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Going one Better in Geometric Dissections

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2016

H. Lindgren*
Affiliation:
Patent office, Canberra

Extract

Methods have been described that facilitate the discovery of economical dissections. They are summarized in §§ 1 and 2 that follow.

1. Each of the figures to be dissected is made an element of a strip with parallel sides; 1 and 2 show strips formed from a Latin or tau cross and a pentagon. The first is a P-strip (prototype parallelogram), in which all elements are the same way up. The second is a T-strip (prototype trapezium), in which alternate ones are inverted. Points such as A and B in 1 are called congruent, a term copied from Whittaker and Watson's Modern Analysis, p. 430.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Mathematical Association 1961

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References

1. Lindgren, H., “Geometric Dissections”, Australian Mathematics Teacher, 7 (1951) 710, 9 (1953) 1721 and 64 (out of print). Also 16 (1960) 64–5.Google Scholar
2. Dudeney, H. E., Amusements in Mathematics, No. 144.Google Scholar
3. Dudeney, H. E., A Puzzle-mine, (a) No. 176, (b) No. 178.Google Scholar
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8. Amer, Math. Monthly, 64 (1957) 368–9. Scientific American, June, 1960, p. 168.Google Scholar