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Self-Made Tapestry
Self-Made Tapestry
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€90.99
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Product details
- ISBN 9780198502432
- Weight: 634g
- Dimensions: 189 x 247mm
- Publication Date: 05 Jul 2001
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Paperback
Why do similar patterns and forms appear in nature in settings that seem to bear no relation to one another? The windblown ripples of desert sand follow a sinuous course that resembles the stripes of a zebra or a marine fish. In the trellis-like shells of microscopic sea creatures we see the same angles and intersections as for bubble walls in a foam. The forks of lightning mirror the branches of a river or a tree. This book explains why these are no coincidences. Nature commonly weaves its tapestry by self-organization, employing no master plan or blueprint but by simple, local interactions between its component parts - be they grains of sand, diffusing molecules or living cells. And the products of self- organization are typically universal patterns: spirals, spots, and stripes, branches, honeycombs. This book explains, in non-technical language, and with profuse illustrations, how nature's patterns are made.
Philip Ball is an editor at Nature magazine.
Self-Made Tapestry
€90.99
