Fractals in nature are like repeating patterns that look the same no matter how much you zoom in or out.
Imagine you have a tree, and you look at it from far away, it’s just one big shape. But if you get closer, you see branches splitting into smaller branches. If you look even closer, each of those little branches splits again, like tiny trees inside the bigger tree! That's how fractals work in nature, they're patterns that repeat themselves, getting smaller and smaller.
Like a Snowflake
A good example is a snowflake. When it forms, each part of the snowflake keeps growing in the same way. You can see tiny shapes inside big ones, like a miniature version of the whole snowflake, just like how cookies are cut from cookie dough!
Like a Coconut
Another example is a coconut. If you look at it, its surface has ridges and bumps. If you break it open, you see little coconut pieces inside that also have similar shapes. It’s like one big coconut made of many small ones, all with the same kind of pattern.
So next time you see a tree or a snowflake, remember: they're showing you repeating patterns, just like a cookie cutter makes identical cookies from the same dough!
Examples
- A tree branch looks like a smaller version of the whole tree.
- Snowflakes have tiny, repeating shapes inside them.
- Coastlines look jagged and never truly straight.
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See also
- How Does The Mathematical Code Hidden In Nature Work?
- Why Do Numbers Appear Everywhere in Nature?
- Why Are Some Numbers 'Favoured' by Nature?
- Why Do Patterns Appear Everywhere?
- Why Do Numbers Seem to Pop Up Everywhere?