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08/12/2012 08:40:47 PM · #26			 | 
		
		Originally posted by sophiawood:   As a mathematician I have to say - Yes, Yes and Yes for a fractal challenge.
 
 But I tend to go with a preference of less editing and have people find them in nature. Capture the fractal as is.
 
 (Then they can go map it to mathematics if they are inclined)  |   
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08/12/2012 10:23:20 PM · #27			 | 
		
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08/13/2012 12:58:54 AM · #28			 | 
		
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08/13/2012 03:38:01 PM · #29			 | 
		
		
 That was a fascinating pbs program, Cory.  Thanks for posting it. |  
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08/15/2012 12:38:18 AM · #30			 | 
		
		Originally posted by hahn23:   Sand dunes, snow drifts, fern fronds, conch shells, broccoli, crystals.... fractals abound in nature.  |   
 
 ^ Thanks for that. All I could think about were Escher drawings and things of that sort with the verbal description. Those photos help a lot. |  
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08/15/2012 02:05:09 AM · #31			 | 
		
		| Somebody wake up the Beav. |  
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08/15/2012 09:44:15 AM · #32			 | 
		
		The image below was my reason for suggesting the challenge idea.  No snow for me now, but other fractals are abundant now.
 
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08/15/2012 09:52:41 AM · #33			 | 
		
		| Looking forward to this challenge very much! |  
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08/15/2012 10:44:57 AM · #34			 | 
		
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08/15/2012 10:59:16 AM · #35			 | 
		
		Originally posted by bspurgeon:   Somebody wake up the Beav.  |   
 
 Ohboyohboyohboy! On vacation at the moment without my Sigma camera (mostly film for the trip). This gives me a reason to look forward to coming home... |  
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08/15/2012 11:03:10 AM · #36			 | 
		
		Originally posted by hahn23:   The image below was my reason for suggesting the challenge idea.  No snow for me now, but other fractals are abundant now.
 
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 DNMC
 
 no order in that choas :) |  
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08/15/2012 12:25:41 PM · #37			 | 
		
		Originally posted by mike_311:   Originally posted by hahn23:   The image below was my reason for suggesting the challenge idea.  No snow for me now, but other fractals are abundant now.
 
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 DNMC
 
 no order in that choas :)  |   
 Why is geometry often described as 'cold' and 'dry?' One reason lies in its inability to describe the shape of a cloud, a mountain, a coastline, or a tree. Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a straight line... Nature exhibits not simply a higher degree but an altogether different level of complexity. 
 - Benoit Mandelbrot
 The Fractal Geometry of Nature (1977), Introduction, xiii. |  
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08/15/2012 12:57:13 PM · #38			 | 
		
		 
 
 I wish we had two weeks for this challenge. |  
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08/15/2012 08:38:46 PM · #39			 | 
		
		| Google search for Fractals in Nature |  
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08/15/2012 09:08:02 PM · #40			 | 
		
		I'm thinking something like this one would do ok in this challenge, if it were cropped down to the tree line at the top. 
  
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08/15/2012 09:29:26 PM · #41			 | 
		
		| Well when I first saw this I thought argh .... now ya'll have me intrigued |  
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08/15/2012 09:33:38 PM · #42			 | 
		
		Originally posted by littlemav:   Well when I first saw this I thought argh .... now ya'll have me intrigued  |   
 Great!  There are infinite possibilities.  Fractals abound in nature.  
 
 The image below would have been something I would have sought out, had we been in winter conditions.
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08/15/2012 10:42:43 PM · #43			 | 
		
		Originally posted by MelonMusketeer:   I'm thinking something like this one would do ok in this challenge, if it were cropped down to the tree line at the top. 
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 I think its fine as is! |  
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08/16/2012 08:51:39 AM · #44			 | 
		
		
 
 you are right, i keep seeing the same things over and over! |  
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08/16/2012 09:40:11 AM · #45			 | 
		
		Mandlebrot vs Fibonacci!
 look for self similar repeating patterns
 there's no inspiration in google images for 'fractals in nature'
 but the results for 'rabbit fractals' is pretty interesting |  
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08/16/2012 09:49:56 AM · #46			 | 
		
		Originally posted by pixelpig:   Mandlebrot vs Fibonacci!
 look for self similar repeating patterns
 there's no inspiration in google images for 'fractals in nature'
 but the results for 'rabbit fractals' is pretty interesting  |   
 
 This image   would NOT be a DNMC. |  
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08/16/2012 11:08:51 AM · #47			 | 
		
		ok, i get it now, its a nature frees study.
 
 (ducks and hides) |  
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08/16/2012 11:12:19 AM · #48			 | 
		
		Originally posted by hahn23:  This image   would NOT be a DNMC.  |   
 You'll have to convince me that its a fractal.  By my working definition, I'm not sure it is. |  
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08/16/2012 11:19:01 AM · #49			 | 
		
		Originally posted by JamesDowning:  You'll have to convince me that its a fractal.  By my working definition, I'm not sure it is.  |   
 I agree. 
 For me, fractals are recursively defined and small sections of them are similar to large ones. |  
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08/16/2012 11:24:04 AM · #50			 | 
		
		Originally posted by JamesDowning:   
 You'll have to convince me that its a fractal.  By my working definition, I'm not sure it is.  |   
 
 the only image in the thread that even resembled a fractal is the waves, and the cauliflower.
 
 just becuase chaos defines nature, doesn't mean fractals are abound.
  Message edited by author 2012-08-16 11:25:33. |  
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