EarthDate
Amazingly, the structure of most living things, and many other things as well, conforms to one sequence of numbers. It was described in the 1200s by Italian mathematician Leonardo Pisano, also called Fibonacci, working from earlier Indian ideas. The Fibonacci Sequence is 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13 and onward – where the first two numbers, one and one, add up the next number, two. The next two numbers, one and two, add up to the next number, three. And so on. Most flowers have three, five, eight or thirteen petals. Spirals found in nature – seeds in a flowerhead, snail shells, even hurricane clouds – expand outward according to the sequence. Scientists looked at 12,000 spirals in different species and found that 90% adhered to the Fibonacci Sequence. But we’re not sure why. The pattern must confer some kind of structural advantage, enough that it continues to persist in newly formed species. Human designers often use the Fibonacci Sequence intentionally when designing art or architecture. Or unintentionally, by mimicking the geometries of nature. You can see it the next time you pick up a pinecone, eat an artichoke, or look in the mirror. The human body has one head, one torso, two arms, with three segments each, ending in five fingers. Efficient and elegant, the Fibonacci Sequence is the shape of nature.
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