Discover Magazine on MSN
The World’s Oldest Botanical Art Reveals How Humans Were Doing Math 8,000 Years Ago
Learn how ancient pottery covered in flowers may be humanity’s first attempts at mathematical thinking.
While flower beds slumber through the British winter, artists are at work capturing their beauty. But the genre is too often under-appreciated ...
Switching out framed botanical prints according to seasons is a great way to keep your home decor fresh all year round. In ...
Botanical illustration is an art that marries science with creativity, capturing the beauty and details of plant life ...
At the Elm Bank Reservation in Wellesley and Dover, the Massachusetts Horticultural Society hosts botanical art classes that teach students to see plants in a new light. Instructor Alice Rosa, whose ...
A new night-time holiday display in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park is delighting visitors with music, colors and over a million twinkling lights.
A new study reveals that the Halafian culture of northern Mesopotamia (c. 6200–5500 BCE) produced the earliest systematic plant imagery in prehistoric art, flowers, shrubs, branches, and trees painted ...
There are stunning botanical gardens all around the U.S., here are some of the most popular public gardens in each state to ...
The Times of Israel on MSN
Study of prehistoric botanical art in the Levant suggests ancient man could do math
Analysis by Hebrew University researchers shows 8,000-year-old Halafian pottery sherds bearing symmetry and numerical ...
Researchers investigate hundreds of motifs made by Halafians and determine that they exhibited mathematical themes.
Over 8,000 years ago, early farming communities in northern Mesopotamia were already thinking mathematically—long before ...
Explore five unique art spaces in Tokyo, from a former cardboard factory to a cafe-bar, offering a fresh perspective on the ...
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