![]() ![]() Pea is the UK’s most highly regarded animal communicator, TEDx speaker, teacher, wild animal retreat facilitator and best-selling author. Pea Horsley is the Founder of the Conversations with Nature World Summit and creator of online learning, Animal Communication Made Easy, a proven 5-step method to learn how to communicate with all species of animals. Registration is free! Listen to 24 women visionaries creating a better world. Join me for our upcoming Conversations With Nature World Summit, 20 – 23 April 2021. The Milky Way has several spiral arms, each a logarithmic spiral of about 12 degrees. When a hawk approaches its prey, its sharpest view is at an angle to their direction of flight – an angle that’s the same as the spiral’s pitch. The eye, fins and tail fall at golden ratio sections.Then one of the new stems branches into two, leaving the other dormant. The sequence is seen in the way tree branches form or split: the trunk grows until it produces a branch, which creates two growth points. The seed pods on a pinecone are arranged in a spiral pattern, each cone has a pair of spiral which spiral up in opposite directions. ![]() Pineapples, Romanesco broccoli and cauliflowers.The head of a flower produces seeds at the centre which migrate towards the outside in a spiral pattern to fill all the space. More examples of the Golden Ratio in nature: Famous examples include the lily, which has three petals, buttercups, which have five, the chicory’s 21, the daisy’s 34, and so on. The number of petals in a flower consistently follows the Fibonacci sequence. It appears to be a kind of built-in numbering system to the cosmos. That is until you realise that this ratio is the key to everything from the number of spirals on a sunflower head, our own limbs, encrypting computer data, and why the Mona Lisa is so pleasing to the eye. It’s a simple pattern, and perhaps not that impressive on its own. Each number is the sum of the two numbers before it. The Fibonacci sequence starts like this: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55 and continues on forever. While not in every structure or pattern, it is a significant discovery by Leonardo Fibonacci. You’ll also find it in the shape of hurricanes, elephant tusks, star fish, sea urchins, ants and honeybees. Our human bodies have the golden ratio, from the navel to the floor and the top of the head to the navel. It can be located in the nautilus shell – the logo for our Conversations with Nature World Summit 2021. ![]() Some historians have suggested that this principle has also been used by Ancient Egyptians in building Pyramids. It is also called the Fibonacci sequence and it can be found across all of nature: plants, animals, weather structures, star systems – it is ever-present in the universe.ĭrawings on rocks and caves carry an evidence about the use of Golden Ratio for over 4,000 years! The golden ratio is 1.618, represented by the Greek letter ‘phi’, is said to be is a mathematical connection between two aspects of an object. There is a cosmic constant called the ‘golden ratio’ which South African researchers say governs the entire universe. ![]()
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