Image for The self-made tapestry  : pattern formation in nature

The self-made tapestry : pattern formation in nature

See all formats and editions

Why do similar patterns and forms appear in nature in settings that seem to bear no relation to one another?

The windblown ripples of desert sand follow a sinuous course that resembles the stripes of a zebra or a marine fish.

In the trellis-like shells of microscopic sea creatures we see the same angles and intersections as for bubble walls in a foam.

The forks of lightning mirror and the branches of a river or a tree, this book explains why these are no coincidences.

Nature commonly weaves its tapestry by self-organization, employing no master plan or blueprint but by simple, local interactions between its component parts - be they grains of sand, diffusing molecules or living cells and gives rise to spontaneous patterns that are at the same time complex and beautiful.

Many of these patterns are universal: spirals, spots, and stripes, branches, honeycombs.

Philip Ball conducts a profusely illustrated tour of this gallery, and reveals the secrets of how nature's patterns are made.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£62.10 Save 10.00%
RRP £69.00
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0198502435 / 9780198502432
Paperback / softback
571.3
05/07/2001
United Kingdom
English
vi, 287p., [16]p. of plates : ill. (some col.)
25 cm
research & professional Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 1999.