Substitution Tessellation Exploration
From EscherMath
Objective: Produce tilings using rep-tiles and substitution methods.
Materials
- Graph paper
- Triangular graph paper
- Pinwheel tessellation
Procedure
- Using triangular graph paper, make the substitution tessellation for the half-hexagon rep-tile:
- Is the substitution tessellation that you get from the trapezoid a periodic tessellation or a non-periodic tessellation?
- On graph paper, draw a right triangle with legs of length 25 squares and 50 squares. Dissect it into smaller (similar) triangles using the pinwheel pattern. Every line you draw will be on a grid point. Now use the same pattern to dissect each new triangle into five still smaller triangles, which will have legs of length 5 and 10 squares. The resulting tessellation has 25 triangles and is stage two of the pinwheel tessellation. Feel free to dissect each triangle again to see stage three.
- The pinwheel tessellation is not periodic. In fact, the triangular tile is rotated by new and different angles at each stage of the construction.
- Learn more about the pinwheel tiling at http://paulbourke.net/texture_colour/nonperiodic/ (scroll to bottom of page)
- See an animated version at commons:File:Pinwheel_2.gif
- Look for it in pictures of Australia's Federation Square
- On your printed copy of the pinwheel tessellation, search for rectangles. Shade in lightly as many different shapes and sizes of rectangle as you can find.
Handin: Your trapezoid tessellation, your pinwheel tessellation, and the printed pinwheel tessellation with shaded rectangles.