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The Very Beginning Ancient Egypt Ancient Greece Roman Empire Babylonian Numeration

Dec 31, 2015

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Demonstrate an understanding of the evolution of our numeration system by connecting concepts such as, counting, grouping and place values from the past to the present Recognize early systems of numeration Write numbers in Roman, Babylonian, Greek and Egyptian. The Very Beginning - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration
Page 2: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Demonstrate an understanding of the evolution of our numeration system by connecting concepts such as, counting, grouping and place values from the past to the present

Recognize early systems of numerationWrite numbers in Roman, Babylonian, Greek

and Egyptian

Page 3: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

The Very Beginning Ancient Egypt Ancient Greece Roman Empire Babylonian Numeration The Mayans Hindu-Arabic Numerals Brief History of ZeroTimeline

Page 4: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

A

B CDE

FG

A. African B. Egyptian C. Babylonian D. GreekE. Roman F. Mayan G. Hindu-Arabic

Page 5: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

First known form of counting Used “grouping”Ishango Bone c. 18,000 BC

Page 6: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Ishango Region

Page 7: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Developed in 3400 B.C.Grouping by 10’sAdditive systemDisadvantages

Examples241241240

Page 8: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Write the following numbers:67242,320345

567,922

Page 9: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Rhind Papyrus, c. 1650 BC

Page 10: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Moscow Papyrus, c. 1850 BC

Page 11: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Ciphered numeration system3000 B.C.Disadvantages

Examples241241240

Page 12: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Write the following numbers: 672

188 345 949 888

Convert to our number system:

Page 13: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Zenon Papyri, c. 200 AD

Page 14: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

500 B.C. – 100 A.D.Grouping , additivity and subtractionPositionalDisadvantages

Examples241241240

Page 15: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Write the following numbers:

672241098

777 479 1776 Your birth year

Page 16: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Convert to our present system:

XL MDCXII MCMLXIV

Page 17: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration
Page 18: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

A

B CDE

FG

A. African B. Egyptian C. Babylonian D. GreekE. Roman F. Mayan G. Hindu-Arabic

Page 19: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Maximum Extent of the Babylonian Empire, c. 1750 BC

Maximum Extent of the Egyptian Empire, c. 1500 BC

Maximum Extent of the Roman Empire, c. 15 AD

Homeland & Colonies of Greek Civilization, c. 700 BC

Maximum Extent of the Roman Empire, c. 100 AD

Page 20: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

3000 - 200 B.C.Positional systemPlace ValuesBase of 60 No place holder Disadvantages

Examples Write the following numbers:24 48124 6721240 3702

Convert to our number system

<

V

Page 21: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Bablyonian Tablets, c. 1800 BC

Page 22: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Bablyonian Tablets, c. 1800 BC

Page 23: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

300 – 900 A.D.Place value systemBase 20Introduced zero

Page 24: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration
Page 25: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Mayan Codices

Page 26: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

800 A.D.10 symbolsGrouping by “tens”Place valueAdditive and multiplicative

Page 27: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration
Page 28: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Who discovered it? Why?Place holder (space, “ , θ )A number itself (7th century India)the sum of zero and a number is the numberzero subtracted from a number is the numberzero multiplied by a number is zerozero divided by a number is zeroa number divided by zero is ……Zero divide by zero is ….

Page 29: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

3000 BC – Egyptian Numerals2000 BC – Babylonian (Iran/Iraq)400 BC – Greek Ciphered Numerals100 BC – 500 AD Roman Empire300 BC – Mayan (Central America)500 AD – Hindu Numerals800 AD – Arabs adopt Hindu Numerals500 – 1100 Dark Ages in Europe1202 – Fibonacci publishes Liber Abaci

Page 30: The Very Beginning  Ancient Egypt  Ancient Greece  Roman Empire  Babylonian Numeration

Which numeration system do you think works best? Why?

How important is zero in our Hindu Arabic System?

Do you think our numeration system will continue to evolve?