Well here are some of the ones I remember * leaves on plants *snake skin *a pineapple *scales on a fish
Just look around you...On your house, there are brick walls. These are examples of non-regular tessellations...Look at pictures of honeycombs that bees live in. Those are examples of regular tessellations...Go on google or whatever you use and look up the artwork of M.C. Escher.
pineapple, honey comb, turtle, fish scales peacock feathers. hope that helps!
Scales on a fish Scales on a tortoise Pineapple Honeycomb Corn on the cob
Actually, tessellations that use more than one type of regular polygon are called semi-regular or Archimedean tessellations, not regular tessellations. Regular tessellations consist of only one type of regular polygon repeating in a pattern. Examples of regular tessellations include those formed by equilateral triangles, squares, or hexagons. Semi-regular tessellations combine two or more different types of regular polygons while still covering a plane without gaps or overlaps.
Well here are some of the ones I remember * leaves on plants *snake skin *a pineapple *scales on a fish
Just look around you...On your house, there are brick walls. These are examples of non-regular tessellations...Look at pictures of honeycombs that bees live in. Those are examples of regular tessellations...Go on google or whatever you use and look up the artwork of M.C. Escher.
Tessellations
All sorts of polygons can create tessellations. See attached link for some examples: http://http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tessellation
Tessellations can be found in art, architecture, nature, and mathematics. You can see tessellations in tiles, quilts, pavement designs, honeycomb patterns, and even in the arrangement of fish scales. Mathematically, regular polygons like squares, triangles, and hexagons can tessellate a plane.
pineapple, honey comb, turtle, fish scales peacock feathers. hope that helps!
Tessellations can be found in nature in various forms such as honeycomb patterns in beehives, fish scales, plant leaf arrangements, and the geometric patterns on the skin of some animals like snakes and turtles. These natural tessellations help organisms optimize space, efficiency, and protection in their environments.
A tessellation or tiling of the plane is a collection of plane figures that fills the plane with no overlaps and no gaps.
Some examples of red things in nature are roses, strawberries, and ladybugs. Some examples of green things in nature are grass, leaves, and frogs.
floors doors floors doors electronics and houses.
Flower petals, tiling, art
Some facts on tessellations are that there are different types of tessellations such as regular and semi-regular. In tessellations, each vertex will have a sum of 360º which is what all of the angles should come out to.