Saturn’s own hexagon Source: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI/Kevin M. Let us see why hexagon shows up so often in nature. An icy sweetness fills my mind, a sense that under thing and wing lies, taut yet living, coiled, the spring.” - Jacob Bronowski Their calculated honeycomb is abacus and rose combined. “The force that makes the winter grow its feathered hexagons of snow, and drives the bee to match at home. For example, the cells of the beehive have a hexagonal shape, as does the molecular structure of Carbon.
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