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  2. List of Martin Gardner Mathematical Games columns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Martin_Gardner...

    A random assortment of puzzles, together with reader responses to earlier problems 1976 Jan: A breakthrough in magic squares, and the first perfect magic cube: 1976 Feb: Some elegant brick-packing problems, and a new order-7 perfect magic cube 1976 Mar: On the fabric of inductive logic, and some probability paradoxes 1976 Apr

  3. Sator Square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sator_Square

    The Sator Square (or Rotas-Sator Square or Templar Magic Square) is a two-dimensional acrostic class of word square containing a five-word Latin palindrome. [1] The earliest squares were found at Roman-era sites, all in ROTAS-form (where the top line is "ROTAS", not "SATOR"), with the earliest discovery at Pompeii (and also likely pre-AD 62).

  4. Martin Gardner bibliography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Gardner_bibliography

    The Scientific American Book of Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions (1959) Reprinted in 1988 as Hexaflexagons and Other Mathematical Diversions: The First Scientific American Book of Puzzles and Games, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-28254-6. The Second Scientific American Book of Mathematical Puzzles and Diversions (1961)

  5. J. A. Lindon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._A._Lindon

    His palindromic poems appeared occasionally in Word Ways: The Journal of Recreational Linguistics, and several were collected in Howard W. Bergerson's Palindromes and Anagrams. [5] Lindon is also noted as being the world's first writer of vocabularyclept poetry, in which poems are constructed by rearranging the words of an existing poem. [1] [6]

  6. John R. Hendricks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_R._Hendricks

    He later was the first to publish diagrams of all 58 magic tesseracts of order 3. [2] Hendricks was also an authority on the design of inlaid magic squares and cubes (and in 1999, a magic tesseract). Following his retirement, he gave many public lectures on magic squares and cubes in schools and in-service teacher's conventions in Canada and ...

  7. Recreational mathematics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recreational_mathematics

    Some of the more well-known topics in recreational mathematics are Rubik's Cubes, magic squares, fractals, logic puzzles and mathematical chess problems, but this area of mathematics includes the aesthetics and culture of mathematics, peculiar or amusing stories and coincidences about mathematics, and the personal lives of mathematicians.

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  9. Jumble - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jumble

    An example Jumble-style puzzle. Jumble is a word puzzle with a clue, a drawing illustrating the clue, and a set of words, each of which is “jumbled” by scrambling its letters. A solver reconstructs the words, and then arranges letters at marked positions in the words to spell the answer phrase to the clue.