Branches: Nature's Patterns: a Tapestry in Three Parts

Author(s): Philip Ball

Science

As part of a trilogy of books exploring the science of patterns in nature, acclaimed science writer Philip Ball here looks at the form and growth of branching networks in the natural world, and what we can learn from them. Many patterns in nature show a branching form - trees, river deltas, blood vessels, lightning, the cracks that form in the glazing of pots. These networks share a peculiar geometry, finding a compromise between disorder and determinism, though some, like the hexagonal snowflake or the stones of the Devil's Causeway fall into a rigidly ordered structure. Branching networks are found at every level in biology - from the single cell to the ecosystem. Human-made networks too can come to share the same features, and if they don't, then it might be profitable to make them do so: nature's patterns tend to arise from economical solutions.

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Wideranging, intelligent and non-dogmatic triology of books. Martin Kemp, Times Literary Supplement 'Branches' is a slim tome, generously illustrated with photographs, charts and mathematical models. Financial Times,

1. A Winter's Tale: The Six-Pointed Snowflake; 2. Tenuous Monsters: Shapes Between Dimensions; 3. Just For the Crack: Clean Breaks and Ragged Ruptures; 4. Water Ways: Labyrinths in the Landscape; 5. Tree and Leaf: Branches in Biology; 6. Web Worlds: Why W

General Fields

  • : 9780199237982
  • : Oxford University Press
  • : Oxford University Press
  • : 0.419
  • : 01 October 2009
  • : 216mm X 138mm X 17mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Philip Ball
  • : Hardback
  • : 500.201185
  • : 240
  • : Popular science
  • : 140 black and white illustrations, 4pp colour plates