Over 8,000 years ago, early farming communities in northern Mesopotamia were already thinking mathematically—long before numbers were written down. By closely studying Halafian pottery, researchers ...
Long before anyone wrote down a number, early villagers were painting flowers with a precision that looks suspiciously like ...
On a set of broken clay bowls from northern Mesopotamia, delicate flower patterns have turned out to be something far more radical than decoration. New analysis of this ancient art suggests that early ...
Halafian pottery shows that early agricultural societies practiced advanced mathematical thinking through plant-based art long before writing.
Learn how ancient pottery covered in flowers may be humanity’s first attempts at mathematical thinking.
Prof Raj Shree Dhar [email protected] Elevate mathematics as reasoning tool and thinking skill, not just rote formulas.
Analysis by Hebrew University researchers shows 8,000-year-old Halafian pottery sherds bearing symmetry and numerical ...
The Halafian culture of northern Mesopotamia arranged floral depictions on pottery with symmetry and numerical sequences, ...
Inspired by kirigami, a type of Japanese paper art, researchers have created a new material that transforms from a grid into ...
Products that belong adapt to user needs, regulatory changes and environmental constraints, rather than fighting them.
Mathematics education must move beyond marks and memorisation, focusing instead on reasoning, problem-solving, and creative ...