Scientists find 60,000-year-old ostrich eggshell carvings follow precise geometric rules, revealing early humans carefully planned designs.
Nalini Anantharaman is a modern mathematics and physics titan, renowned for her unique ability to find order within the heart ...
Crows can recognize geometric patterns, suggesting that humans aren't unique in understanding shape structure.
At multiple archaeological sites across southern Africa, researchers have uncovered hundreds of unusual fragments of ostrich ...
Evidence suggests that 60,000 years ago, humans possessed the mental plasticity to plan complex visual systems.
“The results demonstrate that Homo sapiens during the late [Middle Stone Age] mastered precise, pre-planned patterns anchored in specific geometric affordances: orthogonality [meaning the use of right ...
60,000-Year-Old “Highly Unusual” Etchings Could Point to Humanity’s Earliest Use of Geometric Design
Evidence of early human use of geometric concepts in prehistoric art has surfaced in Africa, pointing to complex patterns in ...
At several archaeological sites in southern Africa, hundreds of highly unusual fragments of ostrich eggs have been found.
Inspired by the Japanese art of kirigami, an MIT team has designed a technique that could transform flat panels into medical devices, habitats, and other objects without the use of tools.
Rethinking solar panel geometry beyond the traditional rectangle can unlock significant energy potential by optimizing coverage on complex, irregular rooflines.
A subtle twist between atomically thin magnetic layers can generate unexpectedly large and complex spin structures.
As semiconductor process nodes scale down to 5nm and below, the complexity of Integrated Circuit (IC) design grows exponentially, and design rules evolve from simple one dimensional constraints into ...
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