Ammonite fossil from Madagascar
© ThomasLENNE/Shutterstoc
Nature's secret code. Fibonacci Day
Look closely at this ammonite fossil. Its swirling shell, once home to a prehistoric sea creature, holds a mathematical secret—a spiral pattern. Each new chamber is proportionally larger than the previous one, maintaining a consistent growth ratio, often associated with the Fibonacci sequence.
Each November 23, we celebrate Fibonacci Day, named after the 13th-century Italian mathematician Leonardo Bonacci (Fibonacci), who introduced the concept to Europe. The pattern 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8…—where each number is the sum of the two before it—was, however, first described in India as early as 200 BCE by the ancient poet-mathematician Pingala. The Fibonacci sequence appears widely in nature, including pineapples, artichokes, pinecones and the arrangement of leaves on a stem.
Ammonites were mollusks that lived between 400 and 66 million years ago, gliding through ancient seas inside coiled shells that protected their soft bodies. When ammonites perished, sediment buried their shells and minerals slowly turned them to stone, preserving this natural geometry for millions of years. Today, the ammonite fossil is a striking reminder that math and nature speak the same language.
Related Images
Bing Today Images
Glass octopus in the Atlantic Ocean off Cabo Verde
Dragonfly fossil, about 150 million years old, in Solnhofen, Bavaria, Germany
Common octopus in sea grass in the Gulf of Lion in the Mediterranean Sea
Blue linckia sea stars at New Ireland in Papua New Guinea
Moon jelly and an aggregation of stingless golden jellyfish, Raja Ampat, West Papua, Indonesia
Golden jellyfish in Jellyfish Lake on the island of Eil Malk, Palau
Spanish shawl nudibranch on kelp off Santa Catalina Island, California, USA
Dr Sylvia Earle explores the Great Barrier Reef in a scene from Mission Blue