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GLOSSARY INQUIRY: FRACTAL GEOMETRY Often called the “geometry of nature”, fractal images resemble natural forms, both in appearance and how they are generated. Although they may appear irregular and even chaotic from a Euclidean perspective, fractal forms nonetheless demonstrate coherent and repeating patterns such as self-similarity and scale independence. They are generated recursively: each stage or generation is an elaboration of the previous one, a process that quickly gives rise to surprisingly complex forms. Ferns, cauliflower, water ripples and the surface pattern of riverbeds are a few examples of such forms. See related terms: Recursion.
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