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Gimnazjum im. Anny Wazówny Golub-Dobrzyń Poland

Maths and nature Comenius Why Maths

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The file was prepared as a part of the Comenius project Why Maths? by the polish studetns from Anna Vasa school in Golub-Dobrzyń (Poland)

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Page 1: Maths and nature Comenius Why Maths

Gimnazjum

im. Anny Wazówny

Golub-Dobrzyń

Poland

Page 2: Maths and nature Comenius Why Maths

Probably most of us have never taken the time to examine very carefully the number or arrangement of petals on a flower. If we were to do so, we would find that the number of petals on a flower, that still has all of its petals intact and has not lost any, for many flowers is a Fibonacci number:

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•3 petals: lily, iris •5 petals: buttercup, wild rose, larkspur, columbine (aquilegia) •8 petals: delphiniums •13 petals: ragwort, corn marigold, cineraria, •21 petals: aster, black-eyed susan, chicory •34 petals: plantain, pyrethrum •55, 89 petals: michaelmas daisies, the asteraceae family

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There is also a link between Fibbonacci sequence and and a special number that ancient civilizations called “the golden ratio”.

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“Logarithmic Spiral” of a common shell.

The Fibonacci numbers increase at a ratio that is revealed in objects and

spirals. The Chambered Nautilus (which was so special to my husband and I) if cut in half reveals a series of chambers. Each chamber increases in size as the mollusk grows. They

also grow in a spiral shape.

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This same spiral and ratio is present in a great many products of nature; the pinecone, the

pineapple

Look at the bottom of a pinecone. It has those same kinds of spirals. They don’t go around and around in a circle – they go out likefireworks. Look at the pictures above to see what that looks

like.

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Golden Spiral also appears in hurricanes,

ram's horns,

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sea-horse tails

growing fern leaves

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seed patterns of sunflowers

All the sunflowers in the world show a number of spirals that are within the Fibonacci Sequence.

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Look at the following images of a sunflower:

By observing closely the seeds configuration you will see how appears a kind of spiral patterns. In the top left picture we have highlighted three of the spirals typologies that could be found on almost any sunflower. Well, if you look at one of the typologies, for example the one in green, and you go to the illustration above right you can check that there is a certain number of spirals like this, specifically 55 spirals.

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We have more examples in the two upper panels, cyan and orange, they are also arranged following values that

are within the sequence: 34 and 21 spirals.

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A lot of people love honey made by tiny bees. These

insects use so much mathematical strategy

throughout their daily lives. Just their hives use angles,

shape, tessellation and addition. Wasps and bees exhibit

polygons in their nests. Hexagons create nests

that require less material and work to build. It is an

efficient way of partitioning that also

saves energy.

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Hexagonal cell requires minimum amount of wax for construction while it

stores maximum amount of honey.

Why hexagons? Not squares or triangles? Hexagons fit most closely together without any gaps, so they are an ideal shape to maximise the available space.

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Fractals aren't just something we learn about in math class. They are also a gorgeous part of the natural world. Here are some of the most stunning examples of these

repeating patterns.

Romanesco broccoli is a particularly symmetrical fractal.

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The fern is one of many flora that are fractal; it’s an especially good example.

Each part is the roughly the same as the whole. When we break a leaf off of the

original and it looks like the original – break a leaf off of that leaf and that looks like

the original also.

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The delicate Queen Anne’s Lace, which is really just wild carrot, is a beautiful example of a floral fractal. Each

blossom produces smaller iterative blooms. This particular image was shot from underneath to demonstrate the

fractal nature of the plant.

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The Giant's Causeway, located in Ireland, is an fascinating formation found in nature. It is a collection of hexagons tesselating the ground - even in 3D at some points.

In nature we can see samples of tessellations. This phenomenon is really beautiful and incredible. Here you can

see some examples :

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Rock formation in "White Pocket", Vermillion Cliffs National Monument,

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Veins in a leaf

Dragonfly

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Cracked dried mud