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Israeli study finds math in ancient Mesopotamian flower art

Hebrew University researchers uncovered 8,000-year-old pottery showing floral patterns built on precise geometric progressions.

Pottery, Archeology
Pottery from the Max Mallowan excavation at Arpachiyah, Iraq, now held in the collections of the British Museum and University College London. Photo courtesy of Yosef Garfinkel.

Researchers at Israel’s Hebrew University have identified the world’s earliest systematic botanical art, dating back more than 8,000 years, that demonstrates sophisticated mathematical reasoning.

Professor Yosef Garfinkel and Sarah Krulwich analyzed pottery from the Halafian culture of northern Mesopotamia (circa 6200-5500 BCE) across 29 archaeological sites. Their study, published in the Journal of World Prehistory, found that flowers, shrubs and trees painted on vessels displayed precise numerical patterns—particularly petal counts following geometric progressions of 4, 8, 16, 32 and 64.

Pottery, Archeology
Pottery from the Max Mallowan excavation at Arpachiyah, Iraq, now held in the collections of the British Museum and University College London. Photo courtesy of Yosef Garfinkel.

The researchers argue these sequences weren’t decorative accidents but reflected intentional mathematical thinking about dividing space and quantities, likely tied to practical needs such as sharing harvests from communal fields.

“These patterns show that mathematical thinking began long before writing,” said Krulwich. “People visualized divisions, sequences and balance through their art.”

The discovery challenges previous assumptions about when mathematical reasoning emerged, providing evidence that it predated written number systems by millennia. The pottery marks the first time in human history that the plant world became a systematic subject of artistic expression.

None of the images depict edible crops, suggesting the purpose was aesthetic rather than agricultural or ritualistic, according to the researchers.

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