparts. The letters are color-coded: red for A, orange for B, yellow for C, green for D, blue for E, purple for F, pink for G, and so on. The chart includes the following text at the top: 'EVOLUTION OF THE ALPHABET FROM ITS EARLIEST FORMS TO THE MODERN LATIN SCRIPT'. At the bottom, there is a copyright notice: '© 2020, UsefulCharts Publishing - Designed by Matt Baker, PhD - ISBN: 978-1-7751393-0-1'. Additional text at the bottom lists the fonts used: 'Fonts used: Insular, Alphabetum, Chomsky, Pesky Phoenician, Pfeffer, ProtoSinaitic, Smaragd, Trajan Pro'.